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Cross border attacks in Sabah

Cross border attacks in Sabah
Part of the Piracy in the Sulu Sea, North Borneo dispute and Moro conflict

Attacks by Moro pirates and militants in Sabah from the 19th century to the present
Date8 December 1962[17] – present
(60 years, 5 months, 1 week and 4 days)
Location
Result

Security in mainland Sabah was under control, cross border attacks ongoing;

Belligerents

 Malaysia

 Philippines (after 1986)[1]
 Indonesia[2]
 Vietnam[3]
 Singapore[4]
 Thailand[5]

Supported by

Bangsamoro militia support:

Moro Islamic Liberation Front[11]
Moro National Liberation Front[12][13]
Abu Sayyaf (2000–present)

Moro Pirates (1963–present)

 Sulu Sultanate (Jamalul Kiram III faction) (2013–present)
Former Sabah invasion supporter:
Government of the Philippines (until 1986)
Moro National Liberation Front (Misuari faction) (2001–2015)[14][15][16]

 • Bangsamoro Republik (2013)
Commanders and leaders

Anwar Ibrahim (Prime Minister of Malaysia)
Mohamad Hasan (Minister of Defence)
Hajiji Noor (Chief Minister of Sabah)
Joko Widodo (President of Indonesia)
Murad Ebrahim[29]
Mohagher Iqbal[11]
Muslimin Sema[30]
Former leader

PM full list

Radullan Sahiron (current Emir of Abu Sayyaf)
Abdurajak Janjalani  

Khadaffy Janjalani  
Isnilon Totoni Hapilon  

Phudgal Kiram[36] (Raja Muda of the Sulu Sultanate)
Various pirates leader
Jamalul Kiram III #

Agbimuddin Kiram #
Ismael Kiram II[36] #
Former support
Diosdado Macapagal #[37]
Ferdinand Marcos #[38]

Nur Misuari (2001–2015)[14][15][16][39][40]
Units involved

NSOF:
Malaysian Armed Forces
Royal Malaysia Police
Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency

Armed Forces of the Philippines
Philippine National Police

Indonesian National Armed Forces
Indonesian National Police
Abu Sayyaf

Moro Pirates

Royal Security Forces of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo
Strength
Malaysian security forces:
British coalition
(until 1966)

Philippine security forces:
uncertain
Indonesian security forces:
uncertain Law abiding Moro rebels:

uncertain
Abu Sayyaf: unknown

Kiram followers:

  • 235[45]
    Moro Pirates: unknown
Casualties and losses
Malaysian security forces:
British coalition
(until 1966)
  • uncertain

Philippine security forces:

Indonesian security forces:

  • uncertain

Law abiding Moro rebels:

Abu Sayyaf:

+10 captured



Kiram followers:

~ The total thought to be higher than what has been shown.

The cross border attacks in Sabah are a series of cross border terrorist attacks perpetrated by Moro pirates from Mindanao, Philippines, in the state of Sabah, Malaysia, that began even before the British colonial period.[59][62] Many civilians have died or suffered during these incidents, causing an increase in anti-Filipino sentiment among the native peoples of Sabah, especially after major attacks in 1985, 2000 and 2013.[63] The attacks were more intense during the presidential terms of Diosdado Macapagal and Ferdinand Marcos, who supported irredentist claims to include eastern Sabah as part of the Philippines territory.[38][60] In addition, recent infiltration and attacks by militants as well as uncontrolled human migration from Mindanao to Sabah has led to more unease sentiments among the local residents of Sabah, with around 78% of prison inmates that were caught in the state due to involvement in criminal activities and lawlessness issues mainly originating from the southern Philippines.[64]

Prior to a large-scale military operation initiated by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to combat the rampant lawlessness in the southern Philippines since mid-2016, Malaysian security forces had been told to tighten its security and to ensure that terrorists do not attempt to flee prosecution by escaping to uninhabited areas.[65][66][67] Sabahan leaders also ordered Malaysian security forces to "shoot on sight" any trespassers who continue to ignore laws despite repeated warnings[68] and that those escaping militants be dealt with by the country's laws more effectively.[69] Following the declaration of martial law in the neighbouring Philippines since 23 May 2017, Malaysian authorities increased their border security.[70] Sabah Chief Minister Shafie Apdal also urged the Malaysian security forces to stop taking a defensive attitude and be offensive towards the rampant crimes perpetrated by southern Filipino criminals and terrorists that has disturbed peace in the state.[71]

Various countries and territories such as Australia,[72] Canada,[73] China, France,[74] Germany,[75] Hong Kong,[76] Ireland,[77] Japan,[78] New Zealand,[79] Singapore,[80] South Korea,[81] Switzerland,[82] Taiwan,[83] United Kingdom,[84] United States[85] and Vietnam[86] have raised a travel alert for their citizens to avoid the area in eastern Sabah.

Background

Piracy has been a part of the Sultanate of Sulu's culture.[59][87][88] During the expedition by the British ship HMS Dido in 1846, Captain Henry Keppel mentioned:

The most desperate and active pirates of the whole Indian Archipelago are the tribes of the Sooloo group of islands lying close to the north shore of Borneo.[17]

— Captain Henry Keppel.

The Sulu islands were known for their "great slave market" with their islanders frequently attacking Borneo Island in search of slaves.[89] In 1910, the neighbouring Celebes Islands was attacked by seven Moro pirates whom had crossed from Mindanao, and two Dutch traders were killed in the incident.[62] Subsequent reports from the British government in North Borneo reported that Joloano Moros terrorised the inhabitants of North Borneo, looting small towns and killing many people.[90] Although the British did a lot to combat piracy,[62] an office of a British company was later raided by twelve Moro pirates in Kalabakan in July 1958. Another raid was done on the nearby township of Semporna on 29 March 1954.[91] During the last years of British rule in North Borneo, both seafarers and coastal settlements suffered a high numbers of attacks from pirates who were believed to be mainly based on Tawi-Tawi.[59] Between 1959 and 1962, 232 pirates attack were recorded by the British authorities in North Borneo, but these were thought to be underestimated as many attacks went unreported.[59] The British North Borneo governor at the time, Roland Turnbull had requested the British to provide him with security forces from the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force but no aid was sent until a British newspaper, the Daily Telegraph embellished the report with an anti-Indonesian bias because of the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation.[91]

Moro migration to Sabah

Regional migration flows within Southeast Asia are not a phenomenon restricted to current times. Social and cultural connections between Sabah, Mindanao and the Indonesian province of North Kalimantan have existed for centuries. The tradition of border crossing from the Philippine Sulu Archipelago to Sabah originated in the late 16th century.[92] The first wave of this migration was linked to the Spanish colonialists who began pushing southwards toward the island provinces of Sulu and Tawi-Tawi from Manila, which was the administration centre of the Spanish during that time. The struggle for dominance between different ethnic groups and the Spanish in Mindanao led to increased immigration of Philippine Moro ethnic groups, mostly the Suluks and Bajaus to Sabah.[92]

 
A huge Moro settlements in the coast of Gaya Island near Kota Kinabalu.

The first arrival of the illegal immigrants in Sabah in the 1960s was said to be associated with the then Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos and his country's claim to the northern Borneo region.[92] It is claimed by media in the Philippines that during the first stage of his plan, Marcos sent around 17 men who mostly recruited from Sulu and Tawi-Tawi had entered Sabah as forest rangers, postmen and police. These agents have blended into the Sabah local communities with a plan to possessing the minds of the larger Filipino communities in eastern Sabah to secede from Malaysia and become part of the Philippines as well to destabilising Sabah.[38] At the same time, a Suluk native, Mustapha Harun became the third Chief Minister of Sabah, he then made a contact with one of the Filipino agent who became his driver.[38] However, most of them did not intend to attack their fellow Muslim brothers in Sabah when they realise their true mission in which they were later execute by Marcos commando soldiers in an event known as Jabidah massacre.[93][94] During Mustapha's term from 1967 to 1975, he was believed to have encouraged many newly Filipino Tausūgs to migrate to northern Borneo to establish a strong Muslim community which was represented by the United Sabah National Organisation (USNO).[92] Since the massacre especially with the starting of Moro insurgency in the Philippines,[95] Mustapha is believed to have supplied the Moro rebels with financial and weapon supports to fight for their freedom and to take a revenge for their fallen comrades.[96]

Since then, it has caused major economic problems for Sabah as Marcos soldiers launched an operation to eliminate any anti-Marcos factions in the Sulu and Mindanao islands which left much infrastructure there destroyed, forcing an estimated of another 100,000 Moros in Mindanao to flee to Sabah.[60][97] Most of those who left the Philippines were already involved in criminal activities, mainly smuggling and armed robbery.[60] Today, a huge numbers of Moros still live in many places in Sabah such as Kota Kinabalu, Kinarut, Lahad Datu, Sandakan, Semporna, Tawau, Telipok as well on Labuan.[98][99][100][101] Most of the Filipino refugees are issued with IMM13 documents by the Malaysian government during Mahathir Mohamad administration,[102] with many of them have been controversially naturalised as citizen.[100][103]

Besides that, the present economic disparity between Mindanao and Sabah became the main reason many of these illegal Moros snuck into Sabah with some of those "extremist" Moros with their own ideology still perceive the eastern part of Sabah as part of the Philippines, and these groups feel entitled to enter Sabah as it is their historical right although the Sultanate of Sulu have defunct since the last recognised Sultan, Jamalul Kiram II whose have no son to inherit his powers.[104][105]

These negative views on Filipino immigrants however, ignores the scathing involvement of the Malaysian government in terrorist activities in southern Philippines, as several terrorists targeting Philippine cities were of Malaysian descent. Filipino Moros who fled from the war in the Philippines were merely fleeing the devastation of the Moro conflict a conflict which was tacitly supported by the Malaysian government,[106] a political move to counter-act attempts for the Reconquest of Sabah by the Sultanate of Sulu which once exercised sovereignty over Sabah before Malaysia took over rule of the territory.

In 2014, the Eastern Sabah Security Command (Esscom) Security Coordinating Intelligence Officer Hassim Justin blamed corruption, illegal issuance of identity cards and local authorities who did not taking any action to combat the squatter colonies for contributing to the significant increase of illegal immigrants in Sabah.[107] It was also reported that community leaders in the east coast such as village chief were involved in the granting of identity cards to new Filipino Moro immigrants as they have a connection with them through similar ethnic roots.[108] According to a research by two Filipino researchers, Myfel Joseph Paluga and Andrea Malaya Ragragio of the Department of Social Science University of the Philippines Mindanao, the flood of migrants from Mindanao to Sabah was partly encouraged by certain Sabah politicians who wanted to be the Sultan of Sulu especially after the fall of Sabah Muslim-led parties of USNO and Sabah People's United Front (BERJAYA) administrations.[109] Beside that, it was claimed by Indonesian workers who had become victims of irresponsible employers, the arrival of illegal immigrants from the Philippines are also caused by employers who abuse their powers especially in the agricultural sectors of palm oil plantation.[110]

Timeline of attacks

Attack strategy

The tactics are different, and are based on the motives of individual groups. Generally, the Moro pirate and militants will attack and escape to the Malaysia–Philippines border or any nearby islands when their activities are spotted by the security forces. Both the pirates and militants will usually steal boat engines, food and other useful things that can be sold.[111] In certain cases, they also attack towns, killing innocent civilians and kidnapping them as shown in the Lahad Datu and Semporna attacks.[50] The Filipino illegal immigrants play an important role in helping them by providing information on their next target.[21] Due to the increase security patrol by the Malaysian Armed Forces, the militants group such as the Abu Sayyaf has change their tactics by attacking and abducting foreign vessel crews. Many of those who fleeing from the Philippine military operation in the southern Philippines also sneaking into Sabah with new tactics by entering the state in a small group to avoid from being detected as suspicious by the Malaysian security forces, this was discovered following the tip-off from local villagers who saw many new suspicious people coming into their village from the sea shortly after the continuous military operation. Many of them are believed to be member of militants and kidnapping groups.[112]

20th century

 
Australian soldiers being ferried in a small craft, from troop transport HMAS Sydney on its arrival in North Borneo (Sabah) to counter Indonesian confrontation and possible attacks by Filipino pirates as part of their defence aid program to Malaysia in 1964.

