• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Lahad Datu News Compilation Thread

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Friday, March 15, 2013

PM’s Department bungles defence of Sabah

ld-standoff3.jpg


A prime minister who resorts to silencing the rakyat with lies and obfuscation, does not deserve our vote.

No wonder Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak is jittery about his handling of the invasion of Lahad Datu. Part of the reason for Najib’s woeful delay in responding to the Suluk threat was because the Prime Minister’s Department (PMD) was responsible for monitoring the waters off Sabah’s east coast.

Did the PMD underestimate the severity of the Suluk threat? Did Najib hope the problem would go away, if he ignored it? We wrongly believed that the navy and the Ministry of Defence (MOD) were responsible for maritime surveillance and law enforcement.

Yesterday (March 14), Bernama reported that the Defence Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said that the monitoring of Sabah’s 1,400km coastline, previously under the PMD, had been transferred to his ministry and the Malaysian Royal Navy.

Zahid said, “I received this command last Friday in a letter given to me from Deputy Prime Minister [Tan Sri] Muhyiddin Yassin as the minister responsible for the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA).

“MMEA’s command in Sabah has been handed over to me [Defence Ministry], it is no longer under the PMD.”

Najib’s lack of leadership was compounded by a failure of the relevant minsters to act. Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein’s assertion that the Suluks were not terrorists was baffling. Both men deserve to be sacked. Then, Musa Aman, Sabah’s Chief Minister freely referred to the Suluks as terrorists. Our leaders can’t even agree on terminology and responded too late to an armed threat.

ld-standoff.jpg


To make matters worse, Najib imposed a news blackout, thus fuelling rumours. Instead of using the media to support our troops, to boost their morale and to reassure the nation, Najib’s news blackout appears to be selfishly motivated. He wanted to prevent criticism of his actions.

Najib and his ministers grappled with the issue, and transferred the problem from one to another, like passing an unwanted newborn baby that has suddenly been left at the doorstep.

Tactical advantage

While he and his inner circle prevaricated, the tactical advantage of containing the threat, while it was still small, was lost. Lives could have been saved if our leaders had acted with more conviction and with urgency.

Sabahans are deeply resentful of former prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s “Project M”, which allowed illegal immigrants to penetrate their community. The Sabahans were robbed of an identity because Mahathir worshipped power. Our government was lax and the foreigners became emboldened. The Suluk invasion was inevitable.

The Suluks appeared in news bulletins around Chinese New Year. Was the PMD caught off guard because of the extended weekend holiday? Najib was trying to manipulate Psy, into becoming a psychological weapon against the opposition, thus neglecting the insidious Suluk threat.

Why was the PMD, and not the MOD, in charge of Sabah’s extensive coastline?

Why are our borders porous despite the various agencies patrolling our waters – the Marine Police, the Marine Department, the Fisheries Department, the Ports and Harbours authorities, the MMEA?

When was the MMEA assigned to the PMD? Was it during Mahathir’s era?

Was the PMD in charge of these waters to facilitate the easy entry of illegal immigrants under Mahathir’s “Project M”? If human trafficking went unchallenged, were arms, drugs and other contraband, peddled along these entry and exit routes, too?

No border enforcement can ever be 100% watertight, but what caused the failure of our intelligence gathering services?

Silencing the rakyat

It was alleged that various Filipinos in Sabah got wind of the Suluk invasion days in advance of the invasion. When the armed forces were eventually deployed, there seemed to be an absence of tactical intelligence. Under Najib’s command, the military objective seems to be subordinate to the political objective.

Perhaps, Najib’s bloated PMD is too big to manage and there is little communication between the various sections under its purview.

Nazri Aziz, a Minister in the PMD, told Parliament that the PMD employed a mind-boggling 43,544 people in 2010 and that its “operating budget” was RM3.9 billion per year.

According to the Malaysia Insider, Liew Chin Tong, the MP for Bukit Bendera claimed that Nazri omitted to include RM8.2 billion which had been allocated for the PMD, under a separate category for “development”. So, in 2010, Najib’s PMD received RM12 billion.

Liew alleges that there has been a steep rise in the staffing levels of the PMD. During Mahathir’s tenure, the PMD grew from 4,414 people in 1981 to 9,673 in 2001. There was a meteoric rise to 21, 045 employees in 2003, which ballooned to 25,332 in 2009.

Najib seems to be trying to hide the failure of the PMD to identify the threat to national security posed by the Suluk invasion. He is also trying to distract us from the failure of his transformation programmes, and is playing on the emotions of select audiences who are made to watch the May-13 film, Tanda Putera.

When he appeared on TV3, Najib said, “That [attack on Lahad Datu and Semporna] is an external threat and we must deal with it. So, when we decide to spend on defence and security, people should not question it.”

The rakyat has every right to question our leaders for spending billions of ringgit on armaments, which appear to be overpriced and ineffective.

We certainly must question our leaders when it appears that the purchase price includes a heavy commission. A sum of RM1 billion was allegedly paid to the Defence Minister who purchased the Scorpene submarines.

We have a right to criticise our leaders for neglecting the Suluk threat and waiting 23 days before taking action. We condemn our leaders for depriving us of news when family and friends live and work in the area. We condemn Najib’s tactic of locking up opposition politicians who ask questions on our behalf.

When we criticise the failure of our leaders to handle the Suluk threat, we are not questioning the bravery of the security forces. A prime minister who resorts to silencing the rakyat with lies and obfuscation, does not deserve our vote.

