Southeast Asia |
Philippines claims Labor Day bomb plot foiled |
2006-05-02 |
DESPITE lack of evidence, police claimed to have thwarted an alleged plan by communist insurgents and rebel soldiers to bomb this years Labor Day rallies after they arrested five suspected leftist guerrillas in Cavite province last week. The alleged communist insurgents, identified as Aries Sarmiento or Ka Narsing, Marvin Galang or Jofel and Kelly, Axel Alejandro Pinpin or Andoy, and Riel Ramos Custodio or Gerald, and their driver, a suspected asset of the New Peoples Army, were arrested in the vicinity of Sungay village in Tagaytay City some 56 kilometers south of Manila at around 6 p.m. Friday, said Senior Superintendent Aaron Fidel, Calabarzon police intelligence chief. But no explosives were recovered from the suspects although receipts for the purchase of bomb components were seized from them, admitted Chief Superintendent Prospero Noble, regional police commander for Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon). Also seized from the suspects were electronic devices containing documents, some of which allegedly showed in detail the protesters' programs during Labor Day, a map of the region, and mobile phones that also purportedly showed an exchange of text messages between those arrested and members of the right-wing Magdalo rebel group, police officials said. The police however did not identify the messages' senders. "There was none," Noble said, when asked if the alleged May 1 bomb plot was mentioned in the documents. "What is significant here is that the exploitation of recovered documents and disks, there appears to be a link between the so-called Magdalo forces together with the CPP-NPA and some sectoral organizations," Director General Arturo Lomibao, Philippine National Police chief, told a news conference Monday. Lomibao also noted that the evidence linking the alleged communists to the rightist elements was an alleged claim by one of the five suspects that he had met with Army First Lieutenant Lawrence San Juan, a member of the Magdalo group that staged the July 27, 2003 mutiny. San Juan was arrested February 24, 2006. "There were plans for this May 1 celebration They were coordinating instructions what to do during the celebration," Lomibao said but refused to elaborate. "We have opened only two documents and we recovered many," Lomibao added. Police pulled over the suspects who were driving a box-type Mitsubishi Lancer, as one of them was allegedly wanted for the recent killing of an Army soldier, said Fidel, Calabarzon police chief. Receipts for the purchase of several kilos of ammonium nitrate and 8,000 pieces of metal balls, allegedly intended for use as bomb shrapnels, flash drives, and several subversive documents were seized from the suspects, Fidel confirmed. The group was allegedly on its way to Talisay town in Batangas province for a meeting with NPA comrades, Fidel said. Sarmiento is the alleged secretary general of the NPA in Cavite province. Galang allegedly met with San Juan while he was in hiding, Fidel said. Metro Manila police chief Director Vidal Querol said the bomb threat on the Labor Day rallies brought to mind the leftist orchestrated attack on Plaza Miranda in September 2001. "They have done it before, and at the right time and for the right reasons, they can do it again," he said. In an interview with reporters, Sarmiento denied he was an NPA member. He said he worked as a researcher for Cavite Representative Crispin Remulla. The Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas (KMP) said last week that a few members of its local chapter in Cavite had gone missing. Some of them were among those arrested, a police report confirmed. KMP spokesman Carl Ala decried what he called another attempt by government to link his group and forces under the Bagong Alyansang Makabayan to the NPA and the Magdalo rebel group. Thousands of militants took to the streets on Monday, Labor Day, to press for the resignation of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and demand a wage increase. |
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Southeast Asia |
Cathedral was the original Abu Sayyaf target |
2006-03-30 |
The Abu Sayyaf terrorist group had initially targeted the Jolo Cathedral in its Monday bombing attack that left five people dead and 20 others wounded but was forced to alter its plans, police investigators revealed yesterday. Owing to strict security measures around the Jolo Cathedral, the bombers diverted their attack to the Sulu multi-purpose cooperative, a store owned and managed by priests and Notre Dame of Jolo college administration, police said. A police investigator revealed the Abu Sayyaf had targeted the store since "it serves both as a religious and commercial target." The initial investigation into last Mondays blast by military investigators also revealed the handiwork of the Abu Sayyaf. Armed Forces Southern Command spokesman Brig. Gen. Francisco Callelero said the military is now tracking down a certain