In 1962, seven Filipino Moros armed with machetes attacked the town of Kunak and robbed the businessmen there. The seven Filipino Moros attacked again in 1963, this time attacking the town of Semporna and killing a number of residents.[58] In October 1979, a passenger boat on the way to Semporna from Lahad Datu with 48 passengers was attacked and forced to dock at Adal Island. Three passengers were shot dead, one woman was raped and the others was taken to the Philippines but were quickly rescued by the Philippine security forces. In 1980, a group of 6–8 Moros attacked an island near Semporna with M16 rifles, killing villagers while they were asleep. At the end, seven villagers were killed while 11 others were injured. In 1982, a groups of Moros ambushed a village in Timba-Timba Island, and started to shoot, rob and kill villagers. The incident in 1985, which is considered to be the most terrifying attack out of all of them, was where 21 people were killed and another 11 wounded. Five of the intruders were killed by the Malaysian maritime police while the others managed to escaped. At the end of the tragedy, one of the victim said;

I cannot help wondering about our government, which can't seem to defend us against these marauders.[60]

In 1987, two Japanese managers were killed while others were wounded after twelve gunmen attack a factory in the Boheydulang Island, forcing the company to close and move their factory to Indonesia.[50] In 1996, two separate armed groups from Mindanao attack the town of Semporna, the first group attack a police station by throwing a fish bomb while the second group managed to steal jewellery worth around MYR100,000 at a gold shop. During the shoot-out, two of the group members were captured by the police with 200 bullets recovered from them. However, the rest managed to escape. In March 1996, another attacks by 10–20 Moros happens in the town of Semporna when three separate armed groups attacked different places at the same time. The first group attacked a police headquarters while the second group attacked a police station. It is acknowledged the motive of the first and second group was to delay time and let the third group succeed in robbing a gold shop. No arrest was made and all the intruders managed to escaped with MYR 200,000. Again in July 1996, four armed men attack a gold shop in Tawau and managed to steal jewellery worth around MYR 150,000. However, one of the gunmen later made a mistake when he retreated to a refugee village in Tawau where he was shot dead by the police. After an hour of investigation, another 5 gunmen from other groups were killed by the police.[50]

21st century

In 2000, the Abu Sayyaf group kidnapped a large number of hostages. 10 of the hostages were from Europe and the Middle East while 11 were Malaysian resort workers. All hostages were later rescued by the Philippine security forces in Jolo, Sulu.[113] In 2003, six foreigners were kidnapped by 10 Moro pirates. In 2004, two Sarawakians and an Indonesian were kidnapped by the Abu Sayyaf group. In 2005, five Filipinos abducted three Indonesian crew from a Sandakan-based trading company near Mataking Island off Semporna. In 2010, a crew of fishermen were captured by Filipino gunmen when their boat strayed into Philippine waters near Boan Island. All crews was later released without any ransom being paid. Also in the same year, a seaweed manager and supervisor were kidnapped by four armed Filipinos on Sebangkat Island. Both victims was freed 11 months later. In 2011, ten armed Filipinos kidnapped a Malaysian businessmen.[58] On 11 February 2013, a group of approximately 100–200 individuals, some of them armed, arrived by boat in Lahad Datu, Sabah from Simunul, Tawi-Tawi, in Mindanao.[114] They were sent by Jamalul Kiram III, one of the claimants to the throne of the Sultanate of Sulu. Their objective was to assert their unresolved territorial claim to North Borneo. During the standoff, 56 militants were killed including 6 civilians and 10 Malaysian forces.[47][115][116][117] In November 2013, suspected Abu Sayyaf militants killed a Taiwanese national at Pom Pom Island and released his wife a month later in southern Philippines.[118]

In January 2014, an attempted intrusion by foreign elements on Sabah was blocked by the Malaysian security forces.[119] On 2 April 2014, a Chinese tourist and a Filipino national were abducted off Singamata Adventures Reef and Resort, Semporna. Two months later, they were rescued by Malaysian and Philippine security forces. On 6 May 2014, another abduction involving a Chinese national occurred in Silam, near the Lahad Datu area in Sabah.[118] He was later freed on 10 July.[120] On 16 June, a fish breeder and a Filipino worker were kidnapped off Kunak.[121][122] The fish farm manager was freed on 10 December with the help of two Filipino negotiators, one of them being the leader of the Moro National Liberation Front.[121] On 12 July, a policeman was shot dead and another marine policeman was abducted at Mabul Water Bungalows Resort, Mabul island.[48][123][124] The policeman was later freed on 7 March 2015, after 9 months in captivity.[125] On 9 October, two Filipino illegal immigrants who were identified as Sulu militants were killed by police in Penampang, both suspects has a record of criminal activities and were responsible for at least three robberies in the area.[57] On 17 October, two Vietnamese fishermen who were working for a Malaysian employer, were shot by Filipino pirates. All of them were later rescued by the Malaysian security forces and sent to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Kota Kinabalu.[126][127]

On 15 May 2015, four armed men from the Abu Sayyaf-based group in Mindanao abducted two people in a resort in Sandakan and brought them to Parang, Sulu.[128][129] One of them been released on 9 November, after six months in captivity,[130] while another one was beheaded due to ransom demands was not met.[131][132] The Malaysian authorities identified that a number of kidnappings in Sabah was perpetrated by a group of Filipino brothers known as "Muktadil brothers" who sell their hostages to Abu Sayyaf group. Of all the five Muktadil brothers: Mindas Muktadil was killed by Philippine police in Jolo in May 2015, Kadafi Muktadil was arrested in late 2015, Nixon Muktadil and Brown Muktadil was killed during an operation by the Philippine military on 27 September 2016 after they resist for arrest,[133][134] while Badong Muktadil succumbed to his injuries during his run after being shot at the time his brothers was killed. His body was discovered in a pump boat in Mususiasi area in Siasi Island, close to Jolo.[135]

On 1 April 2016, four Malaysians aboard a tugboat from Manila was kidnapped when they arrived near the shore of Ligitan Island, while leaving other crews unharmed comprising three Myanmar nationals and two Indonesians.[136] The four Malaysian hostages was later released after nearly two months in captivity.[137] On 15 April, two Indonesian tugboats from Cebu, namely Henry and Cristi with 10 passengers were attacked by Abu Sayyaf militants. Four passengers were kidnapped, while another five were safe. One of the passenger was injured after being shot but were later rescued by Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency when they arrived into the waters of Malaysia.[138] The four were released on 11 May with the help of the Philippine government.[139] On 9 July, three Indonesians fishermen was kidnapped near the coast of Lahad Datu.[140] On 18 July, five Malaysian sailors were also abducted near the coast of Lahad Datu.[141] Another one Indonesian sailor was kidnapped in the waters of Malaysia on 3 August while leaving other two crews unharmed, the incident was only reported by victims on 5 August.[142] Two of the Indonesian sailor hostages have managed to escape from the Abu Sayyaf after persistent threats of beheading.[143]

On 10 September, three Filipino fishermen was kidnapped in the shores of Pom Pom Island in Sabah, Malaysia.[144][145] The three Indonesians fishermen that was kidnapped on 9 July from Sabah were released on 17 September.[146] On 27 September, one local boat-skipper was kidnapped from his trawler by seven armed Filipino militant before attacking another Indonesian trawler but no kidnapping were committed in the second incident.[147] The boat-skipper was released on 1 October with no ransom been asked,[148] along with three Indonesians hostages that were released on the same day.[149] On 12 October, four armed men in a pump boat attacking two fishermen on a boat off Tigabu Island near Kudat. One of the fisherman who is an Indonesian sustained gunshot wounds and has been treated in the Duchess of Kent Hospital in Sandakan.[150][151] On 24 October, six unidentified gunmen who spoke Tagalog rob a Malaysian trawler in international waters near Jambongan Island off Kudat, the incident was only reported to local authorities on 27 October due to long distance with any army post.[152] Another attempt for kidnapping was thwarted by the Malaysian security forces on 31 October near Berhala Island, thought the perpetrators managed to escape.[153] Two Indonesians were abducted near the shore of Kuala Kinabatangan on 5 November by unidentified gunmen based in Tawi-Tawi island of the Philippines.[154] On 6 November, a German woman tourist was shot to dead while her boyfriend been abducted by Abu Sayyaf militants from their yacht off Tanjong Luuk Pisuk in Sabah.[155][156] The German man was later beheaded after failed to pay ransom for his release. On 20 November, two Indonesian fishermen was kidnapped by five Abu Sayyaf gunmen off Lahad Datu, Sabah, while Philippine military been informed to intercept the bandit.[157] Responding for the co-operation with neighbouring countries, since late 2016 more than 100 Abu Sayyaf militants have been killed by Philippine authorities,[158] with another 30 killed in early 2017.[159]

On 8 March 2017, a Vietnamese merchant ship was escorted safely to Malaysian waters by the local authorities after the ship's captain reported that he spotted a strange boat with six people on board from the Philippine waters following their vessel.[160] On 23 March, Philippine authorities rescued two Malaysian hostages during its continuous major pursuit to destroy the group.[161] Another three more Malaysian hostages rescued on 26 March.[162] Following the continuous security operation collaboration between the Philippine and Malaysian authorities, the attacks by Abu Sayyaf have seen a beginning of decrease since the month of April.[163] The Malaysian side announced that they would begin to lead the major active joint sea patrols in the Sulu and Celebes Sea with the authorities in Philippines and Indonesia to eliminate all forms of piracy and to clear the sea areas from criminal and terrorist activities that have been ongoing for decades.[164]

From 2000 to 2016, there has been records of 20 kidnappings cases perpetrated by the Abu Sayyaf, with a total of 33 Malaysians and 31 foreigners have been kidnapped for ransom during the six years.[165] Following the Philippine military major operations in the southern Philippines especially with the recent killings of many notable Abu Sayyaf leaders, the authorities there have foiled a big plan of the Abu Sayyaf to carry out large-scale kidnappings of foreigners from tourist island resorts in East Malaysia and the central Philippines.[166] On 11 September 2018, two Indonesian fishermen working off eastern Sabah shores are kidnapped by Filipino bandits, making it as another first kidnapping incident in almost two years.[167] On 10 June 2019, another ten sea gypsies were kidnapped by southern Filipino bandits from the waters in Lahad Datu.[168] Nine of them were later released without harm on 22 June in the same month.[169] On 4 September, two armed Filipino men were killed after they suddenly opened fire to Malaysian patrolling authorities who out to check two foreign boats acting suspiciously in Malaysian waters during night.[170] In the ensuing shoot-out, the other boat also unheeded the warnings and escaped in darkness towards the direction of the southern Philippines.[171][172] The increasing vigilance comes after the warning from Indonesian consulate in Sabah that there have been attempts by the Abu Sayyaf to carrying out raids for ransom in the east coast.[173]

Threats and impacts

Security

 
The Malaysian Maritime Police on duty patrolling the waters around Semporna especially on the Bajau Laut villages to prevent any further intrusion.

During the British colonial era, the British suffered a high number of attacks, leading to the deployment of Henry Keppel and James Brooke in 1846 to search for pirate nests in North Borneo.[17] After a long journey of battling with the pirates, the last pirate's nest in Tunku, Lahad Datu was destroyed by the British.[174]

The latest intrusion in 2013 caused the Malaysian government to establish the Eastern Sabah Security Command (ESSCOM), Eastern Sabah Security Zone (ESSZONE) and deploy more assets to Sabah.[175] To combat Moro pirates and Abu Sayyaf attacks, the Malaysian government has also decided to impose a curfew on eastern Sabah waters and has started to use radar to detect any suspicious activities on every tiny settlement along the east coast.[176][177] There is a call from a former Chief Minister of Sabah, Harris Salleh to the federal government to reconsider the proposal to move the Royal Malaysian Air Force (RMAF) base from Butterworth, Penang to Labuan. He suggested that the air force base should be relocated to Tawau in the interest of security in the eastern Sabah.[178] The Minister of Transport, Liow Tiong Lai has also proposed to extend the area of ESSCOM and ESSZONE to cover the whole Sabah as also been proposed by Yong Teck Lee.[179] On 23 January 2015, the Royal Brunei Air Force gives neighbouring Malaysia four S-70A Black Hawks as a gift. The Malaysian said that it will use it in addition to available assets to defend Sabah from a further possible attacks by the Moros.[10] On 28 February, the United States supplied the Eastern Sabah Security Command (ESSCOM) with 12 boats following a number of agreements signed between the two countries in 2014 during the Barack Obama visit.[180][181]

 
A Malaysian Army soldier armed with Colt M4 standing guard in Sabah east coast as part of the Eastern Sabah Security Command (ESSCOM).

Despite various initiatives and assets been provided by government, the cross border crimes in eastern Sabah are keep increasing as the kidnap-for-ransom groups had strong intelligence as they had a relatives and family living in Sabah.[67][182] An investigation report in 2017 revealed that some of the militants members caught in Malaysia were even working as security guards or members of the People's Volunteer Corps in the Malaysia's capital city of Kuala Lumpur.[183] The Eastern Sabah Security Command (Esscom) Security Coordinating Intelligence Officer Hassim Justin have previously warned Malaysian employers to be cautious on hiring Filipinos (mainly those who come from the Sulu Archipelago and Mindanao) as they could not be trusted as many of them are believed to be spies of kidnapping groups as shown by police investigation and international media reports.[184][185][186][187][188] Beside that, he have suggested that if any Filipino races (who have been naturalised as Malaysian citizens through the illegal Project IC) caught for continuously committing crimes in the states should be revoked for their citizenship with their whole family been deported back to the Philippines. Hashim also suggested that any Filipino names in troubled villages with high crime rates in eastern Sabah should be removed and replaced with Sabahan names.[189] Similar view were also being highlighted in 2018 by ESSCOM chief Hazani Ghazali that Filipino kidnappers received information from their relatives who have been illegally staying in Sabah for a long time.[190] The Royal Malaysia Police and Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister has made a proposal to ban barter trade in the east coast as it was seen only benefited to one side and threatening the security of the state.[191][192] This was enforced then although facing numerous opposition from the Malaysian opposition parties and Filipino resident on the nearest Philippine islands due to the raise of the cost in their region after the ban, while receiving positive welcomes by Sabahans residents and politicians.[193][194][195] The barter trade activity was resumed on 1 February 2017 with the increase of security surveillance and enforcement from both Malaysia and the Philippines authorities to jointly secure their borders.[25][26]

Malaysia, Philippines and Indonesia has agreed to jointly patrol their sea to thwart any threats from the Filipino militants.[196] The three countries also have signed another agreement on joint air patrols.[197] On 2 March 2015, a Filipino worker was arrested following the murder of the former Sabah Chief Minister nephew over salary dispute.[198] On 22 February 2016, four Filipino refugee were arrested following the discovery of a Colt. 45 and 39 bullets in their Isuzu D-Max vehicle at a refugee settlement scheme in Telipok.[199] On 23 September, an undocumented Filipino migrant was arrested together with his daughter after they were found with M16 bullets and magazines at a premises in Sandakan.[200] On 7 October, Malaysian authorities arrest 10 suspects comprising residents of Sabah and individuals from the southern Philippines on suspicion of collaborating with militant groups.[201] On 8 December, three armed Filipino kidnappers who are believed to be members of Abu Sayyaf was shot dead by Malaysian security forces while another two arrested while the gunmen trying to kidnap a fisherman off Lahad Datu.[49][202] Two other gunmen however managed to escape with one hostage but goes missing after the shootout.[56] Philippine authorities have confirmed all of the gunmen are Abu Sayyaf members and one of the gunmen killed is one of Abu Sayyaf notorious leader that were previously involved in several other kidnappings involving foreign nationals.[203] On 12 December, two armed gunmen was killed during a shootout with police in Kunak.[204] Both suspects are armed with homemade shotguns, an airgun, a Colt .45 pistol, a .38 revolver, a knife and parang, several M16 bullets (a version which different from that being used by the Malaysian security forces), other bullets and cartridges as well drug packets but no documentation found in their bodies.[205] Both suspects are believed to be drug dealers and involved in several robbery around the east coast area.[206][207][208] On 29 December, a 42-year-old local man was slashed to death while his wife and their three children were seriously hurt after being attacked by a Filipino man in Kudat.[209]