Mariam Mokhtar is a FMT columnist.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

54027236.jpg


29012_10151510918591940_1527431327_n.jpg


A female terrorist (above) clad armed leopard is between 3 captures intruder was shot dead by commandos after they managed to locate 69. (Photo Ehsan VAT 69).


 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Saturday March 16, 2013

Lahad Datu: Probe into crackdown against immigrants

PETALING JAYA: The police are looking into allegations by the Philippine media that Malaysian security forces have acted aggressively towards immigrants from the Philippines during Ops Daulat.

Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail said in a statement that the Royal Malaysia Police are investigating all reports made regarding the intrusion of armed Sulu gunmen in Lahad Datu and Semporna and not just those relating to the treatment of immigrants from the Philippines.

“The Malaysian security forces have neither targeted nor launched a specific crackdown against immigrants from the Philippines.

“I acknowledge that there have been some immigrants who were apprehended during Ops Daulat.”

However, the apprehension of these immigrants was purely incidental to the on-going operations against the intrusion,” he said yesterday, adding that the total number of arrests made was 216.

Abdul Gani said that the Bar Council and the Sabah Law Association would work together to provide legal representation for anyone who was arrested or apprehended.

“Once investigation is complete and sufficient evidence is gathered, persons involved in the incidents in Sabah will be brought to justice and charged accordingly,” he said.

In PUTRAJAYA, Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said there was no need for a special dialogue with the Philippines on the Lahad Datu intrusion.

He said Malaysia, through Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Anifah Aman, had explained the incident in detail to Philippines Foreign Secretary Albert Del Rosario.

“Our Foreign Minister has had discussions with the Philippines Foreign Secretary on the matter.

“We will handle this matter through the diplomatic channels,” he told newsmen after announcing the recipient of the 12th National Laureate Award here yesterday.

Poet and writer Datuk Baharuddin Zainal, also known by his pseudonym Baha Zain, has been named 12th National Laureate.

Muhyiddin was asked on the suggestion by the Philippine media that both countries hold a dialogue to discuss the incident.

On Wednesday, Anifah briefed the diplomatic corps on the intrusion and said he had been in constant contact with Del Rosario on the matter.


 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Saturday March 16, 2013

Lahad Datu: Speedboat with eight Filipinos on board stopped

LAHAD DATU: A speedboat with eight Filipinos was intercepted by security forces as it tried to enter the restricted coastal area under Ops Daulat near Sungai Bilis.

The eight, aged between 17 and 29, who were carrying 300 empty jerry cans and 369,000 pesos (RM28,000) were detained at about 12.15am yesterday.

Sabah Police Commissioner Datuk Hamza Taib said no weapons were found on them and police were investigating if they were in any way linked to the Sulu armed group.

He said the eight did not have any identification papers and were being detained under the Immigration Act.

“If there were any indication that they were linked to the Sulu gunmen, they could also be investigated under the Security Ordinance and Special Measures Act 2012,” he said.

He also told the evening media briefing that three more bodies of the enemy were found in Kampung Tanduo and Sungai Nyamuk on Friday, bringing the total number of the Sulu gunmen killed so far to 61.

He said that if the Philippine Government did not respond to an official request to claim the bodies within three days, the Malaysian authorities would bury them according to their religious rites once identification was completed.

Army Division 1 Commander Maj-Gen Mohd Zaki Mokhtar told the media briefing that the operations to track down the remaining gunmen would be completed very soon.

Meanwhile, on the ground, the security forces were still being very cautious as the enemy had the advantage of hiding out in pairs or threes waiting for our soldiers.

It is believed that dozens of gunmen are still hiding out within the 10km radius covered by Ops Daulat.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Saturday March 16, 2013

Lahad Datu: Sulu terrorist leader Azimuddie may be in Tawi-Tawi

Reports by P.K. KATHARASON, MUGUNTAN VANAR, PHILIP GOLINGAI, SHAUN HO, STEPHANIE LEE, ZUHRIN AZAM AHMAD, NICHOLAS CHENG and EILEEN NG

azimuddie-lahad-datu-tawi-n04.jpg


Planning their next move: Security forces discussing their strategy in the front lines of Ops Daulat.

KOTA KINABALU: Sulu terrorist leader Azimuddie Kiram has fled to his native southern Philippines, Armed Forces Chief Tan Sri Zulkifeli Mohd Zin said.

He said security forces had come to this conclusion after vetting through various information.

“Azimuddie has abandoned his men and fled to his homeland,” Zulkifeli said in a joint media conference with Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Ismail Omar late yesterday.

Ismail said feedback from security forces' commanders on the ground had also indicated that Azimuddin was no longer with his men.

This comes as 35 gunmen face criminal charges after being apprehended in Tawi-Tawi waters three days ago by Filipino authorities while fleeing Ops Daulat.

Yesterday, Tawi-Tawi governor Sadikul Sahari said although Azzimudie was not among the 35, the armed group's leader remained a “wanted man” by the order of President Benigno Aquino.

“Our police and navy are on the lookout for him,” he said, declining to comment on talks that the 72-year-old was lying low in one of the many islands in the province.

Sadikul told The Star that another group of 50 Filipinos had reached Taganak island and were on their way to Bongoa.

“I do not know if they are from the battle area but I was told that they are ordinary Filipinos fleeing Sabah.”

There has been no sign of Azzimudie since the March 5 bombardment of Tanduo village, although his family members in Manila insisted that he was alive and was with his followers in the operations area.

