MANILA (1st UPDATE) - A cousin of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram has
reportedly been arrested by Malaysian police in the island of Sabah,
Malaysia.
Salib Asaral, the sultan's cousin, is currently detained in the town
of Lahad Datu, where over a hundred of the sultan's followers arrived by
sea last February 9 to claim the island.
The Philippines has sent a mercy ship to pick up scores of followers
of Kiram who entered the Malaysian state of Sabah to press his
territorial claims.
The "humanitarian ship" departed the southern-most Philippine island
province of Tawi-Tawi before midnight and headed to Lahad Datu on Borneo
island, where dozens of followers of Kiram have been locked in a tense
stand-off with Malaysian authorities for two weeks.
The Filipinos have been holed up in a small coastal area of Lahad
Datu town, where they have remained surrounded by security forces since
February 12 as they pursue their claim to settle in the state, which
used to be a part of the Sultanate of Sulu.
"As we have stated on countless occasions previously, we call on the
entire group to go back to their homes and families, even at the same
time, we are addressing the core issues they have raised," Philippines
Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario said in a statement on Sunday.
"Please do so for your own safety," he added.
Aboard the mercy ship were Filipino Muslim leaders, social workers
and medical personnel, del Rosario's statement said, stressing that the
government "was deeply concerned" about the presence of women among the
group.
The Philippines informed Malaysia through its embassy in Manila of the move on Saturday, it added.
Del Rosario's statement said the group numbered some 180, with 30
armed escorts, although the sultan's spokesman, Abraham Idjirani, last
week put the figure at 400, including 20 bearing arms.
Idjirani said the sultan had given the Filipinos his blessing to
reside in Sabah and they were determined to resist efforts to expel
them.
The Islamic Sultanate of Sulu once controlled parts of Borneo,
including the site of the stand-off, as well as southern Philippine
islands.
The sultanate leased northern Borneo to Europeans in the 1870s. While
the sultanate's authority gradually faded as Western colonial powers
exerted their influence over the region, it continued to receive lease
payments for Sabah.
Heirs to the sultanate still receive nominal annual compensation from
Malaysia under a long-standing agreement. One of the demands from the
sultan's followers is an increase in the amount of compensation paid.
Deadline extension
On Monday, del Rosario urged Malaysia to extend the Tuesday deadline for the Sultan's followers to leave Sabah.
He met with Malaysian Ambassador to Manila Dato' Mohd Zamri Bin Mohd Kassim to renew Manila's request.
The DFA said the deadline extension is needed to convince the sultan's followers to leave the island voluntarily.
"We had a meeting this morning and we want to know some details
regarding what is happening as far as the Filipinos in Sabah are
concerned. We are still hoping they will come back to us with official
confirmation," DFA spokesman Raul Hernandez said.
Del Rosario also urged Kuala Lumpur to allow the Philippine ship to
dock at Lahad Datu to bring food to the Filipinos and fetch those who
want to go home.
"The current plan is for that ship to be at the border. The Malaysian
government will bring the Filipinos to Lahad Datu to our ship which
will be anchored off the border," Hernandez said.
"We sent the ship to Lahad Datu on a humanitarian mission. We are
deeply concerned about the presence of five women and other civilians in
the group, and we urge them to board the ship without delay and return
home," del Rosario said.
"We are getting mixed signals so we asked that Tuesday midnight
deadline be officially confirmed," del Rosario said in a text message.
The meeting also tackled the situation of Filipinos in Sabah.
"We were trying to see how we could end this peacefully and
expeditiously so we want also to be able to bring our ship close to
Lahad Datu for the movement of the people there and to bring them back
home and other civilians there. We are trying to convince them to board
the ship and go home as soon as possible," Hernandez said. -- with reports from Ron Gagalac, ABS-CBN News; Agence France-Presse
Monday, February 25, 2013
Sulu Sultan's cousin arrested in Sabah
6:42 AM