Archive for the 'Sabah' Category

Jul 20 2008

Malaysia Deports More Filipino Workers




Filipino deportees queue for food at a government shelter Sunday, July 20, 2008 in the southern Philippine port city of Zamboanga. Malaysia has deported more than 7,000 illegal Filipinos since January this year and the crackdown still continues in the oil-rich state of Sabah, which is also being claimed by the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo. (Mindanao Examiner Photo)
ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / July 20, 2008) – More than 300 illegal Filipinos arrested in Sabah arrived in the southern Philippine port city of Zamboanga as Malaysia continued its crackdown on undocumented workers in the oil-rich state.

The deportees arrived by boat late Saturday afternoon from Sandakan City. They were herded on trucks and brought to a government refugee shelter. The deportees, mostly from Sulu, Basilan and Tawi-Tawi provinces, all in the Muslim autonomous region, would be sent back to their home after social workers gather information about them.

Malaysia also deported thousands of illegal Filipino workers since early this year. Sabah Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Hajji Aman has repeatedly appealed to Manila to speed up the repatriation of many illegal Filipino workers detained in jails, but so far nothing had been done to bring them back.

Tens of thousands of illegal Filipinos have been arrested in Sabah the past years and many of them had illegally crossed Sabah by boat from Tawi-Tawi to work in construction sites.

Philippine authorities were helpless in putting a stop to the illegal border crossing. Many boat operators in Tawi-Tawi continue to sneak into Sabah, bringing dozens of Filipinos to find work. Worse, some Malaysian policemen in Semporna and Tawau towns intercept Filipino outriggers to collect money to collect bribes from boat operators and passengers in exchange for a passage, said Abdullah.

He said operators of boats called “temper of kumpit” usually charge between P2,000 to P3,000 for each Filipino passenger illegally entering Sabah, many of them were without travel documents, but had relatives also illegally working on the island.

Many Filipinos also crossed Sabah, just 27 nautical miles from Tawi-Tawi’s Sitangkai town, as tourists but never return back only to be arrested later by immigration authorities. “Life is really difficult in Sabah, but it is harder in the Philippines because there is no job for me, for us Muslim. In Sabah, there is always an opportunity to find a job in palm plantations or in constructions sites,” the deportee said.


Malaysia began a crackdown on up to 500,000 illegal foreign workers since 2005 and police and immigration authorities and volunteer squads have been conducting searches that extended from construction sites in Kuala Lumpur to oil palm plantations in Sabah.


The Philippines’ Foreign Affairs said as many as 300 illegal Filipinos are being deported from Malaysia every week. Since January this year, more than 7,000 illegal Filipinos had been deported to the Philippines.


Kuala Lumpur had previously given amnesty that allowed illegal immigrants to leave the country with a promise they could return as legal workers once they received proper documents.


The government's tough action has enjoyed popular support in Malaysia, where illegal workers, who had numbered more than a million in a country of 24 million people, have been blamed for crime and other social ills.Malaysia said the illegal workers do not pay tax and put a heavy burden on state services, such as education and health care, increasing pressure on an already high budget deficit.


Some Filipino deportees said they were herded into overcrowded detention camps before being expelled and others reported tales of abuses inside Malaysian jails.


Filipino lawmaker Luzviminda Ilagan said many of those deported to Zamboanga City had suffered inhumane treatment in Malaysian jails. She urged Manila to look into the poor condition of Filipinos languishing in jails in Malaysia and to take immediate steps to help them. "There were complaints from the deported Filipinos that they were held in poorly maintained jails, not given enough food, and not provided proper health care,” she said.


Filipino Muslims who were deported said they had been forced to work illegally in Sabah because the Philippine government and the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao failed to provide them livelihood opportunities back home.