Meanwhile, the Philippines' Justice Secretary Leila DeLima said among the charges brought against the 35 members of the so-called “Royal Sulu Army” was for inciting war.

She said cases of violations against the Election Gun Ban and Article 118 of the Revised Penal Code for Inciting to War or Giving Motives for Reprisals would be filed before the Bongao, Tawi-Tawi Regional Trial Court.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Saturday March 16, 2013

Lahad Datu: Azzimudie has not fled Sabah, Kiram family insists

By SHAUN HO

Abraham.jpg


LAHAD DATU: The Kiram family has refuted reports that Azzimudie Kiram, leader of the Sulu terrorist group, has fled Sabah.

"That is propaganda of Malaysia so as not to disturb their elections because their elections are nearing. It is a counter strategy," said Abraham Idjirani (pix), spokesman of the self-styled Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III.

"If Azzimudie is here (in the Philippines), he will only be arrested. I last spoke to him at 2pm (Friday) and he is still in Sabah."

Earlier, Armed Forces chief Tan Sri Jeneral Zulkifeli Mohd Zin said Azzimudie had fled to his native southern Philippines.

He said security forces had come to this conclusion after vetting through information received and intelligence.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal
Saturday March 16, 2013

Lahad Datu: Follow money trail to find source of intrusion, advises Dr M

<iframe src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/tv2GDrzD1b0?rel=0" allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="315" width="420"></iframe>

KUALA LUMPUR: The root cause of the Sulu invasion can be discovered by following the money trail to whoever funded the group, said Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad.

The former prime minister said the self-styled Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III should have had financiers.

“All operations cost money. If you are completely bankrupt, I don't think you can mount an invasion. So where does the money come from?

“I don't think the alleged Sultan of Sulu is a rich man. According to the Philippine government, he is a very poor man. Somebody I think, thinks that an engagement of that kind can be of some benefit to them. So that is a question I personally would ask, and I think lots of people, including the police, would want to know where the money is coming from,” he said.

Dr Mahathir reiterated that the self-styled Sulu sultanate had no legitimate hold on Sabah and dispelled the annual “rental fee” paid by the Federal Government as means for a claim.

“Even today, the Federal Government is paying RM10,000 to the Kedah government for the lease of Penang and Province Wellesley (the old name of Prai). Not that it is something that we must do but this is just to show that when we enter into any agreement, we honour that agreement.

“Sabah was a lease that was inherited by us and we continue to pay the lease but it does not give anybody the right to the land,” he said.

When asked by reporters whether there was a need to establish a Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) into the Lahad Datu intrusions, Dr Mahathir said it could be done.

“We have a very open government. If people clear it, they can set up a commission like this. They have all the evidence,” he said after handing a cheque to deputy Inspector-General of Police Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar at Yayasan Al-Bukhary.

The RM80,000 cheque from Perdana Global Peace Foundation will go to the families of the fallen heroes killed in Lahad Datu.
 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Published: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 12:15:00 PM
Updated: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 8:51:03 PM

Lahad Datu: Where is Azzimudie?

By SHAUN HO

lahad-datu-ops-daulat-logo-thumb.jpg


LAHAD DATU: Police believe that Azzimudie Kiram, leader of the Sulu gunmen, has fled to the Philippines but do not discount the possibility that he may be still lurking in Sabah, according to Sabah police commissioner Datuk Hamza Taib during a Saturday evening press conference.

“We will still continue operations and we will catch him if he is still here,” he told reporters.

He appeared to have backed away from his earlier certainty that Azzimudie had fled this week, possibly to one of islands off Tawi-Tawi.

The Kiram family has consistently held that their fighter was still in Sabah.

In the Saturday morning press conference, he said Malaysia would seek to extradite him from the Philippines to face charges here.

"We have begun investigations and will compile evidence to extradite him to mainland Malaysia to face charges," he had said.

The Philippine navy detained 35 gunmen on Wednesday in Tawi-Tawi waters but stated that Azzimudie was not among them.

"But even so, it does not matter to me. We have begun investigations under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act and we will compile evidence to extradite him to Malaysia to face charges.

"We will deal with him according to our laws. I have never trusted what Jamalul Kiram has said from day one," said Comm Hamza.

He added that the authorities estimated less than 50 of the Sulu gunmen remained in the area.

Army Division 1 Commander Maj-Gen Zaki Mokhtar said mopping up efforts were now focused in the Tanjung Batu area.

In the evening press conference, Comm Hamza said that security forces had cleaned up and secured Kg Tanduo and Sg Nyamuk.

He said there were no signs that the enemy was occupying the area.

"We have stationed a team there to make sure they do not enter the area again," he said.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Published: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 2:08:00 PM

Lahad Datu: Indonesian workers in affected areas moved to safer ground


LAHAD DATU: The 193 Indonesian workers in the Felda Sahabat areas affected by Ops Daulat have been moved to safer ground.

The Indonesian consul general in Kota Kinabalu, Soepeno Sahid, said all of them were in good condition and had not asked to be sent home.

"I am satisfied with the fast action taken by the Malaysian government in handling the Lahad Datu crisis and in evacuation of our nationals following the incident," he said at a press conference at the media center at Felda Sahabat.

"We will be visiting them on Saturday and will provide assistance in forms of essential items through Felda's management," he added.

He said there were a total of 10,045 Indonesian nationals working in Felda Sahabat.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Published: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 3:59:00 PM
Updated: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 7:50:36 PM

Lahad Datu: Malaysia to seek info from Philippine govt over intrusion

lahad-datu-ops-daulat-logo-thumb.jpg


MUAR: Malaysia will seek information from the Philippine government on a claim that an opposition figure had financed the intrusion of Jamalul Kiram's followers into Lahad Datu, Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said on Saturday.