Abu Abdulgawey who claimed to have led a group of Abu Sayyaf bandits in the bombing attack. "That was a clear act of terrorism and the Southern Command is pursuing the lead that the Abu Sayyaf demolition team was behind the bombing under Abu Abdulgawey," Callelero said. A day before, Abdulgawey reportedly called up the management of the Sulu cooperative warning of a bombing attack. Abdulgawey earlier sent a letter in Tausog dialect demanding money from the cooperative but this was turned down. "We are informing the management of the coop to negotiate with us through the cell phone numbers that we are providing. If you will not negotiate we will explode the bomb," a part of the supposed extortion letter read. Southern Command information chief Maj. Gamal Hayudini added the investigators believed that the bomb was already planted inside the store. "And the suspect in fact called up a day (Sunday) prior to the explosion, but the management turned down any demand," Hayudini said. The military said the supposed extortion letter made no mention of an amount but left two cellular phone numbers in case the store management decided to "negotiate." The letter was left with a pharmacy clerk but it did not reach the cooperative management which had earlier closed for a one-hour lunch break. When the store reopened an hour later, the bomb went off. The blast occurred around 1:15 p.m. at the ground floor of a two-story commercial building along busy Serrantes street in downtown Jolo, the capital of Sulu. Police said a portion of the buildings facade was blown off due to the impact of the explosion. The investigation revealed a cell phone was used as a triggering device for a pack of ammonium nitrate. Some traces of the fertilizer have been recovered at the blast site. Security officials pointed out the method of using a cell phone as a triggering device is a known signature of the Abu Sayyaf. Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) spokesman Brig. Gen. Jose Angel Honrado said the initial report of military investigators revealed the attack was carried out by the Abu Sayyaf. Honrado also confirmed five people were killed in the bombing attack with 20 others wounded. The fatalities were identified as Nasser Hadjinul, Masser Saipuddin, Jesus Cabrera, Marivic Manuel and 18-year-old Mukarsa Abduharim. The report made by the Disaster Response Operation and Information Center of the Department of Social Welfare and Development also revealed 20 people were wounded in the blast. The youngest of the victims is five-year-old Nurfasa Kasim. Honrado added the report by military investigators at the site concluded the bomb was planted at the ground floor of the establishment. Meanwhile, other sources suggested the bombing attack might have been carried out by rival business groups. Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) police director Senior Superintendent Akmad Mamalinta pointed out the cooperative grocery store might have earned the ire of other business establishments since it sells products cheaper than other outfits in Jolo. The bombing attack prompted Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Director General Arturo Lomibao to place all police forces under heightened alert. Lomibao directed all the 16 regional police directors nationwide to strengthen security measures of vital installations and other probable terrorist targets. "Checkpoints in strategic locations should be conducted to negate criminal and terrorist acts," he told his men. Lomibao ordered Mamalinta to tighten security measures in Jolo following the bombing. Last Mondays blast was the second deadly bomb attack to hit the area this year. On Feb. 18, a bomb exploded at a bar outside an Army camp which left one civilian killed and 20 others wounded in that attack which was blamed on the Abu Sayyaf. The island province of Sulu is a stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf, notorious for kidnappings and terror attacks. It was also the venue of a counterterrorism exercise last month between Philippine and US troops. Dozens of US soldiers who took part in the exercises on the island quickly responded to the blast, sending ordnance experts and medical personnel to help transport the wounded to the hospital. President Arroyo strongly condemned the bomb attack and ordered the police and military to hunt down the perpetrators. "I sympathize with the families of the victims and direct the treatment of the wounded be given priority by our health services," Mrs. Arroyo said. The President called on the public to remain calm and vigilant and took the opportunity to reiterate her call on Congress to approve the mothballed anti-terrorism bill. "Indeed, terror never sleeps and we need to consistently carry out our comprehensive action plan to rid our country and the world of this grave threat," she stressed. "Once more and with a deep sense of urgency, I ask Congress to pass the anti-terrorism law that will enable our nation to constrict, contain and control this threat more