On 7 January 2017, a paperless Filipino who just served his sentence for 13 criminal offences in Sabah prison in October 2016 was shot and re-arrested by local police after he resisting from arrest and tried to injuring one of the policemen when he was caught return to his criminal activities.[210] On 3 April, a Filipino man was shot to dead by police after running amok by stabbing his wife and tried to injuring policemen who tried to stop him after repeated warnings.[211][212] Another Filipino man was charged in court for supporting the ideology of Abu Sayyaf terrorist group on 6 April.[213] On 15 April, a local teenager was attacked and stabbed by a group of Filipino migrants in Penampang.[214] On 30 April, a Filipino foreign worker who works for the Malaysian plantation related an incident to a friend which later was reported to police following the sightings of armed men in Lahad Datu who suddenly apprehended him and telling that they want to protect the peoples in Sabah.[215] Following a wide-scale surveillance launched by the security forces, there is however no presence of armed men founded in the related areas with the Filipino man also giving a lot of excuses when asked why it was only reported after two weeks with authorities have warned that severe punishment will be imposed for those who found to be made a false report.[216][217] The worker explained he was afraid of being arrested if he report the sighting to local authorities as he working illegally in the state, which later resulting to his arrestment with the authorities assured the public that police will not closing the case despite not finding any proof of the man's claim and explained his arrestment are not caused by making false report but rather due to immigration offences.[218]

On 2 May, an unemployed Filipino man was arrested after trying to assault a security guard after being warned not to trespass a construction site. The suspect was managed to be put down by the guard during the ensuing scuffle when he began to brandishing a knife; and giving a threat to find the guard soon after his sentence is ended. The suspect also remanded for coming to the state without any valid travel documents.[219] On 10 May, a local woman was held hostage by a Filipino man high on drugs after the suspect failed to robbed a house which he was then picking a local bystander and pointing his knife towards the woman by threatening to slit her throat.[220][221][222] Following the implementation of strict requirements by Philippine authorities in the southern Philippines for Filipinos who tried to leaving their country to come to Sabah, there is a positive beginning drop on the numbers of Filipinos who plan to heading to the state without complete travel documents. This was enforced following the revelation from the previously arrested Filipino man who tried to robbed a house and taking a local bystander as a hostage in the state capital as he had no money to be used to return to his country.[223] On 29 September, a Filipino man who are previously involved in several robberies and kidnapping plot was shot dead after resisting arrest by opening fire towards police.[53] On 13 November, a previously deported Filipino illegal immigrant who had return to Sabah to commit armed robbery was arrested after robbing a convenience store in Tawau.[224] On 4 December, another Filipino man linked to the Abu Sayyaf was shot dead in the waters near Silam in Lahad Datu after resisting arrest by firing security forces.[54]

On 13 February 2018, a Filipino criminal who has been involved in 17 housebreaking cases were shot dead by police after he resisting arrest by releasing several gunshots to police members during ensuing chase in Kayu Madang Road, Telipok.[225] On 22 February, Sabah fishermen who was fishing in the waters off Kinabatangan was shot by gunmen who are believed to be originated from the neighbouring islands of the Philippines.[226] On 27 February, three heavily armed men was shot dead by police in Tawau after opening fire when the suspects realised they were being tailed.[227] On 8 May, four gunmen were shot dead by Sabah authorities off the coast of Lahad Datu after attacking patrolling authorities.[228] Another two gunmen were shot dead on 20 September.[229] On 24 December, through raids into various Filipino refugee settlement in both Sabah and Labuan, the authorities seized many dangerous weapons including drugs possessed by many of the Filipino illegal immigrants where they were detained through the operations.[230] On 28 December, an armed illegal immigrant man with identity documents from the Philippines were shot dead in Kampung Jawa, Lahad Datu after aiming his gun to patrolling police members who out to check him in a house following a tip-off from the public.[231]

On 13 January 2019, another case of random passerby hostage taking involving a 2-year-old children occurred in Telipok where the suspect been shot dead after 5 hours negotiation with police to release the victim.[232] The identity of the suspect are yet to be ascertained but during the negotiation, the suspect are heard to be speaking Suluk language and police also did not rule out he is a foreigner as no identity document found on his body.[233][234] This was also agreed by a majority of Sabahan society in social media who have been condemning the unstoppable violent attitudes of Muslim Filipino cultures in the state that are brought by their immigrants since the area of Telipok itself are mostly inhabited by southern Filipinos refugees from Mindanao.[235] United Pasokmomogun Kadazandusun Murut Organisation (UPKO) also warned local authorities on the already huge crimes in the state that were perpetrated by Filipinos in just a month, urging for more drastic measures being taken including recalling and reissued all the identity cards in the state to only genuine Sabahan citizens since many foreigners mainly criminals and terrorists from neighbouring countries have taken advantage through the illegal issuance of identity cards to them.[236] On 26 January, an Aussie homestay operator in Sabah were severely slashed with machete by an undocumented Filipino worker after some disagreement with the latter near Kampung Kiwoi, Tamparuli.[237][238] The Filipino was then arrested on 14 February in an unnumbered house in Kampung Saga in Likas, Kota Kinabalu where the suspect still tried to escape and being aggressive towards police.[239] Through his trial, he was served a sentence of 13 years in jail.[240]

On 24 May, a local Grab driver who was pronounced missing was later found to be murdered by a Filipino illegal immigrant with local accomplice (also a Filipino with citizenship) in Kota Kinabalu.[241] Both suspects has been arrested and handed with execution.[242] On 10 June, a local trader in Tawau was stabbed to death by Filipino illegal immigrants with all of the perpetrators were later arrested by police.[243][244] On 11 June, a clash occurred between local and Filipino illegal immigrants in Ranau with a local man was assaulted by the Filipino group.[245][246][247] Following the unstoppable spates of violent criminal incidents perpetrated by Filipino illegal immigrants towards local people, Filipino community leader has called for a more strict and harsh law by both Sabah and Malaysian authorities with life travel ban imposed to those involved while at the same time calling Filipino authorities to records every of the ex-convicts and closely monitor their movements upon their return to the Philippines.[248] The city of Kota Kinabalu have since recently received the exodus of beggars from the Philippines wandering around the city and disrupting the public with more efforts from the authorities have also been urged by the State Tourism Minister Christina Liew to address the matter.[249] The Sabah Prisons' Board of Visiting Justices (LHP) also has reported that most prison in the state have exceeded their capacity,[250] with detained Filipinos in Sabah blamed their embassy for their lengthy detention.[251]

A Malaysian lecturer, B. A. Hamzah of the Department of Strategic Studies, National Defence University, Kuala Lumpur said "the root causes for maritime violence must be understood and addressed" with the people in the Sulu Archipelago should be granted for a self-rule by the Philippine government. Adding that the kidnappings was happened as a result of spillover of armed conflicts in the southern Philippines. He said there must be co-operation between the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia to enforce law and order at the Sulu Sea as the area are historically known for their lawlessness, where the Muslim islanders living in the archipelago becoming bandits, kidnappers, extortionists, and gun runners as their main primary businesses as the areas are very impoverished.[252]

Neighbouring Vietnam have begun to install radar in their ships for piracy warning and launched maritime exercise.[3] Both Singapore and Thailand have also been invited to assist in the Sulu Sea patrols together with Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines.[4][5]

Society

The former Prime Minister of Malaysia, Mahathir Mohamad, has suggested the government of Sabah to demolish all the water villages in eastern Sabah and resettle only the local people there as the era of the water villages has passed and the lifestyle of the villagers there who live in the sea is not appropriate for the modern way of life in Malaysia as the nation aims for Vision 2020.[253] A Sabah MP, Rosnah Shirlin has called for the closure of the Filipino refugee camp in Kinarut, saying it is a threat to security in Papar. She says:

The refugee camp has creating a lot of problems for the residents of the district. The camp has become a drugs den and the source of many other criminal activities. Over the years, many robberies had taken place in nearby villages and the culprits are mostly from the camp. Supposedly, the improved situation in the Philippines today has brought into question whether these Filipinos could still be regarded as refugees. The camp was set up on a 40-acre plot of land near Kampung Laut in the early 1980s by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR). But the UNHCR had long ago stopped providing funds to the camp and as a result, many of these foreigners had been working outside the camp.[254] The refugees had dared to expand the camp area, encroaching on nearby village land and today, the camp has become the biggest syabu distribution den in Papar.[255][256]

— Rosnah Shirlin, Sabah Papar's MP.

United Sabah People's Party (PBRS) leader, Joseph Kurup shares a similar view on this, adding that the Moro refugees and immigrants should take the opportunity to return and develop their homeland in Mindanao, Philippines as the peace had been restored there.[257] Kurup also reminded that Sabahan people are not against to any migration, but stressing that any migration should be accordance to law by not entering illegally;

We (the Sabahan peoples) are not against migration to Sabah as long as it is in accordance with the law.[258]

Another Sabah former Chief Minister, Yong Teck Lee has suggested to suspend the ferry service in Sandakan to counter the high level of Moro people migration from the Mindanao which now has become a major issue for Sabah when they overstay in the state and becoming an illegal immigrant.[259][260] In October 2014, the Minister of Home Affairs, Ahmad Zahid Hamidi announced that all stateless children in Sabah will be given a birth certificates for schooling purposes.[261] The proposal was soon opposed by a number of Sabahan politicians both from the opposition and government allied parties such as Joseph Pairin Kitingan, Darell Leiking and Yong Teck Lee, citing the act would bring a big problem to Sabah in the future,[262][263][264] while another Sabah-based opposition party leader, Jeffrey Kitingan, has called for a different birth certificate to be issued to the foreigners.[265] Sabah State Legislative Assembly member for Kamunting in Sandakan, Charles O Pang, believes the education system will be burdened if stateless children are given birth certificates. He quote;

According to Sabah survey of statelessness, it is estimated that around 36,000 stateless children of Indonesian origin lived in the state and most employees understand they are working on palm oil plantations. While stateless children from the Philippines are estimated much higher. He did not deny that most people who come to Sabah to seek a better life but the problems posed by the illegal human wave will only lead to trouble. Obviously, this scenario creates an unfair situation for Malaysians in the sense that we are taxpayers, and who should pay the high costs of the non-citizen children not only in their schools, but also in the terms of maintenance of their lives?[266]

— Charles O Pang, Sabah State Legislative Assembly Members for Kamunting in Sandakan.

Also it was known the UNHCR has ever trying before to integrate the Filipino refugees with local communities in 1986 if they can't repatriate them back to the Philippines but this was opposed heavily by the locals and Sabah state government as it could bring a big social problem to the state.[98][99] Large amounts of money have been spent to maintain the lives of the Filipino illegal immigrants and the amount remains unpaid until today despite attempts to recover the monies. Sabah Health Department said infectious diseases among the illegal immigrants was on the rise resulting in more expenditures, as well as provisions for more funds to accommodate the logistics such as medical officers and others.[267] Illegal electricity connection and theft in the state are mainly been attributed to illegal squatters settlement that inhabited by Filipino refugees and illegal immigrants.[268][269][270] The seaweed industry operated by indigenous Suluk community in eastern Sabah are also heavily affected because of the persistent kidnappings perpetrated by their Filipino-Tausūg relatives southern-Philippine-based terrorist group, the Abu Sayyaf.[271] Sabah Kiulu Assemblyman, Joniston Bangkuai point out a similar view on the stateless issue. He said:

It used to be that they (the illegal Filipinos) came here to look for livelihood. They came to look for work, but now they are multiplying, with their women giving birth to as many as 10 children, but they are not taken care of.[272]

— Joniston Bangkuai, Sabah Kiulu's Assemblyman.

The Sabah National Registration Department (NRD) director, Ismail Ahmad has clarified that the issuing of the birth certificates does not make the stateless children Malaysians or Sabahan citizens as the certificates will be only used for record and monitoring purpose to show that the children are born in Sabah.[273] Beside that, a DNA test is now among the methods being used to ensure only genuine citizens are issued the Malaysian birth certificate when they apply for late birth registrations.[274] After several discussions, the Cabinet of Malaysia later decided to give only special birth documents instead of birth certificates as announced by the Malaysian Prime Minister, Najib Razak.[275][276]

UPKO to present their proposed solutions on the problems after they have obtained the full Royal Commission Inquiry report, one of them being the re-calling and re-issuing of all the identification cards of the people of Sabah.[277] Other former politicians have asked the federal government to investigate the action of some individuals who claim to be of royal blood of the Sulu Sultanate and have been conferring many Datukship title to local Sabahans and to those from Peninsular Malaysia until today.[278]

Most Sabah United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) leaders have lauded the drastic measures announced by the Sabah current Chief Minister Musa Aman to address the problem posed by illegal immigrants.[279] However, the former UPKO federal parliamentarian, Wilfred Bumburing reminded that the members of Barisan Nasional (BN) should not take credit for the setting up of the Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) as it was only established after a much pressure from the Sabahan peoples.[280] The United Sabah Party (PBS) has said the Philippine government is to be blamed for the misery of its nationals in Sabah as a response to remarks made by Philippines Ambassador to Malaysia, J. Eduardo Malaya who stressed that Filipino migrants children in Malaysia deserved formal education. While he support the suggestion, the party Secretary-General Johnny Mositun reminded:[281]

The number of Filipinos in Sabah, legal or illegal, is huge but what has Manila done, or is doing, to see to their education? It was Manila's refusal to establish a Consular Office in Sabah that was making life difficult for the hundreds of thousands of Filipinos in the state and Malaysia had to bear the cost. Nearly half of the patients using Sabah hospitals are mostly Filipinos. For the better part of four decades, the Filipinos in Sabah – refugees, migrant workers and illegal immigrants – have all been denied any substantial services or assistance from the Philippine government. They survive only because the Malaysian Government adheres strictly to international norms and standards of law and human rights. We provide them with jobs, they avail themselves of all our civic amenities, and now it is implied that we should educate their children, too. What next?[281]

— Johnny Mositun, United Sabah Party (PBS) Secretary General.

