Oleh : ANISAH SHUKRY
INCURSION
....A former Lahad Datu Police Chief says that years of government indifference
towards the dire state of security forces in the district paved the way for an
armed incursion into Sabah.
PETALING JAYA: Insufficient
police personnel, lack of equipment, police vehicles in bad shape — those were
the security issues plaguing Lahad Datu for years, said a former Lahad Datu
police chief.
Yet, the federal government
continued to ignore Lahad Datu police’s requests to upgrade security, said
Kamis Daming, and this was why the Royal Sulu Army was able to breach Sabah
with ease on Feb 9.
“When I was in Lahad Datu
five years ago, I often expressed concerns to our superiors about the
possibility of intrusion by foreign elements, but our proposals and requests
for security beef-up were looked at very lightly,” Kamis was quoted as saying
by the Daily Express.
He told reporters in Kota
Kinabalu yesterday that the Lahad Datu district police had scarce equipment and
police vehicles such as their four-wheel drives and patrol boats were in
terrible shape and constantly broke down.
Meanwhile, the force faced
fuel shortages because their supplier allegedly refused to supply them fuel due
to unsettled debts, he added.
And despite the district
being short of police personnel, he said there were not enough living quarters
in the police compound for the force to reside in.
“Another sad thing is that
some of the police officers and personnel have to rent a house outside the
police compound because there are not enough quarters,” he was quoted as
saying.
But even houses for rent
were scarce, forcing low-rank personnel to stay in dilapidated police barracks
riddled with holes, he said.
“And when we filed an
application for funds to repair the barracks, headquarters would reply that no
allocations were available yet.
“Living under such an
environment is so demoralising for the low-rank personnel, so what can be
expected from them?” he asked.
Kamis also reportedly
supported Sabah Progressive Party (SAPP) President Yong Teck Lee’s claim that
Sabahans had alerted authorities for decades on the threat illegal immigrants
in Sabah posed, yet the government remained indifferent about it.
On Feb 9, some 200 armed men
from the Royal Sulu Army entered Sabah to take the state by force as they
believed they had an ancestral claim on the land.
Weeks of peaceful
negotiations with Malaysian authorities culminated in a shootout in Lahad Datu
on March 1 that saw two local policemen and 12 or the armed intruders killed.
The following day, six more
Malaysians were killed in an ambush by the Sulu army on Saturday in Semporna.
On Tuesday, another local soldier died in a gun battle, while another died in a
vehicle accident. (FMT)
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