The
Philippines President has told Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III not to 'hold gun
to my head if you wish us to talk'.
MANILA : Malacanang Palace
rejected the demand of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III that the government settle
the sultanate’s claim over Sabah with Malaysia before his followers would leave
the island state, saying they are in no position to set conditions.
“You don’t hold a gun to my
head and negotiate. That’s not the way decent people do negotiations. You want
us to know your claim, you cooperate,” said presidential spokesman Edwin
Lacierda.
“The President has said,
‘Come back home, and we will talk.’ But you’re asking me to talk to you while
there are people in Sabah – that there’s a possible outcome of violence. That’s
not acceptable to us,” Lacierda said.
The Manila Standard quotes
the Palace official as saying the primary concern of the government now is the
welfare of 800,000 Filipinos in Malaysia who might be endangered because of the
armed incursion of some 180 followers of Kiram, led by his brother Agbimuddin.
“Remember, this is not about
Sabah. The President’s concern is about the welfare of the 800,000 Filipinos in
Sabah,” he said.
Foreign Affairs Secretary
Albert del Rosario said Wednesday that the Philippines has asked Malaysia for
another extension – its fourth such request — to its deadline for the Filipinos
to leave the town of Lahad Datu in Sabah.
Del Rosario told the
reporters that he already asked Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman to
extend again its deadline to Tuesday next week, but had not heard back from him
yet.
He described the situation
in Lahad Datu as “quiet.”
While the government sought
to convince the Filipinos in the town of Lahad Datu in Sabah to return, the
police threatened to arrest any of them who came back with illegal firearms.
“Once they cross the
boundary into the Philippines and they have illegal firearms, we will arrest
them because they will be violating the law,” said Philippine National Police
chief Alan Purisima.
He added that if Kiram
condoned the use by his followers of undocumented firearms, he too would be
liable under the law.
“If there is a violation we
will file charges against him,” Purisima said.
Also on Wednesday, Interior
Secretary Manuel Roxas II urged Kiram’s followers in Sabah to avoid violence
and surrender so as not to damage the country’s relations with Malaysia, which
helped broker a peace agreement with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.
Earlier, Kiram said he has
ordered his followers to remain in Sabah, even as he hinted openness to
negotiating for a “win-win” solution to the claim and to the sultanate’s lease
agreement with Malaysia.
“I have given the order to
them that they have to stay put. We will leave as long as there is a
(negotiated) arrangement made,” Kiram said in a television interview. (Agencies)
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