Mar 6, 2013

Muslim rebels involved in Lahad Datu Standoff?

MANILA: Members of a major Philippine Muslim rebel force who were meant to have disarmed in the 1990s as part of a peace pact are involved in deadly battles in Malaysia, the group's leader said on Tuesday.


Nur Misuari, who founded the Moro National Liberation Front in the late 1960s, confirmed "freedom fighters" from his group were part of the militia sent by a self-proclaimed sultan to claim the Malaysian state of Sabah.

"I cannot deny that some of them are known to be MNLF freedom fighters," Misuari told a news conference in Manila, although he insisted he was not personally involved.

"They went there without my knowledge. I have not ordered anyone to join them. It would be very irresponsible for anybody to implicate us."

Misuari made the comments while visiting Jamalul Kiram III, the self-anointed Sultan of Sulu, who sent between 100 and 300 men from the southern Philippines to Sabah on February 12 to press his ownership claim.

Malaysian security forces launched a major offensive on Tuesday to end the standoff, which has so far left at least 27 people dead, although the sultan's men reported that they had survived.

The MNLF "freedom fighters" earnt their battle experience during decades of armed struggle against the Philippine government that cost tens of thousands of lives.

The MNLF had fought for an independent state in the southern Philippines, while also claiming Sabah state as part of their ancestral homeland.

The group signed a peace pact with the Philippine government in 1996 which created a Muslim autonomous region in the south, and set aside the claim over Sabah.

The MNLF peace pact led to a less-compromising splinter group, the Moro Islamic Liberation front, continuing the battle for independence.

The MILF is now close to signing a final peace deal with the government, which ignores the Sabah claim completely and would lead to the MNLF losing political influence in the southern Philippines.

Observers have speculated MNLF members may have helped launch the Malaysia offensive because they feared they were losing power.

However Misuari insisted MNLF leaders were not involved directly in the Malaysia standoff, and even offered to go to Kuala Lumpur to mediate a peaceful solution.

Meanwhile on Tuesday, President Benigno Aquino's spokesman, Edwin Lacierda, said that the Philippine Navy had stopped 70 more people from getting across the sea border to help the militants. - source

Picture of Najib with the Sultan of Sulu (Esmail D. Kiram II)

Below is a picture of the Prime Minister of Malaysia, Najib Tun Razak, with the Sultan of Sulu, Esmail D. Kiram II.

Photo taken from facebook page Esmail D. Kiram II:


Picture of Najib with the Sultan of Sulu Esmail Kiram D (Source: Facebook Esmail Kiram D)

Enough so fierce invaders bawak accused Anwar Ibrahim in Malaysia.

Apparently there are going to be closed hole - source

Guess who's the Sulu sultan's royal advisor?

Mar 4: Following several political blogs' publication of his business card, UMNO Youth exco member Lokman Noor Adam (pic) today admitted his links to the Sulu sultanate, which has been at the centre of the ongoing violence in the east coast of Sabah.


But Lokman defended his designation as "Advisor to The Crown", saying he was elected to the role by "the real Sulu Sultan".

"I admit I was elected by the real Sulu sultan, Sultan Roodinod, son of Sultan Julaspi Kiram, as his advisor around the year 2005 to deal with the Malaysian government regarding their welfare,” he told news portal The Malaysian Insider.

Earlier, several blogs questioned Lokman's links to the now defunct sultanate, amid allegations by UMNO-controlled traditional media that opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim had a hand in the armed incursion in Lahad Datu.

The blogs published an image of the business card issued by the Shah Alam office of the 'Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo', bearing Lokman's name above the title "Advisor to The Crown".

Lokman, once active in the 'reformasi' movement and who went on to become a Supreme Council member of the now-renamed Parti Keadilan Nasional, is a virulent critic of Pakatan Rakyat and appears frequently on UMNO's ceramah series to condemn Anwar.

Popular blogger 'Tulang Besi' meanwhile pointed out that representatives of the so-called Sulu sultanate had attended the UMNO general assembly and their pictures are already disseminated on social media. - source

Aquino's 'threats' aggravated Sabah situation — experts

The Aquino administration's threat of legal charges to the followers of Jamalul Kiram III may have aggravated the violence in Sabah – at least according to a human rights lawyer and a Muslim leader.


A total of 27 people have been killed in clashes between Malaysian authorities and armed followers of Kiram, who claims to be the legitimate Sultan of Sulu and declares a claim on the disputed land.

President Benigno Aquino III earlier urged Kiram's followers to return to the country, saying they could be charged if they continue to engage Malaysian security forces in a standoff in the coastal town of Lahad Datu in Sabah.

“If you are truly the leader of your people, you should be one with us in ordering your followers to return home peacefully. As President and chief executor of our laws, I have tasked an investigation into possible violations of laws by you, your followers, and collaborators engaged in this foolhardy act,” Aquino had said in a statement addressed to Kiram.

Also, in a statement last Saturday, a day after the standoff erupted into violence, Aquino told Kiram's army to “surrender now, without conditions.”

But according to lawyer Arpee Santiago, executive director of the Ateneo Human Rights Center, MalacaƱang early on veered from having an open dialogue with Kiram's group by threatening them legal charges once they return to the country.

No threats, please

“In the same breath, the president was asking for a dialogue or saying that it was open to having a dialogue and not to have violence. In the same breath, there was the threat of investigation or possible cases that might be filed against them,” Santiago said in an interview on GMA News TV's “News to Go” on Tuesday.

Violence may have escalated after government threatened Kiram's followers, he noted.

“Kunyare hostage-taking, hindi mo ite-threaten 'yung hostage-taker na ito 'yung gagawin namin sa 'yo. Otherwise violence might actually escalate,” Santiago said.

“In any negotiation like in a hostage-taking crisis, hindi mo muna sila tatakutin. You want them to come back, let's talk and let's see what would happen afterwards,” he added.

Amina Rasul, lead convenor of the Philippine Council for Islam and Democracy, also said a peaceful dialogue does not entail threatening the other party.

“It doesn't mean to be effective if you make public pronouncements. Threatening [them] does not allow for dialogue. What it does is to anger peope who are there,” Rasul said in a phone interview with GMA News Online.

She said the government should have been calm instead of provoking Kiram's followers.

“Ang tinitingnan ko kasi, if there's a hostage-taking crisis, meron yung strategy on how to deal with such situation. As much as possible, kalma. You don't do anything to anger or irritate them. The gunman might decide to do something,” Rasul said.

Impeachment?

For his part, lawyer Oliver Lozano said he might move for Aquino's ouster if the chief executive would not form a body to resolve the ongoing conflict in Sabah.

