Citizen's Commission on Human Rights International
Manila Bulletin published the litany  of Sabah enumerating the human rights violations including killing a 12-15  year old boy, alleged impregnating women in jail, dragging all the men outside  the houses, kicked and hit them and some are ordered to run and shot them..  etc.
It is somewhat unbelievable because Malaysia is  an Islam country and such Islam country is claiming as they are faithful Islam  and they will not do any harm to other human. As it is "HARAM" or [a sin ] 
Some information also leaked that Malaysia a  faithful to Islam country is also funding several groups of rebels to attack  Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines through MNLF which men in Sabah now are  among of those MNLF rebel group funded by Malaysia in 70's-80's initiating rebellion  in the Southern Philippines. 
As leaked, these are the training camps in Malaysia  that are directly supervised by the Malaysian government (funded and armed):
1)  SABAH - funded, trained, and supplied (arms and  weapons) MNLF at the height of its insurgency in the 70's and 80's in southern  Philippines.
2)  KELANTAN STATE - Malaysia's Islamic Party PAS gives  sanctuary to the Malay Pattani people of Thailand and currently funding,  training, and providing (arms and weapons) the P.U.L.O. (Pattani United  Liberation Organization) to wage insurgency war against a sovereign nation of  Thailand.
3)  KEDAH - Sanctuary and training ground for Aceh  People of Indonesia and currently funding the Free Aceh Movement to wage  insurgency war against a sovereign nation Indonesia.
In contradiction, the MNLF group which was  funded by Malaysia to create rebellion in the Southern Philippines is now among  the member of the group of the Sultanate of Sulu Royal Army serving as Royal  Security Guard of the Sulu Sultanate crowned Prince Raja Muda Agbimuddin Kiram  who is returning back to Sabah (North Borneo) to re-claim their ancestral land.  
Malaysia  Human Rights Violation
The reported maltreatment of Filipinos in  Malaysia following the outbreak of violence in Sabah is just the "tip of the  iceberg," an official of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) told  the Manila Bulletin yesterday.
The source, who asked not to be named for lack  of authority to speak in behalf of the ARMM, cited a litany of abuses that have  been happening for years among many undocumented workers or migrants from the  Philippines but never gained any attention from higher authorities.
"Finally, the sufferings of Filipinos in Sabah  drew notice from Malacañang. We got similar, if not harsher, complaints  directly from victims and made appropriate reports to higher authorities to no  avail years ago," the official said.
Local journalists have actually exposed some  documented abuses but the reports seemed to have been suppressed in the  mainstream media in deference to the Manila-Kuala Lumpur diplomacy that bloomed  with Malaysia's brokering of the Philippine government's peace talks with the  Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the official said.
"As if a blessing in disguise, the Sabah crisis  brought to fore the cases of abuses on Filipinos in Malaysia, especially those  undocumented ones," the source said.
As early as 2011, the ARMM's Department of  Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) and Department of Labor and Employment  (DOLE) had been receiving direct reports from some Filipino victims of abuses  ranging from alleged torture of males to sexual attacks on females in Malaysian  detention centers in Sabah.
Some of the victims, whom Sabah authorities  tagged as "halaw" (Malaysian term for rejected or unwanted" for lacking travel  or working documents), had confirmed the cases of three Filipinas allegedly  impregnated in jail, ARMM's DSWD and DOLE officials told a meeting in 2011.
Over the weekend, Malacañang said the alleged  human rights violations perpetrated by the Malaysian police and military on  non-combatants caught in the crossfire recently in Sabah are "unacceptable."
Tawi-Tawi, the nation's southernmost province  and a component of ARMM, has been swamped by refugees fleeing Sabah amid horror  stories of Malaysian forces staging indiscriminate raids on houses suspected of  harboring remnants of Sultan Jamalul Kiram III's followers, reports said.
A national daily said even pregnant women and  children who are long-time residents of Sabah have been affected by Malaysian  mortar attacks and house-to-house searches of people supporting the Sulu  Sultan's royal army.
Refugees by the hundreds have reportedly fled  on any boat available, including traditional wooden lepa, used by Badjaos in  the Sabah town of Semporna.
Some of those who fled Sabah for Tawi-Tawi and  Sulu, another ARMM province, said they were treated "like animals" by the  Malaysian troops.
"They dragged all the men outside the houses,  kicked and hit them," 32-year-old Amira Taradji said on Friday, recounting her  family's ordeal in the hands of raiding policemen in Sandakan.
Taradji alleged that raiding Malaysian troops  ordered Filipino men to run as fast as they could and then shot them. One of  the fatalities was her brother, Jumali, she said.
