-Obits- | ||
US military surveillance flight crashes in Philippines, killing 4 | ||
2025-02-07 | ||
![]() A U.S. military service member and three defense contractors died Thursday in the Philippines after their surveillance flight crashed, officials say. U.S. Indo-Pacific Command said the aircraft contracted by the Department of Defense went down in the southern province of Maguindanao del Sur
"We can confirm no survivors of the crash. There were four personnel on board, including one U.S. military service member and three defense contractors," it added. The aircraft involved in the crash was a U.S. Marine Corps Beechcraft King Air 350, a senior U.S. defense official told Fox News. The cause of the crash remains under investigation. The names of those involved are being withheld pending next of kin notification. Windy Beaty, a provincial disaster-mitigation officer, told the Associated Press that she received reports that residents saw smoke coming from the plane and heard an explosion before the aircraft plummeted to the ground about half a mile from a cluster of farmhouses. A water buffalo on the ground was also killed as a result of the plane crash, local officials said. U.S. forces have been deployed in a Philippine military camp in the country's south for decades to help provide advice and training to Filipino forces battling Muslim militants, the AP reported. The region is the homeland of minority Muslims in the largely Roman Catholic nation. | ||
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Southeast Asia |
Too good to be true? Unpacking Jemaah Islamiyah’s self-declared disbanding |
2024-09-08 |
2024.07.10 [BenarNews] At an event organized last month by the Indonesian counter-terrorism agency (BNPT), Abu Rusydan and 15 other leaders of Jemaah Islamiyah announced their group’s dissolution. JI, the Southeast Asian affiliate of al-Qaeda, had carried out a string of devastating attacks in the 2000s, including Indonesia’s deadliest-ever terror attack — the 2002 Bali bombings. But now it was "ready to actively contribute to Indonesia’s progress and dignity," Abu Rusydan declared as he read from a prepared statement during the event on June 30. This is not the first time that a bully boy group has disbanded itself. The Provisional Irish Republican Army unilaterally broke up in 2005, throwing itself solely into legal activities through its political arm, Sinn Féin. In 2018, the Basque separatist organization ETA also unilaterally disbanded. But Jemaah Islamiyah’s announcement surprised many people, and left others feeling skeptical. There are three interrelated questions that need to be asked about the move by JI: How did we get here? Is this for real? And what does this mean for regional security? HOW DID WE GET HERE? Jemaah Islamiyah, which has its roots in the Darul Islam movement, was founded in Malaysia in 1993, when its two founders, Abdullah Sungkar and ![]() ... Leader of the Indonesian Mujahedeen Council and proprietor of the al-Mukmin madrassah in Ngruki. The spriritual head of Jemaah Islamiya, which he denies exists. Bashir was jugged and then released in the wake of the 2002 Bali bombings, which he blamed on a conspiracy among the U.S., Israel, and Australia. In 2014, as leader of Jemaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), he pledged allegiance to ISIS. Currently in jug... , were on the run from Suharto’s New Order government in Indonesia. While in Malaysia, they served as a way-station for several hundred gunnies who traveled to Pakistain to join the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan, putting them in direct contact with al-Qaeda. In 1996, a charter (the PUPJI) created the group’s organizational structure and codified JI’s Salafi ideology. At the time, the group also reached an agreement with the Philippine armed separatist organization, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, to allow al-Qaeda to establish training camps in the southern Philippines. In Indonesia, JI perpetrated terrorist attacks on Christian churches and established two paramilitary organizations to wage sectarian conflict in the Maluku Islands and Central Sulawesi province. Following the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, the al-Qaeda leadership called for diversionary attacks. One of these was the twin Bali bombings that killed 202 people a year later. Between 2002 and 2007, JI perpetrated a major attack almost every year. But each attack left the organization weaker as counterterrorism forces became more adept and better resourced. This led to an ideological split in the organization between proponents of the line of targeting the "far enemy," versus those who wanted to foment sectarian conflict in order to rebuild their depleted ranks. The government legally banned JI in 2008, but allowed it to operate as an entity as long as it refrained from violence. In 2010, more than 100 JI members were swept up, including Abu Bakar Bashir, breaking the organization’s back. JI’s last terrorist act took place that year. Yet, from 2020-2023, Indonesian counter-terrorism efforts were as focused on JI as it was on the pro-Islamic State ![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... umbrella group, Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD). Security forces originally saw JI as an off-ramp for the more radical JAD, but attitudes hardened. In 2019, when counterterrorism police arrested JI’s emir, Para Wijayanto, they were shocked by the group’s size and national reach. Its madrassas and charitable arms had grown, while its corporations and publishing arms had created a steady revenue stream. As many JI members were arrested in 2021 and 2022 as JAD suspects. Indonesian counter-terrorism forces have applied a softer approach. Though seemingly campy, they’ve held mass rallies where former gunnies pledge allegiance to the republic. Former gunnies have established madrassas for the children of incarcerated bully boys, so they are not raised in JI or JAD-run schools, breaking terrorist social networks. They’ve gotten leaders, including the JAD Emir Aman Abdurrahman, who is on death row, and Umar Patek, to publicly renounce violence. Meanwhile the conflict in Poso, which served as a rallying point for all bully boy groups in Indonesia, has been stamped out. Internationally, there has been more cooperation amongst the regional security services. And while ungoverned space and institutional weakness remains in the southern Philippines, bully boy groups are no longer attracting JI and other foreign bully boys. The Moro Islamic Liberation Front continues to implement the grinding of the peace processor and build up institutions that will help the autonomous Moslem region transition to self-governance. There has been an unprecedented sustained attack on the Abu Sayyaf ...also known as al-Harakat al-Islamiyya, an Islamist terror group based in Jolo, Basilan and Zamboanga. Since its inception in the early 1990s, the group has carried out bombings, kidnappings, murders, head choppings, and extortion in their uniquely Islamic attempt to set up an independent Moslem province in the Philippines. Abu Sayyaf forces probably number less than 300 cadres. The group is closely allied with remnants of Indonesia's Jemaah Islamiya and has loose ties with MILF and MNLF who sometimes provide cannon fodder... , which is now fighting for survival. IS THIS FOR REAL? While JI has not been in a position to engage in terrorism, until now, it has never renounced violence. Many in the organization were simply waiting for the right circumstance to resume operations. It’s easy to be cynical about the group’s prepared statement, especially at an event stage-managed by the BNPT. Some of those who were on hand had been arrested and gone through government disengagement programs. To young radicals, they’re sell-outs, and past their prime. The average age of the men who renounced violence was in the late 50s or older. To what degree will younger members follow the leadership and pursue a legal-political alternative? In many ways, this is more promising. JI’s campaign of militancy failed to bring about the establishment of an Islamic State governed by Sharia. Democratic politics have advanced their political agenda more effectively. It’s not that Islamist parties do terribly well at the national level. Indeed, in Indonesia’s 2024 general election, they collectively represented about 20% of the electorate and won 101 of 580 seats. But they are important members of political coalitions, which tend to give them a disproportionate voice. It’s at the local level where we see faith-based parties make their mark, especially in the passage of public policy and Sharia compliant codes, which the majority of provinces and districts now have. Islamist parties are riddled with rivalries and have never formed a cohesive bloc. Perhaps for that reason, JI saw an opening for a tactical shift. In May 2021, JI established the Indonesian People’s Dakwah Party (PDRI). Yet, counter-terrorism forces arrested its founder, Farid Ahmad Okbah, that November for being a senior member of JI. Two others were arrested. The PDRI did not contest the 2024 elections. But it seems likely that with JI’s dissolution, the government will give former members more political space. WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR REGIONAL SECURITY? JI’s manpower and locus were largely-Indonesian based, but it remains a Southeast Asian organization. Some affiliates gravitated elsewhere. Darul Islam Sabah, for example, went from facilitating JI and the movement of foreign gunnies in and out of the southern Philippines to working with the JAD and other groups. There has always been more fluidity between Southeast Asian bully boy groups than those in the Middle East or South Asia. Abu Bakar Bashir defected from being pro-al Qaeda to being pro-Islamic State, with large numbers of acolytes, without consequence. As such, many younger gunnies who are committed to using violence to achieve their political aims are likely to defect to other groups. What those groups may be, though, is unclear. The JAD is decimated and leaderless, though to be fair, it was always far more horizontally structured. It has not executed a major terrorist attack since 2019. At present there is no apparent charismatic leader for bully boy Salafists ...Salafists are ostentatiously devout Moslems who figure the ostentation of