In a letter addressed to Aquino and coursed through Justice Secretary Leila de Lima, Lozano, a former lawyer of the late President Ferdinand Marcos, suggested that the government form a "Sabah Commission to formulate a Solomonic Solution to the Sabah controversy."

"Your Excellency, concerned sectors are asking me to file Impeachment Complaint against You. However, we have pending suggestions to You on how to resolve the Sabah issue," Lozano said in his letter.

"[H]ence the deferment of the Impeachment Complaint in order to afford You fair opportunity to be heard and due process that hears before it condemns in lieu of trial by publicity," he added.

De Lima is currently conducting a legal study on the validity and strength of the Philippines' claim over Sabah, a region in north eastern Borneo.

Aquino said Kiram's standoff violates the 1987 Constitution, citing Article 2, Section 2 that states that the Philippines "renounces war as an instrument of national policy."

Aquino also said Article 118 of the Revised Penal Code punishes those who “provoke or give occasion for a war…or expose Filipino citizens to reprisals on their persons or property.”

Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office head Ramon "Ricky" Carandang said the Palace did its best to prevent bloodshed in Sabah.

"We've done everything we could to prevent this, but in the end, Kiram's people chose this path," he said.

At 7 a.m. Tuesday, Malaysian security forces attacked Kiram's followers in Lahad Datu, the site of Friday's clash where 14 people — 12 Filipinos and two Malaysian police commandos — were reported killed.

On Saturday, another clash in Semporna left six Malaysian policemen and at least six Filipinos dead. — with Mark D. MerueƱas/KBK, GMA News

Palace fears possible influx of Sabah-based Pinoys to Mindanao

The ongoing armed conflict in Sabah between followers of a Filipino sultan and Malaysian security forces may prompt some 800,000 Filipinos there to rush home and cause a “peace and order problem” in three Mindanao provinces, a MalacaƱang official said Tuesday.


“Yung 800,000 Filipinos, ‘pag biglang umuwi sa Pilipinas ‘yan, it will be a peace and order problem sa Basulta (Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi),” said presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda at a press briefing.

He said this was the reason why President Benigno Aquino III has asked Malaysia's leader to assure the safety of the Filipinos who work or live in Sabah.

“Hindi ka kaagad makaka-create ng trabaho para sa 800,000 in the course of one day. And that’s the reason why the President has asked [Malaysian] Prime Minister Najib kung puwedeng huwag namang apektuhin ‘yung 800,000 Filipinos [doon],” he said.

Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi are the provinces nearest to Sabah, where followers of Sultan Jamarul Kiram III are shooting it out with Malaysian security forces who want them out of the area.

Lacierda said officials in the Autonomous Region of Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) are studying possible contingency plans in case the thousands of Filipinos in Sabah decide to go home. “Pinag-aaralan po ngayon. Sa ARMM, kaya nagpulong po si Governor Mujiv Hataman dahil ito po ay mga constituents niya.”

Meanwhile, Lacierda maintained that the government continues to study the Philippines’ claim to Sabah.

However, unlike previous statements towards the Philippines’ claim over other disputed territories like the Spratly Islands, Lacierda declined to say if the country’s claim to Sabah is strong, saying instead that the Departments of Justice and Foreign Affairs are studying the claim.

“That is being studied right now by the DOJ and the DFA. Let me be clear: I am [in no position] to say whether we have a [strong case],” he said. — Patricia Denise Chiu/KBK, GMA News

Malaysian Forces Bombed Kiram's Followers

Sabah Air Strikes Hit Wrong Target; Kiram’s Army Spared

Malaysian armed forces yesterday started their massive campaign against Rajah Muda Agbimuddin Kiram and his men, launching air strikes in a bid to end the three-week standoff in Sabah.


However, instead of hitting their target, the Malaysian bombers dropped two bombs on their own security forces, the Sultanate of Sulu said.

Abraham J. Iribani, spokesman of the sultanate and Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, said he spoke early Tuesday morning with the rajah mudah (crown prince), who disclosed the aerial assault by Malaysia.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said the government had no choice but to quell Malaysia’s worst security crisis in years, sparked when militants invaded to claim the Malaysian state of Sabah for Kiram III.

“The longer this invasion lasts, it is clear to the authorities that the invaders do not intend to leave Sabah,” Najib said, adding that negotiations had gone nowhere.

“The government must take action to safeguard the dignity and sovereignty of the country as required by the people.”

The rajah muda, younger brother of the Sultan Kiram III, said they saw a jet plane hovering above at 9:30 a.m., but a bit far from their stronghold.

He told Idjirani the jet plane dropped two bombs on the Malaysian military and police forces encamped at Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu.

The bombing of the Malaysian security forces could not be confirmed independently as of press time.

Idjirani said the rajah muda was bewildered by the bombing of the Malaysian security forces.

But the rajah muda recalled that Kampung Tanduo, where the bombs were dropped, used to be his group’s camp, but they abandoned this after Friday’s fighting.

This could be the reason Malaysian bombers dropped two bombs in the area, not knowing that Malaysian security forces are now occupying the camp.

Idjirani described this as a “divine intervention.”

“If the bombs were from Malaysia that is divine intervention. It shows that our only support is from divine intervention,” he said.

At least two fighter jets roared over the standoff site from early morning, launching an air bombardment, a Malaysian reporter positioned about 20 kilometers away told AFP by phone.

“There was a series of explosions in Tanduo. Intense bombing lasted for about half an hour,” followed by a series of sporadic blasts, he said, asking not to be named.

An AFP reporter at a police roadblock about 30 kilometres from the assault saw heavy military helicopters flying toward Tanduo. Six ambulances also were seen speeding toward the site.

Three military trucks filled with dozens of soldiers also moved in the direction of Tanduo, located amid vast oil palm plantations.

Despite being ranged against Malaysia’s armed forces, air, naval, and foot soldiers, with tanks and fighter planes, the rajah muda remains defiant and vows to fight on.

“You know it, whatever they do, we are not afraid because we are fighting for our right,” said the rajah muda. The right of the Bangsa Suluk and the Filipino in general, if the Philippine government considers us Filipinos, is what we’re fighting for, he said.

He reiterated that he and his men will not start a fight.

“If they start, we will defend ourselves. If not, we will not move,” the rajah muda, leader of the originally 235 members of the Royal Security Force (RSF), said. Now down to just 215 men.

The group ventured on a “journey home” to Sabah on Feb. 11 and arrived a day later in Lahad Datu to settle and live peacefully in their “ancestral home.”

The raja muda also confirmed they are holding captives – four Malaysian officers.
He added that he is open to returning to the Philippines on condition there will be no betrayal during the negotiations.

