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  1. Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    8,357
    #441
    tama! punta na lang silang lahat sa malaysia pati mga hayop na NPA

  2. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    17,339
    #442
    Quote Originally Posted by Syuryuken View Post
    tama! punta na lang silang lahat sa malaysia pati mga hayop na NPA
    Kahit tayo magbayad ng pamasahe papunta dun. Basta dyan na silang lahat... mga lekat na yun.

  3. Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Posts
    3,872
    #443
    Quote Originally Posted by vinj View Post
    Kahit tayo magbayad ng pamasahe papunta dun. Basta dyan na silang lahat... mga lekat na yun.
    It's a joke really. On one hand, the Kirams say Sabah is theirs. Pero takot na takot magpunta dun ngayon kasi huli at kulong ang sasalubong sa kanila. Kala ko ba matatapang ang mga Tausug? Kung beng-beng walang takot, pero sa kulong meron?

  4. Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Posts
    25,068
    #444
    The "forgotten" incident of 2013. Shows how short our local media and people's attention span is...

    Did the goverment send any legal help for these guilable idiots who wanted to start a war and the UN to "intervene"...

    Senior KL cop reveals how he spied on Sulu raiders
    Trial of 30 militants accused of waging war against Malaysian king begins
    Published on Jan 07, 2014
    By Lester Kong, Malaysia Correspondent


    A SENIOR Malaysian cop told how he posed as a low-ranking policeman to infiltrate a Sabah village occupied by dozens of Sulu militants from the Philippines, the High Court heard yesterday.

    Mr Rashid Harun, 57, then leading Bukit Aman's special forces unit and its famed VAT69 commandos, pretended to be a sergeant-major carrying food supplies into the remote village to go unnoticed as he gathered ground intelligence.

    Meanwhile, his junior colleague opened negotiations with gunmen out to reclaim the state for the now-defunct Sulu Sultanate.

    "It was to assess the terrain, the enemy's strength, the weapons used and whatever information that could assist with the operation (to extricate the intruders)," he testified under questioning by Attorney-General Abdul Gani Patail yesterday.

    Mr Rashid was the first witness at the start of the high-profile trial, where 29 men and one woman are charged with waging war against the Malaysian king, harbouring terrorists and recruiting members to a terrorist group. It was held at the Kepayan prison near here due to security concerns because of the high number of those on trial at once.

    It is Malaysia's first trial under the new Security Offences (Special Measures) Act 2012, which replaced the controversial Internal Security Act. The penalty for waging war against the king is death or life imprisonment, while the other charges carry a sentence of life imprisonment.

    In February last year, hundreds of gunmen from the southern Philippines landed on Sabah shores in speedboats and took over sleepy Tanduo village about 100km from Lahad Datu on the state's east coast. For months, they holed up there in their bid to take over the state, which was part of the Philippines in antiquity.

    The four-month stand-off from Feb 11 to June 29 last year was one of Malaysia's most serious security threats since a 2000 stand-off with a religious cult that stole arms from a military depot in Perak ended with two members of the Malaysian security forces killed.

    A Malaysian military operation to flush them out killed more than 100 people, including 11 Malaysian soldiers and policemen.

    The end of the operation in late March saw the Malaysian government forming a security zone spanning Sabah's long shoreline, long used by paperless migrants to slip into the state.

    It was called the Eastern Sabah Security Command and aimed to to better protect its borders.

    In one of the earliest encounters with the militants on Feb 15, Mr Rashid said he accompanied Datuk Zulkefli Abd Aziz, a senior officer of the police's Special Branch, its intelligence gathering wing, and two other junior officers into the remote village.

    To put the militants at ease, he offered them cigarettes and chatted in simple English and Malay while keeping his eyes peeled for crucial information.

    He testified that he saw 79 men and women wearing army fatigues. Some, he said, carried M-16 rifles and Colt .45 pistols. All had machetes slung across their torsos or hung at the waist.

    Meanwhile, Mr Zulkefli was negotiating with the militants' leader Datu Agimuddin Kiram, the brother of the self-styled Sulu sultan. Mr Rashid said he could not hear much of the conversation.

    "I only heard Agimuddin stating they will not leave the place so long as his elder brother, Sultan Ismail Kiram, did not order them to retreat," Mr Rashid said.

    Wishing to keep communications with the intruders open, Mr Rashid and Mr Zulkefli went back the next day to meet Agimuddin again. This time, Mr Rashid counted 63 more people and some grenade launchers.

    Mr Rashid, who is now Security and Public Order director for the Eastern Sabah Security Command, is expected to be cross-examined by defence lawyer N. Sivananthan as the trial continues today.
    - See more at: Senior KL cop reveals how he spied on Sulu raiders

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