Many also decried the discrimination in Zamboanga City where Christian employers flatly reject Muslim job seekers for fear they are criminals or had relatives in the Abu Sayyaf and other rebel groups. The discrimination, they said, was heightened after the 9/11 al-Qaeda attacks on the United States. (Mindanao Examiner)

Comments Off

May 27 2008

Malaysia Furious Over Renewed RP Claims On Sabah

COTABATO CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / May 27, 2008) – A senior Malaysian politician furious over a renewed Philippine claims on Sabah have called for a stricter laws on Filipinos traveling to the oil-rich state.
Sabah Progressive Party president Datuk Yong Teck Lee said the National Security Council should closely watch developments in the southern Philippines with the collapse of the Moro peace deal and release of former rebel leader Nur Misuari, the Malaysian’s Star reported.

Lee said the withdrawal last month of the Malaysian truce observers from Mindanao was a clear indication of the failure of the peace process involving the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.
“Further worries included the rumblings from freed rebel Nur Misuari over the Philippines’ claim to Sabah and the re-grouping of the Moro National Liberation Front,” the Star said.

Misuari, who was ousted as MNLF chairman by Muslimin Sema, the Front’s Secretary General, wanted the International Court of Justice to settle the Philippine claims on Sabah if Malaysia fails to resolve the issue.
Lee said the NSC and the Sabah State Security Committee should act on the problems brought about by the failure of the peace process and Misuari’s revival of the Sabah claims.

“All these warrant the immediate attention of the National Security Council in Putrajaya and the Sabah State Security Committee,” he said.

He also urged Kuala Lumpur to suspend the ferry service between Zamboanga and Sandakan. “Malaysia can also suspend the Zamboanga-Sandakan ferry service, impose bonds on incoming visitors, require ferry passengers to have return tickets and step up enforcement at all levels of government,” he said.

The Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo lays claim to Sabah. The Sultanate of Sulu was a Muslim state that ruled over much of the islands off the Sulu Sea. It stretches from a part of the island of Mindanao in the east, to North Borneo, now known as Sabah, in the west and south, and to Palawan, in the north.

The Sultanate of Sulu was founded in 1457 and is believed to exist as a sovereign nation for at least 442 years. The Sultanate of Sulu obtained Sabah from Brunei as a gift for helping put down a rebellion on the Borneo Island.

The British leased Sabah and transferred control over the territory to Malaysia after the end of Second World War. Even after Borneo became part of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur still pays an annual rent of 5,000 ringgit to the heirs of the Sultan of Sulu Ismail Kiram.

Misuari said what Malaysia pays to the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo is but a pittance.

The MNLF, under Misuari, signed a peace deal with Manila in September 1996 ending more than three decades of bloody fighting in the southern Philippines, and accepted a limited autonomy over four Muslim provinces – Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi and Maguindanao that were later expanded into 5 provinces with Maguindanao as an addition and now has become six with the inclusion of Shariff Kabunsuan.
Misuari later became governor or the Muslim autonomous region, but later accused the government of failing to honor the peace agreement, and his forces attacked major military bases and held civilians hostage in Sulu province and Zamboanga City in November 2001.

He fled to Sabah, his former refuge, but was arrested by Malaysian authorities and sent back to Manila where he is now facing rebellion charges and currently out on bail.

Sema said the issue on Sabah has been a long irritant between the Philippines and Malaysia and he appealed to Misuari not to use this to stir restlessness among local Muslims in Mindanao.

“This has been a very old issue and we don’t want to strain our good relations with Malaysia at the expense of everybody. The Philippines has in the past approached this old issue with diplomacy and respect to maintain good bilateral relations with Malaysia and we wanted this to continue,” Sema told the Mindanao Examiner. (Mindanao Examiner)

Comments Off

Jan 13 2008

Malaysia Tells Manila To Get Back Detained Illegal Pinoy Workers

Published by The Mindanao Examiner under OFW, Sabah

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / Jan. 13, 2008) – Malaysia has told the Philippines to speed up the repatriation of illegal Filipino workers detained in jails.

Sabah’s Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Hajji Aman told Filipino lawmakers who visited the oil-rich Malaysian state to expedite the return of the Filipinos, according to the Malaysian Daily Express.

It said many Filipinos have been languishing in jails in Sabah, just a few hundred miles from the southern Philippine province of Tawi-Tawi.