“We will go home if there is no betrayal,” he said, adding their rights (over Sabah) must be preserved.

The raja muda also appealed to the “Bangsa Suluk” (Tausug Nation) and the Filipinos in general to help them, saying this is the time for them unite behind them.

He added that he and his men have no problem with food, saying “we are used to (surviving) wherever."

However, he appealed to the United Nations to send a medical team to Lahad Datu to attend to his wounded men and well as to bring food supplies.

With the Malaysian air strikes and mortar attacks against the Filipino armed men in Sabah, the Philippine government yesterday said it has no shortcomings and actually “did everything to possible” to prevent a violent end to the three-week standoff.

Presidential spokesman Edwin Lacierda said they have exhausted measures to reach a peaceful solution to the conflict but the followers of the Sulu sultan have ignored government appeals to come home and instead pursued a “path of violence.”

Eight Malaysian policemen and 20 Filipinos were reportedly killed in the violent clashes since the supporters of Kiram III occupied Sabah last month. The group is led by the rajah muda.

Asked to comment on former National Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales statement that he is the Aquino administration’s “favorite suspect” on the Sabah issue, Lacierda asked: “Guilty siya?” (Is he guilty?)

“The President never mentioned anybody. He said that I will not name names until I have sufficient evidence,” Lacierda added.

Misuari Warning

Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) founding Chairman Nur Misuari visited Kiram III yesterday, his second, and warned of chaos should the sultan be arrested on government’s allegation he violated the Constitution.

He also practically admitted the presence of MNLF fighters in Sabah, but made it clear he did not order them to join the fighting.

Misuari strongly denied any hand on the Sabah standoff, saying if he were behind it then he would have sent thousands to the oil-rich island.

He slammed Aquino for his handling of the Sabah standoff.

“What he (President) is doing is bad. It is unbecoming of a head of state. I can’t forgive him,” said Misuari.

He also warned Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak of “consequences” if the sultanate’s followers would be killed.

“Sabah is our homeland. It is part of our sovereign territory,” said Misuari.

As this developed, Sen. Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. said the Philippines, as a republic, has a factual, historical claim over Sabah.

“But whatever else the issue there may be, the Sultan of Sulu and his people are Filipino citizens and, by virtue of that fact, they deserve protection from the government of the Philippines,’’ Marcos said.

“Pero bago natin pagusapan ang claim, protektahan muna natin ang mga Pilipino. We should talk to the Malaysians to spare the Filipinos from harm or harassment and to resolve this matter peacefully,” he said (Before we discuss the territorial claim, Filipinos must first be protected.)

“First and foremost, it’s the responsibility of the government to protect its citizens,” he added.

The brief statement of Marcos on the issue did not touch on whether the administration of President Benigno S. Aquino III handled the Sabah situation well or not.

Fight For Our Rights

Yesterday, the Sultanate of Sulu asked President Aquino to abide by the Constitution by protecting “your people and fight for the nation’s territorial rights.”

Princess Jacel Kiram, daughter of Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, read the statement from the Sultanate of Sulu.

“Mr. President, as long as Sultan Jamalul Kiram III and Rajah Muda Agbimuddin Kiram are standing by their belief to defend their rights over North Borneo (Sabah), please do not disrespect the integrity of their intentions,” the sultanate’s statement read.

The President “cannot wash his hands by turning your back on your own people,” it said.
“We are asking all the Filipino people now to pray for the safety of our Muslim brothers both in Malaysia and the Philippines and to a peaceful resolution of the Sabah issue.”

Blunder

Meanwhile, former Senator Ramon Magsaysay Jr. said yesterday that President Aquino may have made a wrong decision in ignoring appeals for him to dialogue with the Kiram III and his family, noting that violence may have been averted had he agreed for talks.

Asked what advise he would have given Aquino had this been sought by MalacaƱang before Malaysia decided to attack the over 200 Filipinos holed up in Sabah, Magsaysay said he would have asked the chief executive to talk to Kiram and his family.

“This is because the issue pertains to ownership problem. Had it been a question of sovereignty, a government-to-government negotiations would have been better and could have averted bloodshed,” said Magsaysay.

“Sabah issue is very complex. If you read former (Supreme Court) Justice Artemio Panganiban, it is an issue of sovereignty on the part of Malaysia and property on the part of the Filipinos,” the Team PNoy senatorial candidate explained. (With reports from AFP, Genalyn D. Kabiling, Madel S. Namit, Mario B. Casayuran, and Ben R. Rosario)

Palace: Safe passage iffy

Malaysia has final say; Kiram insists on claim

MalacaƱang on Sunday admitted that there is no guarantee that the brother of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III and his followers in Sabah will be given safe passage back to the Philippines if they surrender to Malaysian authorities.


Deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte made the admission after repeated calls and warnings from the Palace to the Kirams that surrender was their only option.

“That is up to the Malaysian authorities. It is not a secret that the Malaysians have control of the situation in Sabah,” Valte said when asked if the Aquino administration was given any guarantee that Kiram’s brother, Agbimuddin, and his 223 remaining followers will not be arrested by Malaysian troops once they heed the surrender calls.

Ignoring these calls, the sultan warned of more bloodshed if the Philippine government continued to ignore the sultanate’s claim over Sabah, which it sought to dramatize three weeks ago by sending an armed contingent led by his brother to the island in Malaysia’s north Borneo region.

The sultan said every Tausug and Filipino Muslim would lay down his life in the continuing struggle to reclaim Sabah.

“I warned them. There are many Tausug Muslims who are ready to die. There will be no Muslims left here in the Philippines,” Kiram said from his residence in Maharlika Village in Taguig City. “They will all fight to the death, including those in the police and the military. This is not a joke. Malaking gulo ito.”

A spokesman for the sultanate said they had not been in touch with Agbimuddin since Saturday and could not confirm reports of new firefights in Sabah.

A tense, three-week standoff in Sabah was broken by a bloody firefight on Friday where 12 of Kiram’s followers and two Malaysian security forces were killed.

Agbimuddin claimed the casualties incuded a 28-year-old mother of three and her husband.

Valte said the government has done all it could to negotiate with the sultan, including sending National Security Adviser Cesar Garcia and presidential political adviser Ronald Llamas to discuss a peaceful resolution to the standoff.

Valte noted that the Kirams’ “proprietary claim” on Sabah must not lead to the further shedding of blood.

The Palace official, however, took exception to criticisms that President Benigno Aquino III gave priority to campaigning for Team Pnoy senatorial candidates in Pampanga on Friday, even as initial reports on the firefight were arriving.

She denied a claim by United Nationalist Alliance senatorial candidate Milagros Magsaysay that he chose to be an endorser for Team Pnoy before attending to his job as a President.

