INTERNATIONAL law does not recognise the use of history to advance one’s claims. Period. If history can be used as an antecedent, the whole of South China Sea, which China is claiming based on sheer historical rights, would have been an open and shut case.

But the United Nations International Tribunal on the Laws of the Seas, of which the government of the Philippines is a litigant, successfully claimed that “history”, indeed, cannot form the basis of China’s claim in 2017.

With “living” civilisation traversing 5,000 years, as the Chinese often likes to claim, augmented further by the scholar Zhang Wei Wei, who referred to China as a “civilisational state”, there is not a single part of Asia, for that matter Africa, even the entire arch that forms the Silk Road, is untouched by Chinese “history”. Even the computer bears the imprint of the famous Chinese abacus.

By this token, one of the most outrageous arguments of “historical claims” by the clan of Sultan Qiram, whom some believe has further
sub-divided into eight different clans – by some accounts a galling “sixteen”– is that the Malaysian government is legally entitled to pay the whole Qiram clan a total of US$15 billion (RM67 billion).

Failing which, a compound interest of 10% would be added to the amount each year. This is akin to the court acting as an illegal loan shark. That the adversarial French legal system can stoop so low is, for lack of a better word, abysmal.

What is most unique is the nature of the Qiram “family”, first legal salvo. Rather than reclaim Sabah, it aimed at Malaysia’s most valuable asset – Petronas. If the legal claim is built on ownership of the Qiram family on and of Sabah, shouldn’t the case revolve entirely and wholly on the state?

Yet it was not. The Qiram family does not want the onerous responsibility of taking back one of the poorest state of the Federation of Malaysia. Goaded and shepherded by its money grabbing legal sherpa – Therium Group, incorporated in London – the Qiram family was coached, perhaps, coerced into cherry picking the law. Thus, Petronas became its target. Should this act of helping the enemy of Sabah come from within elements of the state, the laws of treason would aptly apply without fail, invariably, for aiding and abetting an enemy to conduct, what can only be called, a “lawfare” against Malaysia.

The national oil and gas entity is indeed responsible for up to 11% of the fiscal revenue of the Malaysian government. Should all the operations of Petronas be crippled, it is not implausible to think that there are certain higher colonial forces that are fanning the amber to trigger a fire that would burn Malaysia to a crisp. By this token, all parties must be careful of the foreign machinations that are working in cahoots in some elements of Sabah to either reap a financial payout or seek a plea bargain, with a price that Petronas is asked to agree to. Either way, the enemies within and without would win a handsome windfall.

There are three reasons why Malaysia needs to fight this legal farce that verges on neo-colonial conspiracy of the worst kind. While more can be listed, it suffices to name just three.

First and foremost, who is really the true inheritor of the Qiram family? If it is a royal family, with a single line of blood succession, perhaps the Qiram family may ostensibly have some locus standi to press the claims of US$15 billion against Petronas, the leading oil company of Malaysia.

But if the Qiram family has many offshoots of no clear family tree, other then sharing the name sake of Qiram, of which some if not a majority of them may have decided to remain in Sulu to ply a normal life, content with or without any accountrements of the slightest luxuries, or alternatively become naturalised Sabahans, then what rights do they possess over anything that is extracted from the state? None.

Secondly, regardless of that, the Qiram family is not a united and cohesive entity. That is the key point. Whether Malaysia kept paying an annual lease of RM5,800 from 1878 until 2013 is not tantamount to acknowledging their sovereignty. Each year, Malaysia pays a membership of US$2 million to the Asean Secretariat in Jakarta, as do the rest of the 10 member states. Does that mean Malaysia can intervene in the affairs of Singapore just because the member states have pledged to be a single Asean community by 2025. Again the answer is in the negative.

Thirdly, the fact that they needed 144 years to bankroll their claim against Petronas, backed by a legal vulture named Therium, can only suggest one thing: That the Qiram family was merely taking a shot in the dark based on sheer legal sophistry. Not facts.

For the lack of a better word, this was clearly a case of the right hand not knowing what the left hand was doing. Little wonder then that when the verdict in favour of the
supposed legal claim of the Qiram family was announced by the French arbitration court, an immediate stay of judgement was automatically granted to Petronas the
following day.

While the New York Convention on Arbitration forms part of international law, where it allows the case that was originally heard, then spurned in Spain, to be heard in the arbitration chamber of France, the US$15 billion dollar question is this: Granted that the issue in contention was the 1878 lease granted by the Sultan of Qiram to the North Borneo British Company, why didn’t Therium that is backing the Qiram’s family claim display the temerity to file the legal charges in the very inns of courts in the heart of London? Were they afraid that the statue of limitations on the lease have long expired?

Therium is a company, not even a law firm proper, that goes backing spurious legal claims, with the goal of scoring one of the firm’s largest financial windfalls ever. It is a financial predator that embraces the ethics of Wall Street: Greed is good.

Granted the compensation was strictly pecuniary in nature, it is as clear as night and day that the pecuniary firm is nothing less than a fly by night money grabber and badger. Such entities thrive on all round ambiguities of any laws. From reputational damage, without any iota of proof, to supposed libel that has jeopardised the livelihood of the accused. You name them, you have them.

In desperate times, such leading firms normally go after quick wins to abscond with the lowest hanging fruits. Is it any wonder, again, that Therium is an entity without any official presence in Kuala Lumpur, let alone Sulu, the very client it seeks to back?

Indeed, granted that the Philippines is a republic ruled by a president with various theoretical divisions of power, it boggles the mind how a presidential and congressional system, with southern Mindanao being granted a self autonomous status, can provide a legal status to the Qiram family in Sulu when the whole of Mindanao is what the Philippines has sought to claim since the 16th century.

For what it is worth, the legal eagles in Petronas should not rest on their laurels. The same applies to the Attorney-General’s Office. For that matter, the Research Department and the Special Branch too. Truly, someone is trying to stir the proverbial pot in Sabah. Whatever their sinister goal is, Malaysia must take up this case seriously with the right legal competencies to protect and preserve its sovereign territories and rights.

Thus, all these agencies, especially the government and opposition alike, be they at the federal or state level, should closely watch how the Qiram family has been manipulated to enlarge its global arbitrate claims.

The key of their strategy seems to be to cut Petronas to size before the Crown Jewel of Malaysia can launch any counter-attack.

Sometimes defence is not necessarily the best offence, especially when the opposite side is supported by a spurious and amorphous entity.

Dr Rais Hussin is the president
and CEO at EMIR Research,
an independent think tank
focussed on strategic
policy recommendations based on rigorous research. Comments: letters@thesundaily.com

Clickable Image
Clickable Image
Clickable Image