He said he had read the statement issued by Philippine Defence Secretary Voltaire T. Gazmin stating that there was possibly evidence to link the Lahad Datu intrusion to the opposition there.

"We hope they will provide us with detailed information through diplomatic channels, the Foreign Ministry, for us to know the truth," he told a news conference after launching the "Hello Commodity" programme at the Pagoh Sports Complex, here.

He said the intrusion was a critical matter and he hoped that the Philippine government would take firm action against the culprits if it had the evidence.

"It is important that we also want to know if anyone in Malaysia is linked to the incident. We will know the truth if we have a copy of the report.

"We know that the terrorists do not have the capacity to carry out the intrusion, but they were using modern arms," he said.

Muhyiddin, who is the MP for Pagoh, said the government would take firm action against those in Malaysia proven to have had a hand in the intrusion. - Bernama


 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Published: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 5:03:00 PM
Updated: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 7:41:56 PM

Lahad Datu: Karpal asks A-G to seek review of cessation payment for Sabah
By SIMREN KAUR

karpal-singh-dap.jpg


GEORGE TOWN: DAP national chairman and veteran lawyer Karpal Singh (pic) is calling upon the Attorney-General Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail to immediately file the necessary court application to review the cessation payment for Sabah.

“With the passage of time and with Sabah having joined Malaysia as a sovereign state by having ambassadorial level representation in the country, it clearly means that the Philippines cannot lay any claim to Sabah,” said Karpal.

Under a High Court of North Borneo order in 1938, the Malaysian government pays a cessation of RM5,300 a year for Sabah, which is given to the heirs of the sultan of Sulu.

“The continued annual cessation payment pursuant to the order of the High Court of Borneo requires review to discontinue the payment. This can be done by the High Court in Kota Kinabalu,” he said.

“It is my view that the cessation payment constitutes a fit and proper case for the High Court in Kota Kinabalu to review the 1938 decision and order that the cessation payment be discontinued immediately,” he said.

“As an independent country, we should not be paying lease money. By paying, we are accepting that we are not independent,” he said.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Published: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 9:35:00 PM
Updated: Saturday March 16, 2013 MYT 9:39:50 PM

Lahad Datu: Foreign media can get info at Felda Sahabat media centre, says Zahid

BAGAN DATOH: Foreign media representatives, especially those from the Philippines, are allowed access to the media centre at Felda Sahabat in Lahad Datu, Sabah to obtain updates on the latest development there.

Defence Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said, in addition, the armed forces or police could accompany them to the operations area to get the 'real picture', in the light of accusations of cruelty and human rights denial against the terrorists.

"I will discuss with the foreign minister, Wisma Putra and police to permit the Embassy of the Philippines in Kuala Lumpur and consulate to visit those who are detained, upon completion of interrogation," he said.

He was speaking to reporters after handing over 120 computers for Tamil, Chinese and selected schools in Perak here on Saturday.

On Saturday, news portal the Philippines Daily Inquirer reported that Malaysia stopped a Philippine humanitarian team and the Philippine media from gaining access to Filipinos detained in an evacuation centre in Lahad Datu, Sabah.

On the latest development in Lahad Datu, Ahmad Zahid said, the terrorists were in a desperate situation and had run out of food after being surrounded in a small area.

"Their leader has abandoned them, their morale is extremely low now and the communities in Sabah are not supporting their action.

“This means they are not getting information and the moral support of the Sulu people in Sabah," he added.

The minister said, the development had made the terrorists so desperate that they even resorted to stealing food from a 'kongsi' house and food outlets.

"We hope the local communities exercise more care because they (the terrorists) are hungry and their actions could be more aggressive.

"This is also because the Philippine Government has given us very good cooperation. The Philippines will also provide us with information on the 35 people who were detained by its coast guards and navy recently," he said.

He said, Malaysia would share information and other details with the Philippine Government on the detainees and stooges of the terrorists, who were detained after 28 days to facilitate investigation. - Bernama

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Karpal: Stop payments to Sulus
Athi Shankar | March 16, 2013

Veteran lawyer urges the Attorney General to obtain a High Court order in Kota Kinabalu to discontinue cessation payments to heirs of the Sulu sultan over Sabah

karpal.jpg


GEORGE TOWN: The DAP has urged the Attorney General Abdul Gani Patail to obtain a High Court order in Kota Kinabalu to discontinue Malaysia’s cessation payment to heirs of Sultan Sulu over Sabah.

Chairman Karpal Singh called on Gani, who hails from Sabah, to spring to action immediately and file the necessary application as public interests demanded him to do so.

Senior parliamentarian Karpal noted that the cessation payment was on the authority of a 1938 order by then High Court of North Borneo. The order allowed a petition of nine Sulu heirs to receive and share among themselves RM5,000, or now RM5,300, as annual payment.

The 1938 order actually has reinforced the payment that commenced very much earlier when the British took over Sabah. Kadir Mohamad, agent for Malaysia in the ICJ case between Malaysia and Indonesia, said that Kuala Lumpur needed to continue honouring the 1938 judgment on the ground that any violation of that order can be challenged in court by interested parties.

Karpal conceded that a court order must be complied with unless it was set aside judicially. “Contravention of a court order amounts to contempt of court and is punishable by committal to prison,” said Karpal, a veteran lawyer.