“The President had his mind on what was happening in Sabah while he was in Pampanga. He was still monitoring the situation. He was getting the reports,” she said.

“(But) while he was there, he did not want to disappoint also the people who were there,” Valte added.

Mr. Aquino, in his speech, apologized to the audience that he would have to cut his visit short because of the Sabah crisis, but he assured them that he did not go to Pampanga to discuss the firefight

in the island state.

He then proceeded to deliver a 40-minute speech where he criticized his predecessor, detained Pampanga Rep. Gloria Arroyo. He also took the time to campaign not only for Team PNoy senatorial candidates but for Liberal Party local bets as well.

Friday’s gunbattle occurred about an hour before a scheduled meeting between Sulu Sultanate spokesman Abraham Idjirani and Malaysian Ambassador to Manila Mohammad Zamri Mohammad Kassim.

Idjirani said they would appeal to the international community, including the United Nations or the Organization of Islamic Cooperation — to investigate the incident.

The Sulu sultan earlier warned that if the Sabah incident is not handled well, it could “awaken a (sleeping) giant” and that the conflict could spread “all the way to Kota Kinabalu.”

Mr. Aquino has already warned Kiram that he and his followers, including their possible collaborators, will face “the full force of the law” if they refuse to leave Sabah as he ordered an investigation into possible violations of the law by the group.

Mr. Aquino warned Kiram that his group was now “fast approaching that point of no return.”

“The choices and consequences are yours. If you choose not to cooperate, the full force of the laws of the state will be used to achieve justice for all who have been put in harm’s way,” the President said.

The President admitted that Kiram’s letter in 2010 seeking consultations on the peace talks with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front was “lost in the bureaucratic maze.”

But Mr. Aquino said this did not justify an armed incursion.

Justice Secretary Leila de Lima, who was ordered to study the country’s claim over Sabah, said the government’s diplomatic relations with Malaysia were vital to resolving its territorial claim.

“This is not just a purely legal matter. We have to consider all aspects – including foreign policies of the government,” she said in an interview.

She described the Sabah claim as “complicated.”

De Lima also pointed out that crucial part of the study involves the veracity of Sultan Kiram’s claims.

The sultan, who rules the ethnic Tausug population of about 1.5 million in the Sulu archipelago composed of the provinces of Basilan, Sulu, and Tawi-Tawi, said he has grown tired of Malacanang’s indifference to their cause.

“I’ve made so many proposals for a peaceful resolution. I’ve always been saying my door is open. They were saying they want to solve the problem but the problem is they would not talk to me,” Kiram said.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak has warned the Kiram group holed up in Lahad Datu that they will face the consequences if they refuse to surrender. President Aquino has issued similar warnings.

“We are Filipinos but our government is siding with the Malaysians,” Kiram said.

Kiram’s daughter, Princess Jacel, said they had been receiving a flood of support and encouragement from other Muslim sultanates over the Sabah issue, and warned of a possible spillover of the violence.

“We don’t want this to get worse. We are doing the best we can to resolve this issue peacefully,” she said, but added that the struggle would continue because “honor is above life.”

Also on Sunday, the sultanate’s spokesman, Idjarani, said Malaysian security forces killed an imam or priest and four children inside their home in Semporma, Sabah.

“This is incomprehensible. Killing a Muslim priest is not justifiable. It is not the sultanate of Sulu that’s worsening this conflict, it is the Malaysian government,” Idjarani said.

“They should not have resorted to that kind of action,” he added.

The Malaysian national news agency Bernama reported that five policemen were killed Saturday night while checking the presence of armed men in a village in Semporma. It did not mention the deaths of the imam but said two armed intruders were killed.

“I cannot describe how we feel. For the Malaysian authorities to do this to a Muslim priest and his defenseless children, I have no words to express what I feel,” Princess Jacel said.

The Kiram family said Agbimuddin’s forces captured four Malaysian officials following a clash in Semporna in Sabah, but did not say who they were.

Idjarani said the capture of the four Malaysians was triggered by the continued atrocities of the Malaysian government against the Filipinos living in Sabah.

He added that Sultan Kiram ordered his men to respect the rights of the four Malaysian prisoners. “The Filipinos know how to take care of their captured enemies,” he said.

He added that there were unconfirmed reports that other groups, possibly up to 1,000 armed men, arrived in Sabah on Saturday night to reinforce the group led by the sultan’s brother, but said this was not on orders of the sultan.

“This is an organized patriotic act in show of support to this struggle of the Sultanate of Sulu,” he said. “It was not ordered by the Sultan.”

In Lahad Datu, a Philippine humanitarian and consular team arrived to help Filipinos affected by the fighting in Sabah.

In a statement released on Sunday, the Philippine Embassy in Kuala Lumpur informed the Malaysian authorities that an embassy team was already in Lahad Datu for a humanitarian and consular mission to Filipinos there.

On Sunday morning, Philippine ambassador to Malaysia Eduardo Malaya and Foreign Affairs Undersecretary Jose Brillantes had a brief meeting with Royal Malaysian Police Inspector General Tan Sri Ismail Omar.

“We would like to see how we could work with local authorities in further assisting our nationals affected by the situation,” Brillantes said.

Malaya said that its team was in Lahad Datu to assists Filipinos who are wounded from the firefight Friday.

Brilliantes was dispatched from Manila to Malaysia last Feb. 25 to assist the Philippine Embassy in handling the situation. – With Ferdinand Fabella and Sara Susanne Fabunan

Malaysians in PHL advised to take precautions amid Sabah assault

The Malaysian Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Tuesday advised its nationals currently in the Philippines to take precautions amid tensions caused by Malaysian security forces' assault on followers of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III in Sabah.


Malaysia's diplomatic missions are also cooperating with Philippine authorities to monitor and assess the security situation to ensure Malaysians' safety.

"In light of the developments in Lahad Datu in Sabah, Malaysia, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs encourages all Malaysian citizens in the Philippines to pay utmost attention to their safety and security and exercise additional precaution in their daily activities," said the ministry.

On Tuesday, the Malaysian Foreign Affairs Ministry also noted that shortly after the assault began, demonstrators picketed the Malaysian Embassy in Makati City.

"The demonstrators were believed to represent a small number of local interest groups to voice their views about the situation in Lahad Datu in Sabah, Malaysia," it said, adding the demonstrators left without any untoward incident.

Earlier Tuesday, Malaysian forces assaulted an area in Lahad Datu where Kiram's followers were believed to be holing up.

Kiram's followers had engaged Malaysian forces in a three-week standoff until March 1, when a bloody clash left 12 Filipinos and two Malaysian police commandos dead.