“This has been a longstanding issue that we in Sabah have been dealing with. I once again request the Philippine authorities to expedite the documentation of their nationals so that they can be repatriated to their country of origin," the Minister, who is also the chairman of the State Security Council, said.

He told the Philippine congressional delegation led by Rep. Nur Jaafar, of Tawi-Tawi, about the problems on illegal immigrants, and the need for Manila to fast track the immigrants' documentation for their immediate deportation. “We don’t want the social problems that usually come along with the presence of illegal immigrants," the Minister said.
Jaafar was accompanied by Reps. Yusop Jikiri, of Sulu province and Filipino Ambassador to Malaysia Victoriano Lecaros.

In September, Malaysian authorities arrested dozens of Filipinos for illegally entering northern Sabah.

Police arrested 84 people, including 17 children, after they were intercepted in two boats during a special three-day operation at the Sungai Kanibungan river mouth in Sabah's northern Pitas district.

Malaysian authorities also seized from one of the Filipino skippers of the boats 5,500 turtle eggs and 335 boxes of cigarettes believed smuggled from the Philippines. With the arrest, police said it uncovered a new landing point for illegal immigrants in northern Sabah.

Tens of thousands of illegal Filipinos have been arrested in Sabah the past years and many of them had illegally crossed the oil-rich Malaysian state by boat from Tawi-Tawi island to work in construction sites despite a strict government campaign.

Others were duped by illegal recruiters who promised them work in hotels and resorts in Malaysia, but ended up without jobs and money and had been forced to work in palm oil plantations under constant fear of being arrested.

Malaysia began a crackdown on up to 500,000 illegal foreign workers since 2005 and conducting searches that extended from construction sites in Kuala Lumpur to oil palm plantations in Sabah. The round-up usually involved police, immigration and volunteer squads.

Kuala Lumpur had previously given amnesty that allowed illegal immigrants to leave the country with a promise they could return as legal workers once they received proper documents. The government's tough action has enjoyed popular support in Malaysia, where illegal workers, who had numbered more than a million in a country of 24 million people, have been blamed for crime and other social ills.

Malaysia said the illegal workers do not pay tax and put a heavy burden on state services, such as education and health care, increasing pressure on an already high budget deficit. Some Filipino deportees said they were herded into overcrowded detention camps before being expelled and others reported tales of abuses inside Malaysian jails.

Many of those deported ended up in temporary government shelters in Zamboanga City in Mindanao where they are given money so they return to their place of origin. (With reports from Nickee Butlangan and Ely Dumaboc)

Comments Off

Sep 19 2007

Malaysia Detains 84 Filipinos In Sabah

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines (Mindanao Examiner / 19 Sept) – Malaysian authorities arrested dozens of Filipinos for illegally entering northern Sabah, reports said on Wednesday.

Police arrested 84 people, including 17 children, after they were intercepted in two boats during a special three-day operation at the Sungai Kanibungan river mouth in Sabah's northern Pitas district, Malaysia’s The Star reported.

It said police also seized from one of the Filipino skippers of the boats 5,500 turtle eggs and 335 boxes of cigarettes believed smuggled from the Philippines.
With the arrest, police said it uncovered a new landing point for illegal immigrants in northern Sabah.

“They have come into a very remote area to avoid detection,” said Deputy Superintendent Mohd Isa Yusoff, chief of the Kota Marudu police force.

Tens of thousands of illegal Filipinos have been arrested in Sabah the past years and many of them had illegally crossed the oil-rich Malaysian state by boat from Tawi-Tawi island to work in construction sites despite a strict government campaign.

Others were duped by illegal recruiters who promised them work in hotels and resorts in Malaysia, but ended up without jobs and money and had been forced to work in palm oil plantations under constant fear of being arrested.

Malaysia began a crackdown on up to 500,000 illegal foreign workers since 2005 and conducting searches that extended from construction sites in Kuala Lumpur to oil palm plantations in Sabah. The round-up usually involved police, immigration and volunteer squads.

Kuala Lumpur had previously given amnesty that allowed illegal immigrants to leave the country with a promise they could return as legal workers once they received proper documents. The government's tough action has enjoyed popular support in Malaysia, where illegal workers, who had numbered more than a million in a country of 24 million people, have been blamed for crime and other social ills.