their piety gives them the right to tell others how to do it and to kill those who don't listen to them... to coalesce around. And while one would expect external events, such as the war in Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... , to serve as a catalyst, to date it has not. JI still runs a network of madrassas, including some very large ones like al-Mukmin and Pesantren Hidayatullah in Balikpapan. These continue to be ideological incubators and hate factories. It’s hard to see state educational personnel intervene and change their curriculum. But Indonesian security forces have not let up, despite the decline in organizational strength or the tempo of operations. Terrorism will be a persistent but manageable threat in Indonesia. JI’s dissolution makes it more so, providing a legal-political alternative that is more moral, but also proven to be more effective. Zachary Abuza is a professor at the National War College in Washington and an adjunct at Georgetown University. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the position of the U.S. Department of Defense, the National War College, Georgetown University or BenarNews. Related: Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-28 Philippine govt soldiers kill 8 suspected Islamic State-linked militants in Mindanao firefight Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-28 Malaysian defendants in Bali bombings to serve about 5 more years Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-07 Experts: Extremist groups spread disinformation online to provoke conflict during Indonesian election |
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-Lurid Crime Tales- |
Virginia police looking for suspect who burglarized Trump campaign office |
2024-08-13 |
[NYPOST] It's giving Watergate vibes. One of former President Donald Trump ![]() 's Virginia campaign offices was burglarized over the weekend and police are looking for the suspect, authorities said Monday. The break-in took place on Sunday about 9 p.m. at Trump's campaign office in Ashburn, prompting deputies to respond to the scene, the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office said in a statement. Video surveillance footage captured the burglary suspect — a white adult male, wearing dark clothing, a dark baseball cap and a backpack — as he entered the office. ''It is rare to have the office of any political campaign or party broken into,'' Loudoun County Sheriff Mike Chapman said. Look for the FBI raid for what was planted. |
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Southeast Asia |
Philippine govt soldiers kill 8 suspected Islamic State-linked militants in Mindanao firefight |
2024-01-28 |
[BenarNews] Eight suspected Filipino snuffies belonging to a local group allied with Islamic State![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... faceless myrmidons were killed and four government soldiers maimed in fierce fighting in the southern Philippines on Thursday, the military said Friday. The gun-battle between members of the Daulah Islamiyah-Maute Group (DI-Maute) and soldiers with the 103rd Infantry Brigade broke out in the late afternoon in Piagapo, a remote town in Lanao del Sur province, military officials said. The soldiers were on a mission to hunt down two suspected DI-Maute snuffies who had been identified as the main perpetrators of a bombing that killed four people during a Catholic worship service at a university gymnasium in southern Marawi city in early December. That would be the attack on Mindanao State University. According to military officials, the Filipino snuffies were apparently acting under the instructions of the Islamic State, which had earlier owned up to the attack."During the military operations the troops killed eight enemies," Brig. Gen. Yegor Rey Baroquillo Jr., commander of the 103rd, told BenarNews. After the firefight, troops retrieved the bodies of the slain bad boys, he said. Baroquillo said four members of the Scout Rangers, who were maimed in the fighting, were brought to a local hospital. He did not divulge the extent of their wounds. He said the troops were after the Marawi bombers and that search operations were focused on three Lanao towns believed to be strongholds of the DI-Maute: Pantao Ragat, Poona PIagapo and Munai. Brig. Gen. Anthon Abrina, commander of the 2nd Mechanized Infantry Brigade, told BenarNews in a phone interview that "we are on heightened, red alert status following the encounter Thursday evening." Troop reinforcements have been brought in and several checkpoints were established along the national highway leading to the areas "to ensure the safety of civilians in their respective communities," Abrina said. The towns in Lanao are near the city of Marawi, where the bombing took place. Military chief Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. has blamed the DI-Maute group for the bombing, saying it was carried out as Dire Revenge for a military operation elsewhere in the south that left over a dozen snuffies killed. Two of those killed were identified as Mundi Sawadjaan and Jalandoni Lucsadato. Sawadjaan has been identified as a sub-leader of the Abu Sayyaf ...also known as al-Harakat al-Islamiyya, an