Heirs of Sultan of Sulu pursue Sabah claim on their own | Philippine Daily Inquirer
Arlyn dela Cruz, Philippine Daily Inquirer, February 16th, 2013  
Feeling betrayed and left out in the peace process between the  government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the heirs of  the Sultan of Sulu have decided to press their claim to the eastern  Malaysian state of Sabah on their own.
Crown Prince Rajah Mudah Agbimuddin Kiram said in an interview  with the Inquirer that the government appeared to have neglected the  heirs and ignored their stand that their claim to Sabah was an “integral  and essential” aspect of any peace agreement with any armed group in  Mindanao.
Abraham Julpa Idjirani, secretary general and spokesperson of the  Sultanate of Sulu, said the decision to show not just physical presence  but actual occupation of Sabah came late last year, shortly after the  Aquino administration signed a Framework Agreement on the Bangsamoro  with the MILF.
The standoff continued yesterday with Rajah  Mudah’s claim to be under the protection of the security forces of the  Sultanate of Sulu adding more mystery to the bizarre border drama.
Departure on Feb. 11 
“They are not interested, this government and the previous governments, so we decided to act on our own,” Rajah Mudah said.
Early on Feb. 11, Rajah Mudah and about  1,000 of his followers, including armed men from what he called “Royal  Security Forces of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo” left Simunul  Island in Tawi-Tawi in speedboats and headed for Sabah.
Rajah Mudah described his action as not an act of aggression but a journey back home.
“We came here in peace. We are not here to  wage war. The armed men who are with me are the Royal Security Forces of  the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo. We will never bring war to our  own territory, much less to our own people,” Rajah Mudah said.
His group landed in the village of Tunduao in Lahad Datu town in Sabah.
Surrounded 
What happened after the landing is unclear,  but reports from Kuala Lumpur on Thursday said Malaysian security  forces had surrounded the Filipinos, whom they believed were a faction  of Muslim rebels unhappy with a peace deal with the administration of  President Aquino.
Rajah Mudah said he and his group were not  arrested. He said he was communicating with Gen. Zul Kipli, head of the  Special Branch of Sabah, the equivalent of the top intelligence officer  in the Philippines.
He admitted, however, that he and his group were surrounded by Malaysian police and special forces.
The standoff between the Malaysian  authorities and Rajah Mudah’s group has sparked one of the biggest  security scares in recent years in Sabah, which is less than an hour by  speedboat from the southernmost Philippine province of Tawi-Tawi.
To ascertain facts 
Malacañang was reluctant to meddle in the  reported incursion into Sabah by “100 armed Filipinos” claiming to be  descendants of the Sultan of Sulu.
Deputy presidential spokesperson Abigail  Valte indicated in a briefing for reporters in the Palace yesterday that  the government was not sure about what was going on in Sabah. 
She said the Philippine Embassy in Kuala Lumpur had sent a police attaché to Sabah to ascertain “what’s really happening.”
Valte said the government would provide  assistance “to any Filipino abroad,” but added that on the Sabah  standoff, “we would like to ascertain the facts first.”
Unaware of the situation in Lahad Datu,  Philippine officials said the Filipinos were unarmed civilians who had  been promised land.
Citing information from Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, Valte told reporters yesterday that the Filipinos were unarmed.
But Rajah Mudah’s claim that he was  surrounded by his own security forces indicated the dearth of  information in the government about the move taken by the heirs of the  Sultan of Sulu.
Negotiations 
In a statement released yesterday, the  Department of Foreign Affairs said Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifa Aman  had spoken to Foreign SecretaryAlbert del Rosario and assured him that the Malaysians would respect the rights of the Filipinos in the Sabah standoff.
The statement said the Malaysian government had resorted to “negotiations to encourage” the Filipinos “to leave peacefully.”
Both the Philippine military and the  Malaysian military had established that the Filipinos’ activity in Sabah  had no approval from the Philippine government, the DFA said.
“In this regard, we therefore urge these concerned individuals to return to their homes and families,” the DFA said.
Pretended consultation 
Idjirani said that before the signing of  the agreement, the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace  Process (Opapp) invited the heirs of the Sultan of Sulu to what was  supposed to be a consultation on a peace deal with the MILF.
He said he was asked to give a lecture on  the stand of the Sultanate of Sulu at a forum held at the University of  the Philippines College of Law.
“We thought finally the government of  President Aquino wanted a complete and comprehensive resolution  management to the peace, security and economic problems of territories  in Mindanao by consulting with us. But it was just talk,”
Idjirani said in English and Filipino.
“The framework agreement was finished  without even the shadow of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo. They  just pretended to consult us,” he said.
He said the government encouraged the heirs  of the Sultan of Sulu to lead “peace caravans” and they complied. He  showed pictures of such a caravan taken in Tawi-Tawi last year. The  pictures showed members of the Kiram royal family and their followers  participating in the caravan. 
  
Sultanate not mentioned 
But the next thing the heirs knew, he said,  the framework agreement had been signed without any mention of the  “historic and sovereign rights” of the Sultanate of Sulu and North  Borneo to territories included in the agreement.
“Until the government includes the  Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo, no lasting and significant peace  will come to Mindanao,” Idjirani said.
“They should have seen that in the failure  of the peace agreement with the Moro National Liberation Front of Nur  Misuari,” he said.
“We thought the administration of President  Aquino gave weight to ancestral and historic agreements. We were  clearly wrong,” he added.
He said the sultanate’s “desire and  intention” to be part of the peace process initiated by the government  was expressed in a letter to former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo  dated April 13, 2009.
In that letter signed by Sultan Jamalul  Kiram III, he said, the government was acknowledged and referred to only  as an ally in the sultanate’s ancestral and historic rights over the  Sulu archipelago, which includes territories covered in the preliminary  peace talks between the government and the MILF.
But Arroyo’s term ended in June 2010 with no agreement being reached with the MILF.
It was the Aquino administration that would clinch a preliminary peace deal with the MILF.
Heirs united 
Idjirani said the signing of the framework  agreement with the MILF led to the unification of the heirs of the  Sultan of Sulu and their decision to proceed with claiming Sabah on  their own.
Idjirani said the reported differences among the heirs were never personal but involved only policy and direction.
He said the direct descendants and heirs of  the Sultan of Sulu and North Borneo were Sultan Jamalul Kiram III,  Sultan Bantilan Esmail Kiram III, Datu Alianapia Kiram, Datu Phugdal  Kiram, Datu Baduruddin Kiram and Rajah Mudah Agbimuddin Kiram, the crown  prince who was tasked to lead the 1,000-strong civilian and military  force to Sabah.
The “meeting of the minds” of the Kirams  happened on Nov. 11 last year in a relative’s house, Idjirani said. It  was during that meeting that Sultan Jamalul issued the royal decree that  authorized Rajah Mudah’s journey to Sabah.
With reports from Michael Lim Ubac, Jerome Aning, AFP and The Star-Asia News Network 
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