Safeguarding
 our territory: Malaysian troops moving into Tanduo village during an 
operation to flush out the armed intruders. — (Handout photo by Defence 
Ministry)
  
A major shift in Malaysia's position on the Philippine claim to Sabah is needed. 
  
 THE
 Philippines Government officially announced their claim to North Borneo
 (now Sabah) on June 22, 1962. Despite numerous attempts to settle the 
issue, it still festers on, exemplified by the latest tragic events 
unfolding on the east coast of Sabah.
 The Philippine claim is based on two documents dated Jan 22, 1878. By the first document, Sultan Muhammad Jamaluladzam granted (
pajak) all his territorial possessions in Borneo (
tanah besar Pulau Berunai)
 to Gustavus Baron de Overbeck and Alfred Dent Esquire as 
representatives of a British Company for a yearly payment/ quit rent (
hasil pajakan) of five thousand dollars (Spanish dollars).
 By
 the second document, the said Sultan appointed Overbeck as “Dato' 
Bendahara and Rajah of Sandakan” with the fullest powers of a “supreme 
ruler” (
penghulu pemerintah atas kerajaan yang tersebut itu).
 Descendants of Sultan Muhammad Jamaluladzam (the number cannot be ascertained, but is large), represented by the 
Kiram Corporation and the Philippine Government, have always claimed that this 1878 grant was a lease (
pajakan)
 and not a cession as claimed by Malaysia. The continuous annual payment
 of the quit rent or cession monies of five thousand dollars (now 
RM5,300) to these descendants is cited as further proof of this 
contention. Based on these grounds, they claim, Sabah belongs to the 
Philippines/ the Sultan of Sulu's descendants.
 Before discussing 
how Malaysia has been responding to this assertion and how it should 
alter its position drastically, a little bit of historical narrative is 
in order.
 Without going too far back in time, it is suffice to 
say historical documents confirm that both the Sultanate of Brunei and 
the Sultanate of Sulu exercised political control over parts of 
present-day Sabah (there was no State or Negeri Sabah at that time) in 
the late 19th century. Brunei had 
defacto jurisdiction on the 
west coast from Kimanis to Pandasan, while Sulu ruled the east coast 
from Marudu to the Sibuku River. The interior was largely independent 
under local indigenous 
suku chiefs.
 Both Sultanates, however, claimed 
dejure
 jurisdiction from the Pandasan on the west coast to the Sibuku River on
 the east. Both Sultanates were also in a state of decline. Brunei was 
suffering from internal decay while large parts of its territories were 
being swallowed up by the new state of Sarawak under the Brookes.
 In
 the Philippine region, the Spanish authorities in Manila had been 
trying to subjugate the independent and powerful kingdom of Sulu for 
three centuries without success. In 1871, the Spaniards launched another
 exerted campaign to conquer the stubborn kingdom.
 It was in this
 kind of environment that a number of European and American speculators 
became interested in obtaining territorial concessions from the two weak
 Sultanates for speculative purposes. Among them were Lee Moses and 
Joseph Torrey of America; and Baron von Overbeck and Alfred Dent who had
 formed a company called the Overbeck-Dent Association on March 27, 1877
 in London for the purpose of obtaining land concessions in Sabah and 
selling them for a profit.
 Overbeck and Dent acquired Brunei's 
jurisdiction over its Sabah possessions in five documents dated Dec 29, 
1877 from the Sultan of Brunei and his ministers. After this, Overbeck 
sailed to Jolo where he also obtained the rights of the Sultan of Sulu 
in Sabah through two agreements concluded on Jan 22, 1878.
 Why was Sultan Muhammad Jamaluladzan prepared to lease/ grant/ 
pajak his
 territories in Sabah to Overbeck and Dent? Sulu was on the brink of 
capitulating to the Spaniards and as such Sultan Muhammad was hopeful of
 obtaining some assistance from the Overbeck-Dent Association and 
possibly even from Britain. Placed in such dire straits, he was 
therefore not adverse to giving Overbeck and Dent territorial 
concessions in Sabah with some hope of salvation.
 In the event, 
no such aid came either from the Overbeck-Dent Association or the 
British Government. Six months after the Overbeck-Dent grants were 
concluded, Sulu was conquered by the Spanish authorities on July 2 1878.
 With the fall of Sulu, the said Sultanate ceased to be an independent 
entity as it was incorporated as part of the Spanish colonial 
administration of the Philippines.