effectively," the President said. Congressmen, for their part, noted last Mondays bombing attack highlighted the urgency of passing the anti-terrorism bill. Eastern Samar Rep. Marcelino Libanan said the Jolo bombing provided another compelling reason for the passage of the anti-terror bill. "We condemn the attack as we work to ensure the passage of the anti-terror bill so perpetrators of attacks like this will be meted with the death penalty," he said. Deputy Speaker for Mindanao Rep. Gerry Salapuddin (Basilan) said the enactment of the anti-terror bill was "a matter of necessity and a call of the time" in the light of the Jolo bombing attack. Salapuddin said, however, that the measure must ensure that civil liberties and human rights will be respected in its implementation. Anak Mindanao Rep. Mujiv Hataman condemned the bombing and claimed that in most cases of violence in his region and other areas, the casualties were innocent civilians. "Unleashing terror against innocent civilians is deplorable and condemnable to the highest degree. Those behind the Jolo attack are enemies of the state and the people. This is unforgivable in a civilized society like ours," Hataman said. Hataman urged the authorities to act fast and apprehend those responsible for the bombing. But he warned the police and the military not to use last Mondays attack as an excuse to launch indiscriminate crackdown on Muslims. |
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Southeast Asia |
Alleged plotters charged in Philippines crackdown |
2006-02-28 |
![]() At the same time, police filed charges of rebellion and coup d'etat against four leftist legislators and 12 other opposition figures who have called on Mrs Arroyo to step down. The head of police criminal investigations, Chief Superintendent Jesus Versoza, said his office submitted the names of the 16 to the Justice Department. Among those charged were leftist members of the House of Representatives Crispin Beltran, who was arrested Friday, Satur Ocampo, Liza Maza and Teodoro Casino, Chief Superintendent Versoza said. Also in the charge sheet was former senator Gregorio Honasan, who as an army colonel in the 1980s led several bloody coup attempts against the government. He remains at large. |
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Southeast Asia |
Filippino marine commander relieved over coup fears |
2006-02-26 |
The commander of the Philippine marines was relieved of his duties Sunday in the wake of a coup plot that prompted the government to declare a state of emergency. Maj. Gen. Renato Miranda asked to be relieved of his duties for citing personal reasons, military spokesman Lt. Col. Tristan Kison said. Although the marines were widely rumored to have been involved in the coup plot against President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Kison said Miranda was not implicated. He also dismissed reports of unauthorized troop movement and disgruntled troops pushing through with plans to withdraw support from Arroyo, as they had reportedly intended to do Friday. "Let us remain calm, there is no reason to panic," Kison said. Navy chief Vice Adm. Mateo Mayuga accepted Miranda's request to be relieved of his position, Kison said. He was replaced by his deputy, Brig. Gen. Nelson Aliaga, who took over in a brief ceremony in a military camp. The 8,000-strong marines are regarded as an elite, well-armed unit at the front line of the government's fight against Muslim and communist guerrillas and al-Qaida-linked militants in the country's volatile south. Arroyo set off an uproar with her emergency decree Friday as Filipinos celebrated the 20th anniversary of dictator Ferdinand Marcos' ouster in a "people power" revolt, and even some supporters questioned the move. Local and international journalists expressed alarm Sunday over a police raid of a small daily newspaper critical Arroyo. Police seized editorial materials from the offices of The Daily Tribune early Saturday and threatened to take over the paper. Police were posted at the Tribune door. National police chief Arturo Lomibao said he would recommend that police be allowed to supervise the Tribune and threatened to take steps against the paper if it contributes "to the atmosphere of uncertainty, the atmosphere of instability." |
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Southeast Asia |
Sahiron hiding in Sulu islands |
2005-11-08 |