Other Sabahan leaders such as Darell Leiking agreed and reminded the Philippine government to emulate the Indonesian government's plan by setting up a consulate in Sabah to care for their nationals and set up schools for their children. On a statement, he said:[282]

The Philippine government should accept the fact that Sabah was a sovereign nation and that it needed to set up a consulate in the state for the good of its people. Filipino migrants must be registered to allow them to have better opportunities in Sabah, to have a life and proper jobs as it was unfair to impose Filipino problems unto Sabah or the Malaysian government simply because the Philippine government refused to take responsibility for its own people.[282]

— Darell Leiking, member of the opposition (PKR).

The Sabah state government has since working to end the Filipino squatter problems that have become the main cause for rampant crimes, terrorism and drug trafficking in the state by relocating them to a proper place to ease proper management.[283] Prior to the meeting between Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak in Putrajaya in late 2016, both leaders agree to deport illegal Filipino migrants and refugees in Sabah while set aside Philippines claim into the state with the signing of various agreements to improve the social conditions of legal Filipino migrants and expatriates in the state with the establishment of a school, hospital and a consulate.[284][285] However, the matter will still need to be discussed within the Sabah state cabinet for an outcome to allow Philippine government setting up their school, hospital and a consulate in the state, with the Sabah state government appreciating Philippine government recent move to accept its citizens that currently being detained in various temporary detention in the state mainly for illegal migration, overstaying and committing crimes.[286] According to a statistics from Sabah National Security Council, around 550,000 undocumented immigrants have been deported from the state or left voluntarily since 1990, with most of them are Filipinos.[287] The Sabah state government also submit recommendations to the Malaysian federal government through the Main Committee on Management of Foreigners to move the refugee placement schemes in the state to other more suitable locations far from the towns and industrial development areas.[288] More strong enforcements against illegal immigrants in Sabah also being taken following the discovery of immigrants syndicates giving illegal citizenship to their fellow relatives from the Philippines and Indonesia,[289] as in early 2017, a former employee in the Malaysian Registration Department (JPN) was sentenced to 156 years in prison for giving illegal citizenship to Filipino illegal immigrants from Sulu to stay in Sabah.[290] The recent Sabah state government decision to re-open border trade in its eastern coast has been applauded by Mindanao Development Authority (MinDA) secretary Abdul Khayr Alonto. In his statement:

As per announcement by the chief Minister of Sabah, starting 1 February 2017, the ban on doing the economic activities will be lifted. Sabah is open once again to our Muslim/Filipino traders going to that part of Malaysia. The re-opening of the cross border trade will involve our three island provinces but will eventually expand to other territories of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), and even to General Santos City. The behaviour of some individuals, you know – kidnapping and beheading – the inhumanity in this kidnap for ransom affected not only the free trade but economic activities, their livelihood (mainly to us). Without prejudice to the Sabah claim, we will operate (consulate) in Kota Kinabalu, within that complex also we will try to put up the consular office activities to take good care of our people in Sabah and attend to their requirements, including passport.[26]

The secretary added that he vowed to work harder to make Mindanao as the gateway of the Philippines as part of the BIMP-EAGA and asked the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) to strengthened security in the Sulu Sea and Mindanao and eliminating terrorists to encourage more investors to develop the areas.[26] However, according to Philippine Representative from Palawan Jose C. Alvarez, they are more interest to establish a Palawan Business Office in the state than Philippine Office that will also giving the similar services like passport granting, renewal of travel documents and other requirements as well extending business assistance to the Filipino people when the need arises, giving excuses that it is only proper and logical to set up the main office if there are increasing number of Filipino traders especially from Palawan.[291] Despite this, Abdul Khayr said the opening of a consulate is still a major necessary to serve as a refuge for overseas Filipino workers who vulnerable to many issues especially those who remain undocumented and by opening it does not mean it will affect the territorial dispute issue.[292]

The Filipinos in the state expressed their hopes that more attention will be given from the Filipino consular services especially on easy and better access in communication facilities, more friendly attitude from embassy officials and staff and transparency in all official transactions as they had repeatedly expressed their dissatisfactions over how the manner of consular missions were conducted with the presence of "middlemen", delays in deliveries of travel documents, difficulties to telephone the main Philippine embassy in Kuala Lumpur and rudeness of some of the embassy officials and staff.[293] Despite the return of barter trade activity, the state of Sabah has maintained they will always be cautious on their trade with the Philippines.[294]

In 2019, the IMM13 document for refugees from southern Philippines are being replaced with Temporary Sabah Pass (PSS) under the administration of a new Malaysian government to solve the problems once and for all which have been ongoing since the 1970s where the old document is misused by the refugees which subsequently posing threats to the security of the state.[295] The Sabah state government also introducing a new barter trade system where only non-subsidised cooking oil can be used in the trade unlike in the previous system where subsidised cooking oil specifically for Malaysian citizens were rampantly taken by foreigners in neighbouring Philippines and Indonesia.[296][297] Despite with all of the earlier proposals and newer approaches, the increasing Filipino netizens pressure on the Philippine government to act more on territorial issues due to the government soft approaches to recent presence of China's military in their territorial waters was responded by Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr. who subsequently trying to divert the attention by saying in April 2019 that the Philippine government should make the attempt to possessing Sabah as the main priority instead while telling everyone through his tweet in Twitter that the South China Sea (known as West Philippine Sea in the country) is not Philippine territories where it is only an exclusive economic zone (EEZ).[298] Further in September in the same year, Locsin finally revealed the definite Philippine government decision that they really did not have any plan to setting up an embassy to care for Filipino nationals in the state who frequently detained due to social problems as the move is considered by the Philippine government as an act of treason to their country, ignoring the plead of many Filipinos who have been complaining the problems on the lacks of their representative in the state unlike neighbouring Indonesia which has a consulate in the state.[299]

Notes

  1. ^ A number of Philippine police and soldiers were also killed in their mission to suppress the piracy and criminal activities in the Sulu Archipelago.
  2. ^ A number of law abiding Moro rebels from the group of MNLF and MILF were also killed in their mission to control the persistent lawlessness in Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago.