Another clash last Saturday left six Malaysian police officers and at least six Filipinos dead.

Meanwhile, the ministry was appreciative of efforts by the Philippine government, particularly the Philippine National Police, to secure the Malaysian Embassy in Manila and the Malaysian Consulate General in Davao City.

"As the current security situation at the Embassy and Consulate General, as well as their immediate vicinity remains calm and is under control, both Diplomatic Missions will remain open unless the Ministry of Foreign Affairs notifies otherwise," it said. — DVM, GMA News

DFA confirms Malaysia airstrikes in Sabah, appeals for 'safety corridor'

The Department of Foreign Affairs has confirmed the airstrikes conducted by Malaysia on Tuesday against the remaining followers of a Philippine sultan locked in a deadly standoff in Sabah.

A convoy of ambulances drive toward Tanduo village on Tuesday where the standoff with Sulu gunmen and Malaysian security forces was taking place. Malaysian security forces launched an assault on March 5 to clear out the armed Filipinos engaged in a three-week incursion into Sabah that has left 27 people dead.
Foreign Affairs spokesman Raul Hernandez said it has no information if there are Filipino casualties in the Malaysian assault, which is aimed at ending the three-week standoff.

“We would like to confirm reports that Malaysian security forces conducted air strikes followed by ground operations. We are waiting for details and casualties if there are,” Hernandez told a press briefing.

Malaysian jets bombed targets in Sabah early Tuesday morning and hundreds of troops have moved into areas occupied by followers of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, escalating the violence intended to end the impasse between Kiram's men and Malaysian security forces.

Del Rosario's visit

The operation was conducted several hours after Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario met with his Malaysian counterpart Foreign Minister Anifah Aman and the Malaysian Defense Chief in Kuala Lumpur at 1 a.m. on Tuesday.

Del Rosario was dispatched by the Philippine government to Malaysia to appeal for “maximum tolerance” on the Filipinos, who are regarded as intruders by Malaysian forces, as Manila scrambled to end the violence in Sabah.

In a statement from Kuala Lumpur, Del Rosario said: “We came to Malaysia to endeavor to walk that last mile to try to save lives in this unfortunate conflict. We intend to fully continue this effort.”

In his discussion with Anifah, Del Rosario also requested the Malaysian government to establish a safety corridor for women, children and other civilians not involved in the hostilities, Hernandez said.

As of Monday, the DFA has recorded 23 Filipino casualties in the armed hostilities.

PHL forces 'defeated'

Before noon Tuesday, Malaysian police claimed that Kiram's followers were defeated. However, Sultanate spokesman Abraham Idjirani claimed that the sultan's brother Raja Muda Azzimudie told him they were still well and alive.

Malaysian news site Malaysiakini quoted Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak as saying that the Malaysian troops started with an airstrike by jet fighters of the Royal Malaysian Air Forces followed by a mortar strike at around 10 a.m. Tuesday.

It also quoted Armed Forces General Zulkifli Mat Zain as saying that "certain explosives" were used to allow Malaysian forces to move in. At around 11:45 a.m., Malaysian media outfit The Star reported that the Filipinos have been defeated.

Azzimudie, through Idjirani, confirmed that the Malaysian security forces dropped at least two bombs but that these were far from their position.

The Star quoted Malaysian authorities as saying that there were reportedly no casualties among Malaysian troops. However, they did not indicate how many Filipinos were killed or wounded.

At around 11:54 a.m., Malaysiakini quoted Inspector General of Police Omar Ismail as saying that the joint operation between Malaysian police and military is "still facing resistance."

The Star quoted Malaysia's De facto law minister Nazri Aziz as saying that Kiram's followers will be charged for murder for their intrusion into Lahad Datu, Sabah.

Doubts

However, according to a report by M. Jegathesan for Agence France Presse, Malaysia's national police chief had raised doubts about the success of the air and ground attack, saying "mopping up" operations had yet to find any bodies and suggesting at least some of the militants might have slipped away.

Furthermore, Abraham Idjirani, spokesman for the sultan Jamalul Kiram III, told AFP that the attack had occurred "away from where" their men were, and he had spoken with the leader of the Sultan of Sulu's armed group about eight hours after the assault was launched.

Malaysian federal police chief Ismail Omar later told reporters in a press conference hours after the initial attack that soldiers combing across a wide area of hilly plantation country were yet to find any dead militants.

If the invaders had indeed escaped a tight police and military cordon, it would likely fuel perceptions of incompetence by security forces in the affair, and sow fears that armed and dangerous gunmen were loose.

At least 180 Filipinos have been holed up Sabah, surrounded by massive Malaysian forces, since landing by boat from Southern Mindanao on February 12 to press the Sultanate of Sulu's claim to the territory located in Borneo Island, sparking a diplomatic crisis between the Philippines and Malaysia.

The Filipinos refused to leave until the Malaysian government heeds their demand to re-open talks on unresolved claim of the sultanate on Sabah.

Kiram, 74, said he is the heir to the Islamic sultanate of Sulu, which once controlled Sabah and islands in Southern Philippines.

Over the years, the sultanate’s power has diminished but it has continued to receive nominal payment from the Malaysian government under a historical lease arrangement between Kiram’s forebears and the British North Borneo company.

The latest flare-up in the conflict over Sabah that has long been a thorn in Malaysian-Philippines relations. The Philippines has also been concerned that the violence could affect years-long negotiations being brokered by Malaysian between Manila and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, the largest Muslim rebel group in the southern Philippines. — with a report from AFP/Kimberly Jane Tan/KG/KBK/DVM, GMA News

Mar 4, 2013

Malaysia beefs up security as Sabah death toll rises

TAWAU, Malaysia - Malaysia vowed to beef up security Monday in an eastern state where at least 26 people have been reported killed after a standoff allegedly initiated by followers of a Filipino sultan based in Sulu.

Malaysian soldiers man a security checkpoint in Semporna, the new area where a standoff with armed followers of the Sulu sultan in Simunul, Borneo occured on Sunday. Five Malaysian policemen and two gunmen died in a fresh clash as fears mounted that violence linked to a deadly standoff with Filipino intruders had widened to other areas.
Prime Minister Najib Razak, who is under pressure over Malaysia's worst security crisis in years, has authorized a "doubling" of police and armed forces deployed in the tense state of Sabah on Borneo island.

"An additional two army battalions have been dispatched to Sabah," Najib, who has vowed to root out followers of Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, was quoted as saying by state news agency Bernama.

Malaysians have been shocked by the standoff, which began when an estimated 100-300 people landed on the shores of Sabah on February 12, claiming the state for the heir to a former Philippine sultanate.