ABU Sayyaf commander Radullan Sahiron is hiding in Sulu province, Armed Forces of the Philippines Chief of Staff General Generoso Senga said Monday. This developed as the man police mistook for Sahiron threatened to sue policemen for arresting him over the weekend. "Sahiron is in Sulu. His mass base is there. His bailiwick is there," Senga said in a chance interview with reporters in Camp Aguinaldo military headquarters. On Saturday, police arrested Anthony Gara in Titay town, believing he was the one-armed Abu Sayyaf commander who led the kidnapping of foreign tourists from a diving resort in Malaysia's Sipdadan Island in 2000. Police realized their blunder after an informant close to the bandit group noticed that Gara was missing his left arm. Sahiron's right arm, not his left, was amputated. Philippine National Police (PNP) Chief Director General Arturo Lomibao has apologized for falsely announcing Sahiron's arrest, calling it an "unintentional oversight." He said that the man police intelligence officials apprehended was only a "look-alike" of the Abu Sayyaf commander. "My family will not let them off with just an apology. We are seeking help so we can file charges," Gara said in a radio interview. Gara said that at around 4 p.m. Saturday, four uniformed policemen without name plates forcibly took him while he was about to enter his house. "They loaded me inside a van like a pig. They hit me in the head three times," he said, adding that while in detention, his eyes were covered with packaging tape. "Maybe they [police] noticed that my arm was amputated, that's why they arrested me. They said my face was similar [to Sahiron's]," Gara said. Senga said police arrested the Sahiron "look-alike" without coordinating with the military. "Based on my talk with Southern Command commander Lieutenant General Adan, it was an independent operation." President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo was the first to announce the "arrest" of Sahiron in her program over government television station NBN. Senga confirmed the alleged arrest late Saturday evening, but he quoted information from police intelligence. Sahiron, who is believed to be the Abu Sayyaf's chief of staff, is wanted for his alleged involvement in the kidnapping of 21 Western tourists and Asian workers from a Malaysian resort in April 2000. The hostages were freed after payment of huge ransom believed to have been financed by Libya. Sahiron and current Abu Sayyaf chief Khadaffy Janjalani are among five of the group's leaders wanted by the United States. The U.S. government has offered a five-million-dollar reward for information leading to their arrest and conviction, and has placed Abu Sayyaf on its list of terrorist organizations. The Philippine government has also raised a reward for their capture. Washington has deployed American troops to the southern Philippines to train and arm Filipino soldiers battling Muslim militants and provided covert assistance in one major effort to capture Sahiron on southern Jolo island early this year. The mistaken arrest showed the difficulty of the war on terrorism, Lomibao said. "The fight against terrorism is a long, tedious and emotional battle," he said. "Along the way, there are hits and misses. |
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Southeast Asia |
Sahiron not so captured? |
2005-11-06 |
Philippine police apologized Sunday for reporting that a senior leader of the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf rebel group had been arrested in a southern province, saying that operatives only caught a "look-alike". Director General Arturo Lomibao, national police chief, said the reported arrest of Abu Sayyaf leader Radulan Sahiron was part of the "hits and misses" of the "long, tedious and emotional battle" against terrorism. "We apologise for the unintentional oversight, all in a day's work, if we may add," he said in a statement. "But the incident highlights key important elements in the government's fight against terrorism. One, the war on terror is personal and passionate." "Two, the war on terror is continuing and sustained," he added. |
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Southeast Asia |
Filippino intel knew attack was imminent |
2005-10-03 |
FOR MONTHS intelligence officials had received information about a terrorist attack like the latest Bali bombing--but the plot's details were not uncovered in time to thwart it, Philippine security officials said Sunday. Ric Blancaflor, executive director of a Philippine anti-terrorism task force, said Southeast Asia's intelligence community was aware that the al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah group was orchestrating a major strike, possibly in the Philippines or Indonesia. "The fact that there's going to be an attack was known to the intelligence community," Blancaflor said. "The problem always is how to get the exact details, like where." A police intelligence official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of his work, said Indonesia was warned by Western security officials of a possible attack before Saturday's deadly bombings. He didn't elaborate. The official also said Jemaah Islamiyah has been trying to solicit funds from the Middle East to finance a major strike in the Philippines. "The threat has not diminished," said Blancaflor. Philippine security officials warned last month that at least two Jemaah Islamiyah would-be suicide bombers may have already slipped into the country to carry out an attack with the help of Abu Sayyaf Muslim militants. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo urged the public to help thwart attacks. "The new Bali attacks after the London attacks show the resiliency of terrorists to strike targets when our guard is down," she said in a statement. National police Director General Arturo Lomibao placed the 115,000-strong police force on "heightened alert," requiring at least half of the force to be on stand-by in camps, following the latest Bali attacks. Intelligence gathering would be intensified and security in resorts frequented by foreigners would be further strengthened as a precaution, he said. The Philippines has been regarded as a terrorist breeding ground. Western nations have expressed concern over the presence of Jemaah Islamiyah training camps in the country's south, fearing they could produce militants who could strike anywhere. Officials, however, say that troops have overrun those camps and were pursuing Indonesian militants and Abu Sayyaf guerrillas fleeing from a months-long offensive. |
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Huge blasts rock Philippines police armory | |||||
2005-09-12 | |||||
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Ferry bomb designed to burn, not explode |
2005-08-30 |
THE BOMB that injured 30 people on a passenger ferry appeared to have been designed to only cause a fire, the Philippine National Police said Monday, while President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo blamed terrorists, with officials pointing the finger at the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group. âIt was found that a low explosive substance was used here, unlike in previous bombings,â said PNP spokesperson Leopoldo Bataoil of Sunday morningâs blast aboard the MV Doña Ramona as it was boarding passengers at the Dangkalan wharf in Lamitan town, Basilan province. âIf itâs a low explosive, the effect would be a burning effect that could cause fire,â Bataoil said. He said it was not clear why the substance was used instead of a highly explosive substance, but it was possible the perpetratorsâ aim was only âto instill fear and panic.â Ms Arroyo in a statement said, âI condemn the ferry bombing... as a crime against peace and humanity that will not go unpunished. I have directed our security forces to pinpoint and hunt down the perpetrators who have shown a total disregard for the law and human life.â The ferry was preparing to depart with more than 300 passengers for nearby Zamboanga City when the bomb went off. At least six people were badly injured, including a soldier, with nine children among the casualties. PNP Director General Arturo Lomibao quickly flew to Lamitan and created an investigative task force composed of bomb experts, investigators, crime lab experts and officers from the local police command. Bataoil said police were using witness accounts to draw a sketch of the man suspected to have left the bomb, hidden in a cardboard box filled with old clothes, on a counter in the canteen at the rear of the ferry. The suspicious-looking man hurriedly disembarked, said Brigadier General Raymundo Ferrer, 103rd Army Brigade commander, who also rushed to the scene. Ferrer said no one had claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Abu Sayyaf, which has a presence on Basilan, was a prime suspect. Last year, a bomb went off on the SuperFerry 14 in Manila Bay, killing 116 people in the countryâs worst terror attack. The Abu Sayyaf took responsibility for the blast. Two bombs that wounded 30 people in Zamboanga City early this month were also blamed on the group. Armed Forces Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Generoso Senga said the bomb attack was the handiwork of the Abu Sayyaf. âThat is the consensus of all investigative agencies handling the case. That is the initial conclusion,â Senga said in an interview in Camp Aguinaldo yesterday. He said the conclusion was âbased on the existing threat and the capability of the group to conduct such an atrocity.â Senga theorized the Abu Sayyaf attacked the Doña Ramona to divert the militaryâs attention away from its pursuit of Abu Sayyaf chieftain Khadaffy Janjalani in Central Mindanao. Lomibao, however, was not so quick to blame the Abu Sayyaf. âDefinitely it was a terrorist attack but we cannot say for sure,â he said. The Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which in the past had been blamed for almost every bombing incident in the country, is helping the government this time. The MILF said it had deployed personnel to gather information on who was behind the ferry bombing. âThe MILF is helping in hunting down the perpetrators of the latest attack against civilians,â said Ghazali Jaafar, MILF vice chief for political affairs. The MILF moved even without a formal request from the government. The peace talks between the government and the MILF are currently suspended. âWe denounce terrorism. Right now, we are in the process of gathering information. We have alerted our men in Basilan to inform us if they have information about those behind the ferry blast,â Jaafar said. He said the move was part