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cross, border, attacks, sabah, conflict, philippines, moro, conflict, part, piracy, sulu, north, borneo, dispute, moro, conflictattacks, moro, pirates, militants, sabah, from, 19th, century, presentdate8, december, 1962, present, years, months, week, days, loc. For the conflict in the Philippines see Moro conflict Cross border attacks in SabahPart of the Piracy in the Sulu Sea North Borneo dispute and Moro conflictAttacks by Moro pirates and militants in Sabah from the 19th century to the presentDate8 December 1962 17 present 60 years 5 months 1 week and 4 days LocationSabah MalaysiaResultSecurity in mainland Sabah was under control cross border attacks ongoing Operation Merdeka to invade Sabah under the instruction of Ferdinand Marcos failed to carry out and the starting of insurgency in the Southern Philippines after Marcos soldiers execute a number of Moro fighters in an event known as Jabidah massacre Nur Misuari deported to the Philippines in 2001 under the ASEAN friendship after Malaysian security forces found he had stayed illegally on an island in Sabah to escape from the Philippine authorities after a failed rebellion against the Philippine Government 18 19 Establishment of RCI in 2012 when Sabah was infiltrated with a huge numbers of illegal immigrants from the Philippines who escape from the war torn Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago Deportation of thousands of Filipino illegal immigrants in Sabah after they were found collaborating with militants during a brief of standoff with a self proclaimed Filipino Sultan Jamalul Kiram III followers in 2013 20 21 Establishment of ESSCOM and ESSZONE in 2013 to counter further Filipino militant infiltrations and to prevent the mass exodus of Filipino illegal immigrants into Sabah 22 23 Sabah ceases its cross border trade and barter trade in eastern waters from 7 April 2016 1 February 2017 due to persistent Abu Sayyaf attacks 24 25 26 The governments of Malaysia Philippines and Indonesia have signed an agreement to jointly countering the persistent lawlessness in the Sulu Archipelago 27 28 Belligerents Malaysia Sabah Philippines after 1986 1 Indonesia 2 Vietnam 3 Singapore 4 Thailand 5 Supported by Australia 1963 66 troops and material aid New Zealand 1963 66 troops and material aid United Kingdom until 1966 troops and material aid Brunei material aid 6 7 8 9 10 Bangsamoro militia support Moro Islamic Liberation Front 11 Moro National Liberation Front 12 13 Abu Sayyaf 2000 present Moro Pirates 1963 present Sulu Sultanate Jamalul Kiram III faction 2013 present Former Sabah invasion supporter Government of the Philippines until 1986 Moro National Liberation Front Misuari faction 2001 2015 14 15 16 Bangsamoro Republik 2013 Commanders and leadersAnwar Ibrahim Prime Minister of Malaysia Mohamad Hasan Minister of Defence Hajiji Noor Chief Minister of Sabah Joko Widodo President of Indonesia Murad Ebrahim 29 Mohagher Iqbal 11 Muslimin Sema 30 Former leader PM full list Tunku Abdul Rahman 1962 1970 Abdul Razak Hussein 1970 1976 Hussein Onn 1976 1981 Mahathir Mohamad 1981 2003 Abdullah Ahmad Badawi 2003 2009 Najib Razak 2009 2018 Mahathir Mohamad 2018 2020 Muhyiddin Yassin 2020 2021 Ismail Sabri Yaakob 2021 2022 CM full list Fuad Stephens Peter Lo Sui Yin Mustapha Harun Mohamed Said KeruakHarris SallehJoseph Pairin KitinganSakaran DandaiSalleh Said KeruakYong Teck LeeBernard Giluk DompokOsu SukamChong Kah KiatMusa AmanShafie Apdal PR full list Corazon Aquino deceased 31 Fidel V Ramos 32 33 Joseph Estrada 34 Gloria Macapagal Arroyo 32 Benigno Aquino III 1 Rodrigo Duterte PR full list Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 35 Radullan Sahiron current Emir of Abu Sayyaf Abdurajak Janjalani Khadaffy Janjalani Isnilon Totoni Hapilon Phudgal Kiram 36 Raja Muda of the Sulu Sultanate Various pirates leader Jamalul Kiram III Agbimuddin Kiram Ismael Kiram II 36 Former support Diosdado Macapagal 37 Ferdinand Marcos 38 Nur Misuari 2001 2015 14 15 16 39 40 Units involvedNSOF Malaysian Armed Forces Royal Malaysia Police Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency British coalition until 1966 Royal Australian Navy 41 Royal New Zealand Navy 42 43 British troops and navy Armed Forces of the Philippines Philippine National Police Indonesian National Armed Forces Indonesian National PoliceAbu SayyafMoro Pirates Royal Security Forces of the Sultanate of Sulu and North BorneoStrengthMalaysian security forces Malaysian Army 6000 troops 44 18 ACV 300 Adnan IFV 12 DefTech AV8 AFV Some of AV4 Lipanbara MRAP Some of Condor APC Royal Malaysian Air Force A squadron of BAE Hawk 3 F A 18D Hornet Some of Eurocopter EC725 Royal Malaysian Navy Some of ships from Eastern FleetBritish coalition until 1966 Australian forces HMAS Tobruk 41 HMAS Sydney R17 New Zealand forces Patrol ships 42 British forces Thousands British troops Philippine security forces uncertainIndonesian security forces uncertain Law abiding Moro rebels uncertainAbu Sayyaf unknownKiram followers 235 45 Moro Pirates unknownCasualties and lossesMalaysian security forces 12 deaths 46 47 48 and 13 wounded 47 49 recordedBritish coalition until 1966 uncertain Philippine security forces uncertain note 1 Indonesian security forces uncertainLaw abiding Moro rebels uncertain note 2 Abu Sayyaf estimated 21 killed 49 50 51 52 53 54 3 wounded 49 55 56 10 capturedKiram followers 58 killed 47 57 3 wounded 47 Moro Pirates Hundreds killed 50 Civilian casualties estimated 50 killed 46 47 58 59 60 61 estimated 23 wounded 47 60 The total thought to be higher than what has been shown The cross border attacks in Sabah are a series of cross border terrorist attacks perpetrated by Moro pirates from Mindanao Philippines in the state of Sabah Malaysia that began even before the British colonial period 59 62 Many civilians have died or suffered during these incidents causing an increase in anti Filipino sentiment among the native peoples of Sabah especially after major attacks in 1985 2000 and 2013 63 The attacks were more intense during the presidential terms of Diosdado Macapagal and Ferdinand Marcos who supported irredentist claims to include eastern Sabah as part of the Philippines territory 38 60 In addition recent infiltration and attacks by militants as well as uncontrolled human migration from Mindanao to Sabah has led to more unease sentiments among the local residents of Sabah with around 78 of prison inmates that were caught in the state due to involvement in criminal activities and lawlessness issues mainly originating from the southern Philippines 64 Prior to a large scale military operation initiated by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte to combat the rampant lawlessness in the southern Philippines since mid 2016 Malaysian security forces had been told to tighten its security and to ensure that terrorists do not attempt to flee prosecution by escaping to uninhabited areas 65 66 67 Sabahan leaders also ordered Malaysian security forces to shoot on sight any trespassers who continue to ignore laws despite repeated warnings 68 and that those escaping militants be dealt with by the country s laws more effectively 69 Following the declaration of martial law in the neighbouring Philippines since 23 May 2017 Malaysian authorities increased their border security 70 Sabah Chief Minister Shafie Apdal also urged the Malaysian security forces to stop taking a defensive attitude and be offensive towards the rampant crimes perpetrated by southern Filipino criminals and terrorists that has disturbed peace in the state 71 Various countries and territories such as Australia 72 Canada 73 China France 74 Germany 75 Hong Kong 76 Ireland 77 Japan 78 New Zealand 79 Singapore 80 South Korea 81 Switzerland 82 Taiwan 83 United Kingdom 84 United States 85 and Vietnam 86 have raised a travel alert for their citizens to avoid the area in eastern Sabah Contents 1 Background 1 1 Moro migration to Sabah 2 Timeline of attacks 2 1 Attack strategy 2 2 20th century 2 3 21st century 3 Threats and impacts 3 1 Security 3 2 Society 4 Notes 5 ReferencesBackground EditMain articles Sultanate of Sulu and Piracy in the Sulu Sea Piracy has been a part of the Sultanate of Sulu s culture 59 87 88 During the expedition by the British ship HMS Dido in 1846 Captain Henry Keppel mentioned The most desperate and active pirates of the whole Indian Archipelago are the tribes of the Sooloo group of islands lying close to the north shore of Borneo 17 Captain Henry Keppel The Sulu islands were known for their great slave market with their islanders frequently attacking Borneo Island in search of slaves 89 In 1910 the neighbouring Celebes Islands was attacked by seven Moro pirates whom had crossed from Mindanao and two Dutch traders were killed in the incident 62 Subsequent reports from the British government in North Borneo reported that Joloano Moros terrorised the inhabitants of North Borneo looting small towns and killing many people 90 Although the British did a lot to combat piracy 62 an office of a British company was later raided by twelve Moro pirates in Kalabakan in July 1958 Another raid was done on the nearby township of Semporna on 29 March 1954 91 During the last years of British rule in North Borneo both seafarers and coastal settlements suffered a high numbers of attacks from pirates who were believed to be mainly based on Tawi Tawi 59 Between 1959 and 1962 232 pirates attack were recorded by the British authorities in North Borneo but these were thought to be underestimated as many attacks went unreported 59 The British North Borneo governor at the time Roland Turnbull had requested the British to provide him with security forces from the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force but no aid was sent until a British newspaper the Daily Telegraph embellished the report with an anti Indonesian bias because of the Indonesia Malaysia confrontation 91 Moro migration to Sabah Edit See also Jabidah massacre Refugees of the Philippines and Illegal immigrants in Malaysia Regional migration flows within Southeast Asia are not a phenomenon restricted to current times Social and cultural connections between Sabah Mindanao and the Indonesian province of North Kalimantan have existed for centuries The tradition of border crossing from the Philippine Sulu Archipelago to Sabah originated in the late 16th century 92 The first wave of this migration was linked to the Spanish colonialists who began pushing southwards toward the island provinces of Sulu and Tawi Tawi from Manila which was the administration centre of the Spanish during that time The struggle for dominance between different ethnic groups and the Spanish in Mindanao led to increased immigration of Philippine Moro ethnic groups mostly the Suluks and Bajaus to Sabah 92 A huge Moro settlements in the coast of Gaya Island near Kota Kinabalu The first arrival of the illegal immigrants in Sabah in the 1960s was said to be associated with the then Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos and his country s claim to the northern Borneo region 92 It is claimed by media in the Philippines that during the first stage of his plan Marcos sent around 17 men who mostly recruited from Sulu and Tawi Tawi had entered Sabah as forest rangers postmen and police These agents have blended into the Sabah local communities with a plan to possessing the minds of the larger Filipino communities in eastern Sabah to secede from Malaysia and become part of the Philippines as well to destabilising Sabah 38 At the same time a Suluk native Mustapha Harun became the third Chief Minister of Sabah he then made a contact with one of the Filipino agent who became his driver 38 However most of them did not intend to attack their fellow Muslim brothers in Sabah when they realise their true mission in which they were later execute by Marcos commando soldiers in an event known as Jabidah massacre 93 94 During Mustapha s term from 1967 to 1975 he was believed to have encouraged many newly Filipino Tausugs to migrate to northern Borneo to establish a strong Muslim community which was represented by the United Sabah National Organisation USNO 92 Since the massacre especially with the starting of Moro insurgency in the Philippines 95 Mustapha is believed to have supplied the Moro rebels with financial and weapon supports to fight for their freedom and to take a revenge for their fallen comrades 96 Since then it has caused major economic problems for Sabah as Marcos soldiers launched an operation to eliminate any anti Marcos factions in the Sulu and Mindanao islands which left much infrastructure there destroyed forcing an estimated of another 100 000 Moros in Mindanao to flee to Sabah 60 97 Most of those who left the Philippines were already involved in criminal activities mainly smuggling and armed robbery 60 Today a huge numbers of Moros still live in many places in Sabah such as Kota Kinabalu Kinarut Lahad Datu Sandakan Semporna Tawau Telipok as well on Labuan 98 99 100 101 Most of the Filipino refugees are issued with IMM13 documents by the Malaysian government during Mahathir Mohamad administration 102 with many of them have been controversially naturalised as citizen 100 103 Besides that the present economic disparity between Mindanao and Sabah became the main reason many of these illegal Moros snuck into Sabah with some of those extremist Moros with their own ideology still perceive the eastern part of Sabah as part of the Philippines and these groups feel entitled to enter Sabah as it is their historical right although the Sultanate of Sulu have defunct since the last recognised Sultan Jamalul Kiram II whose have no son to inherit his powers 104 105 These negative views on Filipino immigrants however ignores the scathing involvement of the Malaysian government in terrorist activities in southern Philippines as several terrorists targeting Philippine cities were of Malaysian descent Filipino Moros who fled from the war in the Philippines were merely fleeing the devastation of the Moro conflict a conflict which was tacitly supported by the Malaysian government 106 a political move to counter act attempts for the Reconquest of Sabah by the Sultanate of Sulu which once exercised sovereignty over Sabah before Malaysia took over rule of the territory In 2014 the Eastern Sabah Security Command Esscom Security Coordinating Intelligence Officer Hassim Justin blamed corruption illegal issuance of identity cards and local authorities who did not taking any action to combat the squatter colonies for contributing to the significant increase of illegal immigrants in Sabah 107 It was also reported that community leaders in the east coast such as village chief were involved in the granting of identity cards to new Filipino Moro immigrants as they have a connection with them through similar ethnic roots 108 According to a research by two Filipino researchers Myfel Joseph Paluga and Andrea Malaya Ragragio of the Department of Social Science University of the Philippines Mindanao the flood of migrants from Mindanao to Sabah was partly encouraged by certain Sabah politicians who wanted to be the Sultan of Sulu especially after the fall of Sabah Muslim led parties of USNO and Sabah People s United Front BERJAYA administrations 109 Beside that it was claimed by Indonesian workers who had become victims of irresponsible employers the arrival of illegal immigrants from the Philippines are also caused by employers who abuse their powers especially in the agricultural sectors of palm oil plantation 110 Timeline of attacks EditSee also 1985 Lahad Datu ambush 2000 Sipadan kidnappings and 2013 Lahad Datu standoff Attack strategy Edit The tactics are different and are based on the motives of individual groups Generally the Moro pirate and militants will attack and escape to the Malaysia Philippines border or any nearby islands when their activities are spotted by the security forces Both the pirates and militants will usually steal boat engines food and other useful things that can be sold 111 In certain cases they also attack towns killing innocent civilians and kidnapping them as shown in the Lahad Datu and Semporna attacks 50 The Filipino illegal immigrants play an important role in helping them by providing information on their next target 21 Due to the increase security patrol by the Malaysian Armed Forces the militants group such as the Abu Sayyaf has change their tactics by attacking and abducting foreign vessel crews Many of those who fleeing from the Philippine military operation in the southern Philippines also sneaking into Sabah with new tactics by entering the state in a small group to avoid from being detected as suspicious by the Malaysian security forces this was discovered following the tip off from local villagers who saw many new suspicious people coming into their village from the sea shortly after the continuous military operation Many of them are believed to be member of militants and kidnapping groups 112 20th century Edit Australian soldiers being ferried in a small craft from troop transport HMAS Sydney on its arrival in North Borneo Sabah to counter Indonesian confrontation and possible attacks by Filipino pirates as part of their defence aid program to Malaysia in 1964 In 1962 seven Filipino Moros armed with machetes attacked the town of Kunak and robbed the businessmen there The seven Filipino Moros attacked again in 1963 this time attacking the town of Semporna and killing a number of residents 58 In October 1979 a passenger boat on the way to Semporna from Lahad Datu with 48 passengers was attacked and forced to dock at Adal Island Three passengers were shot dead one woman was raped and the others was taken to the Philippines but were quickly rescued by the Philippine security forces In 1980 a group of 6 8 Moros attacked an island near Semporna with M16 rifles killing villagers while they were asleep At the end seven villagers were killed while 11 others were injured In 1982 a groups of Moros ambushed a village in Timba Timba Island and started to shoot rob and kill villagers The incident in 1985 which is considered to be the most terrifying attack out of all of them was where 21 people were killed and another 11 wounded Five of the intruders were killed by the Malaysian maritime police while the others managed to escaped At the end of the tragedy one of the victim said I cannot help wondering about our government which can t seem to defend us against these marauders 60 In 1987 two Japanese managers were killed while others were wounded after twelve gunmen attack a factory in the Boheydulang Island forcing the company to close and move their factory to Indonesia 50 In 1996 two separate armed groups from Mindanao attack the town of Semporna the first group attack a police station by throwing a fish bomb while the second group managed to steal jewellery worth around MYR100 000 at a gold shop During the shoot out two of the group members were captured by the police with 200 bullets