Malaysia beefs up security in Sabah

Agence France-Presse

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Malaysian PM Najib Razak is under pressure over Malaysia's worst security crisis in years

LOCKDOWN IN SABAH. Malaysian soldiers man a security check point in Semporna, the new area where the stand-off with Sulu gunmen in Simunul village on the Malaysian island of Borneo on March 3, 2013. AFP PHOTO

TAWAU, Malaysia – Malaysia vowed to beef up security Monday, March 4 in Sabah, where at least 26 people have been reported killed after a bizarre invasion by Philippine followers of one of the heirs of the former Sultan of Sulu.

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 the intruders, was quoted as saying by state news agency Bernama.

Malaysians have been shocked by the militant incursion, 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 armed intrusion 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 standoff between the intruders and security forces who have them pinned down in the farming village of Tanduo erupted in a bloody firefight Friday that left 12 gunmen and 2 police officers dead.

SEMPORNA CLASH. A gun battle on Saturday night in Semporna dramatically increased tensions and raised the overall toll of reported dead to at least 18 Filipinos and 8 Malaysian policemen. Infographic by Teddy Pavon

Semporna firefight

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

FILIPINOS IN SABAH. A villager lets his cocks fight in Tanjung Labian in the area where the Filipino militants are holding off near Lahad Datu on the island of Borneo, on February 17, 2013. AFP PHOTO / MOHD RASFAN

Not first raid by Filipino militants

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 Muslim 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. – Rappler.com


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