THE SABAH ISSUE. BY GLENDA GLORIA.
I read this article and found it rather informative. There is more to this intrusion than meets the eye. I would like to share this with you.
Sabah, Merdeka and Aquino
BY GLENDA M. GLORIA
Is it possible to understand Muslim
Mindanao without looking at Malaysia? Perhaps not. This stern neighbor has
played its hands rather wisely: feeding a Filipino rebellion on one hand, and
helping end it on the other.
Sabah has been home to thousands of Muslims
who once fought for independence under the Marcos dictatorship. It was their
refuge when the military continued to pummel them with bombs and bullets in
Mindanao.
Sabah was always part of their real — and
imagined — community. Before colonizers carved out superficial boundaries in
that part of the world, the Muslims of Sabah, Tawi-Tawi and Sulu were one
community that freely traded goods with each other, paid unhampered visits to
one another, and spoke the same language. The imperious Sultanate of Sulu
reigned over these islands.
Thus while Manila has consistently put the
Sabah claim on the back burner, the reality is that to many Filipinos, Sabah
has long been theirs. They grew up on the island, got married there, raised
their kids, and put up businesses. An estimated 65,000 Filipinos carry
passports as “political refugees” in Sabah. In the capital city of Kota
Kinabalu, I once asked a former member of the Moro National Liberation Front
(MNLF) why he had chosen to live there. “It’s our land. These are my brothers,”
he said. They call themselves “Suluks” not Filipinos.
At the height of the MNLF’s secessionist
campaign in the 1970s and 1980s, Muslim rebels sought refuge in Sabah. In Sabah
they mapped out plans to bring down the Marcos military to its knees. In its
lush jungles they trained young recruits in guerrilla warfare. While Nur
Misuari toured the Middle East to raise funds for his movement, his young
commanders held clandestine meetings in Sabah to plot the war against Marcos.
Which begs the question, why would Malaysia
tolerate this when it could not even put up with a ragtag group of old guards
now holed up in Lahad Datu?
The answer partly lies not in Sabah or Sulu
or Tawi-Tawi but in another place that keeps the dark secrets of a bungled
special operation to invade Sabah: Corregidor Island.
Jabidah, Ninoy Aquino
In March 1968 — 45 years ago this month —
the Philippine military shot dead young Muslim recruits whom they had trained
to invade Sabah as part of Ferdinand Marcos’ adventurous pursuits at the time.
The underground plot was named Oplan Merdeka (freedom in Bahasa Melayu).
Trained under a commando unit called
Jabidah (the name of a beautiful woman in Muslim lore), they were recruited
from Muslim provinces such as Sulu, Tawi-Tawi and Basilan. Army officers led by
then Maj Eduardo Martelino first taught them the rudiments of warfare on the sleepy
island of Simunul, Tawi-Tawi. A picturesque town, Simunul is home to the first
mosque in the Philippines built in the 14th century. It is also a breath away
from Semporna, an island off Sabah. Last month, it was in Simunul where
followers of the Sultan of Sulu prepared to sail to Sabah to begin the
standoff.
Back then, Simunul lacked the environment
for rigorous training. Thus the Army boarded its recruits on a ship to the
forlorn, tadpole-shaped island of Corregidor. Promised a monthly allowance, the
recruits waited patiently for cash to send to their parents back home. It never
came, triggering widespread demoralization that culminated in a petition
addressed to Marcos.
The Army was ordered to fix the problem,
but the situation was doomed. The young Muslims mutinied against their training
officers. Oplan Merdeka was about to be exposed. The government panicked and
ordered the Army to silence the recruits forever in what is now infamously
known as the Jabidah massacre.
A few survived (including one who would
tell the story), but more than two dozen got killed, their bodies burned before
being thrown into the sea by the Army’s elite forces on board a presidential
helicopter. The senator who did his own sleuthing and pushed for a high-profile
congressional probe on the massacre — and Merdeka — was no less than the
President’s father, then Sen Ninoy Aquino Jr.
The Jabidah massacre was the spark that lit
the Muslim rebellion. It also changed Malaysia forever.
Times were different then. The Philippines
was ahead of its neighbors and was in the best position to claim Sabah.
Malaysia seemed an easy target at the time: the Federation had just been born
in 1963, Singapore had just broken away, and Indonesia was becoming a
problematic neighbor.
Malaysia took Jabidah to heart; never again
would it be vulnerable to its neighbors. Sabah began getting the attention it
deserved through projects and a huge budget.
To spite Marcos, Malaysia welcomed MNLF
rebels to its fold to the extent of arming and providing them sanctuary.
Eventually the rebels got integrated into Malaysian society. This didn’t cause
problems in multi-ethnic Malaysia. Because while Marcos unleashed his sword to
defeat Muslim rebels, Mohammad Mahathir took the more sophisticated path —
discouraging Islamic extremism by mobilizing and spending state resources to
allow moderate Islam to flourish.