recovered from them However the rest managed to escape In March 1996 another attacks by 10 20 Moros happens in the town of Semporna when three separate armed groups attacked different places at the same time The first group attacked a police headquarters while the second group attacked a police station It is acknowledged the motive of the first and second group was to delay time and let the third group succeed in robbing a gold shop No arrest was made and all the intruders managed to escaped with MYR 200 000 Again in July 1996 four armed men attack a gold shop in Tawau and managed to steal jewellery worth around MYR 150 000 However one of the gunmen later made a mistake when he retreated to a refugee village in Tawau where he was shot dead by the police After an hour of investigation another 5 gunmen from other groups were killed by the police 50 21st century Edit In 2000 the Abu Sayyaf group kidnapped a large number of hostages 10 of the hostages were from Europe and the Middle East while 11 were Malaysian resort workers All hostages were later rescued by the Philippine security forces in Jolo Sulu 113 In 2003 six foreigners were kidnapped by 10 Moro pirates In 2004 two Sarawakians and an Indonesian were kidnapped by the Abu Sayyaf group In 2005 five Filipinos abducted three Indonesian crew from a Sandakan based trading company near Mataking Island off Semporna In 2010 a crew of fishermen were captured by Filipino gunmen when their boat strayed into Philippine waters near Boan Island All crews was later released without any ransom being paid Also in the same year a seaweed manager and supervisor were kidnapped by four armed Filipinos on Sebangkat Island Both victims was freed 11 months later In 2011 ten armed Filipinos kidnapped a Malaysian businessmen 58 On 11 February 2013 a group of approximately 100 200 individuals some of them armed arrived by boat in Lahad Datu Sabah from Simunul Tawi Tawi in Mindanao 114 They were sent by Jamalul Kiram III one of the claimants to the throne of the Sultanate of Sulu Their objective was to assert their unresolved territorial claim to North Borneo During the standoff 56 militants were killed including 6 civilians and 10 Malaysian forces 47 115 116 117 In November 2013 suspected Abu Sayyaf militants killed a Taiwanese national at Pom Pom Island and released his wife a month later in southern Philippines 118 In January 2014 an attempted intrusion by foreign elements on Sabah was blocked by the Malaysian security forces 119 On 2 April 2014 a Chinese tourist and a Filipino national were abducted off Singamata Adventures Reef and Resort Semporna Two months later they were rescued by Malaysian and Philippine security forces On 6 May 2014 another abduction involving a Chinese national occurred in Silam near the Lahad Datu area in Sabah 118 He was later freed on 10 July 120 On 16 June a fish breeder and a Filipino worker were kidnapped off Kunak 121 122 The fish farm manager was freed on 10 December with the help of two Filipino negotiators one of them being the leader of the Moro National Liberation Front 121 On 12 July a policeman was shot dead and another marine policeman was abducted at Mabul Water Bungalows Resort Mabul island 48 123 124 The policeman was later freed on 7 March 2015 after 9 months in captivity 125 On 9 October two Filipino illegal immigrants who were identified as Sulu militants were killed by police in Penampang both suspects has a record of criminal activities and were responsible for at least three robberies in the area 57 On 17 October two Vietnamese fishermen who were working for a Malaysian employer were shot by Filipino pirates All of them were later rescued by the Malaysian security forces and sent to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Kota Kinabalu 126 127 On 15 May 2015 four armed men from the Abu Sayyaf based group in Mindanao abducted two people in a resort in Sandakan and brought them to Parang Sulu 128 129 One of them been released on 9 November after six months in captivity 130 while another one was beheaded due to ransom demands was not met 131 132 The Malaysian authorities identified that a number of kidnappings in Sabah was perpetrated by a group of Filipino brothers known as Muktadil brothers who sell their hostages to Abu Sayyaf group Of all the five Muktadil brothers Mindas Muktadil was killed by Philippine police in Jolo in May 2015 Kadafi Muktadil was arrested in late 2015 Nixon Muktadil and Brown Muktadil was killed during an operation by the Philippine military on 27 September 2016 after they resist for arrest 133 134 while Badong Muktadil succumbed to his injuries during his run after being shot at the time his brothers was killed His body was discovered in a pump boat in Mususiasi area in Siasi Island close to Jolo 135 On 1 April 2016 four Malaysians aboard a tugboat from Manila was kidnapped when they arrived near the shore of Ligitan Island while leaving other crews unharmed comprising three Myanmar nationals and two Indonesians 136 The four Malaysian hostages was later released after nearly two months in captivity 137 On 15 April two Indonesian tugboats from Cebu namely Henry and Cristi with 10 passengers were attacked by Abu Sayyaf militants Four passengers were kidnapped while another five were safe One of the passenger was injured after being shot but were later rescued by Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency when they arrived into the waters of Malaysia 138 The four were released on 11 May with the help of the Philippine government 139 On 9 July three Indonesians fishermen was kidnapped near the coast of Lahad Datu 140 On 18 July five Malaysian sailors were also abducted near the coast of Lahad Datu 141 Another one Indonesian sailor was kidnapped in the waters of Malaysia on 3 August while leaving other two crews unharmed the incident was only reported by victims on 5 August 142 Two of the Indonesian sailor hostages have managed to escape from the Abu Sayyaf after persistent threats of beheading 143 On 10 September three Filipino fishermen was kidnapped in the shores of Pom Pom Island in Sabah Malaysia 144 145 The three Indonesians fishermen that was kidnapped on 9 July from Sabah were released on 17 September 146 On 27 September one local boat skipper was kidnapped from his trawler by seven armed Filipino militant before attacking another Indonesian trawler but no kidnapping were committed in the second incident 147 The boat skipper was released on 1 October with no ransom been asked 148 along with three Indonesians hostages that were released on the same day 149 On 12 October four armed men in a pump boat attacking two fishermen on a boat off Tigabu Island near Kudat One of the fisherman who is an Indonesian sustained gunshot wounds and has been treated in the Duchess of Kent Hospital in Sandakan 150 151 On 24 October six unidentified gunmen who spoke Tagalog rob a Malaysian trawler in international waters near Jambongan Island off Kudat the incident was only reported to local authorities on 27 October due to long distance with any army post 152 Another attempt for kidnapping was thwarted by the Malaysian security forces on 31 October near Berhala Island thought the perpetrators managed to escape 153 Two Indonesians were abducted near the shore of Kuala Kinabatangan on 5 November by unidentified gunmen based in Tawi Tawi island of the Philippines 154 On 6 November a German woman tourist was shot to dead while her boyfriend been abducted by Abu Sayyaf militants from their yacht off Tanjong Luuk Pisuk in Sabah 155 156 The German man was later beheaded after failed to pay ransom for his release On 20 November two Indonesian fishermen was kidnapped by five Abu Sayyaf gunmen off Lahad Datu Sabah while Philippine military been informed to intercept the bandit 157 Responding for the co operation with neighbouring countries since late 2016 more than 100 Abu Sayyaf militants have been killed by Philippine authorities 158 with another 30 killed in early 2017 159 On 8 March 2017 a Vietnamese merchant ship was escorted safely to Malaysian waters by the local authorities after the ship s captain reported that he spotted a strange boat with six people on board from the Philippine waters following their vessel 160 On 23 March Philippine authorities rescued two Malaysian hostages during its continuous major pursuit to destroy the group 161 Another three more Malaysian hostages rescued on 26 March 162 Following the continuous security operation collaboration between the Philippine and Malaysian authorities the attacks by Abu Sayyaf have seen a beginning of decrease since the month of April 163 The Malaysian side announced that they would begin to lead the major active joint sea patrols in the Sulu and Celebes Sea with the authorities in Philippines and Indonesia to eliminate all forms of piracy and to clear the sea areas from criminal and terrorist activities that have been ongoing for decades 164 From 2000 to 2016 there has been records of 20 kidnappings cases perpetrated by the Abu Sayyaf with a total of 33 Malaysians and 31 foreigners have been kidnapped for ransom during the six years 165 Following the Philippine military major operations in the southern Philippines especially with the recent killings of many notable Abu Sayyaf leaders the authorities there have foiled a big plan of the Abu Sayyaf to carry out large scale kidnappings of foreigners from tourist island resorts in East Malaysia and the central Philippines 166 On 11 September 2018 two Indonesian fishermen working off eastern Sabah shores are kidnapped by Filipino bandits making it as another first kidnapping incident in almost two years 167 On 10 June 2019 another ten sea gypsies were kidnapped by southern Filipino bandits from the waters in Lahad Datu 168 Nine of them were later released without harm on 22 June in the same month 169 On 4 September two armed Filipino men were killed after they suddenly opened fire to Malaysian patrolling authorities who out to check two foreign boats acting suspiciously in Malaysian waters during night 170 In the ensuing shoot out the other boat also unheeded the warnings and escaped in darkness towards the direction of the southern Philippines 171 172 The increasing vigilance comes after the warning from Indonesian consulate in Sabah that there have been attempts by the Abu Sayyaf to carrying out raids for ransom in the east coast 173 Threats and impacts EditSecurity Edit Main articles Eastern Sabah Security Command and Eastern Sabah Security Zone The Malaysian Maritime Police on duty patrolling the waters around Semporna especially on the Bajau Laut villages to prevent any further intrusion During the British colonial era the British suffered a high number of attacks leading to the deployment of Henry Keppel and James Brooke in 1846 to search for pirate nests in North Borneo 17 After a long journey of battling with the pirates the last pirate s nest in Tunku Lahad Datu was destroyed by the British 174 The latest intrusion in 2013 caused the Malaysian government to establish the Eastern Sabah Security Command ESSCOM Eastern Sabah Security Zone ESSZONE and deploy more assets to Sabah 175 To combat Moro pirates and Abu Sayyaf attacks the Malaysian government has also decided to impose a curfew on eastern Sabah waters and has started to use radar to detect any suspicious activities on every tiny settlement along the east coast 176 177 There is a call from a former Chief Minister of Sabah Harris Salleh to the federal government to reconsider the proposal to move the Royal Malaysian Air Force RMAF base from Butterworth Penang to Labuan He suggested that the air force base should be relocated to Tawau in the interest of security in the eastern Sabah 178 The Minister of Transport Liow Tiong Lai has also proposed to extend the area of ESSCOM and ESSZONE to cover the whole Sabah as also been proposed by Yong Teck Lee 179 On 23 January 2015 the Royal Brunei Air Force gives neighbouring Malaysia four S 70A Black Hawks as a gift The Malaysian said that it will use it in addition to available assets to defend Sabah from a further possible attacks by the Moros 10 On 28 February the United States supplied the Eastern Sabah Security Command ESSCOM with 12 boats following a number of agreements signed between the two countries in 2014 during the Barack Obama visit 180 181 A Malaysian Army soldier armed with Colt M4 standing guard in Sabah east coast as part of the Eastern Sabah Security Command ESSCOM Despite various initiatives and assets been provided by government the cross border crimes in eastern Sabah are keep increasing as the kidnap for ransom groups had strong intelligence as they had a relatives and family living in Sabah 67 182 An investigation report in 2017 revealed that some of the militants members caught in Malaysia were even working as security guards or members of the People s Volunteer Corps in the Malaysia s capital city of Kuala Lumpur 183 The Eastern Sabah Security Command Esscom Security Coordinating Intelligence Officer Hassim Justin have previously warned Malaysian employers to be cautious on hiring Filipinos mainly those who come from the Sulu Archipelago and Mindanao as they could not be trusted as many of them are believed to be spies of kidnapping groups as shown by police investigation and international media reports 184 185 186 187 188 Beside that he have suggested that if any Filipino races who have been naturalised as Malaysian citizens through the illegal Project IC caught for continuously committing crimes in the states should be revoked for their citizenship with their whole family been deported back to the Philippines Hashim also suggested that any Filipino names in troubled villages with high crime rates in eastern Sabah should be removed and replaced with Sabahan names 189 Similar view were also being highlighted in 2018 by ESSCOM chief Hazani Ghazali that Filipino kidnappers received information from their relatives who have been illegally staying in Sabah for a long time 190 The Royal Malaysia Police and Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister has made a proposal to ban barter trade in the east coast as it was seen only benefited to one side and threatening the security of the state 191 192 This was enforced then although facing numerous opposition from the Malaysian opposition parties and Filipino resident on the nearest Philippine islands due to the raise of the cost in their region after the ban while receiving positive welcomes by Sabahans residents and politicians 193 194 195 The barter trade activity was resumed on 1 February 2017 with the increase of security surveillance and enforcement from both Malaysia and the Philippines authorities to jointly secure their borders 25 26 Malaysia Philippines and Indonesia has agreed to jointly patrol their sea to thwart any threats from the Filipino militants 196 The three countries also have signed another agreement on joint air patrols 197 On 2 March 2015 a Filipino worker was arrested following the murder of the former Sabah Chief Minister nephew over salary dispute 198 On 22 February 2016 four Filipino refugee were arrested following the discovery of a Colt 45 and 39 bullets in their Isuzu D Max vehicle at a refugee settlement scheme in Telipok 199 On 23 September an undocumented Filipino migrant was arrested together with his daughter after they were found with M16 bullets and magazines at a premises in Sandakan 200 On 7 October Malaysian authorities arrest 10 suspects comprising residents of Sabah and individuals from the southern Philippines on suspicion of collaborating with militant groups 201 On 8 December three armed Filipino kidnappers who are believed to be members of Abu Sayyaf was shot dead by Malaysian security forces while another two arrested while the gunmen trying to kidnap a fisherman off Lahad Datu 49 202 Two other gunmen however managed to escape with one hostage but goes missing after the shootout 56 Philippine authorities have confirmed all of the gunmen are Abu Sayyaf members and one of the gunmen killed is one of Abu Sayyaf notorious leader that were previously involved in several other kidnappings involving foreign nationals 203 On 12 December two armed gunmen was killed during a shootout with police in Kunak 204 Both suspects are armed with homemade shotguns an airgun a Colt 45 pistol a 38 revolver a knife and parang several M16 bullets a version which different from that being used by the Malaysian security forces other bullets and cartridges as well drug packets but no documentation found in their bodies 205 Both suspects are believed to be drug dealers and involved in several robbery around the east coast area 206 207 208 On 29 December a 42 year old local man was slashed to death while his wife and their three children were seriously hurt after being attacked by a Filipino man in Kudat 209 On 7 January 2017 a paperless Filipino who just served his sentence for 13 criminal offences in Sabah prison in October 2016 was shot and re arrested by local police after he resisting from arrest and tried to injuring one of the policemen when he was caught return to his criminal activities 210 On 3 April a Filipino man was shot to dead by police after running amok by stabbing his wife and tried to injuring policemen who tried to stop him after repeated warnings 211 212 Another Filipino man was charged in court for supporting the ideology of Abu Sayyaf terrorist group on 6 April 213 On 15 April a local teenager was attacked and stabbed by a group of Filipino migrants in Penampang 214 On 30 April a Filipino foreign worker who works for the Malaysian plantation related an incident to a friend which later was reported to police following the sightings of armed men in Lahad Datu who suddenly apprehended him and telling that they want to protect the peoples in Sabah 215 Following a wide scale surveillance launched by the security forces there is however no presence of armed men founded in the related areas with the Filipino man also giving a lot of excuses when asked why it was only reported after two weeks with authorities have warned that severe punishment will be imposed for those who found to be made a false report 216 217 The worker explained he was afraid of being arrested if he report the sighting to local authorities as he working illegally in the state which later resulting to his arrestment with the authorities assured the public that police will not closing the case despite not finding any proof of the man s claim and explained his arrestment are not caused by making false report but rather due to immigration offences 218 On 2 May an unemployed Filipino man was arrested after trying to assault a security guard after being warned not to trespass a construction site The suspect was managed to be put down by the guard during the ensuing scuffle when he began to brandishing a knife and giving a threat to find the guard soon after his sentence is ended The suspect also remanded for coming to the state without any valid travel documents 219 