Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, whose followers had engaged Malaysian forces
in a confrontation in Sabah earlier this year, died early Sunday at age
75, his daughter said.
Kiram's daughter Jacel Kiram-Hasan said in a radio interview her father had been battling kidney problems.
"He
passed away (at) 4 a.m. due to organ failure," she said in an interview
on dzBB radio. She said he was confined at the Philippine Heart Center
since Thursday.
Earlier, Kiram-Hasan disclosed her father's death on her social media account.
"My
Appah Sultan Jamalul Kiram III has returned to our Creator at around
4:00 in the morning October 20, 2013. Thank you for your prayers and
support," she said.
Sultan Kiram ran for senator in 2007 under then President Gloria Arroyo's TEAM Unity but lost.
Fight to reclaim Sabah continues
Despite
Kiram's death, his followers will continue efforts to "repossess" Sabah
for the Filipino people, the sultanate's spokesman said Sunday.
In
a radio interview, Abraham Idjirani said repossessing Sabah for the
Philippines was one of the last decrees issued by the sultan before he
died early Sunday.
"(His third decree was) not to waive the
objective to repossess Sabah for the sake of the Filipino people...
Isulong at ituloy ang mission, dapat maibalik ang Sabah sa Pilipinas for
the sake of the Filipino people (Kiram decreed that the mission to
repossess Sabah should continue)," Idjirani said in an interview on dzBB
radio.
The sultan's two other orders were for his brothers to be closer together, and for their families to unite, he added.
Idjirani
said the sultan talked to his two brothers, including Agbimuddin Raja
Muda Kiram – who led an armed group to Sabah earlier this year – before
he died.
Remains to be flown to Jolo
After
failing to secure clearance to transport his remains to Jolo before
sundown Sunday, Kiram's relatives have arranged to have his body flown
there via private plane between 3 and 4 a.m. Monday, radio dzBB's Divine
Caraecle reported.
But only close family members are to take the trip to Jolo as the plane will be an eight-seater, the report added.
Kiram's
relatives were earlier not able to transport the sultan's body to Jolo
after failing to get clearance from the Civil Aviation Authority of the
Philippines.
Meanwhile, supporters continued to go to the Blue Mosque in Taguig City to pay their last respects.
In February this year, followers of the Sultanate of Sulu engaged Malaysian forces in Sabah in an effort to assert their claim on what they call their ancestral territory.
Based
in Mindanao, the Islamic sultanate once controlled Sabah in northern
Borneo, including the site of the stand-off. Until now, the sultanate's
heirs have been receiving a nominal yearly compensation package from
Malaysia under a long-standing agreement for possession of Sabah.
Malaysian
forces conducted offensives in Sabah to flush out Kiram's followers.
Malaysia have since charged several of Kiram's followers with terrorism
and waging war on the King.
The second offense carries the death penalty upon conviction.
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