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Southeast Asia
Arroyo addresses the situation in Mindanao
2005-09-23
SHORT stint, but with a very tough is what new Southern Command chief Lieutenant General Edilberto Adan will face in Mindanao where the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) is having its biggest battle against terrorists.

The AFP made this assessment in Metro Manila as Malacañang reportedly ordered Adan to get all the terrorists operating in the Island.

Ten different factions in Mindanao--including the Abu Sayyaf group, Jemaah Islamiya (JI) and the New People's Army (NPA)--were included in the assessment report.

The other leading forces mentioned in the assessment was the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) Misuari breakaway group based in Western Mindanao, the Abu Sofia Group and the Pentagon Kidnap-for-Ransom Group (KRG) based in Central Mindanao and the Al-Qaeda linked group. Three others are identified with "lost command groups."

As this developed, government troops battled the Misuari break-away forces in Sacol island, west-coast of the city last Monday morning, according to a report reaching the Southern command. No immediate casualties on either side were reported.

The security forces deployed in the island were making their morning patrol when they chanced upon the heavily armed group. They clashed for several minutes before the armed group retreated, a Southcom source disclosed.

The AFP lists the Misuari-renegade forces as among the ten active terrorist groups operating in Southern Philippines. They are mostly scattered in Sulu, Basilan and Zamboanga. The group formed part of the Misuari rebel forces that staged a short-lived uprising in Cabatangan this city in 2001.

The incident gained worldwide attention when they held hostage more than 200 civilians living near their Cabatangan lair, which was overrun later by the military with air support from the Philippine Air Force that bombarded their hideout.

Many people perished in the attack. The group set free all their hostages after a successful three-day negotiation that also led to their freedom somewhere in the Eleven Islands near Sacol.

Meantime, President Gloria Macapagal Arrovo denied reports that the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) is giving sanctuary to the terrorists in their territory here in Mindanao.

The President made the denial following persistent insinuations against her government that the MILF, with whom her administration is currently locked in peace talks, is coddling terrorists in Central Mindanao.

She said, on the contrary, that the MILF is helping the government hunt down the Abu Sayyaf and the JI militant forces in Liguasan Marsh, where they reportedly hide from pursuing government troops.

The vast Liguasan marshland is hard to penetrate by security forces, the AFP admitted. Arroyo made the statement when interviewed in Manila.

After her successful trip to the United Nations Security Council last week, where she had the prestigious honor of presiding over the powerful council, she was hailed as the first Filipino leader, first Asian and the first woman to bang the gavel as chair of the UN Security Council. One of her main appeals to the rest of the world leaders is to vigorously fight terrorism that grips the entire free world.

Her last minute instruction to Adan when the latter assumed his post here last August 9 was to capture Abu Sayyaf overall chieftain Kadaffy Janjalani dead or alive, utilizing all AFP available resources under his AOR here in the South.

"This will help tone down his critics who are against his appointment as Southcom chief," a Malacanang news source said when reached for comment.

Adan's post here was contested by newly promoted Lt. General Samuel Bagasin, who recently assumed as AFP deputy chief of staff, the post vacated by Adan. Bagasin was the former 4th Infantry Division commander based in Cagayan de Oro. He was highly recommended as the supposed 27th Southcom commander by the Board of Generals to replace retired Southcom head Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza; but his appointment was overturned by Arroyo, as the commander-in-chief, and instead placed Adan at the helm of the biggest AFP unified command outside Manila.

