A. M. Azahari

A.M. Azahari
Prime Minister of the Federation of North Kalimantan (Unrecognised)
In office
7 November 1961  18 December 1962
Chairman of the Partai Rakyat Brunei
In office
2 October 1947  18 December 1962
Personal details
Born (1928-09-03)3 September 1928
Crown Colony of Labuan (now Labuan, present-day Malaysia)
Died 3 September 2002(2002-09-03)
Bogor, Indonesia
Spouse(s) unknown

Sheikh Azahari bin Sheikh Mahmud (3 September 1928 - 3 September 2002), better known as A.M. Azahari, was a Brunei politician turned rebel.

Born of mixed Arab-Malay heritage in Labuan, he was educated in Java and later fought against the Dutch there. He was the leader of the Brunei People's Party which sought to reduce the power of Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddin III to a constitutional monarch during the Brunei Revolt in 1962.

Azahari's party won all 16 elected seats in the 33-member legislative council and as a left-leaning politician, Azahari strongly objected to the Sultan's idea for Brunei's membership in the Federation of Malaysia, along with British North Borneo (which was later renamed to Sabah), Sarawak and Singapore.

The idea of the North Kalimantan was originally proposed by Azahari, who had forged links with Sukarno's nationalist movement, together with Ahmad Zaidi Adruce, in Java in the 1940s. The idea supported and propagated the unification of all Borneo territories under British rule to form an independent leftist North Kalimantan state.

Azahari personally favoured Brunei's independence and merging with British North Borneo and Sarawak to form the federation with the Sultan of Brunei as the constitutional monarch.

However, the Brunei People’s Party was in favour of joining Malaysia on the condition it was as the unified three territories of northern Borneo with their own Sultan, and hence was strong enough to resist domination by Malaya, Singapore, Malay administrators or Chinese merchants.[1]

The North Kalimantan (or Kalimantan Utara) proposal was seen as a post-decolonization alternative by local opposition against the Malaysia plan. Local opposition throughout the Borneo territories was primarily based on economic, political, historical and cultural differences between the Borneo states and Malaya, as well as the refusal to be subjected under peninsular political domination.

During the Brunei Revolt, Azahari was in Manila and managed to avoid capture by British and Commonwealth forces that help quell the revolt. He was even involved in the Limbang raid.

Life in exile and death

After his defeat, Azahari fled to Jakarta where he was granted asylum by President Sukarno in 1963 and lived in exile in Kalimantan. A. M. Azahari later died in 2002 in Bogor, Indonesia. He was 75.

He is survived by a wife and more than 10 children. Azahari was the strong voice against the proposal by then Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman Putra to merge Malaya, Sabah, Sarawak and Brunei to form Malaysia.

Instead, Azahari, who led BPP from the time it was formed in 1956 to when the party was disbanded in 1962, proposed the formation of a unified state consisting of Brunei, Sarawak and North Borneo.

References

  1. Pocock p. 129
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