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Secret February plot to invade Sabah dismissed
Published on: Friday, December 10, 2021
By: Stefyanie Myla Micheal, Zam Yusa
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Secret February plot to invade Sabah dismissed
Idris (above) and a picture of army vehicles on the move to Kampung Tanduo in 2013 (Bernama pix for illustration only).
Kota Kinabalu: Sabah police and the Philippine military have dismissed as untrue, a report that said a secret plot has been hatched for Sulu militants to invade Sabah which echoed the 2013 bloody incursion of Lahad Datu.

Sabah Police Commissioner Datuk Idris Abdullah was responding to a report by the South China Morning Post (SCMP) that said a locally elected Sulu official gathered 19 mayors in the Sulu archipelago in a Dec. 1 meeting to set up a “Royal Sulu Army” with a target of recruiting up to 600 men to invade Sabah. “The report is not true, nevertheless, we are always enhancing maritime security,” Idris told Daily Express, Thursday. Idris’ comments echoed a statement by a Philippine military official.

“There was a meeting (by Sulu leaders), but [it] has nothing to do with Sabah or Malaysia,” Joint Task Force-Sulu spokesperson Lt Jerrica Manongdo told Daily Express.

The SCMP report also said the plan was also to recruit spies in the coastal towns. According to the South China Morning Post, the meeting was arranged by a senior local government official in the southern Philippines.

A senior regional security source told the Post’s This Week In Asia magazine that the meeting was held on Dec 1 by a locally-elected official of Sulu province who gathered mayors of the Sulu Archipelago to discuss plans to set up a “Royal Sulu Army” to invade Sabah.

“The potential of the plan coming to fruition depends on how much political support and funds it can get from various parties.

“Many stakeholders in the Philippines and abroad are willing to exploit this issue for their respective political and strategic interests,” the source said.

The source added that February 2022 was seen as the best time to invade to “commemorate” the Lahad Datu incursion in 2013.

The source also said the implementation of the plan was prompted by the failure of the heirs of the Sulu Sultanate to obtain the consent of the Malaysian government to settle proprietary rights over Sabah.

It was reported that out of the 19 mayors who attended the secret meeting, 11 agreed to the plan while the rest sat on the fence, neither agreeing to nor rejecting it.

“Each mayor is expected to provide 50 men who are skilled and brave in battle.

“The cost of ammunition and other logistics is to be borne by the high-ranking official who also promised to contribute 500,000 pesos (US$10,000) to build 100 speedboats that will be used to attack Sabah,” the source said.

According to the source, the local official was believed to have supplied 500 firearms to local representatives in Sulu who would then distribute them to the militia.

The source also said 150 to 200 spies from Sulu were expected to be directed to Lahad Datu and Semporna – two key coastal towns where the invasion force might land.

In the 2013 incursion, an estimated 235 militants – some of them armed – landed at Lahad Datu on Feb 11.

“All the Sulu soldiers entering the waters of Lahad Datu and Semporna (in the new invasion plot) will be bringing in firearms,” said the source.

“The firearms will be buried in an area before being used to attack (targets).

The source added that although “no one” had infiltrated Sabah yet, the Sulu plotters had sleeper cells there (in Sabah’s east coast).

The security source said intelligence gathering and security had been stepped up in Sabah since the discovery of the Sulu meeting.

The sovereignty of Sabah is the source of a long-standing dispute between Malaysia and the Philippines.

In the Philippines, feelings are especially strong in the Sulu Archipelago, from where previous failed attempts to invade have been launched. 

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