By : DONA Z. PAZZIBUGAN
MANILA : The Sultanate of
Sulu is considering seeking the intercession of the US government in pressing
its claim to Sabah by invoking a 1915 agreement with the US colonial government
in the Philippines.
Abraham Idjirani,
spokesperson for the sultan of Sulu, said the sultanate was considering
invoking the Kiram-Carpenter Agreement of March 22, 1915.
Under that agreement, signed
by US-appointed Governor of Mindanao and Sulu Frank W. Carpenter with the
sultan of Sulu relinquished the sultan’s and his heirs’ right to temporal
sovereignty, tax collection and arbitration laws.
In exchange, the sultan got an
allowance, a piece of land and recognition as religious leader.
The agreement did not cover
the territory of North Borneo, which the sultanate had leased to the British
North Borneo Company.
Moral obligation
Idjirani said that under the
agreement, the United States also agreed to give “full protection to the sultan
of Sulu should the question of Sabah arise in the future between the sultanate
and any foreign authority.”
“We will remind them of
their moral obligation. That obligation is not to use violent means but to help
find a solution,” Idjirani said.
Princess Jacel Kiram, Sultan
Jamalul Kiram III’s daughter, said the ball was now in the court of the
Philippine and Malaysian governments.
“We are saddened and
dismayed by the treatment of the government of this issue. We are trying our
best to understand why we are treated this way, because it’s unacceptable,” she
said.
Holding their ground
“We offer the 10 lives that
were lost to our dear President and to Secretary Mar Roxas. I hope they do not
wait for more people to be killed before they wake up and address the situation
properly,” she added, referring to the followers of the sultan who were killed
in a clash with Malaysian police in Tanduao village in Lahad Datu town, Sabah,
on Friday.
By midnight Friday after
hours of discussion, Jamalul decided that his brother Agbimuddin and his
remaining 224 followers would hold their ground in Sabah.
“The Sultan came to a
decision at midnight, weighing the lives of (224) and his brother and the
aspiration that the ancestral land be recognized by Malaysia. The decision is
to stay put,” Idjirani said on Saturday morning.
Open to talks
“This is not being stubborn.
The sultan is open to talks,” he said, reiterating that only the sultanate
could talk about disengagement with the Malaysian Embassy.
Idjirani said MalacaƱang’s
“small window of opportunity” to end the standoff was not acceptable because
all the government wanted was Agbimuddin’s group pullout from Sabah, without
assurance of negotiations involving the sultanate’s claim to Sabah. (globalnation.inquirer)
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