of their commitment to the guidelines of the Adhoc Joint Action Group (Adjac), which is composed of representatives from both the government and MILF and is tasked to stop terrorists and kidnappers. Chief Superintendent Sukarno Ikbala, police director of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, said the explosive was not meant to kill. âUnlike other bomb attacks that were meant to kill and destroy, this one was different because the explosive had no shrapnel as evidenced by the victims who only suffered burns,â Ikbala said. Superintendent Jose Bayani Gusela, Zamboanga City Police deputy director and chief of the local police Explosives and Ordnance Detection Unit, was more definite. âThe suspect or suspects used a black powder commonly found in pyrotechnics,â he said. âWe donât see any pattern similar to previous explosions,â he added. Because of this, Emilia Torres has no one to blame for what happened to her son, 18-year-old Emmanuel. âIt pains me to see my son suffering,â Torres said. âI just pray theyâll be arrested and jailed.â |
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Ten Indonesian suicide bombers hunted in Philippines |
2005-08-12 |
The Philippines said Thursday it was hunting 10 Indonesian extremists who were feared to be plotting suicide attacks, as security was stepped up following a spate of bombings in the south. National Security Advisor Norberto Gonzales said the Indonesians, from an extremist group linked to Al-Qaeda, could be behind two bomb blasts in the southern city of Zamboanga on Wednesday which injured at least 26 people. He said two of the militants were already believed to be in the capital Manila scouting possible targets with the help of Filipino accomplices from the Abu Sayyaf group. Police in Zamboanga meanwhile announced they were questioning four suspects about the blasts. The Abu Sayyaf, a gang of Islamic militants blamed for the bombing of a ferry last year in Manila Bay that killed more than 100 people, were also suspected of planning the attacks in Zamboanga. "The searches will be intensified," said Gonzales, adding that possible targets in Manila such as hotels and shopping malls had been alerted. Gonzales said the Philippines had received a tip-off from unspecified foreign governments about the 10 Indonesians who were believed to be from the Jemaah Islamiyah group behind the 2002 bombings on the island of Bali. He declined to elaborate on the sources, but a security official told AFP that at least two top JI lieutenants who played key roles in the Bali attacks had slipped into the southern island of Mindanao. The two were identified as Omar Patek and Dulmatin, whose real name is Joko Pitono and who allegedly helped assemble the bombs that killed 202 people on the Indonesian resort island. Gonzales said the Indonesian suspects may be working closely with Dulmatin. "What is important here is we are beginning to see a new development as far as terrorism is concerned in the Philippines," Gonzales said. He said Jemaah Islamiyah was "beginning to employ non-Filipinos in the Philippines terror action, this to us is significant." The military said Wednesday's blasts in Zamboanga, which tore through a mini-bus and an inn, could be meant as a diversionary tactic by the Abu Sayyaf to slow a military offensive against the group. The militants, including Abu Sayyaf leader Khadaffy Janjalani, have been in a cat-and-mouse chase with the military in the jungles of central Mindanao island since July. "The police and military are under strict orders by the president to get to the root of these attacks and bring the perpetrators to justice," President Gloria Arroyo's spokesman Ignacio Bunye said. Zamboanga city police director Henry Lozanes said four suspects were being questioned about the blasts. "We picked up three suspects for questioning and another one suspect was questioned from among those wounded," he said. Police officials said the bombs in Zamboanga appeared to have been made with ammonium nitrate, a substance also used in fertiliser. National police chief, Director General Arturo Lomibao, visited the bombing sites and ordered tighter security in the city, describing the bombings as "a terrorist attack meant to harm civilians." The last major bombings in Zamboanga city took place on October 17, 2002 when two bombs exploded in a shopping mall, leaving six dead and 150 wounded. Security analysts in the region say that while the Abu Sayyaf ranks have fallen in recent years after its key leaders were captured or killed, its cells have been infiltrated by JI militants. A military intelligence report has also said that up to 40 JI militants trained last year in a rebel camp controlled by the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). The MILF is negotiating peace with Manila and has denied the report. |
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Southeast Asia |
JI movements confined in the Philippines |
2005-04-24 |
