BURN......Malaysian
demonstrators burn a poster of self-proclaimed Philippine Sultan Jamalul Kiram
III during a protest outside the Philippine embassy in Kuala Lumpur, on March
7, 2013, against the followers of the sultan who landed on Malaysia's Borneo
island on February 12 to assert a long-dormant territorial claim. Kiram has
reportedly fled Malaysia, although his family insist he is still in the country.
THE leader of a band of
Filipino militants whose incursion in Malaysia has left scores dead has
reportedly fled even as his own family insist he is still in the country.
More than 200 followers of a
self-proclaimed Filipino sultan entered Sabah on Borneo island a month ago to
resurrect long-dormant land claims by Jamalul Kiram III.
Malaysian forces launched a
military assault on March 5 against the group, sending them fleeing from a
farming village where they had been holed up.
Armed Forces chief Zulkifeli
Zin said intelligence reports showed that Agbimuddin Kiram, whose family says
is the crown prince of the Sulu sultanate, had managed to evade security forces
and slip out of Malaysia.
"(He) has abandoned his
men and fled to his homeland," Zulkifeli was quoted by local media as
saying late Friday.
But his family has denied
the man, the younger brother of the self-styled sultan, had left Malaysia.
When asked about the armed
forces chief's comments, the clan's Manila spokesman Abraham Idjirani told AFP:
"That's not true."
The New Straits Times
reported that Kiram is believed to have slipped out of the farming area,
surrounded by Malaysian security forces, by blending in with the local
population before the military attack earlier this month.
According to the latest
police figures, 61 suspected militants have been killed in Malaysia's biggest
security crisis in years. Eight police officers and a soldier have also died.
Authorities have arrested
more than 100 people on suspicion of having links to the militants.
The Philippines navy said on
Wednesday it had detained 35 suspected Filipino militants as they tried to sail
home. The group reportedly did not include Kiram.
A total of 800,000 Filipinos
live in Sabah, making up about a quarter of the population of the state, which
is just a short boat ride from the southern Philippines.
The crisis has embarrassed
the Philippines and Malaysia, shining the spotlight on the latter's porous
shoreline and locals' complaints of rampant illegal immigration and
lawlessness.
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