But, he said with the passage of time and with Sabah having joined Sarawak and Peninsular to form Malaysia, and recognition by Manila of Malaysia as a sovereign state by having ambassadorial level representation in the country, the Philippines cannot lay any claim to Sabah.

He said Malaysia was internationally recognised with Sabah as a sovereign state in the Federation of Malaysia since the North Borneo territory opted to join Malaysia on Aug 31, 1963.

“It’s ridiculous to continue paying the Sulu heirs when Malaysia and Sabah are independent and sovereign states,” Karpal told newsmen during a routine visit to his Bukit Gelugor parliamentary constituency here today.

‘Respect sacrifices of our forces’

He said the cessation payment was different from the “annual royalty” being paid by Penang to Kedah, as both these provinces were part of a sovereign Malaysia.

He said the fact that the payment has been continuously made for 131 years does not mean, having regard to passage of time and change of circumstances, that the case cannot be reopened with a view to the payment to be discontinued.

karpal-pc.jpg


He stressed that the continued annual cessation payment pursuant to the 1938 order required review to discontinue the payment and this can be done by the High Court in Kota Kinabalu.

He referred to a 2011 Federal Court decision on Harcharan Singh Piara Singh vs Public Prosecutor where unanimously ruled that a a court of first instance, including High Court, must be equipped with residual jurisdiction to rehear and reopen its own earlier decision in a fit and proper case.

He said that the cessation payment constitutes a fit and proper case for the High Court in Kota Kinabalu to review the 1938 decision and order it to be discontinued.

“The country’s sovereign should not be allowed to be compromised in any way. The sovereignty should and must stand pristine,” stressed the DAP supremo.

On the sedition charge against PKR vice-president Tian Chua for allegedly making statements linking the federal government to the Lahad Datu shooting, Karpal acknowledged that the Batu MP had denied making such remarks.

But, he stressed that the DAP stand was clear that no one should make a statement insulting the armed forces, especially when they were defending the nation’s independence and sovereignty against alien forces.

He said the DAP stand was that all Malaysians should stand united against intrusions by foreign forces.

“The DAP is united against any intrusions. The sacrifices of the armed forces must be respected, appreciated and honoured by all Malaysians. It’s wrong to insult the role of armed forces,” said Karpal.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Police want Kiram extradited
March 16, 2013

Police are seeking to extradite Sulu terrorist chief Azzimudie Kiram from the Philippines to answer charges in Malaysia

Azzimudie-Kiram-hamza-taib.jpg


LAHAD DATU: The police will have Sulu terrorist chief Azzimudie Kiram or Agbimuddin extradited from the Philippines to face prosecution in Malaysia, said Sabah Police Commissioner Hamza Taib.

He said Azzimudie, as mentioned by Inspector-General of Police Ismail Omar, had led the Sulu intrusion in Lahad Datu and was now believed to be back in the Philippines.

“Even if he is there (in the Philippines), we do not face any problem because we have undertaken an investigation under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012 against those under detention.

“We will compile the evidence and use the legal channel to have Azzimudie extradited to face charges in our country,” he told a news conference at the Felda Sahabat plantation, near here.

Ismail and Chief of Defence Forces Gen Tan Sri Zulkifeli Mohd Zin, at a joint news conference in Kota Kinabalu yesterday, said Azzimudie is believed to have fled to the Philippines.

Meanwhile, security forces picked up an unarmed Sulu terrorist in the Ops Daulat offensive zone at the Felda Sahabat plantation at 6.30 am today and believe less than 50 terrorists are still there.

Hamza, who disclosed this at the news conference, said the detained terrorist, who had no identification papers on him, was taken to the police station for questioning.

He said the terrorist was held under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012, but he did not reveal the exact location where he was picked up. So far 104 individuals had been arrested under the act while 232 people were being held under different laws.

Hamza said 61 terrorists had been killed since March 1 when the terrorists killed two policemen. Six more policemen and two soldiers have also been killed in clashes with the terrorists.

The government launched the Ops Daulat offensive on March 5 after the terrorists, who rejected a negotiated settlement of their intrusion into Sabah on Feb 12, started attacking the security forces.

Hamza said the security forces’ mopping-up exercise in Kampung Tanjung Batu was expected to be completed by tomorrow. He advised villagers and newsmen against entering the village as it was suspected that the terrorists were moving about in small groups.

“We need the cooperation of the people in channelling information to the security forces so that we can eliminate the remaining terrorists,” he said. Hamza said the security forces were also working to remove 10 bodies of terrorists still in the village.

He explained that only 15 terrorists were killed by security forces in a clash in Kampung Tanduo on March 1, and not 27 as reported by some media today.

“On March 1, twelve terrorists were killed in a clash. During the mopping-up exercise, we came across three more bodies, raising to 15 the number killed on that day,” he said.

– Bernama

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Another black eye for Malaysian security
Thomas Pi | March 16, 2013

Malaysians are puzzled by how Sulu terrorist leader Agbimuddin Kiram had escaped the enforced security dragnet by the joint securities forces.

Lahad-Datu-Standoff-300x202.jpg


LAHAD DATU: The gaping holes in Malaysia’s defence has again been dazzlingly exposed by a ragtag band of “terrorists” this time escaping a dragnet operation that turned out to be leaky yet again.

The embarrassing escape of Agbimuddin Kiram, the man wanted by security forces for leading a group of armed men from the Southern Philippines on an invasion of Sabah has left many flummoxed by the ease with which he had left the country in much the same way he had come in.