The standoff has embarrassed Malaysian premier Najib -- who must call elections by June -- by exposing lax border security and fuelling perceptions of lawlessness and huge illegal immigration in Sabah.

A tense standoff between the Filipino sultan's followers and Malaysian security forces who have them pinned down in the farming village of Tanduo erupted in a bloody firefight Friday that left 12 gunmen and two police officers dead.

Another gun battle erupted in Semporna, 300 kilometers (190 miles) away, on Saturday night, dramatically escalating tensions and raising the overall toll of reported dead to at least 18 Filipinos and eight police officers.

It remains unclear whether the Semporna confrontation was resolved or is ongoing.

Followers of the 74-year-old Manila-based Islamic leader, Jamalul Kiram III, say the gunmen are ready to die to defend his claim to Sabah, which was once controlled by the now-defunct sultanate.

The fresh weekend clash in Semporna -- and a police claim that they were pursuing yet another group of gunmen in a nearby town -- has sparked fears of further infiltration by armed Filipinos along the coast.

The exact identities of the gunmen remains a mystery, but Malaysian armed forces chief Zulkifeli Zin told a press conference in Sabah on Sunday that the intruders appeared to have combat experience.

Their "insurgency guerrilla technique is quite good," he was quoted saying.

Sabah has seen previous smaller-scale cross-border raids from Islamic militants and other bandits from the adjacent southern Philippines, which has suffered for decades from a campaign by Moro insurgents.

Malaysian authorities have not clearly said whether the different armed groups in the current troubles are related, instead issuing calls for calm, saying the situation is under control.

The Star newspaper has reported, however, that thousands of families fled Semporna in panic.

Sabah's police chief Hamza Taib was quoted by Malaysian press saying an armed man in commando gear was killed by angry villagers near Semporna. It was not clear whether he was one of the six militants reported killed in Saturday's shooting.

The Sulu sultanate's power faded about a century ago but it has continued to receive nominal Malaysian payments for Sabah under a lease deal inherited from European colonial powers. — Agence France-Presse

Bayan's Satur Ocampo pledges support for Sultan Kiram


Former Bayan Rep. Satur Ocampo on Monday tells the media that he is supporting Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III in his quest to reclaim Sabah from Malaysia. About 100-300 armed followers of Sultan Kiram ventured into Sabah on Feb. 17 to reassert the sultanate's centuries-old claim over the land. At least 27 Malaysians and Filipinos were killed in clashes over the weekend. Danny Pata

Line of succession of the Sultans of Sulu of the Modern Era


Line of succession of the Sultans of Sulu of the Modern Era found in the Official Gazette, Download pdf
http://www.gov.ph/2013/02/26/line-of-succession-of-the-sultans-of-sulu-of-the-modern-era/

Dr Mahathir : Lahad Datu crisis likely to worsen

KUALA LUMPUR (March 4, 2013): The escalating crisis in Lahad Datu may not die down anytime soon as the self-proclaimed Sulu Royal Army is unlikely to admit defeat, former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said today.


Offering his condolences to the families of those killed in the growing conflict, Mahathir said the situation could worsen as the group of more than 150 Filipinos, supporters of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, are not likely to surrender or leave peacefully.

"The situation may possibly get worse because looking at the Philippines and the people in these rebel groups, they're the type that will keep fighting even if they know they cannot win.

"I'm very sad to hear of the deaths of our Malaysian armed forces and policemen because of this, they sacrificed their lives for this country," he told a press conference after opening the Global Muslim Conference on Unity and Economy 2013 today.

Jamalul Kiram has staked an ancestral claim over Sabah and his men landed in Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu on Feb 12.

Fresh clashes in Semporna on Saturday, where five policemen were killed in an ambush by armed men in Kampung Sri Jaya, have brought the total death toll to 22, with seven of the dead from Malaysian armed forces and police.

Rumours of an uprising among resident Southern Filipinos in Sabah have also surfaced following incidents of violence between armed men and villagers in the Lahad Datu area, with an elderly Southern Philippines man having been beaten to death after trying to take villagers hostage.

Mahathir had on Sunday reportedly warned that the army may turn into guerrillas and launch sporadic attacks in the future.

"There is no other way than launching a counter-attack to eliminate the Sulu group," he had said at a Perkasa gathering in Perak.

Meanwhile, at the conference, the former prime minister encouraged Muslim countries to help each other out in spurring economic growth.

"Money will depreciate, so Muslim countries should invest in infrastructure, education and the people's welfare and also invest in other Muslim countries," he said. - source

Robin Padilla shows support for Sulu sultan

MANILA, Philippines—Action movie star Robin Padilla showed his support for embattled Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III by paying him a surprise visit at his home in Maharlika Village, Taguig City, Saturday afternoon. He gave the ailing Kiram a check for P500,000 for his medical needs.

Actor Robin Padilla kisses the hand of Sultan Jamalul Kiram III at the Kiram residence in Maharlika Village, Taguig.
Padilla told reporters he owed his conversion to Islam to the sultan, who introduced the Islamic faith to the actor while he was doing time in prison for illegal possession of guns.

Padilla immediately drew a crowd when he and a handful of companions arrived shortly after 2 p.m. by helicopter at the Blue Mosque, which is adjacent to the Sultan’s home.

He had an audience with Kiram for about 30 minutes discussing the plight in Sabah of the sultan’s brother and heir and 235 followers, 10 of whom were killed by Malaysian security forces Friday morning.

“Nakakalungkot kasi Muslim ang pumatay sa kapwa Muslim. Narito ako para maliwanagan (It is sad because Muslims killed fellow Muslims. I’m here to be enlightened),” the actor told reporters before he was ushered into the Kiram’s room.

“Marami akong tanong na kailangan ng sagot. Bakit pinayagan nating mapatay ang ating kapwa Pilipino (I have many questions that need answers. Why did we allow our fellow Filipinos to be killed)?” he added.

The actor sidestepped a questioned about the government’s call on Kiram’s followers to come home, saying the government should sit down with the Kirams as the sultanate of Sulu used to have relations with foreign governments at the height of its power long ago.

On whether he wants the sultanate’s crown prince, who leads the expedition now in Sabah, to come home, Padilla said given the circumstances, he would not say anything to dishearten the Royal Security Force.

“Nandito ako para mag-apela. Kapwa Pilipino na natin ang pinapatay doon. Ako nasasaktan ho bilang isang Muslim at isang Pilipino (I am here to make an appeal. Our fellow Filipinos are getting killed there. I am hurting as a Muslim and as a Filipino),” he said.

The sultan’s daughter, Jacel Kiram, told reporters later that Padilla expressed his support for the Sultan’s cause.

