All about the genuine Sabah Claim Society

ATTENTION! This blog is the genuine Sabah Claim Society.

We are Philippine patriots who have grouped together from around the world and who created the Sabah Claim Society group originally on Facebook on 15 July 2011 and counted close to 6,000 members.

But on 5 October 2011 our group on Facebook was traitorously hijacked by two people we had invited to join us as group admins but who, we learned later on, had been hired to sabotage our patriotic group by a group of sinister individuals sporting fake European sounding nobility titles and other spurious Tausug/Sulu titles ['bestowed' and indiscriminately distributed on Facebook] and organized by a combined team of charlatans namely a datu (sporting a fake sultan title) and the latter's handler who is conveniently sporting an absolutely fake 'princely' title as well.

Please be warned that the said group of individuals, we believe, are in fact con artists out to "claim" Sabah for "get rich quick" reasons and are not genuine Philippine patriots. Their motive, we have discovered, is to be able to convince Malaysians that they are genuine Sulu royalty and pro-Philippine Sabah claim supporters in order to extract from Malaysia (which has control of Sabah today) a premium for letting go of the Sabah claim.

For more information on the Philippine Sabah claim, please join the ongoing discussions by clicking on the following link on Facebook: Philippine Sabah Claim Forum

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Wednesday 21 November 2012

Remembering a hero of OPLAN MERDEKA, CAPT SOLFERINO TITONG, PA

In the early 1960s, the Philippine government was already concerned that the pan Islamic movement financed by Libya's leader, Muammar Gaddafi would reach Southern Philippines. The deputy chief of the National Intelligence Coordinating Agency, Gen. Rafael Ileto, a West Pointer and the founder of the Scout Rangers. 

Returning from a conference in Israel, with sophisticated communications equipment he recruited a Scout Ranger officer, Captain Solferino Titong, who was an expert in communications, with the mission to obtain information on events in North Borneo. He was to ingratiate himself with the new Malaysian authorities and get in a position of trust. He could not have gotten any closer, he managed to get the trust of the then Chief Minister, Tun Mustapha bin Datu Harun, a Suluk/Bajau (Tausug) and a relative of the Sultan of Sulu.

A year later, Ileto left the NICA for a new appointment as commander of a PC zone. But Titong stayed on in Sabah. ln 1967, Maj. Eduardo Martelino learned of Titong and tapped him to lead the team of infiltrators, this time for Oplan Merdeka.


Malaysia seemed an easy and vulnerable target at that time. The Federation was new and still fragile, having come into being only in 1963. It had barely taken off when Singapore, a member of the Federation of Malaya, decided to break away in 1965. Malaysia was engaged in a border dispute with its giant neighbor, Indonesia. 


Manila wanted to pursue its claim to Sabah at the World Court in the Hague and any discontent in the territory might have encouraged the Philippines to abandon diplomatic channels for more direct methods. True enough, Marcos cast his eyes on a country that was still on its way to political cohesion.

Capt Titong was extracted out of Sabah in the aftermath of the exposé of the operation.


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