Police say the 72-year-old leader of the Sulu group probably escaped from their mop-up operations code named Ops Daulat a few days ago, leaving behind a small number of gunmen to do the fighting in and around Tanjung Labian.

Agbimuddin is believed to have been smuggled out of Sabah waters to Simunul, one of the islands in Tawi Tawi province, and is keeping a low profile.

This is the third time Malaysian security forces appear to have been outsmarted by Agbimuddin and his armed group who had slipped into Sabah undetected between Feb 9-12 and then escaped the cordon thrown around Kampung Tanduo which they had occupied since then till March 4.

While the Philippines navy has said that it had intercepted in Tawi-Tawi waters two boats with about 35 men, one of them wounded, packed onboard fleeing Sabah on Wednesday, it was not known if he was among the group.

Both the Inspector General of Police Ismail Omar and Armed Force Chief Zulkifeli Mohd Zin have, however, confirmed that he has escaped and is now back in the southern Philippines.

They added that based on intelligence and information received they could not tell how he managed to escape the security dragnet.

Meanwhile, Tawi-Tawi governor Sadikul Sahari said yesterday Agbimuddin was not among the 35 but the Sulu leader remains a wanted man by order of the President Benigno Aquino.

“Our police and navy are on the look out for him. If he appears, he will surely be arrested,” he said declining to comment on talk that Agbimuddin could be lying low with relatives in on the island of Simunul in Tawi-Tawi province.

Gunmen charged

Sadikul said that about 50 more Filipinos had reached Taganak island yesterday and were on their way to Bongoa island, the administrative capital of the province. “I do not know if they were from the battle area but I was told that they are ordinary Filipinos fleeing Sabah,” he added.

Agbimuddin vanished from sight after the March 5 bombardment of Kg Tanduo. While there has been no direct contact with him, his family members in Manila have insisted he is alive and still with his followers.

Meanwhile, the Philippines’ Justice Department has booked the 35 gunmen of the so called ‘Royal Sulu Army’ on various criminal charges including inciting war.

She said the cases against them under the violation of the Election Gun Ban and violation of Article 118 of the Revised Penal Code for Inciting to War or Giving Motives for reprisals would be filed before the Bongao, Tawi-Tawi Regional Trial Court.

The department’s secretary Leila DeLima said an informal investigation or inquest proceeding has been instituted against the 35 was held on Thursday evening.

Such investigations are conducted following any arrest without warrant to determine whether that person should remain in custody and be charged in court. The 35 have been detained in a naval facility in Tawi-Tawi.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Evidence shows Sulu militant leader still in Sabah, say cops
UPDATED @ 04:30:30 PM 16-03-2013

MARCH 16, 2013

troops-march16.jpg


File photo of soldiers on guard in Sungai Nyamuk, a village adjacent to Kampung Tanduo where troops stormed the camp of the armed Filipino group, in Lahad Datu. — Reuters pic

KUALA LUMPUR, March 16 — There is no sign Agbimuddin Kiram has fled Sabah, state police chief Datuk Hamza Taib said today, contradicting yesterday’s statement by the armed forces chief that the Filipino militant leader had returned to his home in the southern Philippines.

Hamza said the earlier report was only a forecast, adding that Agbimuddin was probably still holed up in Lahad Datu where the self-proclaimed Sulu sultanate crown prince had landed with some 200 followers last month to claim ownership of Sabah.

“But, assuming he is in southern Philippines, this clearly shows he is an irresponsible person for leaving his followers here to face the security forces,” Hamza said on television channel TV3’s “Malaysia Hari Ini” (MHI) programme, according to a report by national news agency Bernama.

Citing military intelligence reports, Armed Forces chief Gen Tan Sri Zulkifeli Mohd Zin told The Star Online news portal yesterday that Agbimuddin had abandoned his men in Sabah and hotfooted it home alone to the republic’s Muslim-dominant south.

Agbimuddin is the brother of the self-proclaimed Sulu “Sultan” Jamalul Kiram III.

On February 9, the “royal” Sulu army led by Agbimuddin, who is also the self-proclaimed “crown prince” of Sulu, landed in Sabah’s coastal Lahad Datu township to lay claim over the north Borneo territory.

Attempts to resolve the conflict peacefully failed despite intervention from the Philippine government, sparking the first round of clashes between Malaysian security forces and the Sulu gunmen on March 1.

According to Bernama, Hamza said the security forces were now focusing on flushing out gunmen hiding in Kampung Tanjung Batu after completing their sweep of Sungai Nyamuk and Kampung Tanduo along Sabah’s restive east coast.

“If today we can clean up Tanjung Batu, insya Allah, we can then say Kampung Tanduo, Kampung Sungai Nyamuk and Kampung Tanjung Batu are clear,” the Sabah police chief said.

He said security forces will still be placed at the three areas as a precautionary measure.

He also said his men had only shot dead 15 Filipino militants in clashes at Kampung Tanduo last March 1 and not 27 as reported by some newspapers today.

Malaysia launched Ops Daulat three weeks after the gunmen landed, kicking off the assault with an aerial strike of bombs and heavy artillery fire before dispatching its ground troops to make a clean sweep of the coastal villages in Lahad Datu where Agbimuddin and his men were hiding.

But the elusive Agbimuddin and his men slipped out of sight, and are believed to be receiving aid from local villagers in the area, some of whom have been detained for questioning.

His kinsmen in the Philippines have also claimed in the media that the rebel leader contacted them several times over the past week to inform them he was still safe and unharmed.