Adan said he will do his very best to get Janjalani before he retires in January, next year.
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Southeast Asia
Ex-Abu Sayyaf men claim to be trained by Aijur
2005-04-03
Two members of the Abu Sayyaf Group who turned state witnesses said they were trained by Palestinian Fawaz Zi Aijur. He was arrested by authorities for not having a visa as he entered the southern Philippine airport on March 26, a source said When shown photos of Aijur, 39, the two former Abu Sayyaf members said that the foreigner was one of the six trainers who worked with the Abu Sayyaf Group in 2000. He was the one who told Abu Sayyaf leaders to continue their hostage taking activities, to embarrass the government and at the same time gain attention worldwide, the two Abu former bandits said. Sources said the state witnesses who identified Aijur's links in the southern Philippines were Angelo Trinidad, also known as Abu Khalil, and Gappah Balih Bannah, alias Boy Negro.
"Don't even call me 'boy'!"
The former Abu Sayyaf members admitted their participation in the bombing of a bus in Makati City on Valentine's Day this year. "Their testimonies could be used against the arrested Palestinian national," said Southern Command chief Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza.
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Southeast Asia
Philippines seeks to uncover Palestinian's plot
2005-04-01
Philippine authorities said on Friday they were investigating what a Palestinian, linked to local Muslim extremists, may have been planning when he entered the country without a visa recently.
Just the usual...drinking, wenching, cockfights, re-establishing the Caliphate.
Intelligence officials said they are looking into the local contacts of Fawaz Zi Ajjur, 39, who was detained on March 26 after arriving in the southern city of Zamboanga after travelling a circuitous route across the globe.
Doubling up on his frequent jihadi miles...
Fawaz was originally due to be deported but was detained after two former militants of the Al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group, identified him as allegedly being one of six "Arab-looking foreigners" who trained guerrillas in their camp.
"Abu al-Hebroni...yah we'd know his ugly mug anywhere."
The two Abu Sayyaf members, who have turned state witness, said the Palestinian worked with the group in 2000 and instigated the Abu Sayyaf to stage kidnapping attacks to gain international media attention and embarrass the government. A smiling Fawaz, wearing an orange T-shirt of detained suspects, was presented to the media in Zamboanga Friday by regional military chief Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza and immigration chief Alipio Fernandez.
"Ya got me, infidels. Bring on the pliers!"
Fawaz made no remarks in his brief appearance before he was taken away by the intelligence agents. Fernandez said "our interrogation will continue and we will file a case against him," although he did not give specifics.
Note: it involves ladies' finery.
"This is a big fish," Fernandez remarked.
Note: Aqua-colored finery.
The military said Fawaz had a commerce degree from the University of Kuwait and has been married three times, to a Filipina, a Kuwaiti and a Ukrainian.
Needs one more to be Just Like Mo...
His passport showed that he left Kiev, Ukraine on March 11, landed in Bangkok where he stayed for a week, then took a train to Kuala Lumpur, flew to Sandakan and from there, flew to Zamboanga City. He had only 2,000 pesos (36.50 dollars) with him when he arrived in Zamboanga, raising suspicions, Fernandez said. Intelligence sources said Fawaz had been receiving money via Western Union but did not say who was sending it to him.
Is he a message courier maybe?
The government has been on the look-out for foreigners who may be involved with the Abu Sayyaf which has been linked by both Washington and Manila to the Al Qaeda network of Osama bin Laden.
Good catch, Pinoys.
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Southeast Asia
5 Abu Sayyaf rolled up in Patikul
2005-03-10
At least five Abu Sayyaf bandits were killed in a fierce firefight in Patikul town early morning Thursday, the military said. The clash was the second recent incident of violence in the province as people displaced by previous clash have started to return to their homes. Five bandits were also killed while two soldiers wounded during an encounter in Parang town Tuesday.

Southern Command chief Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza said soldiers were patrolling Barangay (village) Danag around 6:30 a.m. on Thursday when they chanced upon a still undetermined number of bandits. Braganza said that soldiers counted five dead bandits during the firefight, but he said only one cadaver has been recovered so far. "They brought with them the bodies of their other slain comrades," he said. No soldier has been reported hurt, he said.
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Southeast Asia
Philippines tells MNLF to surrender or they're gonna get it
2005-02-10
The Philippine armed forces has demanded Muslim rebels in the southern island of Jolo surrender or suffer heavy casualties, as fighting enters its fourth day. More than 100 soldiers and supporters of jailed former Muslim separatist leader, Nur Misuari, have either been killed or wounded in some of the most intense fighting seen in the region for years. Chief of the military's southern command, Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza, says reinforcements dispatched to the area are enough to crush the rebels.

Clashes erupted on Jolo island on Monday following attacks by Mr Misuari's men against troops in several towns. They had joined forces with the Abu Sayyaf, who were fighting the troops. The area is a known stronghold of armed Muslim militants and the al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf rebels. The AFP news agency quotes officials as saying that his followers are demanding his detention be transferred to Jolo.
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Southeast Asia
Escaped Abu Sayyaf member gunned down
2005-01-31
Soldiers on Sunday killed an Abu Sayyaf bandit who was among those who bolted the Basilan Provincial Jail in April last year. Southern Command chief Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza said Abdulajid Awalal alias Jaid Awalal was killed in an encounter in Sitio (hamlet) Batolareg, Barangay (village) Mahatalang in Sumisip town, Basilan province Sunday at dawn. Colonel Raymundo Ferrer, 103rd Army Brigade commander, said residents earlier reported the presence of Abu Sayyaf bandits inside the rubber plantation of Tumahubong Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Incorporated. Ferrer said Awalal, who had been convicted for kidnapping, carried a 150,000-peso reward on his head.
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Southeast Asia
Filippino airstrike on JI command meeting killed 40
2005-01-30
FORTY al-Qaeda-affiliated rebels, including two suspected members of the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), were killed in a military airstrike over their alleged hideout on a marshland in Datu Piang town, Maguindanao province, officials said Friday. Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza, military Southern Command (SouthCom) chief, told Camp Aguinaldo reporters that the death toll was based on radio signals from the rebels, intercepted by military intelligence. Major General Raul Relano, chief of the Army's 6th Infantry Division, said in a separate interview that three rebels were injured based on initial reports.