 In 1898, Spain lost the 
Philippines to the United States by the Peace of Paris (Dec 10, 1898), 
which ended the Spanish-American War. The US ruled the Philippines till 
1946 when independence was granted.
The sultanate ended when Sultan 
Jamalul Kiram II signed the Carpenter Agreement on March 22, 1915, in 
which he ceded all political power to the United States. 
Carpenter, Governor of the Department of Mindanao and Sulu, Philippine 
Islands,  from 1913-1920, with the Sultan of Sulu, Jamalul Kiram II.
Meanwhile, in 1936, the US 
colonial administration of the Philippines abolished the Sulu Sultanate 
upon the death of Sultan Jamalul Kiram II (1894-1936) in the same year 
in an attempt to create a unitary State of the Philippines. Jamalul 
Kiram III is a self- appointed “Sultan” with a dubious legal status.
 Now,
 coming back to the question of Malaysia's ongoing treatment of the 
claim, and why and how it should completely alter this position. Since 
the official announcement of the claim by the Philippine Government on 
June 22, 1962, Malaysia has been pursuing an ambivalent policy. On the 
one hand, it has persistently rejected the Philippines claim, but on the
 other it has compromised Malaysia's sovereignty by agreeing to settle 
the “dispute” by peaceful means (such as the Manila Agreement, Aug 3, 
1963) and a number of other mutual agreements between the two countries.
 Most
 damaging of all is Malaysia's willingness to honour the clause in the 
1878 Sulu grant pertaining to the payment of the annual quit rent or 
cession monies as Malaysia says, of RM5,300, to the descendants of the 
former Sulu Sultanate. To this day, Malaysia is still paying this quit 
rent, lending credence to the claimants' argument that the 1878 grant 
was a lease and not a cession and therefore it still belongs to them.
 If
 Malaysia continues to follow this policy, there will be no end to this 
problem except to buy out the rights of the descendents of the Sultan of
 Sulu. But this course is fraught with danger as it will lead to further
 legal complications with the Philippines and even endless litigation 
with the descendants.
 My proposal is that Malaysia should go by 
the laws of “effectivities”, as in the case of the International Court 
of Justice's (ICJ) judgement pertaining to the issue of sovereignty over
 the Sipadan and Ligitan islands, and the law of acts of 
a'titre de souverain as
 in the case of Pulau Batu Puteh. No title, however strong, is valid 
once the original owner fails to exercise acts consistent with the 
position of 
a'titre de souverain. The opposite is true, that is, 
the holder of the lease may not have original title but he ultimately 
gains permanent possession of the lease by virtue of continuous state 
“effectivities”.
 In this case, the Sultan of Sulu and its successors including the Philippine government have failed to conduct any acts of 
a'titre de souverain since 1882, and so they have legally lost their title.
 On
 the other hand, the successors of the Overbeck-Dent Association, that 
is the British North Borneo Company (1882-1946); the British Colonial 
Administration (1946-1963); and Malaysia, (from 1963) have been 
exercising continuous acts of 
a'titre de souverain for a period of 131 years.
 Since
 we have all this evidence on our side, Malaysia should now take a new 
stand by totally rejecting the validity of the 1878 grants on the 
grounds of “effectivitie” and 
a'titre de souverain. It should 
also immediately stop paying the so-called annual quit rent or cession 
monies. This payment has always brought huge embarrassment to Malaysia 
and has in fact compromised its sovereignty.
 We should also never
 agree to go to the International Court of Justice not because our case 
is weak (it is very strong), but because we don't want to trade the fate
 of sovereign territories and people through the judgment of any court, 
even the ICJ.
 There's one more point that should be pondered 
upon. No country or state or nation which has obtained independence has 
ever paid ownership monies to its former masters. The 13 Colonies of 
America did not do so, India did not do so, the Federation of Malaya did
 not do so.
 Sabah became an independent state on Aug 31, 1963 and
 decided to form the Federation of Malaysia with three other partners on
 Sept 16, 1963. It is strange indeed, if not preposterous, that a 
sovereign state is paying ownership or cession monies to certain people 
based on a colonial, pre-independence treaty that is 131 years old!
Comment by EMERITUS PROF DR D.S RANJIT SINGH
 Emeritus
 Prof D. S. Ranjit Singh is Visiting Professor at the College of Law, 
Government and International Studies, Universiti Utara Malaysia 
(ranjit@uum.edu.my). 
Related posts:
The former Sulu Sultanate, a foreign problem in history that became Sabah's