Teaching Misuari a lesson
Its porous borders, however, made it
difficult for Malaysia to stop the entry of job-hunting Filipinos. The number
of illegal Filipino workers in Sabah reached 400,000 at one point. This would
not have been a problem if not for the 1997 financial crisis that forced
Malaysia to deport illegal Indonesian and Filipino workers. In 1999, Zamboanga
City felt the brunt as it witnessed the arrival of a few hundred deportees via
commercial ships.
The situation called for bilateral
cooperation. But then President Joseph Estrada had just thrown his support
behind Mahathir’s jailed opponent at the time, former Deputy Prime Minister
Anwar Ibrahim, and this severely strained the excellent ties that both
countries enjoyed under the Ramos administration.
The situation turned for the worse in 2000,
when Abu Sayyaf bandits kidnapped tourists on one of Malaysia’s prime islands,
Sipadan, brought them to Sulu, and earned millions of dollars in ransom.
Malaysia deported about 700 Filipinos from Sabah after the incident, but denied
it was a retaliatory move.
And then something happened in 2001 under
the Arroyo government. Malaysia’s old friend ran into trouble.
Misuari quarreled with the Arroyo
administration and incited a revolt in Sulu. When the military moved against
him, he counted on one ally to save him from getting jailed. On a pump boat,
Misuari escaped to Sabah. Malaysia is a friend. Or so he thought.
Shortly after reaching the shores of
Jiamperas in November 2001, the Muslim leader who once awed the Islamic world
was handcuffed and detained by the Malaysian police. He was deported to the
Philippines in January 2002, briefly detained on charges of leading a botched
revolt in Sulu.
Malaysia’s move proved how it regarded
Misuari and how aware it was of its bigger priority — to co-opt another rebel
movement that was being lured by radical Islam. Thus its decision to host the
peace talks between the Philippine government and the Moro Islamic Liberation
Front.
The past offers a few lessons to all the
actors involved in the Sabah issue.
First is the Merdeka trauma. To land in
Sabah via Simunul and to revive the Sabah claim through the threat of prolonged
confrontation is simply unacceptable to Malaysia.
Second is the wisdom of keeping the claim
dormant for now. Even the wily Marcos eventually dropped his hot pursuit of
Sabah, setting his sights instead on expanding Philippine voice in Southeast
Asia. In 1977, during the Asean summit in Kuala Lumpur, Marcos announced his
intention to drop the claim in the spirit of regional cooperation. He never got
beyond a verbal commitment though because politicians back home criticized him.
President Aquino’s mother, Corazon Aquino, did not revive the claim, but
neither did she pursue relations with Kuala Lumpur. It was only in 1993 when
the first official visit by a Philippine president to Malaysia was made in 30
years — by Fidel Ramos. He took the more nuanced route, pushing for the
BIMP-EAGA economic corridor and converting the East Asian backdoor into a
business hub.
Does the Aquino administration have a plan
for this area as well?
Third is the fact that the Sultanate of
Sulu, which has proprietary rights over Sabah, has always been open to a
settlement. But the squabbling heirs couldn’t agree on how to do it. Under Cory
Aquino, top-level sources told us before, Malaysia offered the sultanate at
least US$70 million as settlement. But a politician who claimed to be one of
the heirs protested, scuttling the talks. Under Ramos, Malaysia asked
Philippine officials to persuade the heirs to accept the setting up of a
“generously funded” foundation that will assist Muslim communities in Mindanao,
according to then ARMM governor Parouk Hussin. No agreement was ever reached.
Is this something that should be pursued in
the current peace process being brokered by Malaysia or outside such
parameters?
Fourth is the ultimate question that a
responsible government needs to resolve eventually: Should it drop the claim
entirely? Under Ramos, Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) officials quietly
pushed for the establishment of a consulate in Sabah so it could make a full
inventory of Filipinos with passports or work permits. Malaysia welcomed the
idea, and both countries signed an agreement on it. But when further studied by
the legal office of the DFA, this was shot down. A consulate implies that the
claim to Sabah has been dropped.
Many in government still cling to the view
that Manila should use Sabah as leverage with Malaysia in negotiating better
terms for Filipinos there. But other experts believe that pursuing the claim
has become unrealistic. To some diplomats, Manila should stop the pretense,
because this has deprived Filipinos of full-time consular services there. Have
you ever wondered why our government didn’t get much information regarding the
standoff? We don’t have presence there!
Fifth is the reality that while the claim
is dormant, many Filipinos consider Sabah their own. It pays to be sensitive to
this. Sabah is not just a an academic or political issue. It is about social
networks deeply rooted in the past. To confront the Sultan’s bombast with
conventional political wisdom betrays narrow-mindedness. As the recent past has
proven, the Sultan of Sulu has never been known for bold moves. For the
situation to reach a bloody end shows utter lack of focus and sophistication on
the part of government — the kind that happens when one is distracted by
political noise.
What can be done to end the impasse?
For one, perhaps the government should stop
a presidential wannabe from talking about Sabah as if he had credibility to do
so. And then do quiet work – preferably through the backdoor.
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