Islamist terror group based in Jolo, Basilan and Zamboanga. Since its inception in the early 1990s, the group has carried out bombings, kidnappings, murders, head choppings, and extortion in their uniquely Islamic attempt to set up an independent Moslem province in the Philippines. Abu Sayyaf forces probably number less than 300 cadres. The group is closely allied with remnants of Indonesia's Jemaah Islamiya and has loose ties with MILF and MNLF who sometimes provide cannon fodder... , another Islamic State-linked group in the southern Philippines. He was also the nephew of the late Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan, who was thought to be the group’s leader before he was killed in 2020. The elder Sawadjaan at one time was also named as the IS leader for the Philippines. Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan also criminal masterminded a January 2019 bombing at a Catholic church on southern Jolo island that killed 23 people including an Indonesian couple blamed for the suicide kaboom, according to Philippine authorities. Related: Daulah Islamiyah-Maute Group: 2023-06-05 Filipino soldier, militants killed in southern Philippine clash Daulah Islamiyah-Maute Group: 2022-04-30 Philippine soldier, 5 suspected Islamic State militants killed in clash Daulah Islamiyah-Maute Group: 2022-03-03 Philippine Military Identifies IS Extremist Group’s New Regional Leader Related: Lanao del Sur province: 2023-12-03 Philippines: Blast at Catholic Mass kills several Lanao del Sur province: 2023-06-05 Filipino soldier, militants killed in southern Philippine clash Lanao del Sur province: 2023-02-18 4 policemen killed, governor wounded in southern Philippine ambush Related: Munai: 2024-01-07 Philippine military: IS-linked militants kill 2 army intelligence operatives Munai: 2021-09-22 Alleged Islamic State Recruiter Arrested in Southern Philippines Munai: 2013-04-03 Two Engineers Killed in Attack on Iraq Gas Field Related: Piagapo: 2018-02-25 Latest clashes show Marawi gunmen seek new base Piagapo: 2017-04-26 37 members of Maute, Jemaah Islamiyah, killed in Lanao clashes Piagapo: 2017-04-26 Two Abu Sayyaf leaders killed in Lanao del Sur clashes Related: Marawi: 2024-01-07 Philippine military: IS-linked militants kill 2 army intelligence operatives Marawi: 2023-12-10 Deadly Philippine bombing exposes weakness in intel gathering as Mindanao State U bombers named Marawi: 2023-12-04 Islamic State, ISIS Terrorists Claim Responsibility For Catholic Church Bombing In Philippines that left 11 dead |
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
2 arrested over vandalism of Israeli flags, pro-Palestinian messages left at school |
2024-01-18 |
[IsraelTimes] Police say they have arrested two women aged 19 and 21, from the Bedouin town of Hura, for vandalizing Israel flags and leaving pro-Paleostinian messages at a school in the town of Meitar. Channel 13 reported yesterday that students and staff last month arrived one morning to find the flags torn and the whiteboard bearing a drawing of a Paleostinian flag alongside writings about "liberating Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... " and "freeing Paleostine." The two suspects have been arrested today, police say. Channel 13 reports that they have been employed as cleaners at the school, adding that a few days ago, a student at the school found a drawing of a Paleostinian flag in his textbook. Related: Hura: 2023-08-19 2 MILF members blamed for deadly ambush surrender in southern Philippines Hura: 2023-05-05 Security forces kill Palestinians who allegedly shot dead 3 members of Dee family Hura: 2023-04-01 Man shot, killed while trying to snatch police officer’s weapon in Jerusalem - UPDATED |
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Southeast Asia |
Governor claims Sulu has eliminated Abu Sayyaf Group but observers urge caution |
2023-09-13 |
[BenarNews] The governor of Sulu has declared it to be free of Abu Sayyaf ...also known as al-Harakat al-Islamiyya, an Islamist terror group based in Jolo, Basilan and Zamboanga. Since its inception in the early 1990s, the group has carried out bombings, kidnappings, murders, head choppings, and extortion in their uniquely Islamic attempt to set up an independent Moslem province in the Philippines. Abu Sayyaf forces probably number less than 300 cadres. The group is closely allied with remnants of Indonesia's Jemaah Islamiya and has loose ties with MILF and MNLF who sometimes provide cannon fodder... holy warriors, but analysts warn that the group’s top leaders remain on the lam while private armies hired by politicians strike fear among people in the southern Philippine province. Sulu Gov. Abdusakur Tan, who chairs a task force of military and local government officials, last week announced that the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) had been wiped out in Sulu, a chain of islands in the far south near the Malaysian part of Borneo. |
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Southeast Asia |
2 MILF members blamed for deadly ambush surrender in southern Philippines |
2023-08-19 |
