
Former MNLF chairman Nur Misuari visits Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III at his residence in Maharlika Village in Taguig City yesterday. With them are Misuari's wife Tarhata and Kiram's wife Fatima Celia. EDD GUMBAN
    Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) founding chairman Nur  Misuari yesterday volunteered to serve as emissary to Kuala Lumpur and help in  talks to resolve the violence in Sabah peacefully.
    Misuari visited Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III at his house  in Maharlika Village, Taguig City yesterday.
    The MNLF chief told reporters that he is willing to sit  down with Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak to help end the crisis in Sabah.
    "For the sake of peace, and to save the lives of the young  Muslims who had joined the Sabah incursion as well as of the Malaysian  soldiers, Muslims should not be fighting," he said. "If there is a need for me  to visit Kuala Lumpur and possibly iron out differences between the Bangsamoro  nation and the Malaysian people, I am willing to do that at my own expense."
    Misuari criticized President Aquino for taking the side of  Malaysia on the Sabah incursion issue.
    He said the Aquino administration handled the situation  "badly."
    "What the President did was unbecoming of a head of state.  Why is he siding with the enemy of his own people? I don't know who is advising  him. I hope the President is properly advised and would recant so we could  forgive him," he said.
    Misuari warned the President against arresting the sultan  of Sulu.
    "The country will be in total chaos if they do that. The  President should be calm and quiet. If he has nothing to say, he should not open  his mouth anymore," he added.
    Misuari reiterated that he and the MNLF had nothing to do  with the Sabah incursion.
    "There has been speculation about my supposed involvement  in the incursion. These are all wild speculations. I cannot preempt the role of  the sultan," he added.
    Misuari also denied allegations that he financed the armed  men who intruded Sabah.
    "If indeed I am that well-off, why should I finance this  adventure of the sultan's men? They are only about 200 people. That is not my  way of doing things," he said.
    But Nur Misuari, who founded the Moro National Liberation  Front in the late 1960s, confirmed "freedom fighters" from his group  were part of the militia sent by a self-proclaimed sultan to claim the  Malaysian state of Sabah.
    "I cannot deny that some of them are known to be MNLF  freedom fighters," Misuari told a news conference in Manila, although he  insisted he was not personally involved.
    "They went there without my knowledge. I have not  ordered anyone to join them. It would be very irresponsible for anybody to  implicate us."
    Noy  lawyering for Malaysia
    MNLF legal counsel and spokesman Emmanuel Fontanilla said  yesterday that President Aquino acted as lawyer for Malaysia when he declared that  Sabah belongs to Malaysia.
    Fontanilla said the President's statement jeopardized the  possible action against Malaysia by the International Court of Justice (ICJ).
    "We regret the pronouncement of the President that the  actions of Sultan Kiram are unlawful, thus negating our stand in the ICJ," he  said.
    He said any move to elevate the Sabah case to the United  Nations will not prosper following Aquino's declaration.
    He said the only option for the sultanate is to bring the  case to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) through the MNLF, which  has permanent observer status in the Islamic body.
    'Sabah  crisis should be resolved before UN'
    Meanwhile, former Tawi Tawi governor Al Tillah yesterday  said the Sabah conflict should be resolved before a world forum.
    "The Sabah crisis is rooted historically in the just  struggle of the sultanate through justice and the lofty ideals of the Muslim  Filipinos. Any opinion to the contrary is null and void," said Tillah. "The  resolution is between the Sulu sultanate and Malaysia before the United  Nations."
    Tillah added that what is happening in Sabah is not a  rebellion by the sultan, but a defense of their historic rights over the  territory.
    He condemned President Aquino for his apparent reluctance  to have the issue arbitrated before the international court.
    He also assailed the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)  for trading the peace process with the Philippine government in exchange for  Sabah.
    "What did President Aquino trade to gain this peace process  with the MILF?" he asked.
    Tillah also questioned Aquino for not including the MNLF  and the sultanate of Sulu in the peace process.
    "Is this the kind of peace the MILF signed for? Born out of  treachery?" he asked.  – 
    by:Mayen  Jaymalin, Christina Mendez, Evelyn Macairan, Jose Rodel Clapano 
    with report from , MSN, RFTBP & philSTAR