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Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Sabah stand-off: Senator Honasan turns cold feet, tells Sultan Jamalul Kiram III to recall brother

A former renegade Colonel in the Philippine Army,
Honasan is now a Senator
FORMER RENEGADE ARMY OFFICER TURNED MEDIA DARLING TURNED SENATOR GRINGO HONASAN tells Sultan Jamalul III to recall his brother, leader of Sulu Sultanate group in Sabah stand-off

Senator Gringo Honasan seems to have turned cold feet. Instead of insisting that Malacanang take this opportunity to raise the Sabah claim issue with Kuala Lumpur, he is now virtually siding with Malaysia against the Sultanate of Suu 'army' in Sabah! 

WHAT IS WRONG WITH YOU MR HONASAN???? IF YOU ARE FEARFUL THAT AN ARMED CONFRONTATION MIGHT ARISE AT THE SABAH STAND OFF, THEN GET YOUR BUTT OUT THERE AND LEAD THE CHARGE! YOU MORON!

But no, we guess you do not have the moral courage to face the issue and demand that Malaysia return Sabah to its legitimate owners. No, you Sir have no moral courage at all! One would have thought that your army training would have imbued in you a sense of duty. That when your fellowmen need you to stand for their right, because Sabah's sovereingty rights belong to the Republic, you would stand there and fight for them in the august halls of the Senate. 

Has Kuala Lumpur also got to you? You Sir are a waste of meagre, precious rations this country can barely afford!

REPORT:

Honasan also called on Sultan Jamalul Kiram III to recall his brother, Rajah Mudah, back into the Philippines. 
Rajah Mudah, in an earlier report, said that he will only follow orders from his older brother. 
Sultan Kiram III, in an earlier report in the Philippine Daily Inquirer, said the royal decree that he ordered for his brother was not about war, and that he sent his brother to Sabah as an exercise of their historic, ancestral and sovereign right over Sabah. 
Honasan said that the Sultan must be made to realize that his order has not been helping the government in its foreign and security policies. 
“He must be made to realize that these have become more complicated,” Honasan added. 
“It is time for the government to clarify these with the Sultan of Sulu and if these go out of proportion, it is a problem that we do not need,” said Honasan, who was in the city to join the regional convention of the Philippine Guardians Brotherhood, Inc. 
LINK: hHonasan suggests talks between Manila and Kuala Lumpur but does not raise Philippine rights over Sabah

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