Braganza and Relano said they could not determine the affiliations of the other casualties. One government soldier, flying a helicopter gunship, was slightly wounded, Relano said. Some 300 MILF rebels, led by renegade commander Wahid Kalil Tondok, were in Butilan marsh allegedly coddling some 40 Abu Sayyaf bandits and several JI members, Relano said. "They have scattered in the area. It is useless bombing them now," Relano said in a telephone interview.

Relano said checkpoints were set up around the marsh area to prevent the bandits from escaping. An Inquirer report from Cotabato City said one JI member was killed although he could not be positively identified. Colonel Gerry Jalandoni, chief of the 604th Infantry Brigade, said military agents could not say who among the Indonesians -- Dulmatin, Mohammad Ali Abdulrahiman alias Muhayiha and Saki alias Maruan -- was killed during the air strikes.

A Huey helicopter almost crashed when bullets from caliber 50 hit its tail while it was trying to insert troops in the marshland on Thursday to recover the remains of the slain suspected terrorist, Jalandoni said. This prompted the Air Force to launch a second wave of attacks in the afternoon, he added. Jalandoni said about 70 renegade Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) members were monitored in the area during the air attacks. He said the manhunt against the followers of Tondok shifted to Sultan Kudarat province following reports that his group moved from the towns of Datu Piang, Mamasapano, Sultan sa Barongis, Ampatuan -- all in Maguindanao -- to Palimbang, Sultan Kudarat.

Tondok's group was allegedly behind an attack on an Army detachment in Linantangan town earlier this month, which left seven soldiers and 15 rebels killed. Tondok has refused to surrender to the government and the MILF. The MILF, while insisting that it did not sanction the assault, refused to surrender the Muslim rebel leader. Meanwhile, MILF spokesman Eid "Lipless Eddie" Kabalu said the latest military attack was a "blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement" and that it would file a protest before the Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH). Kabalu however maintained that the attacks would not affect the resumption of peace talks, slated in February in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Brigadier General Alexander Yano, military spokesman, expressed a similar view. "We don't think so
the operation was targeted against the same groups which the MILF says is not affiliated with them," Yano told reporters in Camp Aguinaldo. "But informally, we told them that the operation was targeted against the Abu Sayyaf and the Jemaah Islamiyah and not against the MILF," Yano added. In Malacañang, Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said the ongoing clashes would not get in the way of the scheduled resumption of peace negotiations between the government and the secessionist group. But while the government was willing to sit down anew with the MILF, Bunye said government forces would continue to pursue terrorist cells in the South, including the renegade members of the MILF. "We are confident this will not hinder the peace talks with the MILF, which is also forsworn to fight terror. Terrorism is our common enemy and there is no disagreement that it could be defeated," he said.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf leader busted in Basilan
2004-12-09
A suspected Abu Sayyaf sub-leader involved in the 2001 siege of Lamitan town was arrested in the municipality of Sumisip, Basilan Island on Wednesday morning, the military reported Thursday. Southern Command chief Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza said military intelligence agents, backed by the 103rd Infantry Brigade, raided the house of Quirino Manajil Lambungan, alias "Asmalul," in Limbo Candiis village and arrested the suspect. Braganza said Lambungan was with the Abu Sayyaf group that attacked the Jose Torres Memorial Hospital in June 2001 and snatched several people, including nurses Reina Malonzo, Sheila Tabuñag, and Ediborah Yap. Yap was later killed, along with American hostage Martin Burnham, during a military rescue operation in Sirawai town, Zamboanga del Norte province.
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Southeast Asia
Janjalani may be back in Basilan
2004-11-12
Abu Sayyaf leader Khadaffy Janjalani has reportedly slipped back to Basilan province following intense military operations against him and his followers in Sultan Kudarat province in central Mindanao, the military said on Friday. Southern Command chief Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza however said the information was still being double-checked. Braganza said aside from Basilan, Janjalani was also reportedly sighted in Sulu, another area where the Abu Sayyaf operates.
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