Malaysia not to claim Indonesian territory

Agence France Presse

Kuala Lumpur, March 14:

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi on Monday said Malaysia will not take control of any territory that belongs to Indonesia but will defend its own territorial rights. “Their territory is their territory and our territory is ours and we will definitely protect our territory,” he was quoted as saying by Bernama news agency. Abdullah said he was confident the maritime territorial dispute in the Sulawesi Sea off Borneo with Indonesia could be resolved through negotiations, adding that Malaysia had no intention to be embroiled in a conflict. “We have no intention whatsoever. If there have been any intention to go to war, we will conduct ourselves in such a way. If there have been any intention to fight, we will speak in that manner. We want, however, to maintain cordiality and to resolve the matter,” he told a group of visiting Indonesian scholars. Abdullah’s remarks came after reports that Indonesia had sent seven navy frogmen to a small reef that both countries claim.

The elite troops were dropped on the Karang Unar-ang reef in the Sulawesi Sea from an aircraft, navy spoke-sman Lieutenant Col Guntur Wahyudi told the Antara news agency without giving a date. Indonesia and Malaysia agreed last Wednesday to use dialogue to end the dispute centred on Kuala Lumpur’s granting of an oil concession in the contested area.

Warships from both countries have come into close contact in the Sulawesi Sea east of Borneo several times since February 16 when energy giant Shell was given a concession by Malaysia’s state oil company Petronas. Jakarta says the blocks awarded by Petronas are outside Kuala Lumpur’s sovereignty.