Southeast Asia |
Al-Ghozis co-escapee recaptured in Basilan |
2007-03-18 |
![]() Chief Supt. Joel Goltiao, police director of the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao, said Abante has two arrest warrants issued by a Zamboanga City court for kidnapping. Goltiao said the arresting team was led by the Isabela City police chief, Senior Insp. Parson Asadil. Abante was brought to Zamboanga City for investigation and will be turned over to the Zamboanga Trial Court. Al-Ghozi, a Jemaah Islamiah bomb expert, Abante and another Abu Sayyaf member, Abul Mukhim Edris, escaped from the detention center of the PNP Intelligence Group in Crame on July 14, 2003. Their escape was a major embarrassment to the country since it coincided with the state visit of Australian Prime Minister John Howard who had promised support to the countrys counterterrorism drive. Al-Ghozi is one of the primary suspects in the bombing of an LRT terminal on December 31, 2000, that killed at least 26 people and injured scores of others. Edris, said to be a former member of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, was killed a month after the escape as he tried to flee from government troops manning a checkpoint in Central Mindanao. Two months later, al-Ghozi was killed by policemen at a checkpoint in a remote town in Tigkawayan, North Cotabato. |
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Southeast Asia |
Suspected Abu Sayyaf bomber's contact falls in Central Mindanao raid |
2007-03-14 |
Government security forces arrested a close associate of fugitive Abu Sayyaf bomber Abdul Basit Usman during a raid Monday in Sultan Mastura, Shariff Kabunsuan province, a regional military spokesperson said. Maj. Randolph Cabangbang, Eastern Mindanao Command spokesman, said the suspect, Acmak Saludin, is also long wanted for a series of bomb attacks in Mindanao just like Usman. Saludin was arrested at his hideout in barangay Tambo, Sultan Mastura, around 2:45 a.m. through the help of government intelligence personnel of the Army's 603rd Infantry Brigade. "He did not resist arrest. We are also looking into his involvement in the bomb attack in Makilala town last year," Cabangbang said. Two improvised explosive devices, two rocket propelled grenades, mobile phones, and an electronic tester were recovered from the suspects' possession. The U.S. government has earlier offered US$ 50,000 dollars or approximately P2.5 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Usman. The fugitive bomber is linked to Jemaah Islamiyah and believed responsible for bombings in Makilala town in October 2006 that killed eight civilians and left 30 others wounded. Usman is also implicated in a recent series of bomb attacks in Mindanao. Over the weekend, authorities also nabbed an Abu Sayyaf leader implicated in the kidnapping and beheading of civilians six years ago in Basilan. Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao police director Chief Supt. Joel Goltiao said the suspect, Abu Usman, was arrested by joint military and police troopers at the Port of Isabela, Basilan, through a tip from concerned civilians. |
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Southeast Asia |
Abu wanted for killing plantation workers falls in Basilan |
2007-03-14 |
Government forces have arrested a suspected member of the Abu Sayyaf wanted for kidnapping and killing plantation workers in 2001 in nearby Basilan province. ![]() Usman was arrested last weekend at the port of Isabela City, the capital of Basilan province. The Abu Sayyaf seized 40 plantation workers to divert the military forces' attention at that time in their pursuit operations against the other terrorist group who seized 20 people, including three Americans from Dos Palmas, Puerto Princesa City, Palawan. Of the 40 people the Abu Sayyaf seized, nine were beheaded while one was shot dead. The Abu Sayyafs has also burned some houses of the plantation workers at the time they seized the farmers. Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao police director Chief Supt. Joel Goltiao disclosed that Usman is facing three counts of kidnapping with serious illegal detention cases in court. The military's Western Mindanao Command (Wesmincom) has not issued statement surrounding Usman's arrest in Isabela City. He was placed under tactical interrogation. "Narcisso! My interrogator's pliers, please!" "Sorry, boss! The electrician's not done with them yet!" "Well then call the plumber!" |
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Southeast Asia |
MILF bares al-Qaeda plot vs ASEAN |
2006-12-11 |
The Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) said on Sunday that al-Qaeda-affiliated militants had plotted to disrupt the 12th Summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in Cebu. Eid Kabalu, MILF spokesperson, told the Inquirer by phone that their field commanders monitored the plot, which was hatched by militants active in Mindanao. The ASEAN meet was moved to January next year because of threats from Typhoon Seniang (international code name: Utor) and not because of terror threats, according to Malacañang. But the day before organizers announced the postponement of the Summit, the United States, Britain, Australia and Japan warned of imminent terror attacks in Cebu. Kabalu said the intelligence reports filed by MILF field commanders were not verified but said it was good the summit had been moved to another date so that security could be further tightened. "It was difficult to verify the threat but we monitored it," he said. Chief Supt. Joel Goltiao, police director of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), admitted that militants identified with the Abu Sayyaf and Jemaah Islamiya, who are operating in the region, remained capable of launching attacks outside Mindanao. The Abu Sayyaf and the JI could easily hire somebody to carry out the attacks for them," he said. But he said the ARMM police had not monitored any plot to disrupt the ASEAN Summit. "We have not monitored reports about terror threats to the ASEAN summit. We have direct contacts with the MILF and those with the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)," Goltiao said. |
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Southeast Asia |
Philippine Muslim Autonomous Region Official Killed in Ambush |
2006-10-06 |
![]() Datukon was the executive director of the Social Fund Project of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), which is based in Cotabato City. Witnesses said the attackers were wearing camouflage uniforms, which are widely available in stores in Cotabato City, despite a strict campaign against the use by civilians of these uniforms. Investigators said they were also looking into any link between yesterdays ambush and a bomb attack last June, which narrowly missed Maguindanao provincial Gov. Andal Ampatuan as his car was passing along the public market of Shariff Aguak town. Authorities blamed the assassination attempt on two leaders of the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), who both denied the charges. An attempt by the police to arrest the suspected bombers led to fighting between MILF fighters and militiamen loyal to Gov. Ampatuan. The wife of one of the suspects, Zaid Pakiladatu, was killed later on in an ambush in Cotabato City by unknown assailants. |
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More Abu Sayyaf Arrests | ||||||||||
2004-04-02 | ||||||||||
The alleged Abu Sayyaf bandit arrested in Quezon City, was an anchorman, until early this year, in a radio station run by the military. Walter Ancheta Villanueva, who was arrested by the police Wednesday in a Quezon City mall, was the anchorman of radio program Light of Peace aired over radio station dwDD. The program, military officials said, was aimed at bridging the gap between Christians and Muslims.