The actor also handed over a check for P500,000 to Kiram, saying the money was for his medical needs (the Sultan requires regular dialysis) and not for buying weapons. Kiram needs to undergo two kidney dialysis sessions every week. - source

Sabah Claim History


The sultanate was once one of the most powerful monarchies in the world, with warriors feared for their swordsmanship. Until the 19th century, the sultanate’s territory stretched from Sulu in southern Philippines to North Borneo in the northern margin of the South Pacific. But the sun has set on the sultanate, as the colonial powers retreated home with the arrival of modern times.

Tarsilah Brunei: Zaman Kegemilangan dan Kemasyhuran

Description

Penulis: Pehin Orang Kaya Amar Diraja Dato Seri Utama (Dr) Haji Awang Mohd. Jamil Al-Sufri
Penerbit: Pusat Sejarah Brunei
Tahun Terbitan: 1997
Muka Surat:
Binding: Kulit Nipis
ISBN


Buku ini adalah lanjutan daripada Tarsilah Brunei: Sejarah Awal dan Perkembangan Islam. Mengandungi 11 bab yang memuatkan sejarah Sultan-Sultan Brunei, bermula daripada Sultan Sulaiman (Sultan Brunei ke-4) hingga Sultan Abdul Jalilul Akbar (Sultan Brunei ke-10), di samping mencatatkan hubungan Brunei dengan beberapa buah Kerajaan Melayu di Nusantara seperti Jawa, Pahang, Sambas, dan Suluk.

Books >> Dr. Haji Awang Mohd. Jamil Al-Sufri

http://www.krafiti.com/Tarsilah-Brunei-Zaman-Kegemilangan-dan-Kemasyhuran_p_221.html

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Tarsilah-Brunei-Awang-Mohd-Al-Sufri/dp/9991734031

Muslims In The Philippines

Muslims In The Philippines

by Cesar Adib Majul

At bottom, the Muslim resistance against Spain in the Philippines was not an isolated or insignificant phenomenon but an essential part of the generaAt bottom, the Muslim resistance against Spain in the Philippines was not an isolated or insignificant phenomenon but an essential part of the general resistance of all Muslim peoples in Malaysia against Western Imperialism, colonialism, and Christianity. In an important sense, the sultanates were articulations of a wider social entity, the Islamic society in the Malaysian world. It is within this context that the history of Moro Wars should be seen to be better understood.


…History books in the Philippines tend to lay emphasis on events in other islands and glorify national heroes from such areas, as if the history of the Philippines is only that of people who had been conquered while the history of the unconquered ones does not merit a share in the history of the Philippines. Possibly, with greater tolerance, intensive scholarship on all levels, deeper and wider moral perspectives, and a greater appreciation of the concept and implications of a pluralistic society, a future generation of Filipinos would consider the struggle of the Muslim South as part of the struggle of the entire nation—and the epic exploits of its heroes may well be the nation’s heritage.

THE AUTHOR

CEZAR ADIB MAJUL was born in Aparri, Cagayan, Philippines, on October 21, 1923. He was educated at the University of the Philippines and Cornell University. From 1961 until 1966, he was Dean of the University College, University of the Philippines, and from 1969 until 1971, he was Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, University of the Philippines. He received the Republic Heritage Award for “the most outstanding contribution to Historical Writing during the period from May 1, 1960 to April 30, 1961” as well as the First Prize in the Biography Contest on the Life of Apolinario Mabini in 1964. From the University of the Philippines, he received the Distinguished Scholar Award in 1968.

His major works include The Political and Constitutional Ideas of the Philippine Revolution (1957, 1968, 1996), Mabini and the Philippine Revolution (1960, 1996), and Apolinario Mabini: Revolutionary (1964).(less)l resistance of all Muslim peoples in Malaysia against Western Imperialism, colonialism, and Christianity. In an important sense, the sultanates were articulations of a wider social entity, the Islamic society in the Malaysian world. It is within this context that the history of Moro Wars should be seen to be better understood.

His major works include The Political and Constitutional Ideas of the Philippine Revolution (1957, 1968, 1996), Mabini and the Philippine Revolution (1960, 1996), and Apolinario Mabini: Revolutionary (1964).

Lahad Datu Crisis Six more killed in Semporna

LAHAD DATU (March 3, 2013): A superintendent was killed and his two subordinates were seriously injured in an ambush by gunmen on Saturday at a village off the coast of Semporna in Sabah during a surveillance operation.


The incident occurred about 180km from another bloody confrontation at the village of Kampung Tanduo in Lahad Datu on Friday between Malaysian security forces and intruding gunmen from the south Philippines.

Sources said the senior police officer in his 40s, who was the third policeman to be killed in the clashes, was attached to the federal special branch in Bukit Aman.

Two other policemen suffered serious injuries. As at 9am today, it is learnt that the police party remained entrapped in the village surrounded by the gunmen.

Reinforcement police teams deployed to the village are attempting to penetrate the area to disarm the attackers.

The superintendent had led three dozen police personnel in an operation at Kampung Sri Jaya Siminul in Semporna.

There were also reports that one of the injured policemen had succumbed to his injuries Sunday morning.

(According to a report by Bernama at 12.43pm, Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Ismail Omar told reporters in Lahad Datu today that five policemen, one of them an officer, was killed in an ambush by armed intruders in Kampung Sri Jaya, Simunul, Semporna, Sabah, last night. He said two of the armed intruders were also killed.)

The operation in Semporna was launched at 4pm on Saturday following intelligence reports of the existence of a cache of firearms in the village, and that an uprising by certain groups of villagers believed to be of Southern Philippines origin and residing there was in the making.

About three hours into the operation, the team came under gunfire attack while it was scouring one village after another.

It is learnt that the superintendent who was the first to be hit by a hail of gunshots fired by hiding gunmen died moments later.

Sabah police commissioner DCP Datuk Hamza Taib had said on Saturday the attack may not be related to the Kampung Tanduo standoff.

Inspector General of Police Tan Sri Ismail Omar is expected to hold a press conference at 2pm today to update the media.

Sources from the Philippines authorities monitoring the Kampung Tanduo standoff said Friday's bloody clash that left 12 South Philippines gunmen dead may have provoked sentiments among their fellow followers living along the coastal villages between Tawau and Lahad Datu.

"These gunmen from the Sulu Sultanate are made up mainly of four tribes namely the Tausug, Majuindanao, Badjao and Samal. These tribes have great brotherhood among them and regardless of their nationalities, they will rise in show of loyalty to their ethnicity.

"It is no surprise if these tribes living in Malaysia join forces to fight the cause of their South Philippines counterparts.