[BenarNews] Two rogue Moro Islamic Liberation Front members suspected of taking part in an attack that killed a soldier and a police officer in the southern Philippines last weekend have surrendered and will be charged with murder, military officials said Thursday. The suspects were among 10 MILF button men who ambushed a government security team on Aug. 12 as it escorted regional peace monitors in Ulitan, a barangay on Basilan ...Basilan is a rugged, jungle-covered island in the southern Philippines. It is a known stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf, bandidos, and maybe even orcs. Most people with any sense travel with armed escorts... island, said Brig. Gen. Alvin Luzon, commander of Joint Task Force Basilan and the 101st Brigade. The two were "primarily responsible (among the) perpetrators in the recent ambush," Luzon told news hounds here. He said the suspects surrendered on Tuesday and had provided the military with vital information used by government troops to hunt down the others involved in the attack that left seven other troops injured. Basilan is one of several provinces in the southern Mindanao region that make up the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Moslem Mindanao (BARMM). In a 2014 peace agreement with Manila, the MILF gave up its long-running separatist insurgency in exchange for autonomous rule over predominantly Moslem areas in Mindanao. Under the deal’s terms, the group promised to have its tens of thousands of members turn over and decommission their weapons, but the MILF has struggled to meet that target. In various phases so far, it has decommissioned about 4,500 weapons of 40,000 believed to be in the hands of the members of the former guerrilla force, according to Department of National Defense estimates. In Sunday’s attack, the button men ambushed a security convoy guarding a Joint Peace and Security Team tasked with overseeing the decommissioning and disarming of former MILF combatants. The team — whose members are military, police, MILF and local officials — assists in monitoring and enforcing the peace pact. On Thursday, Luzon pointed to the 2014 peace agreement as being instrumental, in close coordination with its leaders, for the "peaceful and voluntary surrender of the two rebel suspects." He identified the suspects as Adzmin Manjapal, 20, and Mudzni Sapau, 27, saying they were both rogue members of the MILF. The suspects were turned over to the Basilan police chief Col. Carlos Madronio to be charged with murder, Luzon said, while vowing to provide justice for those killed and seven injured in the ambush. Luzon credited MILF leaders with facilitating the surrender, naming Malik Cadil, officer-in-charge of Western Mindanao Front MILF; and Hadji Sammad Ahaddin, member of the MILF Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostility. Abdurahman Rajan, deputy commander of MILF 114th Base Command, also played a role. The military commander had previously said that the MILF’s leaders do not have control over people not identified as their members. The MILF leaders did not immediately respond to BenarNews requests for comment. During a decommissioning ceremony for 1,300 ex-combatants earlier this month, Murad Ebrahim, who heads the BARMM, blamed holy warrior groups with endangering efforts to disarm former MILF guerrillas. Under the decommissioning process, each former combatant who hands over weapons is expected to receive about U.S. $2,400 per weapon, including funds for education. "We are facing a very challenging situation because there are still groups out there that encourage our members to join them," Murad said at the time. The surrender came amid an intense military-police manhunt for the suspects who were believed to be linked to a MILF faction led by Huram Malangka. The faction was alleged to be involved in killings including acting as guns for hire for criminal gangs. "Under the administration of President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr., such attacks will not go unpunished. Justice will be served," Philippine presidential peace adviser Carlito Galvez said on Thursday. "The blatant disregard for human life and hostilities against our peace builders is an affront and an act of contempt against the tenets of peacebuilding, human dignity and respect to the rule of law." Related: Moro Islamic Liberation Front: 2023-08-16 Philippine military blames ex-separatist rebels for deadly southern ambush Moro Islamic Liberation Front: 2023-08-05 Bangsamoro leader: Militants endanger efforts to disarm ex-MILF guerrillas in southern Philippines Moro Islamic Liberation Front: 2023-06-27 Thousands flee standoff between govt forces and ex-guerrillas in southern Philippines |
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Southeast Asia |
Philippine military blames ex-separatist rebels for deadly southern ambush |
2023-08-16 |