On 10 May a local woman was held hostage by a Filipino man high on drugs after the suspect failed to robbed a house which he was then picking a local bystander and pointing his knife towards the woman by threatening to slit her throat 220 221 222 Following the implementation of strict requirements by Philippine authorities in the southern Philippines for Filipinos who tried to leaving their country to come to Sabah there is a positive beginning drop on the numbers of Filipinos who plan to heading to the state without complete travel documents This was enforced following the revelation from the previously arrested Filipino man who tried to robbed a house and taking a local bystander as a hostage in the state capital as he had no money to be used to return to his country 223 On 29 September a Filipino man who are previously involved in several robberies and kidnapping plot was shot dead after resisting arrest by opening fire towards police 53 On 13 November a previously deported Filipino illegal immigrant who had return to Sabah to commit armed robbery was arrested after robbing a convenience store in Tawau 224 On 4 December another Filipino man linked to the Abu Sayyaf was shot dead in the waters near Silam in Lahad Datu after resisting arrest by firing security forces 54 On 13 February 2018 a Filipino criminal who has been involved in 17 housebreaking cases were shot dead by police after he resisting arrest by releasing several gunshots to police members during ensuing chase in Kayu Madang Road Telipok 225 On 22 February Sabah fishermen who was fishing in the waters off Kinabatangan was shot by gunmen who are believed to be originated from the neighbouring islands of the Philippines 226 On 27 February three heavily armed men was shot dead by police in Tawau after opening fire when the suspects realised they were being tailed 227 On 8 May four gunmen were shot dead by Sabah authorities off the coast of Lahad Datu after attacking patrolling authorities 228 Another two gunmen were shot dead on 20 September 229 On 24 December through raids into various Filipino refugee settlement in both Sabah and Labuan the authorities seized many dangerous weapons including drugs possessed by many of the Filipino illegal immigrants where they were detained through the operations 230 On 28 December an armed illegal immigrant man with identity documents from the Philippines were shot dead in Kampung Jawa Lahad Datu after aiming his gun to patrolling police members who out to check him in a house following a tip off from the public 231 On 13 January 2019 another case of random passerby hostage taking involving a 2 year old children occurred in Telipok where the suspect been shot dead after 5 hours negotiation with police to release the victim 232 The identity of the suspect are yet to be ascertained but during the negotiation the suspect are heard to be speaking Suluk language and police also did not rule out he is a foreigner as no identity document found on his body 233 234 This was also agreed by a majority of Sabahan society in social media who have been condemning the unstoppable violent attitudes of Muslim Filipino cultures in the state that are brought by their immigrants since the area of Telipok itself are mostly inhabited by southern Filipinos refugees from Mindanao 235 United Pasokmomogun Kadazandusun Murut Organisation UPKO also warned local authorities on the already huge crimes in the state that were perpetrated by Filipinos in just a month urging for more drastic measures being taken including recalling and reissued all the identity cards in the state to only genuine Sabahan citizens since many foreigners mainly criminals and terrorists from neighbouring countries have taken advantage through the illegal issuance of identity cards to them 236 On 26 January an Aussie homestay operator in Sabah were severely slashed with machete by an undocumented Filipino worker after some disagreement with the latter near Kampung Kiwoi Tamparuli 237 238 The Filipino was then arrested on 14 February in an unnumbered house in Kampung Saga in Likas Kota Kinabalu where the suspect still tried to escape and being aggressive towards police 239 Through his trial he was served a sentence of 13 years in jail 240 On 24 May a local Grab driver who was pronounced missing was later found to be murdered by a Filipino illegal immigrant with local accomplice also a Filipino with citizenship in Kota Kinabalu 241 Both suspects has been arrested and handed with execution 242 On 10 June a local trader in Tawau was stabbed to death by Filipino illegal immigrants with all of the perpetrators were later arrested by police 243 244 On 11 June a clash occurred between local and Filipino illegal immigrants in Ranau with a local man was assaulted by the Filipino group 245 246 247 Following the unstoppable spates of violent criminal incidents perpetrated by Filipino illegal immigrants towards local people Filipino community leader has called for a more strict and harsh law by both Sabah and Malaysian authorities with life travel ban imposed to those involved while at the same time calling Filipino authorities to records every of the ex convicts and closely monitor their movements upon their return to the Philippines 248 The city of Kota Kinabalu have since recently received the exodus of beggars from the Philippines wandering around the city and disrupting the public with more efforts from the authorities have also been urged by the State Tourism Minister Christina Liew to address the matter 249 The Sabah Prisons Board of Visiting Justices LHP also has reported that most prison in the state have exceeded their capacity 250 with detained Filipinos in Sabah blamed their embassy for their lengthy detention 251 A Malaysian lecturer B A Hamzah of the Department of Strategic Studies National Defence University Kuala Lumpur said the root causes for maritime violence must be understood and addressed with the people in the Sulu Archipelago should be granted for a self rule by the Philippine government Adding that the kidnappings was happened as a result of spillover of armed conflicts in the southern Philippines He said there must be co operation between the Philippines Malaysia and Indonesia to enforce law and order at the Sulu Sea as the area are historically known for their lawlessness where the Muslim islanders living in the archipelago becoming bandits kidnappers extortionists and gun runners as their main primary businesses as the areas are very impoverished 252 Neighbouring Vietnam have begun to install radar in their ships for piracy warning and launched maritime exercise 3 Both Singapore and Thailand have also been invited to assist in the Sulu Sea patrols together with Malaysia Indonesia and the Philippines 4 5 Society Edit Main article Royal Commission of Inquiry on illegal immigrants in Sabah The former Prime Minister of Malaysia Mahathir Mohamad has suggested the government of Sabah to demolish all the water villages in eastern Sabah and resettle only the local people there as the era of the water villages has passed and the lifestyle of the villagers there who live in the sea is not appropriate for the modern way of life in Malaysia as the nation aims for Vision 2020 253 A Sabah MP Rosnah Shirlin has called for the closure of the Filipino refugee camp in Kinarut saying it is a threat to security in Papar She says The refugee camp has creating a lot of problems for the residents of the district The camp has become a drugs den and the source of many other criminal activities Over the years many robberies had taken place in nearby villages and the culprits are mostly from the camp Supposedly the improved situation in the Philippines today has brought into question whether these Filipinos could still be regarded as refugees The camp was set up on a 40 acre plot of land near Kampung Laut in the early 1980s by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees UNHCR But the UNHCR had long ago stopped providing funds to the camp and as a result many of these foreigners had been working outside the camp 254 The refugees had dared to expand the camp area encroaching on nearby village land and today the camp has become the biggest syabu distribution den in Papar 255 256 Rosnah Shirlin Sabah Papar s MP United Sabah People s Party PBRS leader Joseph Kurup shares a similar view on this adding that the Moro refugees and immigrants should take the opportunity to return and develop their homeland in Mindanao Philippines as the peace had been restored there 257 Kurup also reminded that Sabahan people are not against to any migration but stressing that any migration should be accordance to law by not entering illegally We the Sabahan peoples are not against migration to Sabah as long as it is in accordance with the law 258 Joseph Kurup United Sabah People s Party PBRS leader Another Sabah former Chief Minister Yong Teck Lee has suggested to suspend the ferry service in Sandakan to counter the high level of Moro people migration from the Mindanao which now has become a major issue for Sabah when they overstay in the state and becoming an illegal immigrant 259 260 In October 2014 the Minister of Home Affairs Ahmad Zahid Hamidi announced that all stateless children in Sabah will be given a birth certificates for schooling purposes 261 The proposal was soon opposed by a number of Sabahan politicians both from the opposition and government allied parties such as Joseph Pairin Kitingan Darell Leiking and Yong Teck Lee citing the act would bring a big problem to Sabah in the future 262 263 264 while another Sabah based opposition party leader Jeffrey Kitingan has called for a different birth certificate to be issued to the foreigners 265 Sabah State Legislative Assembly member for Kamunting in Sandakan Charles O Pang believes the education system will be burdened if stateless children are given birth certificates He quote According to Sabah survey of statelessness it is estimated that around 36 000 stateless children of Indonesian origin lived in the state and most employees understand they are working on palm oil plantations While stateless children from the Philippines are estimated much higher He did not deny that most people who come to Sabah to seek a better life but the problems posed by the illegal human wave will only lead to trouble Obviously this scenario creates an unfair situation for Malaysians in the sense that we are taxpayers and who should pay the high costs of the non citizen children not only in their schools but also in the terms of maintenance of their lives 266 Charles O Pang Sabah State Legislative Assembly Members for Kamunting in Sandakan Also it was known the UNHCR has ever trying before to integrate the Filipino refugees with local communities in 1986 if they can t repatriate them back to the Philippines but this was opposed heavily by the locals and Sabah state government as it could bring a big social problem to the state 98 99 Large amounts of money have been spent to maintain the lives of the Filipino illegal immigrants and the amount remains unpaid until today despite attempts to recover the monies Sabah Health Department said infectious diseases among the illegal immigrants was on the rise resulting in more expenditures as well as provisions for more funds to accommodate the logistics such as medical officers and others 267 Illegal electricity connection and theft in the state are mainly been attributed to illegal squatters settlement that inhabited by Filipino refugees and illegal immigrants 268 269 270 The seaweed industry operated by indigenous Suluk community in eastern Sabah are also heavily affected because of the persistent kidnappings perpetrated by their Filipino Tausug relatives southern Philippine based terrorist group the Abu Sayyaf 271 Sabah Kiulu Assemblyman Joniston Bangkuai point out a similar view on the stateless issue He said It used to be that they the illegal Filipinos came here to look for livelihood They came to look for work but now they are multiplying with their women giving birth to as many as 10 children but they are not taken care of 272 Joniston Bangkuai Sabah Kiulu s Assemblyman The Sabah National Registration Department NRD director Ismail Ahmad has clarified that the issuing of the birth certificates does not make the stateless children Malaysians or Sabahan citizens as the certificates will be only used for record and monitoring purpose to show that the children are born in Sabah 273 Beside that a DNA test is now among the methods being used to ensure only genuine citizens are issued the Malaysian birth certificate when they apply for late birth registrations 274 After several discussions the Cabinet of Malaysia later decided to give only special birth documents instead of birth certificates as announced by the Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak 275 276 UPKO to present their proposed solutions on the problems after they have obtained the full Royal Commission Inquiry report one of them being the re calling and re issuing of all the identification cards of the people of Sabah 277 Other former politicians have asked the federal government to investigate the action of some individuals who claim to be of royal blood of the Sulu Sultanate and have been conferring many Datukship title to local Sabahans and to those from Peninsular Malaysia until today 278 Most Sabah United Malays National Organisation UMNO leaders have lauded the drastic measures announced by the Sabah current Chief Minister Musa Aman to address the problem posed by illegal immigrants 279 However the former UPKO federal parliamentarian Wilfred Bumburing reminded that the members of Barisan Nasional BN should not take credit for the setting up of the Royal Commission of Inquiry RCI as it was only established after a much pressure from the Sabahan peoples 280 The United Sabah Party PBS has said the Philippine government is to be blamed for the misery of its nationals in Sabah as a response to remarks made by Philippines Ambassador to Malaysia J Eduardo Malaya who stressed that Filipino migrants children in Malaysia deserved formal education While he support the suggestion the party Secretary General Johnny Mositun reminded 281 The number of Filipinos in Sabah legal or illegal is huge but what has Manila done or is doing to see to their education It was Manila s refusal to establish a Consular Office in Sabah that was making life difficult for the hundreds of thousands of Filipinos in the state and Malaysia had to bear the cost Nearly half of the patients using Sabah hospitals are mostly Filipinos For the better part of four decades the Filipinos in Sabah refugees migrant workers and illegal immigrants have all been denied any substantial services or assistance from the Philippine government They survive only because the Malaysian Government adheres strictly to international norms and standards of law and human rights We provide them with jobs they avail themselves of all our civic amenities and now it is implied that we should educate their children too What next 281 Johnny Mositun United Sabah Party PBS Secretary General Other Sabahan leaders such as Darell Leiking agreed and reminded the Philippine government to emulate the Indonesian government s plan by setting up a consulate in Sabah to care for their nationals and set up schools for their children On a statement he said 282 The Philippine government should accept the fact that Sabah was a sovereign nation and that it needed to set up a consulate in the state for the good of its people Filipino migrants must be registered to allow them to have better opportunities in Sabah to have a life and proper jobs as it was unfair to impose Filipino problems unto Sabah or the Malaysian government simply because the Philippine government refused to take responsibility for its own people 282 Darell Leiking member of the opposition PKR The Sabah state government has since working to end the Filipino squatter problems that have become the main cause for rampant crimes terrorism and drug trafficking in the state by relocating them to a proper place to ease proper management 283 Prior to the meeting between Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte and Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak in Putrajaya in late 2016 both leaders agree to deport illegal Filipino migrants and refugees in Sabah while set aside Philippines claim into the state with the signing of various agreements to improve the social conditions of legal Filipino migrants and expatriates in the state with the establishment of a school hospital and a consulate 284 285 However the matter will still need to be discussed within the Sabah state cabinet for an outcome to allow Philippine government setting up their school hospital and a consulate in the state with the Sabah state government appreciating Philippine government recent move to accept its citizens that currently being detained in various temporary detention in the state mainly for illegal migration overstaying and committing crimes 286 According to a statistics from Sabah National Security Council around 550 000 undocumented immigrants have been deported from the state or left voluntarily since 1990 with most of them are Filipinos 287 The Sabah state government also submit recommendations to the Malaysian federal government through the Main Committee on Management of Foreigners to move the refugee placement schemes in the state to other more suitable locations far from the towns and industrial development areas 288 More strong enforcements against illegal immigrants in Sabah also being taken following the discovery of immigrants syndicates giving illegal citizenship to their fellow relatives from the Philippines and Indonesia 289 as in early 2017 a former employee in the Malaysian Registration Department JPN was sentenced to 156 years in prison for giving illegal citizenship to Filipino illegal immigrants from Sulu to stay in Sabah 290 The recent Sabah state government decision to re open border trade in its eastern coast has been applauded by Mindanao Development Authority MinDA secretary Abdul Khayr Alonto In his statement As per announcement by the chief Minister of Sabah starting 1 February 2017 the ban on doing the economic activities will be lifted Sabah is open once again to our Muslim Filipino traders going to that part of Malaysia The re opening of the cross border trade will involve our three island provinces but will eventually expand to other territories of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao ARMM and even to General Santos City The behaviour of some individuals you know kidnapping and beheading the inhumanity in this kidnap for ransom affected not only the free trade but economic activities their livelihood mainly to us Without prejudice to the Sabah claim we will operate consulate in Kota Kinabalu within that complex also we will try to put up the consular office activities to take good care of our people in Sabah and attend to their requirements including