Following its admission that at least 40 suspected Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) terrorists are still operating in the country, the Philippine National Police (PNP) said it has contained the movements of these terrorists. PNP Directorate for Intelligence chief Director Robert Delfin said the intensified intelligence buildup and targeting operations undertaken by the police and military have made it highly difficult for JI operatives to move around in the Philippines. "There is still a threat, but (the terrorists) cannot move because they know we will catch them," Delfin said in Tagalog as he assured the public that the authorities are doing their best to neutralize the JI operatives. PNP chief Director Arturo Lomibao, during a forum of the Manila Overseas Press Club in Makati City last Wednesday, revealed that at least 40 suspected foreign terrorists are still in the country, particularly in Mindanao. "Terrorist threats remain because there are at least 40 suspected foreign terrorists in the country," he said. Lomibao's admission came after a published report that the JI, despite its failure to carry out threatened Holy Week bombings, is still plotting to launch major attacks in the region. The Holy Week bombing plot was uncovered and thwarted following the arrest of Rohmat, a 25-year-old Indonesian whom authorities said is a ranking JI member operating in Mindanao. When interrogated, Rohmat, alias Zaki, said the Abu Sayyaf bandit group and renegade members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) were tasked to carry out the attacks. He also admitted there are still about 33 JI members who remained in the country after completing terrorist training in Lanao del Sur. He said the training was supervised by one Abu Usman, a deputy of Quod Amir, alias Daud who heads the Wakalah Hudeibiyah group. Rohmat's arrest also led military and police authorities to an apartment believed to be the terrorists' safe house along Lilac street in Fairview, Quezon City on March 23. Police seized 11 sacks of explosives allegedly intended to be used in Holy Week bombings. |
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Bomb found outside Spanish embassy |
2005-03-27 |
Police detonated a small homemade bomb found near the Spanish embassy in Makati City late Saturday, as security forces were on alert after warnings of attacks over the Holy Week. A Spanish foreign ministry statement issued in Madrid said police safely detonated two devices outside its embassy in Makati City without causing any damage. It said extra security measures were being taken to safeguard Spanish interests in the Philippines. However, National Capital Region Police Office chief Director Avelino Razon said authorities found only one bomb, in a shoe box contained in an orange plastic bag, and that it lacked components and a blasting cap. He said a Marine guard had noticed the bomb outside the ACT Tower at the corner of Sen. Gil Puyat Avenue and Nicanor Garcia street. The Spanish embassy is on the fifth floor of the building. The guard called the police and the improvised bomb was defused. Razon downplayed the incident, saying the device was not similar to those normally used by either the Jemaah Islamiyah or the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf guerrillas who had threatened a wave of bombings in the Philippines over the Holy Week. The device was apparently not powerful enough to cause much damage, he said. Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Director General Arturo Lomibao and Razon personally inspected the area where the explosive was found. PNP spokesman Senior Superintendent Leopoldo Bataoil said the explosive material was discovered at around 8:30 p.m. on Saturday outside the back door of the building. He said the bomb, made of gunpowder wrapped with firecracker paper and stuffed in a canister wired to a cell phone and a nine-volt battery, was considered by bomb disposal experts as "incomplete." "It was detonated and had been rendered safe at 8:45 p.m., or merely 15 minutes after it was found, with no damage to property," Bataoil said. Southern Police District director Chief Superintendent Wilfredo Garcia said the bomb, being "very crude" and "incomplete," was "never meant to explode, only to scare." He said any involvement by the Abu Sayyaf has been ruled out. "When our bomb disposal team arrived, they found firecracker explosives inside the box but there was no blasting cap... so it was not intended to explode," Garcia said. He added that the bomb "was so weak it hardly left a mark on the pavement when police destroyed it." A source from the Explosives and Ordnance Division of the Makati City police said the black gunpowder was a chemical used for the manufacture of fireworks but with no capacity to explode. "Black powder will not explode. We disposed of it in water. It might catch fire if it's accidentally ignited," the source said, adding that they opened the shoe box with a "bomb disruptor." Makati police chief Superintendent Jovito Gutierrez denied that two bombs were found, saying the "Spanish