Splitters! [BenarNews] The Philippine military on Monday accused members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, a former guerrilla group, of killing a soldier and a policeman during an attack in the south that left seven government troops maimed. In Sunday’s incident in Ungkaya Pukan, a remote town in the island province of Basilan ...Basilan is a rugged, jungle-covered island in the southern Philippines. It is a known stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf, bandidos, and maybe even orcs. Most people with any sense travel with armed escorts... , officials said that 10 button men ambushed a security convoy guarding a Joint Peace and Security Team. The team is tasked with overseeing the decommissioning and disarming of former MILF combatants as agreed in a 2014 peace agreement with Manila. The team members were riding in two vehicles after inspecting the area — a former MILF stronghold — when they were attacked, said Maj. Andrew Linao, a regional military front man. "Our troops fought back, resulting in a firefight which lasted for five minutes," Linao said. He said the soldier went titzup, while the policeman died later while being treated for his injuries. The seven other maimed soldiers were recuperating at a military hospital in Zamboanga City. "This act is a clear manifestation of the perpetrators’ disrespect to their local government officials, the military, and their fellow Basileños, hence, we will not stop until these heartless individuals are identified and neutralized," Linao said. BenarNews contacted local MILF authorities but did not immediately hear back. Brig. Gen. Alvin Luzon, commander of 101st Brigade and Joint Task Force Basilan (JTFB), said the MILF leadership "appears to have no control over its members," although he added that they had denied their members were involved in the ambush. "Right now, the pressure is on the MILF side to show their sincerity," Luzon told news hounds. The former separatist group’s leadership said they had no control over people not identified as their members, according to Luzon. "But the MILF leadership promised to look and identify those perpetrators," Luzon said. He said pursuit operations were continuing on Monday against the suspects. The 12,000-strong MILF was once the country’s largest murderous Moslem force until it dropped its bid for independence and settled for expanded autonomy under the 2014 peace deal. Demobilization started in 2019, and was to be taken in three stages. At each stage, those demobbed were to get U.S. $2,400 per weapon, including funds for education. Stage 1 covered 145 gunnies and 75 weapons, stage 2 covered 12,000 gunnies and 2,000 weapons. Stage 3, which started this month, is to cover 12,699 gunnies and 2,450 weapons. It’s odd that the Philippine defense department estimated 40,000 firearm in MILF hands. The separatists then became caretakers of a Moslem region although they agreed to turn over their weapons, while some of the ex-guerrillas were absorbed into the local police force.As long as the Philippine government surrendered the territory to the Ummah, that’s all that should matter. Except to those who refuse to give up the pleasures of the hard jihad of the sword even after they’ve won. In November, around 100 suspected MILF members attacked a military outpost in the same village as the weekend ambush, according to the military. Officials did not immediately say if the two incidents were related.Related: Moro Islamic Liberation Front: 2023-08-05 Bangsamoro leader: Militants endanger efforts to disarm ex-MILF guerrillas in southern Philippines Moro Islamic Liberation Front: 2023-06-27 Thousands flee standoff between govt forces and ex-guerrillas in southern Philippines Moro Islamic Liberation Front: 2023-06-05 Filipino soldier, militants killed in southern Philippine clash |
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Southeast Asia |
Bangsamoro leader: Militants endanger efforts to disarm ex-MILF guerrillas in southern Philippines |
2023-08-05 |
[BenarNews] Militant groups are endangering efforts to disarm former Moro Islamic Liberation Front guerrillas by trying to recruit them, the head of an autonomous Moslem region in the southern Philippines told 1,300 ex-combatants during their official decommissioning ceremony this week. Some MILF members have reneged on the group’s promise to President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to cooperate in the transition to peace in the south, said Murad Ebrahim, the ex-chief of the former separatist group who now heads the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Moslem Mindanao (BARMM). "We are facing a very challenging situation because there are still groups out there that encourage our members to join them," Murad told news hounds Thursday during a ceremony here as he led 1,301 former MILF combatants in the third and final phase of a process to decommission them as fighters and have them turn over their weapons. |
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Southeast Asia |
Thousands flee standoff between govt forces and ex-guerrillas in southern Philippines |
2023-06-27 |