Last Thursday, the Kiram clan called for a ceasefire but refused to pull its army from Lahad Datu.

In response, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak rejected the request, telling the gunmen to surrender unconditionally instead or face death.

To date, 56 Sulu gunmen have been shot dead in separate skirmishes, while the Malaysian security forces have lost 10 men — eight policemen and two soldiers. A teenage boy, whose identity is unknown, was also shot dead on Day 6 of Ops Daulat.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Leader of Malaysia incursion has fled–reports

Agence France-Presse
12:34 pm | Saturday, March 16th, 2013

KUALA LUMPUR – The leader of a band of Filipino militants whose incursion in Malaysia has left scores dead has reportedly fled even as his own family insist he is still in the country.

More than 200 followers of a self-proclaimed Filipino sultan entered Sabah on Borneo island a month ago to resurrect long-dormant land claims by Jamalul Kiram III.

Malaysian forces launched a military assault on March 5 against the group, sending them fleeing from a farming village where they had been holed up.

Armed Forces chief Zulkifeli Zin said intelligence reports showed that Agbimuddin Kiram, whose family says is the crown prince of the Sulu sultanate, had managed to evade security forces and slip out of Malaysia.

“(He) has abandoned his men and fled to his homeland,” Zulkifeli was quoted by local media as saying late Friday. But his family has denied the man, the younger brother of the self-styled sultan, had left Malaysia.

When asked about the armed forces chief’s comments, the clan’s Manila spokesman Abraham Idjirani told AFP: “That’s not true.”

The New Straits Times reported that Kiram is believed to have slipped out of the farming area, surrounded by Malaysian security forces, by blending in with the local population before the military attack earlier this month.

According to the latest police figures, 61 suspected militants have been killed in Malaysia’s biggest security crisis in years. Eight police officers and a soldier have also died.
Authorities have arrested more than 100 people on suspicion of having links to the militants.

The Philippines navy said on Wednesday it had detained 35 suspected Filipino militants as they tried to sail home. The group reportedly did not include Kiram.

A total of 800,000 Filipinos live in Sabah, making up about a quarter of the population of the state, which is just a short boat ride from the southern Philippines.

The crisis has embarrassed the Philippines and Malaysia, shining the spotlight on the latter’s porous shoreline and locals’ complaints of rampant illegal immigration and lawlessness.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

PH mission, media barred from Sabah evacuation center

By Nikko Dizon, Tina G. Santos
Philippine Daily Inquirer
4:41 am | Saturday, March 16th, 2013

LAHAD DATU—Malaysian guards on Friday rebuffed an attempt by a Philippine humanitarian mission to talk with Filipinos detained in the wake of the Sabah dispute, saying the group needed a written permission from Kuala Lumpur.

Elsewhere, Sabah police arrested eight Filipinos who sailed into the disputed territory carrying 300 water gallons and cash amounting to P369,000.

At the Cenderawasih gym here, the Malaysian security personnel demanded that the five-man humanitarian and consular assistance team (HCAT) dispatched by the Philippine government first show a permit before they can get in. The Filipino team was comprised of diplomats.

Cenderawasih is located at Felda Sahabat, a vast palm oil plantation where most of the fighting between the so-called “royal army” of the sultanate of Sulu and the Malaysian security forces has erupted.

Two of the diplomats spoke with the official in charge of the evacuation center, asking if the team could go inside. “I told him that we just want to send food and water to the Filipino evacuees. He said we should first submit a written permission from their government,” one of the HCAT members told Filipino reporters covering the Sabah crisis.

Turned away again

The Sulu sultanate has a long-standing territorial claim to Sabah, the former British North Borneo, which was federated into Malaysia in 1963. The Inquirer and news teams from GMA 7 and ABS-CBN networks were with the humanitarian mission outside the gate, hoping to get access to the detained Filipinos.

Turned away, the group drove to Embara Budi, 10 minutes away, to also try to get into the evacuation center there. But they were also stopped by a police checkpoint on a street leading to the evacuation center. No explanation was given.

ABS-CBN’s Henry Omaga-Diaz reported that the Filipino diplomats in Tawau also could not openly provide consular assistance to the Filipinos there because they had no permission from the Malaysian government.

Last Tuesday, the INQUIRER and GMA 7 teams were allowed inside the Embara Budi evacuation center only to take footages but not to interview the evacuees.
Investigation going on

Last Monday, the HCAT “found a way to enter” Cenderawasih but was asked to leave after a few minutes, one diplomat said. The team was able to take photographs and talk to some Filipinos who told them they were given adequate food and medical supplies. They were mostly residents of villages where fighting had taken place.

The Malaysia Daily newspaper earlier reported Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Amab as saying that Malaysia could not grant Philippine officials “legal access” to the Filipinos arrested because “the investigation on suspicions that they provided help or security information to the terrorists is continuing.”

Elsewhere, eight male Filipinos carrying water gallons and cash were arrested shortly after midnight on Friday in Sungai Bilis village in Felda Sahabat. Sabah Police Commissioner Hamza Taib said the authorities were investigating why the men came to Sabah’s east coast.

More bodies

The eight Filipinos, aged from 17 to 29, were arrested at around 12:15 a.m. after they arrived on a speedboat, Hamza said at a press conference. Malaysia’s Security Operations Act, widely criticized by the international community, allows the government to detain suspects for 28 days without trial.

