Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Malaysia should have listened to Nur Misuari warning not to harm Filipino Tausugs in Sabah

Nur Misuari shown with a group of MNLF fighters
Malaysia press seem to be filled with news about Nur Misuari and the MNLF's rescue operations in the offing. 

If we have to go by the amount of news mileage that Nur Misuari-MNLF rescue teams have garnered in Malaysia news, it is safe to assume that the Malaysians are probably worried sick. And rightly so!

No less than Malaysia's Defence Minister Zahid issued threats against the MNLF founder by bandying Malaysia's 'superior' security faces to prove his point that he is not taking Nur Misuari's MNLF training camps lightly. Alas! Too late! He should have listened to Nur Misuari's warning much earlier and refrained from ordering the massive killings of Filipino Tausugs in Sabah.

Malaysia must not be surprised by Nur Misuari's preparations. He had already warned Malaysia that if their troops kill Filipino Tausugs, the MNLF would be forced to the rescue but it seems Malaysians, pigheaded that they alwasy are, have not been taking the legendary Tausug warrior's exhortations. 

To the MNLF, we say, march on Tausug warriors! March on and thrash these Malaysian bastards!

Nemo nos impune lacessit! (No one hits us with impunity)

MNLF training camp for Sabah rescue operation

April 10, 2013 Free Malaysia Today
Veteran combat fighters are training recruits to rescue Filipinos stranded in Sabah.
JOLO: In a camp set up by the Moro National Liberation Front in this part of southern Philippines, recruits are being trained by veteran combat fighters “to rescue” thousands of Filipinos allegedly being abused by Malaysian security forces in Sabah.
MNLF chairman Nur Misuari gave News5 an exclusive peek into the ongoing training for members of “Operation Rescue”" as he claimed they were ready to “sustain a war for a hundred years” if necessary.
The online news portal InterAksyon.com quotes Misuari, founder of the original Moro insurgent force in the 1960s, as saying that 1,000 of their men are already in Sabah.
Misuari stressed that their troops are not allied with the Royal Sultanate Army but have as their main mision the “rescue” of Filipinos allegedly being “abused” by Malaysia. Over 60 Filipinos have died in the standoff, and thousands others are feared caught in the crackdown.
Separate from Misuari’s statements, members of the self-styled “Royal Security Force of the Sulu Sultanate” who remain holed up in Lahad Datu, Sabah, claimed to have received additional reinforcements from sympathisers in the Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi areas.
Abraham Idjirani, sultanate spokesman and secretary general, claimed in a phone interview that as of Tuesday, Raja Muda Agbimuddin Kiram and his Royal Security Force are 400-strong, after dwindling to just over 160 in the face of heavy Malaysian assault.
Idjirani said more Filipinos went to Sabah on March 29 and April 5 on board boats, able to slip past the naval blockade set up by both the Philippines and Malaysia.
He said “70 to 80 percent” of those who went there were reportedly armed. He said these Filipinos went there on their own due to “accumulated anger” after their loved ones in Sabah were either allegedly killed or harassed by Malaysians.
Idjirani’s claims could not be independently verified, and Philippine military officials have said that naval forces are in place to block any such attempts to reinforce the sultanate’s followers in Sabah.
At the MNLF camp, trainees were being instructed on the use of machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades.
Sulu Gov. Abdulsakur Tan cautioned Misuari against any rash actions, while a military spokesman warned that the supposed rescue plans, if carried out, would go against Philippine policies on the Sabah standoff.
-Agencies

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