passport 26 Abdul Khayr Alonto Secretary of Mindanao Development Authority MinDA The secretary added that he vowed to work harder to make Mindanao as the gateway of the Philippines as part of the BIMP EAGA and asked the Armed Forces of the Philippines AFP to strengthened security in the Sulu Sea and Mindanao and eliminating terrorists to encourage more investors to develop the areas 26 However according to Philippine Representative from Palawan Jose C Alvarez they are more interest to establish a Palawan Business Office in the state than Philippine Office that will also giving the similar services like passport granting renewal of travel documents and other requirements as well extending business assistance to the Filipino people when the need arises giving excuses that it is only proper and logical to set up the main office if there are increasing number of Filipino traders especially from Palawan 291 Despite this Abdul Khayr said the opening of a consulate is still a major necessary to serve as a refuge for overseas Filipino workers who vulnerable to many issues especially those who remain undocumented and by opening it does not mean it will affect the territorial dispute issue 292 The Filipinos in the state expressed their hopes that more attention will be given from the Filipino consular services especially on easy and better access in communication facilities more friendly attitude from embassy officials and staff and transparency in all official transactions as they had repeatedly expressed their dissatisfactions over how the manner of consular missions were conducted with the presence of middlemen delays in deliveries of travel documents difficulties to telephone the main Philippine embassy in Kuala Lumpur and rudeness of some of the embassy officials and staff 293 Despite the return of barter trade activity the state of Sabah has maintained they will always be cautious on their trade with the Philippines 294 In 2019 the IMM13 document for refugees from southern Philippines are being replaced with Temporary Sabah Pass PSS under the administration of a new Malaysian government to solve the problems once and for all which have been ongoing since the 1970s where the old document is misused by the refugees which subsequently posing threats to the security of the state 295 The Sabah state government also introducing a new barter trade system where only non subsidised cooking oil can be used in the trade unlike in the previous system where subsidised cooking oil specifically for Malaysian citizens were rampantly taken by foreigners in neighbouring Philippines and Indonesia 296 297 Despite with all of the earlier proposals and newer approaches the increasing Filipino netizens pressure on the Philippine government to act more on territorial issues due to the government soft approaches to recent presence of China s military in their territorial waters was responded by Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Teodoro Locsin Jr who subsequently trying to divert the attention by saying in April 2019 that the Philippine government should make the attempt to possessing Sabah as the main priority instead while telling everyone through his tweet in Twitter that the South China Sea known as West Philippine Sea in the country is not Philippine territories where it is only an exclusive economic zone EEZ 298 Further in September in the same year Locsin finally revealed the definite Philippine government decision that they really did not have any plan to setting up an embassy to care for Filipino nationals in the state who frequently detained due to social problems as the move is considered by the Philippine government as an act of treason to their country ignoring the plead of many Filipinos who have been complaining the problems on the lacks of their representative in the state unlike neighbouring Indonesia which has a consulate in the state 299 Notes Edit A number of Philippine police and soldiers were also killed in their mission to suppress the piracy and criminal activities in the Sulu Archipelago A number of law abiding Moro rebels from the group of MNLF and MILF were also killed in their mission to control the persistent lawlessness in Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago Portals Malaysia Philippines Piracy Law Australia New Zealand United KingdomReferences Edit a b Ubac Michael Lim 7 March 2013 Aquino I won t allow Sulu sultan to drag PH into war with Malaysia The Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on 24 July 2014 Retrieved 5 November 2014 President Aquino said in a statement I appeal to you Jamalul Kiram III we should be really clear on this this incident is wrong If this is wrong why should we the government lend support to this We should support what is right which will lead us to brighter prospects the wrong option will only bring us ruin That s it that s my simple message He also added Let s not forget What they the Jamalul Kiram III faction are pushing for is their right as so called heirs of the sultan of Sulu It s not yet clear if their rights have been transferred to the Philippines But we the Philippines citizens and our nation will all be affected by their conflict with Malaysia Febrianto 29 March 2016 Indonesia Tak Boleh Tunduk Terhadap Terorisme Abus Sayyaf Indonesia Cannot Bow to Terrorism of Abu Sayyaf in Indonesian Rima News Archived from the original on 25 April 2016 Retrieved 30 March 2016 a b Vietnamese ships to get piracy warnings Vietnam News Agency Vietnam Net 4 May 2016 Archived from the original on 4 September 2016 Retrieved 4 September 2016 a b Lim Yan Liang 6 June 2016 Eng Hen Joint Sulu Sea patrols a welcome initiative to tackle terror The Straits Times Retrieved 14 June 2017 a b Ruksith Sitthitool 20 April 2016 Thailand to be invited by Malaysia as observers for Sulu Sea Patrol Thai Tribune Retrieved 14 June 2017 Ranjit Singh 1984 Brunei 1839 1983 the problems of political survival Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 582571 8 Alito Malinao 27 August 1989 No links with Kiram says Brunei embassy Manila Standard Retrieved 19 June 2015 Steven Runciman 3 February 2011 The White Rajah A History of Sarawak from 1841 to 1946 Cambridge University Press pp 116 ISBN 978 0 521 12899 5 Nicholas Tarling 17 June 2013 Southeast Asia and the Great Powers Routledge pp 58 ISBN 978 1 135 22941 2 a b Marcel Burger 23 January 2015 Brunei gives four Black Hawks as present to Malaysia AIRheads Retrieved 24 January 2015 a b Iqbal Sabah better off under Malaysia The Manila Times 14 April 2015 Archived from the original on 4 June 2015 Retrieved 15 April 2015 MNLF strongly condemns terrorist acts in eastern Sabah The Brunei Times Bernama 8 March 2013 Archived from the original on 2 October 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2016 Dharel Placido 31 August 2016 Misuari wants meeting with Duterte in Malaysia ABS CBN News Retrieved 28 September 2016 a b Teoh El Sen 14 March 2013 MNLF supports Sulu claim says Nur Misuari faction Astro Awani Archived from the original on 5 July 2014 Retrieved 5 November 2014 a b Nur Misuari involved says Zahid Bernama MySinChew English 16 July 2014 Archived from the original on 16 July 2014 Retrieved 5 November 2014 a b Karlos Manlupig 17 May 2015 MNLF denies talks with Malaysia over Sabah Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on 17 May 2015 Retrieved 18 May 2015 Misuari who is hiding after the hostilities in Zamboanga in 2013 maintains his position that only the Sultanate of Sulu can pursue the negotiations for the Sabah claim Respecting the fervent wish of the late Sultan Muhammad Jamalul Kiram III to let alone the Islamic Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo SSNB to negotiate peacefully with the Muslim leaders of Malaysia to settle the controversial issue in order not to repeat the March 2013 Lahad Datu Sabah incident Chairman Misuari has dismissed the media reports as unfounded and without any ounce of truth involving the MNLF in any level talks The MNLF however asserted that the Sabah case is a non issue because it is the home base for different tribal groupings of Muslims from different regions of Southeast Asia that have enjoyed peaceful and harmonious co existence with the Chinese and Christian populace in the area a b c CAPTAIN THE HON HENRY KEPPEL R N 1846 THE EXPEDITION TO BORNEO OF H M S DIDO FOR THE SUPPRESSION OF PIRACY Chapman and Hall pp 214 Philippines rebel leader arrested BBC News 25 November 2001 Archived from the original on 26 September 2015 Retrieved 26 September 2015 Malaysia s Inspector General of Police Norian Mai said Mr Misuari and six of his followers were arrested at 3 30 am on Saturday 1930 GMT Friday on Jampiras island off Sabah state Manila had ordered his arrest on charges of instigating a rebellion after the government suspended his governorship of an autonomous Muslim region in Mindanao the ARMM Although the Philippines has no extradition treaty with Malaysia the authorities have already made clear that they intend to hand Mr Misuari over to the authorities in Manila as soon as possible Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad had said before the arrest that although his country had provided support to the rebel group in the past in its bid for autonomy Mr Misuari had not used his powers correctly Therefore we no long feel responsible to provide him with any assistance he said Nur Misuari to be repatriated to stand trial Australian Broadcasting Corporation 20 December 2001 Archived from the original on 5 July 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2014 Jaymalin Mayen 25 March 2014 Over 26 000 Filipino illegal migrants return from Sabah The Philippine Star ABS CBN News Retrieved 5 November 2014 a b Gindol Kanul 31 May 2014 Localised illegal immigrants helping foreign relatives in Sabah The Ant Daily Archived from the original on 3 June 2014 Retrieved 5 November 2014 Vanar Muguntan 29 June 2013 Lahad Datu Ops Daulat officially ends today The Star Retrieved 11 October 2013 ESSCOM will continue to hold programmes on security within ESSZONE New Sabah Times 22 October 2013 Archived from the original on 29 June 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2013 Ruben Sario 7 April 2016 Sabah ceases cross border trade The Star Retrieved 24 November 2016 a b Ruben Sario 17 January 2017 Sabah to lift barter trade ban in east coast from Feb 1 The Star Retrieved 1 February 2017 a b c d Antonio L Colina IV 25 January 2017 Cross border trade between Malaysia and ARMM s island provinces to reopen on Feb 1 Minda News Archived from the original on 1 February 2017 Retrieved 1 February 2017 Indonesia Malaysia Philippines agree to intensify maritime security Antara 15 July 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2016 Indonesia Malaysia Philippines Maritime Cooperation Agreement Finalized Stratfor 2 August 2016 Retrieved 28 September 2016 Moro refugees immigrants in Sabah should return develop homeland Kurup The Borneo Post Bernama 21 January 2013 Retrieved 20 September 2013 John Unson 11 March 2013 Sema calls for sobriety prudence among Moro groups The Philippine Star Retrieved 28 September 2016 Aquino to meet heirs of sultan on Sabah Manila Standard 16 April 1989 Retrieved 6 July 2015 a b Marites Danguilan Vitug 11 March 2013 Sabah Ramos and Arroyo Rappler Archived from the original on 27 September 2015 Retrieved 27 September 2015 FVR to PNoy Meet with Sultan Kiram to address Sabah conflict GMA News 6 March 2013 Archived from the original on 27 September 2015 Retrieved 27 September 2015 Jurgen Haacke 13 May 2013 ASEAN s Diplomatic and Security Culture Origins Development and Prospects Routledge pp 187 ISBN 978 1 136 13146 2 President Yudhoyono hopes Sabah problem to be resolved soon Balita 9 March 2013 Retrieved 14 January 2014 a b Rashvinjeet S Bedi 27 January 2015 Self styled Sulu Sultan names Phugdal to be Raja Muda The Star Retrieved 27 January 2015 Durian Amina Rasul 14 May 2009 Basis of the Sabah claim The Manila Times Retrieved 19 June 2015 a b c d Marcos order Destabilize take Sabah Philippine Daily Inquirer 2 April 2000 Retrieved 19 June 2015 Duterte Misuari wants amnesty for Abu Sayyaf ABS CBN News 28 September 2016 Retrieved 30 September 2016 Nestor Corrales 3 November 2016 Misuari accuses Malaysia of using Moro people in kidnap for ransom activities Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved 4 November 2016 a b Ian Pfennigwerth 2008 Tiger Territory The Untold Story of the Royal Australian Navy in Southeast Asia from 1948 to 1971 Rosenberg pp 69 ISBN 978 1 877058 65 3 a b New Zealand Registrar General s Office New Zealand Census and Statistics Dept New Zealand Dept of Statistics 1957 New Zealand official yearbook New Zealand Statistics New Zealand New Zealand Dept of External Affairs 1963 External Affairs Review Army strength in Sabah at the optimum level Daily Express 9 September 2015 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 9 September 2015 Abigail C Kwok 10 April 2013 Sulu Governor No MNLF rescue mission for Filipinos in Sabah Inter Aksyon Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 8 November 2014 a b Policeman dies in shootout with pirates New Sunday Times 24 September 1985 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Misuari over to the authorities in Manila as soon as possible Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad had said before the arrest that although his country had provided support to the rebel group in the past in its bid for autonomy Mr Misuari had not used his powers correctly Therefore we no longer feel responsible to provide him with any assistance he said Illegals Graft illegal issuance of ICs councils blamed Daily Express 24 June 2014 Archived from the original on 29 June 2014 Retrieved 30 June 2014 Take stern action on culprits NGO Daily Express 3 November 2015 Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 3 November 2015 Why the exodus to Sabah continued Daily Express 28 October 2016 Archived from the original on 28 October 2016 Retrieved 28 October 2016 Tracy Patrick 1 July 2017 Indon workers claim replaced by Filipino illegals Daily Express Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Armed group fails to kidnap cage fish farmer in Semporna The 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get bolder Daily Express Archived from the original on 27 February 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2017 Seaweed industry dying due to kidnappings Daily Express 16 July 2016 Archived from the original on 16 July 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2016 Julia Chan 10 November 2014 Illegal immigrants crime shattering peace in Sabah s villages state reps say The Malay Mail Retrieved 11 November 2014 Avila Geraldine 4 November 2014 Birth certificates issued to Sabah born foreign children do not make them Malaysians New Straits Times Archived from the original on 4 December 2017 Retrieved 8 November 2014 Ruben Sario 6 November 2014 DNA tests to help certify genuine Malaysians in late birth registrations The Star Retrieved 8 November 2014 Ruben Sario Stephanie Lee 16 November 2014 Najib Children of stateless individuals born in Sabah to get special birth document The Star Retrieved 17 November 2014 Stephanie Lee 17 November 2014 Najib Form is visually different from certificate The Star Retrieved 17 November 2014 RCI UPKO to propose solutions on influx of illegal immigrants New Straits Times 3 December 2014 Archived from the original on 4 December 2017 Retrieved 3 December 2014 Stop people receiving Sulu Sultan awards Daily Express 7 November 2014 Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 Retrieved 7 November 2014 Leaders laud new measures on illegals Daily Express 14 December 2014 Archived from the original on 15 December 2014 Retrieved 15 December 2014 RCI only after much pressure from the people Bumburing Daily Express 14 December 2014 Archived from the original on 15 December 2014 Retrieved 15 December 2014 a b Manila to blame says PBS Daily Express 15 December 2014 Archived from the original on 15 December 2014 Retrieved 15 December 2014 a b Emulate Indonesian govt in taking care of citizens in Sabah Philippine leaders told The Rakyat Post 16 December 2014 Retrieved 16 December 2014 Muguntan Vanar 16 February 2016 Sabah aims to end squatter problem The Star Retrieved 17 February 2016 PH Malaysia put Sabah dispute on back burner ABS CBN News 10 November 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2016 Pia Ranada 11 November 2016 PH Malaysia agree on repatriation of Filipinos in Sabah Rappler Retrieved 19 November 2016 Julia Chan 24 November 2016 Sabah to discuss hospital school for Filipinos The Malay Mail Retrieved 24 November 2016 Awang Ali Omar 23 November 2016 More than half a million immigrants deported from Sabah since 1990 New Straits Times Archived from the original on 4 December 2017 Retrieved 27 November 2016 Sabah government to submit recommendations to move refugee placement schemes Bernama The Sun 24 November 2016 Archived from the original on 8 April 2017 Retrieved 24 November 2016 Sabah steps up enforcement against illegal immigrants The Star 9 March 2017 Retrieved 9 March 2017 Man Who Illegally Changed 22 Sulu Citizenships Faces 156 Years Imprisonment Malaysian Digest 3 March 2017 Archived from the original on 3 March 2017 Retrieved 28 March 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Nikko Fabian 16 April 2017 Palawan plans to set up business office in Sabah Daily Express Archived from the original on 16 April 2017 Retrieved 16 April 2017 Nef Luczon 28 December 2018 MinDA pushes for Sabah consular office Philippine News Agency Archived from the original on 29 December 2018 Retrieved 31 December 2018 Nikko Fabian 20 April 2017 Sabah Filipinos hope for better consular services Daily Express Archived from the original on 20 April 2017 Retrieved 21 April 2017 Sabah trades cautiously with the Philippines due to security situation The Malay Mail Bernama 4 June 2017 Retrieved 6 June 2017 Temporary Sabah Pass shows Home Ministry s earnestness says Liew Bernama The Sun 7 September 2019 Archived from the original on 8 September 2019 Retrieved 8 September 2019 Larry Ralon 27 August 2019 New barter trade system Daily Express Archived from the original on 8 September 2019 Retrieved 9 September 2019 Sabah to launch barter trade system for non subsidised cooking oil products says CM The Malay Mail Bernama 24 August 2019 Archived from the original on 8 September 2019 Retrieved 9 September 2019 Locsin says as netizens press him on territory issues ABS CBN News 20 April 2019 Archived from the original on 8 September 2019 Retrieved 9 September 2019 Locsin Setting up Sabah embassy an act of treason ABS CBN News 20 April 2019 Archived from the original on 8 September 2019 Retrieved 9 September 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cross border attacks in Sabah amp oldid 1151531154, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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