The Philippine government has not been granted access to the nearly 100 Filipinos arrested on suspicion they were abetting the group of Rajah Mudah Agbimuddin Kiram, the leader of a group that recently went to Sabah claiming the territory belonged to the Sulu sultanate.

Hamza said the death toll in Kiram’s group was now 61, with the discovery of 15 bodies in three graves in the village of Tanduao. He said about 10 more bodies could be retrieved in the village of Tanjung Batu.

Hamza said that following a postmortem on the bodies, Malaysia would call the Philippine authorities and ask if they would want to collect the bodies. If there was no response within three days from the Philippines, the Malaysian government would bury the dead.

‘No conspiracy’

In Manila, Abraham Idjirani, a spokesperson for Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, told reporters after meeting with officials of the National Bureau of Investigation that he was asked to narrate the events surrounding the Sabah incursion.

He said the NBI questioned him about the possible collusion of some personalities in the episode. “I maintained no conspiracy and no financier,” Idjirani said.

3rd party inquiry

Sen. Miriam Defensor-Santiago proposed that the Philippines and Malaysia agree on a third party to conduct an inquiry on the spate of violence in Sabah to avoid further bloodshed. Santiago also commended President Benigno Aquino III for his “sober and prudent” strategy on the issue.

“I commend him (Aquino) for his caution… You cannot just run to war on an emotional burst of energy. You have to consider all aspects, particularly the world public opinion,” she told reporters on the sidelines of the convention of the Association of Nursing Service Administrators of the Philippines.

Santiago said that if necessary, she would file a resolution in the Senate proposing that the Philippines invite Malaysia to agree on the entry of a third party to conduct an inquiry “on the alleged violent acts” that had occurred in Sabah.

She said Malaysia’s move to expel Filipinos from Sabah before any talks on settling the dispute “appears to be unacceptable under international law.”

Limited force

In her speech, Santiago said the Philippines may use “limited force” against Malaysia if the lives of Filipinos caught in the middle were in danger. While the use of force is prohibited under international law, there are certain conditions that allow a state to use limited force to protect its nationals, she said.

In Malacañang, presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said measures were in place to protect Filipinos in Sabah and render humanitarian assistance to those who have returned to Sulu.

“Our main concern is the 800,000 Filipinos in Sabah,” Lacierda said. “For those under the custody of the Malaysian authorities, we continue to ask for consular access. It is the reason why the Philippine Embassy has people on the ground in Lahad Datu.”

Social Welfare Secretary Dinky Soliman confirmed that Manila had sent a “rapid response team” to Sabah composed of Foreign Undersecretary Jesus Yabes and Social Welfare Undersecretary Paris Taradji.

With reports from Michael Lim Ubac and Nancy C. Carvajal

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Published: Sunday March 17, 2013 MYT 12:24:00 PM
Updated: Sunday March 17, 2013 MYT 7:47:41 PM

Lahad Datu: Gunman shot dead as fighting shatters four-day lull under Ops Daulat
By SHAUN HO

SABAH-IN-CONFLICT.jpg


LAHAD DATU: A gun battle on Sunday between security forces and remnants of the Sulu gunmen shattered several days of lull under the Ops Daulat operations.

Security forces killed another gunman at about 10.15am following skirmishes in Kg Tanjung Batu here, said Army field commander Lt Gen Datuk Seri Zulkiple Kassim.

"We believe they are still in the area and we have surrounded it," he told reporters at Felda Sahabat 16.

No casualty was reported on the side of the security forces.

The last gunfight occurred on Tuesday when a soldier was killed and another injured along with three gunmen shot dead near Sungai Nyamuk not far Kg Tanjung Batu.

Sabah Commissioner of Police Datuk Hamza Taib said a man detained in Semporna for suspected links with the Sulu gunmen has died due to illness and not from suicide as was reported in a daily.

He said police are still establishing if the 104 detainees, some believed to be members of the self-styled Sulu Sultanate, held under the Special Ordinance and Security Measures Act 2012 have links to the gunmen.

He said the incendiary family's members were in the country under assumed names and used different identities in the Philippines.

 

MidnightSun

Alfrescian
Loyal

Published: Sunday March 17, 2013 MYT 10:20:00 PM

Lahad Datu: Autopsies done on 22 of 28 bodies of terrorists, says Hamza

LAHAD DATU: Sabah Police Commissioner Datuk Hamza Taib said post mortems had been conducted 22 of the 28 bodies of terrorists brought out from areas under "Ops Daulat".

The bodies included that of a terrorist who was shot in a shootout in Kampung Tanjung Batu on Sunday, he told a media conference which was jointly held with Army First Infantry Division commander Major-General Datuk Ahmad Zaki Mokhtar at Felda Sahabat 16 near here about 5.30pm.

Malaysia had given the Philippines three days, in line with the Geneva Convention, to claim the bodies of their citizens killed in the "Ops Daulat" offensive against Sulu terrorists who had intruded into Sabah on Feb 12.

The deadline ended Sunday with no response from Manila.

Hamza said he did not rule out the possibility that the terrorists had escaped to Pulau Tambisan, about 100 km from Felda Sahabat.

However, he said, the security forces had tightened patrols at all strategic areas.

He said he was optimistic that the operation to flush out the remaining terrorists in Kampung Tanjung Batu would be completed Monday, following which the security team would focus on areas in Tanjung Labian and Sungai Bilis.

So far, 62 terrorists had been killed, 104 detained under the Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012 and 241 people, including nine who were arrested Saturday and Sunday, for being in the "Ops Daulat" red zone area and other offences. - Bernama

 
Top