NO
BASIS......A spokesman for the sultanate says there is no basis for Malaysia to
file charges against eight Filipinos because it does not own Sabah.
MANILA: The Sulu Sultanate
will sue the Malaysian government before the International Court of Justice in
response to its filing of terrorism charges against eight of the sultan’s
followers who were captured in Sabah, a crime punishable by death.
The spokesman of the
sultanate, Abraham Idjirani, said their legal team was preparing to file a
complaint of usurpation of authority and illegal development of natural wealth
in Sabah against Malaysia.
“There is no basis for
Malaysia to file charges against those eight Filipinos because it does not own
Sabah. We are the rightful owners,” Idjirani said at the residence of Sultan
Jamalul Kiram III in Taguig City.
This will be the third time
the Sulu Sultanate will file a lawsuit against Malaysia. The first was filed in
1992 before the United Nations and the second was filed in 2004 before the
International Court of Justice.
Idjirani said both cases
were still pending because the ownership of Sabah had not been resolved.
Maintaining that the
Malaysia’s move was illegal, Idjirani said the moves to file terrorism charges
against the sultan’s followers violated the 1963 agreement signed by the heads
of Malaysia, the Philippines and Indonesia.
The 1963 Manila accord states
that “the inclusion of Sabah into the Federation of Malaysia will not prejudice
the interest of parties concerned until the issue of the Sabah claim is finally
resolved by the United Nations.”
“Malaysia is only an
occupant of Sabah, so they have no right to file charges against those
Filipinos,” Idjirani added.
He said the sultanate had no
way to confirm whether the eight Filipinos were indeed members of the Sulu
Royal Army that occupied Lahad Datu.
President Benigno Aquino III
on Thursday said the government would help the eight Filipinos charged with
terrorism and waging war in Sabah.
“It is our obligation to
protect the rights of our citizens,” the President said.
Aquino said he had already
instructed the Foreign Affairs and Justice Departments to give the Filipinos
legal assistance.
Under Malaysian laws,
terrorism charges carry a jail term of up to 30 years while waging war against
the King is punishable with death.
A group of Sabah-based lawyers
have also expressed their intention to help the eight followers of the
sultanate.
The Sabah Law Association,
in a report carried by the Malaysian press, said it was ready to ensure that
the eight Filipinos are accorded due process.
Aquino earlier ordered an
inter-agency team led by Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa Jr. to come up with
a roadmap to resolve the Sabah conflict peacefully.
Aquino said the Philippines
was open to negotiating with Malaysia and embarking on a rules-based approach
to resolve the Sabah claim similar to the case filed by Manila against Beijing
to address the territorial dispute over Panatag Shoal.
The sultanate on Thursday
slammed the Palace for dismissing an alleged assassination plot against the
sultan and his family.
Idjirani said President
Aquino should have at least ordered an investigation into the reported arrival
in the country of the Malaysian hit squad to liquidate the sultanate officials.
(Agencies)
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