Those Filipinos caught alive and detained were  not being fed, she and other refugees told Sulu officials led by Jolo Mayor  Hussin Amin.
Mayor Amin, who spoke to many refugees, said  the situation was "alarming and disturbing" because the raiding troops no longer  distinguish illegal immigrants from holders of MyKad, an identification card  issued to Malaysian citizens and permanent residents.
The Bernama, Malaysia's national news agency,  had confirmed police detention of Filipinos including four women for allegedly  "abetting" the Sulu sultan's royal army.
Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of the New  York-based Human Rights Watch, said Friday in a statement that while the  "situation on the ground in the conflict zone in Sabah is still quite murky,"  Malaysia "should provide clear and accurate information on what had occurred"  and "allow humanitarian access for the provision of emergency assistance to  those affected."
On Sunday, the Malaysian police shot dead a  teenage boy and injured a man, bringing the death toll to 62 as the Malaysian  security forces continue to launch assaults to end the Filipino militant incursions  in Malaysia's Sabah state.
Police chief Ismail Omar said the teenager,  aged between 12 and 15, was killed when police sensed movements behind a bush  and fired shots at it as they were frisking five people in Sungai Bilis  village.
The identity of the teenager has yet to be  disclosed. A man in his 30's were also injured in the shooting.
Two policemen were shot and injured by gunmen  in overnight skirmishes as the Malaysian authorities said the militants showed  no signs of backing down.
The Malaysian police on Sunday raised the  number of people they arrested under suspicion of sympathizing with the militant  to 85 from 79 last night.
Authorities said they are concentrating efforts  to hunt down the militants holed up in Kampung Tanjung Batu and Kampung Tanduo  by launching airstrikes and sifting them out house-to-house. Some of the  militants were found to be posing as civilians, the police said.
The Malaysian forces and the Filipino militants  have been fighting since last Friday in an intense standoff that left at least  62 people dead, including eight Malaysian policemen whom authorities said were  brutally murdered.
Malaysia began an all-out raid codenamed  "Sovereign Operation" on Tuesday that included airstrikes and ground assaults  on several areas aiming to flush out the militants.
Analysts said Prime Minister Najib Razak is  dealing with the incursion crisis carefully as it could reflect on the national  polls that are due by June.
More than a thousand Filipino Muslims from  Sabah have already arrived in Tawi-Tawi to escape from being caught in a  crossfire or arrested and jailed by Malaysian authorities.
An old man named Amir Elias, who arrived here a  few days ago, said Filipinos in Sabah have to flee to avoid being arrested,  jailed, and maltreated by the Malaysian police.
"Our movement has become very difficult while  we were there, because the Malaysian police are just arresting anybody at  random and jailing them. Worse, the arrested Filipinos are being beaten by a  rattan pole stick. You will surely pity them when you see them beaten by these  policemen," Elias said.
At least 400 Filipinos were forced to leave  Sabah due to fear of getting caught in the crossfire between the Malaysian  security forces and Sulu royal army, based on the latest data of the Department  of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD).
There were 432 displaced individuals from  Sabah, who have been processed by social workers from DSWD-Autonomous Region in  Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) since March 8, according to DSWD Secretary Corazon  Soliman.
Among those displaced were 93 men, 66 women,  and 93 children, while the breakdown for the 180 individuals was not available  at press time.
Meanwhile, Department of Interior and Local  Government (DILG) Secretary Mar Roxas yesterday met the younger brother of  Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, Sultan Bantilan Esmail Kiram, and discussed the  possibilities of "disengagement" of arms.
During the two-hour talk at the DILG's office  in Camp Crame, Quezon City, the two considered the possibilities and mechanisms  of disengagement although Roxas admitted that their talks are only  "exploratory."
Relatedly, the Volunteers Against Crime and  Corruption (VACC) led by founding chairman Dante Jimenez yesterday urged the  United States to make its voice heard on the Sabah standoff.
Jimenez noted that the United Nations has  already called for the end of violence and to resort to dialogue, but Malaysia  has not heeded the call
Jimenez also called on President Benigno S.  Aquino III to start handling the standoff "hands on."
He led the VACC Board of Trustees Monday in visiting Sultan Jamalul Kiram III at Astanah Kiram in Maharlika Village, Taguig City. (With reports from PNA/Xinhua, Nonoy E. Lacson, Ellalyn B. De Vera, Czarina Nicole O. Ong, and Edd K. Usman)
With report from Manila Bulletin and RFTBP
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 