[BenarNews] Thousands of civilians have fled their homes in the southern Philippines’ Sulu islands amid a standoff following a deadly weekend gunbattle between police and armed former guerrillas, officials said Monday. As of late Monday, the standoff was still ongoing and at least one policeman and three suspected members of the Moro National Liberation Front, a former separatist rebel group, were reported killed in related violence over the weekend. The military said the violence began Saturday when followers of Pando Mudjasan, a former town vice mayor and leader of the MNLF, fired upon coppers as they prepared to serve him an arrest warrant for murder and illegal firearms and ammunition. Police said Mudjasan’s armed followers housed inside a fortified compound opened fire on the police as they approached the village of Bualo Lipid in Maimbung town. Maimbung is on Jolo island in Sulu province, for those interested in the geography of the thing. One member of the police Special Action Force (SAF) unit and three followers of Mudjasan were killed in the fighting. Ten coppers and a soldier were also reported to have been maimed, while two civilians were hit by stray bullets, the police and military said.The violence has displaced about 5,000-6,000 civilians, Maj. Andrew Linao, front man for the military’s Western Mindanao Command (WestMinCom), said Monday. The civilians were sheltering in the Maimbung town gymnasium and being assisted by local officials. "They fled because they are very afraid, and we are calling on everyone to calm down," Linao told news hounds. "But that is what usually happens when you have a firefight near a populated community." Civilians near the conflict area were being advised not to return to their homes amid ongoing tensions in the area. Brig. Gen. Eugenio Boquio, commander of the Army’s 1101st Brigade, said Mudjasan and his brother were maimed but were able to escape, according to intelligence reports. But Mudjasan and his followers have not beat feet from Sulu, an island province in the far southern Philippines, although it was unclear how many of their followers were still inside the compound, Linao said. Linao said the area where the fighting was concentrated had been cordoned off, with troops and soldiers moving closer in. "The operation of the SAF and police unit is ongoing to serve the warrant, capture and neutralize Pando [Mudjasan]," Linao said. "Our effort is continuing now and our Army has set up checkpoints and blockades to prevent them from escaping." Mudjasan’s group was composed of 20 to 30 individuals prior to the clash on Saturday. But the number of his fighters grew to around 50 individuals during the fighting, officials said. Political warlords controlling their own private armies is a pervasive problem in the Philippines, especially in the southern Mindanao region where many of these officials were once members of bully boy groups who command their own forces. The Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) was once the country’s largest separatist force until it signed a peace deal with the government in 1996, although that agreement failed. A splinter group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), would later sign a deal that would supersede the old peace pact and create an expanded Moslem autonomous region in Mindanao now controlled by MILF. Some ex-MNLF fighters became elected local officials in Jolo, with their former rebel commands forming their own private armed security, officials said. Military coordination and talks with the Sulu-based MNLF leadership were continuing to ensure that the law enforcement operation was aimed only at Mudjasan due to his criminal charges, officials said. Mudjasan’s illegal activities were not sanctioned by the MNLF leadership, officials said. The runaway’s group was composed of "sympathizers and (Mudjasan’s) relatives from the MNLF," Brig. Gen. Boquio said.
6,000 Maimbung, Sulu evacuees returning home after shootout, says gov [MSN] More than 6,000 residents of Maimbung, Sulu who were evacuated for their safety during a deadly shootout over the weekend are now being sent home, the governor said. On Saturday former vice mayor Pando Mudjasan and his men exchanged fire with government forces who tried to serve a warrant of arrest on him. The encounter left one policeman and four people on Mudjasan's side dead. According to Jun Veneracion's report on "24 Oras" on Monday, Sulu Governor Abdusakur Tan said that some of the evacuees have started returning home. Mudjasan, who is still on the lam, is suspected to be a leader of the Moro National Liberation Front ![]() the much belovedhas jailed in the last few years for not worshipping the ground he walks upon. The Uighurs and so forth who did not join Al Nusra or ISIS seem to have ended up here... (MNLF). He is wanted on murder charges and the government also has a warrant to search his premises for firearms and explosives. Authorities are now in pursuit of around 50 gunnies. |
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Southeast Asia |
Philippine military denies killing Moro Islamic Liberation Front members in weekend clash |
2023-06-22 |
[BenarNews] The Philippine military defended itself Wednesday against allegations that it killed members of a former Moslem guerrilla group, which had signed a peace deal with Manila in 2014, during a weekend shootout in the south. Philippine officials say the seven people slain during the clash with government forces in Maguindanao on Sunday were members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters ...a MILF splinter group aligned with the Islamic State... (BIFF), a pro-Islamic State |
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