Malaysia said the illegal workers do not pay tax and put a heavy burden on state services, such as education and health care, increasing pressure on an already high budget deficit. Some Filipino deportees said they were herded into overcrowded detention camps before being expelled and others reported tales of abuses inside Malaysian jails. (Mindanao Examiner)

Comments Off

Mar 21 2007

Pinoy Patungong Sabah, Binalaan!

ZAMBOANGA CITY (Mindanao Examiner / 21 Mar) – Nagbabala ang awtoridad kahapon laban sa mga nagnanais na pumasok ng illegal sa Sabah, Malaysia na kung saan ay matindi ang crack down sa mga walang dokumento at papeles.

Ilang ulit na rin nagbigay ng babala ang Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) ukol sa pagpasok sa Sbah ng mga Pinoy na walang papeles o passport. Talamak ang tawiran mula sa lalawigan ng Tawi-Tawi patungong Sabah sa kabila ng mahigpit na kampanya ng Philippine Navy.

Nuong Sabado lamang ay mahigit sa 300 mga Pinoy na dinakip sa Sabah ang dumating sa Zamboanga City. Mahigit na rin 2,000 ang ma illegal na Pinoy ang pinabalik sa bansa mula pa ng Enero, ayon sa Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) sa Zamboanga City.

Sinabi ni local DSWD spokesperson Fe Dela Cruz na nasa mabuting kalagayan umano ang huling batch ng mga deportees. Batay sa record ng DSWD ay 232 sa mga dumating ay kalalakihan. Hindi naman nabatid kung ilan ang babae at bata sa nasabing grupo.

Agad naman silang binigyan ng tulong ng DSWD at pinabalik na rin umano ang ibagng mga deportees sa kani-kanilang lugar at karamihan ay mga Muslim na nanggaling sa Basilan, Sulu at Tawi-Tawi.

Nanawagan ang DFA sa mga nais na magtungo sa Sabah na kumuha ng passport at iba pang mga dokumento upang maiwasan ang anumang problema. Mahigpit ang sa Malaysia sa kasalukuyan dahil sa dami ng mga ilegal doon, bukod sa Pinoy ay may mga Indian at Thailander sa nasabing bansa.

Karamihan sa mga deportees ay walang papeles at nagtungo ng ilegal sa Sabah upang doon makipagsapalaran. Hirap umano ang buhay sa Basilan, Sulu at Tawi-Tawi at walang kasuguhan sa kinabukasan ng kanilang pamilya.
(Mindanao Examiner)

Comments Off

Mar 04 2007

Zambo Paboritong Investment Destination

ZAMBOANGA CITY (Mindanao Examiner / 04 Mar) – Patuloy na pumapayagpag ang Zamboanga City matapos na dalawang Malaysian airlines ang sinasabing magbubukas ng biyahe mula Sabah.
Paborableng klima sa negosyo at gumagandang peace and order situation sa Zamboanga City at Mindanao ang dahilan kung bakit naisipan magbukas ng ruta dito and Air Asia at Malaysian Airlines.
Bagamat hindi agad mabatid ang takdang petsa ng pagbubukas ng mga ruta ay ikinatuwa na ito ng maraming opisyal ng pamahalaan sa Zamboanga. Patunay umano ang pagdagsa ng mga dayuhang negosyo sa Zamboanga ang malaking pagbabago sa pangkalahatang sitwasyon sa Mindanao.

Nabatid pang ang introductory ticket ng Sabah-Zamboanga flight ng Malaysian Airline ay $50 (P2,400) lamang. Mataas pa umano ang singil ng Philippine Air Lines, Cebu Pacific at Air Philippines sa kanilang Zamboanga-Manila flight na aabot sa mahigit P4,500.

Naunang nagbukas sa Zamboanga nuong nakaraang taon ang Mosphil, isang Russian-Filipino airliner, na bumibiyahe mula dito at Sabah. (Mindanao Examiner)

Comments Off

  • Monthly

  • Pages

  • Meta