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Sabah crisis: Filipino gunmen injure two Malaysian policemen
2013-03-10 18:12:40

Filipino gunmen's weapons found at the area where a stand-off between Malaysian security forces and Filipino gunmen took place, at Tanduo village in Lahad Datu, Borneo's Sabah state, Malaysia. Malaysian police said on Sunday two officers were injured in shootouts with Filipino gunmen as they try to end a month-long incursion in remote Sabah state that has already left 61 people dead.*-- PHOTO: AP
FELDA SAHABAT (AFP) - Malaysian police said on Sunday two officers were injured in shootouts with Filipino gunmen as they try to end a month-long incursion in remote Sabah state that has already left 61 people dead.

Fifty-three militants and eight police officers have been shot dead since a group of armed Filipino Islamists landed in the state on Borneo island last month to resurrect long-dormant land claims of a self-proclaimed Philippine sultan.

Malaysia, facing its worst security crisis in years, insists the gunmen must surrender unconditionally, but the men have refused to lay down arms, hiding within a security cordon around two villages, palm oil plantations and swamp.

Sabah police chief Hamza Taib said gunmen have traded fresh fire with security forces since late Saturday with shots hitting two officers who were sent to a hospital in Sandakan town for treatment.

He also said six more people have been arrested in the state under a security law and are being investigated for "committing terrorist acts", bringing the total held under the law in relation to the crisis to 85.

Authorities stopped three boats near the battlezone on Saturday and detained 27 people claiming to be fishermen. But it is unclear if any of them were included in Hamza's figure.

Meanwhile, authorities are fine-tuning operations in a "special security area" along Sabah's east coast, where they are stationing five army battalions, or about 3,500 men, to protect more than 1.4 million people following the incursion.

The crisis has embarrassed the Philippines and Malaysia, shining the spotlight on the latter's porous shoreline and locals' complaints of rampant illegal immigration and lawlessness.

About 235 people took part in the mission to reclaim the state for the sultan, a self-proclaimed heir to the former southern Philippine sultanate of Sulu, according to his people.

The intruders had been holed up in a farming village since February 12 before deadly clashes led Malaysian authorities to launch air- and groundstrikes on their hide-out.

Fears have also been raised of a wider infiltration by other gunmen or sympathisers already in Malaysia following a shootout in a coastal town, several hours by car from the battlezone.

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Sabah stand-off: PM Najib rejects ceasefire with militants, plans security zone
2013-03-10 18:12:40

Malaysia will only accept a ceasefire from the Philippine militants who invaded Sabah if they lay down arms and surrender unconditionally, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Thursday, March 7, 2013. -- PHOTO: AFP

By Lester Kong, Malaysia Correspondent
LAHAD DATU - Malaysia will only accept a ceasefire from the Philippine militants who invaded Sabah if they lay down arms and surrender unconditionally, Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Thursday.

He also announced that a special security zone will be set up on Sabah's eastern shores.

"He (Philippine President Benigno Aquino) asked for Malaysia's response to Jamalul's statement that he has asked his soldiers to surrender unilaterally," Mr Najib said at a press conference.

"I said they must lay down their arms unconditionally."

He was referring to the self-proclaimed Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram's earlier call for a unilateral ceasefire after Malaysia's security forces attacked the militants hiding in a remote village in eastern Sabah.

They had landed in Sabah almost a month ago as the army of the Sultan to "reclaim" Sabah for the Sulu Sultanate which ruled North Borneo several centuries ago. A gun battle broke out last weekend, killing at least 27 people including eight Malaysian policemen.

The Malaysian security forces launched a large-scale military operation on Tuesday to flush them out. The area is still closed for inspection by the army.

Mr Najib arrived in the coastal town of Lahad Datu in east Sabah on Thursday to inspect the 'Ops Daulat' (Ops Sovereignty) operation.

He said operations against the insurgents will go on "as long as it takes."

He also said a special security zone from Kudat in north Sabah to Tawau on its eastern shores will be set up, and patrolled by five battalions of the armed forces and police to safeguard its security.

This would cover more than half of Sabah's long and porous coastline.

"I want to assure that the government will do anything to guarantee the security and sovereignty of Sabah," he said.

The gunmen had reportedly arrived by boat to coastal village of Tanduo, about 160km from Lahad Datu. The area is just about an hour's boat ride away from the islands in southern Philippines.

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