Brig. Gen. Victor Corpus, commander of the Armed Forces Civil Relations Service, which oversees the operation of the radio station said Villanueva was indeed a âblock timerâ at the radio station.
Corpus said the military and the police are still verifying if Villanueva, a Muslim convert, is indeed a member of the Abu Sayyaf.
Villanuevaâs radio program was reportedly scrapped in January. In a separate interview, Chief Supt. Joel Goltiao, National Police spokesman, said that as far as the police is concerned, it is âpositiveâ that Villanueva is an Abu Sayyaf bandit. However, Goltiao said this has to be confirmed with the National Police Intelligence Group. The police claimed to have confiscated from Villanueva 10 kilos of trinitrotoluene (TNT), wires connected to a dry cell battery and cellular telephone and a 9mm pistol when he was arrested Wednesday.
According to authorities, Villanueva was planning to carry out bombings in Metro Manila. Relatedly, the militaryâs Southern Command announced the arrest of four alleged Abu Sayyaf bandits implicated in the kidnapping of 54 students and teachers and a priest in Sumisip, Basilan, four years ago. Arrested were Nasir Hapilon, older brother of Abu Sayyaf commander Isnilon Hapilon, who was included on the list of the five most wanted Philippine terrorists by the US; Hamil Abdulbasar alias Kasir Ibrahim, 31; Jumadil Abdulhan, 25 and Julpikar Abdulbasar, 24. Authorities said the four were arrested by a combined team from the Marines, naval intelligence and Military Intelligence Group 9 in their safe house at Rio Hondo Aplaya in Zamboanga City before noon Thursday. Authorities said the bandits were collared after an informant tipped off the police that the four were waiting for a vessel bound for Malaysia.
The military said that based on initial interrogation, Hamid admitted that he was a student of slain Abu Sayyaf leader Abdurajak Abubakar Janjalani.
Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Eduardo Ermita, concurrent coordinator of the Antiterrorism Task Force, said Abu Sayyaf bandits have been training Muslim converts to carry out terror attacks in Metro Manila. Ermita said six bandits captured this week for plotting âMadrid-levelâ bomb attacks in Manila had confessed that they were recruiting Muslim converts because they would not stand out and arouse suspicion.
The wife of one of the six suspected Abu Sayyaf members had said they were Muslim converts, but denied they were involved in terrorism. She accused security forces of torturing her husband into confessing an allegation quickly denied by Ermita. Islamic community leaders on Friday denounced a wave of arrests of suspected terrorists, accusing the Philippine government of using minority Muslims as âsacrificial lambs.â Relatives of at least two men -- including Redendo Cain Dellosa, who allegedly admitted to a February ferry bombing that claimed more than 100 lives -- said the men had been abducted, framed and tortured.
Remedios Fatima Balbin, a lawyer for Dellosa, said he cried when she saw him for the first time on Friday, more than a week after he was taken into custody. He claimed he signed a confession to stop being tortured, she said. Police have denied the allegations. âWe are now calling on our brother Muslims. . .to unite and condemn these arrests,â said Abdulbasit Marangit, an Islamic preacher in Manilaâs Quiapo district, one of the largest Muslim communities outside the traditional Islamic homeland in the southern Philippines. Community leader Charlie de Makota read a statement from the Alliance of United Muslims Against Human Rights Violations and Terrorism, saying the governmentâs antiterror campaign has caused fear among innocent Muslims. He said Muslim communities wonât protest whenever the government arrests genuine terrorists.
Sen. Aquilino Pimentel Jr., meanwhile, challenged law-enforcement authorities to present to the media the six suspected Abu Sayyaf terrorists they have arrested to enable the public to determine the truth behind allegations they were out to bomb shopping malls and trains in Metro Manila. | ||||||||||
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