embassy may have been misinformed." Police are investigating who left the bomb and why. Makati City officials downplayed reports that those who left the homemade device near the ACT Tower building were actually targeting the Spanish embassy. Lito Anzures, spokesman for Makati Mayor Jejomar Binay, said the building was "not even a high-profile target." "Yung mga tunay na terorista, 'di na nananakot (Real terrorists go beyond scare tactics)," he said. The Makati police assured residents that mobile and foot patrol units will go around the city on a 24-hour basis, and that they should not be alarmed when mobile patrol vehicles turn on their sirens, since it is part of the plan to improve police visibility in the city. Just over a week ago, an improvised bomb shattered the glass windows of a building where First Gentleman Jose Miguel Arroyo has an office. No one was hurt when the homemade bomb went off in front of the LTA building. The bomb was believed to have been hurled during a street fight between two gangs. Security forces across the Philippines have been on heightened alert after threats by the Abu Sayyaf to hit "soft targets" in Manila to avenge the deaths of 22 of the gang's members who died in a failed jailbreak two weeks ago. Police said bombings planned by the Abu Sayyaf may have been preempted after troops arrested a suspected Muslim militant who provided information that led to last week's discovery of about 600 kilos of explosive materials, enough to flatten an entire shopping mall. The military said the explosives were intended for terror attacks in Metro Manila during the Holy Week. Despite the setback, there were indications that militants were pursuing terror plots. One plan by members of the Abu Sayyaf, the JI, and local Muslim converts involved separate attacks in Metro Manila and a southern city using at least two car bombs, according to a security official who spoke on condition of anonymity. Police and troops already on alert after the Valentine's Day bombing spree were guarding malls, seaports and airports, bus terminals, churches and other crowded areas yesterday, Razon said. The tight security will continue as Manila prepares to host a six-day conference next week of more than 1,300 lawmakers, including 46 heads of parliament, from 145 countries, police officials said. In a related development, peace advocates in central Mindanao asked a team of peace monitors led by Maj. Gen. Zulkefli bin Mohammad Zin of Malaysia to look into reports that renegade members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front are coddling foreign terrorists in known MILF strongholds in southern Mindanao. Observers said the 60-member monitoring team tasked to monitor the compliance of a truce between the government and the MILF was silent on the issue despite the recent arrests of suspected militants who claimed to have been trained in bomb-making in areas covered by the ceasefire. Leaders of the MILF, who have yet to forge a final peace pact with the government, have denied coddling JI members in the group's strongholds. Major Gen. Raul Relano, commander of the Army's 6th Infantry Division, earlier said renegade MILF commanders, many of whom still refuse to recognize the leadership of MILF chairman Al-Haj Murad, could be conniving with the JI and the Abu Sayyaf without the knowledge of their superiors. Murad succeeded the MILF's founding chairman, the late Hashim Salamat. The Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP), on the other hand, said the United States' warning that the Philippines is under threat of "multiple" terrorist attacks was merely a "publicity spin." CPP spokesman Gregorio Rosal claimed that American covert operatives reportedly based in the country are apparently planning to stage "terrorist attacks in the Philippines that it would blame on other threat groups." The objective of this plot is to "justify the escalation of US military intervention in the country," he added. Rosal said it was not "farfetched" that the US military's alleged "dirty tricks department" now plans to bomb certain areas of the country "through its agents and contacts within the Abu Sayyaf." The Abu Sayyaf's founders were "CIA-trained" in the 1980s and that "instances of collusion" among the US, the Armed Forces of the Philippines, and the Abu Sayyaf "now abound," he added. The CPP, together with its armed wing, the New People's Army, has been tagged by Washington since 2002 as an "international terrorist organization." Rosal said his group strongly believes that US covert operatives were actually behind the spate of bombings in the country, particularly in Mindanao. He cited the case of Michael Meiring, an agent of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), who was arrested in a Davao City hotel in 2002 after a bomb he was preparing accidentally exploded. Rosal said Meiring was never investigated and was "whisked off to the US by American and Philippine intelligence units." |
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