"In South Philippines, these tribes also make up the bulk of MNLF and Abu Sayaf rebels, joining forces in an alliance of convenience to fight common causes. They are hardcore rebels who have battle in their blood and do not give up easily. It is not unusual for them fight to their death." said a source.

Friday's clash ended the 16-day standoff that began on Feb 12 with two police commandos of the General Operations Force elite VAT 69 killed and their three squad members severely injured.

The group of 150-odd Filipinos, supporters of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III who has staked an ancestral claim over Sabah, landed in Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu on Feb 12.

Kiram had said his supporters would only lay down their arms if the Philippines and Malaysia agreed to negotiate terms for the joint development of Sabah which the Sulu Sultanate once controlled before it was leased to the British in the 1870s and later became part of Malaysia. - source

Sabah Fighting Spreads

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Filipino gunmen ambushed and killed five Malaysian policemen as fears mounted that armed intruders from the southern Philippines had slipped into at least three coastal districts on Borneo island, officials said Sunday.


Two of the attackers were also fatally shot Saturday night, escalating tensions in eastern Sabah state, where Malaysia’s biggest security crisis in recent years began after about 200 members of a Philippine Muslim royal clan occupied a village last month to claim the territory as their own.

Security forces clashed with the clan members in the coastal area of Lahad Datu on Friday, leaving 12 Filipinos and two Malaysian police commandos dead.

The remaining clan members have refused to budge, while concerns have grown that other groups from the Philippines’ restive southern provinces might enter Sabah, which shares a long and porous sea border with the Philippines that’s difficult to patrol.

A police team was attacked late Saturday while inspecting a settlement in Semporna town, more than 150 kms from Lahad Datu, said national police chief Ismail Omar. Authorities were searching the area for more of the assailants.

Police are also investigating sightings of armed foreigners in military-style clothing in a third Sabah seaside district nearby, Ismail said.

It was not clear whether the groups in the three areas had links to each other.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said Saturday that the government would offer “no compromise — either they surrender or face the consequences if they refuse.”

Police dropped leaflets by helicopter over the occupied village Saturday telling the Filipinos to give up, while the navy bolstered patrols in waters between Malaysia and the Philippines.

Three of the intruders tried to escape late Saturday and were caught, Ismail said, without elaborating.

Sabah’s chief minister Musa Aman said the federal government has agreed to increase the size of the police and army force in Sabah.

Suspected followers of Rajah Muda Agbimuddin Kiram of the Sultanate of Sulu attacked a police station Saturday evening in Lahad Datu, Sabah, according to reports reaching Sultan Jamalul Kiram III and members of his clan at Astanah Kiram, Maharlika Village, Taguig City.

As the fighting raged, the sultan had lost contact with his brother rajah muda (crown prince).

Dayang-Dayang Jacel Kiram, a daughter of the sultan, said the last time the two brothers spoke with each other was at 2:30 p.m. on Feb. 2.

As of 10:30 a.m. yesterday, there was no new contact with the rajah muda, she said.

Angry Filipino settlers in Sabah, Malaysia, have reportedly overran the town of Semporna, Sabah, Malaysia, in the wake of the killing of a religious leader and his four sons by Malaysia authorities.

As early as Saturday evening text messages purportedly coming from Semporna, a small town in Sabah’s east coast and facing Lahad Datu, claimed that Imam Maas and his four sons were killed by members of the Malaysia Police General Operation Forces (GOF).

Abraham J. Idjirani, spokesman of the Sultanate of Sulu, formally announced this in a press conference yesterday shortly after noon time.

Idjirani also said that in the wake of the killing, Filipinos in Semporna reacted by taking over a police station and grabbing over 100 firearms.

In the process, he said the Filipinos, who have been living in Semporna for a long time, also captured two high-ranking military officers, one top-ranking police officer, and one high official of Semporna town.

Semporna overlooks Sipadan island, where Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) bandits some years ago kidnapped 21 foreigners, including Malaysians and made them hostages. Semporna means “place of rest.”

Idjirani made clear the attack on Semporna was not ordered by Sultan Jamalul Kiram III.

He said it was a reaction against the atrocities committed by the Malaysian authorities.

It appeared that the Malaysia’s GOF was looking for Datu Alianapia Kiram, a brother of the sultan, and Datu Amer Bahar Kiram, the sultan’s nephew.

The two have been living peacefully in Semporna for many years, said Idjirani, and were not part of the Sabah standoff.

Information relayed to the Sultanate of Sulu, he said, showed the Malaysian authorities were looking for the two datus at 7:50 p.m. Saturday, but did not find them.

When Imam Maas admitted that they were taking care of the datus, Idjirani said the Malaysian policemen gunned them down.

Idjirani said other information reaching them reported that Filipinos from Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, and Zamboanga Peninsula have penetrated the sea blockade by Malaysian and Philippine naval forces in the two countries’ respective borders.

They are now in Sabah and have even witnessed the burial of the 10 followers of Rajah Muda Agbimuddin Kiram, he said.

Idjirani said the Filipinos who overran Semporna and took four Malaysian officers captive are not part of the rajah muda’s Royal Security Force (RSF) involved in the standoff.

The sultan’s spokesman blamed Malaysia for the escalation of violence on Sabah island.

Meanwhile in Davao City, Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) chairman Nur Misuari denied any involvement in the recent standoff in Sabah, Malaysia.

Misuari denied his involvement during a late night meeting with Davao City Vice Mayor Rodrigo Duterte at the Royal Mandaya Hotel here on Saturday evening, March 2.

“They accused me of inspiring it,” Misuari said, adding that he was also suspected of giving finances to Kiram’s group.

“I was with my wife for almost a month in Africa. Malayo kami,” Misuari said during the meeting.

Besides, he added, he has no money to finance it. “Where will I get the money,” he added. (With reports from Edd K. Usman and Alexander D. Lopez) - source

Xiaopan OS 0.4.2.2 English Version


XiaopanOS is an easy to use software package for beginners and experts that includes a number of advanced hacking tools to penetrate wireless networks.

Download XiaoPan 0.4.2.2 English Version here

XiaoPan 0.4.2.2 Changelog
  • Added English as default language. XFE and Minidwep are now in English!
  • Changed resolution from 800 x 600 to 1024 x 768
  • Default TinyCore background
  • Added Black Background on boot
  • Added useful text documents for the following commands
Based on the Tiny Core Linux (TCL) operating system (OS), it has a slick graphical user interface (GUI) requiring no need for typing Linux commands. XiaopanOS is Windows, Mac and Linux compatible and users can simply install and boot this ~70mb OS through a USB pen drive or in a virtual machine (VM) environment.