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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Malaysia should dialogue with the Sultan


An attack by the Malaysian police and military against the group headed by Crown Prince Agbimuddin Kiram after the deadline could start a war against the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF). MNLF chairman Nur Misuari, who is of royal lineage, will order his followers to cross to Sabah and fight a guerrilla war.
(Philippine Daily Inquirer) - There’s no way the Sultan of Sulu, Jamalul Kiram, will heed President Noy’s appeal for him to order his men in Sabah to come home so  the standoff could be resolved peacefully.
“Why would the Sultan listen to the President who left him out in the peace talks with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)?” said a member of the Philippine intelligence community who claims he is close to Kiram.
The sultan continues to refuse Malaysia’s ultimatum for the recall of his men. The ultimatum expired yesterday (Friday).
An attack by the Malaysian police and military against the group headed by Crown Prince Agbimuddin Kiram after the deadline could start a war against the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF).
MNLF chairman Nur Misuari, who is of royal lineage, will order his followers to cross to Sabah and fight a guerrilla war.
The MNLF, composed mostly of Tausogs, waged a  decades-long war against the government until it signed a peace accord with the government during the time of President Ramos.
If MNLF guerrillas cross over to Sabah, they will be harboured by fellow Tausogs who live in the Malaysian state.
A third of the population in Sabah, according to a rough unofficial estimate, is Tausog.
The Tausogs and other Muslim tribes, like the Maguindanaoans and Maranaws, live in a feudal society where datus (village kings) rule.
The datus in Sulu and Tawi-Tawi, in turn, defer to the Sulu sultan.
It would be good for Malaysia to dialogue with the sultan to prevent a guerrilla war like the one waged by the MNLF against the  government from the 1970s through the 1980s and early 1990s.
Malaysia could promise the Tausogs just about anything to appease them.
At the outset of the talks with the Sulu sultanate, Kuala Lumpur could promise to increase the rent it pays the sultan for Sabah.
The fact that Malaysia pays rent, no matter how paltry, is evidence that the sultanate owns Sabah.

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