Southeast Asia |
Abu Sayyaf planning new attacks |
2006-02-03 |
AL QAEDA-linked Muslim militants are plotting fresh attacks in Manila almost a year after blowing up a bus in the capital's financial district, killing four people, a state prosecutor said Friday. Justice Department prosecutor Emmanuel Velasco said the latest plot was uncovered with the help of a former Abu Sayyaf member who turned state witness during a trial last year that ended with death sentences for an Indonesian and two Filipinos for their role in the Feb. 14, 2005 bus bombing. "Their plan is to strike on or before February 14 to show they are still a force to reckon with, to say that even if our people are in jail, we can strike," Velasco told The Associated Press. He refused to disclose details of the plot, but said three would-be attackers were identified by the witness, Gappal Bannah, through surveillance photographs. He said he had filed a case of rebellion against them and was waiting for a judge to issue arrest warrants. Abu Sayyaf guerrillas, hiding in the remote jungles of the southern Philippines, are notorious for ransom kidnappings and bomb attacks, which have targeted Filipinos and Americans. The group, which numbers about 300 men, is on a US list of terrorist organizations and Washington has offered rewards for information leading to the capture of its leaders. Scores of militants already have been killed or arrested in US-backed military operations. Later this month, about 250 American troops will start month-long military training of Filipino soldiers on southern Jolo Island, a guerrilla stronghold. The Abu Sayyaf had claimed responsibility for the Feb. 14, 2005 bombing in Manila's Makati financial district, as well as two other bomb attacks in two southern towns the same day, in retaliation for a military offensive. An Indonesian man, Rohmat, who confessed to membership in the regional terror group Jemaah Islamiyah, was sentenced to death last year for the attack, along with two Filipinos, Gamal Baharan and Abu Khalil Trinidad. Authorities say several dozen Indonesian militants have been training Abu Sayyaf guerrillas in bombmaking. |
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Southeast Asia |
Al-Qaeda directly funding Abu Sayyaf along with JI, witness testifies |
2005-11-16 |
![]() In a sworn statement to state prosecutors, Alimuddin said he had maintained an account in the state-run Land Bank of the Philippines where money from the al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah Southeast Asian terror group and other âforeignâ supporters was being wired to finance their operations. The account was opened in the Landbank branch in Zamboanga City on the instructions of Abu Sayyaf chief Khadaffy Janjalani and Hilarion Santos, he said. âFunds from the Jemaah Islamiyah and the al-Qaeda were being sent to that account. The money that goes to that account is used by the Abu Sayyaf and the RSM in their armed struggle against the government,â Alimuddin said. He agreed to open the bank account to government investigators. Alimuddin said the Abu Sayyaf had tapped Santos to form the RSM to encourage Christians to turn against the government. Intelligence agencies have identified the RSM as a major threat because many of its members can blend in easily in Manila to hit âsoft targets.â It is not known how many members the group has. Alimuddin said the brothers Hilarion and Dawud Santos (also known as Tyrone del Rosario) were active RSM members. Last February 14, the Abu Sayyaf, with the help of Alimuddinâs group, staged three simultaneous bomb attacks in the Makati financial district and in two Mindanao cities, killing six and wounding more than 100. Shortly after, troops recovered a ton of explosives from Dawud Santos. The explosives were allegedly for a truck bomb attack on the United States Embassy. âThe Abu Sayyaf and the RSM have long had connections with the Jemaah Islamiyah and al-Qaeda. The people who trained us in bomb making are foreign members of the JI,â Alimuddin said. He said local terror groups also received support from some policemen and even media people in Mindanao and Manila. Senior State Prosecutor Emmanuel Velasco yesterday submitted Alimuddinâs extrajudicial confession, which he made on October 17, to the Makati Regional Trial Court which is trying the Santos brothers, Janjalani and 18 others for terror activities, including the Valentineâs Day bombing in Makati. Velasco also submitted to the court the sworn statement of Abu Sayyaf member Gappal Bannah, alias Boy Negro, who had also turned state witness. Bannah claimed that Dawud Santos was one of the people who delivered to him the bombs that were used in the Valentineâs Day bombing. Court proceedings against the alleged RSM members were suspended yesterday after defense lawyers told the court that one of the accused was a minor. Makati Judge Encarnacion Moya suspended the hearing and ordered the defense to submit proof that the accused was under 18 years old. Moyaâs court, a regular trial court, does not have jurisdiction over cases in which minors are involved. Cases involving minors, whether as accused, witnesses or complainants, are to be tried in designated family courts. Moya said the question of whether her court had jurisdiction over the case must first be resolved. Velasco said that other than causing a little delay in the caseâs progress, the transfer to a juvenile court would not affect the governmentâs case. The minor, who is said to be 17 years old, is in the custody of the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines after she was arrested in Zamboanga last month along with Alimuddin, Hilarion Santos, his wife Hannah Santos, Nururrija Amdal, Mursidi Balao, Ismael Idiris and Bodot Abdullah. The other accused include Dawud Santos, who is out on bail while being tried on charges of illegal possession of explosives, and Abu Sayyaf leaders Khaddafy Janjalani and Jainal Sali, alias Abu Solaiman, who are both at large. |
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Southeast Asia |
JI funding Philippines violence |
2005-11-15 |
he Jemaah Islamiah, a regional militant network linked with al Qaeda, has trained Muslim rebels in the Philippines and given funds to carry out attacks, a state prosecutor said on Tuesday, quoting testimony from a former rebel. Emmanuel Velasco told reporters that the JI, blamed for a string of bombings in Indonesia, had taught bomb-making techniques to members of the Rajah Solaiman Movement, a radical Muslim convert group in the Philippines. "The people who trained us in bomb-making are foreign members from JI," Velasco quoted Malik Alimuddin, a member of the Rajah Solaiman group, as saying in an eight-page sworn statement. Velasco said Alimuddin, who was arrested last month, had agreed to become a government witness, linking other members of his group to bomb attacks in the country in February 2004 and this year. Alimuddin's statement detailed his group's role in future terrorist plots in the Philippines, using Muslim converts to carry out the attacks. He said the Jemaah Islamiah funnelled money into a bank account he was asked to open last year in the southern port city of Zamboanga. Alimuddin was arrested last month along with seven members of the Rajah Solaiman Movement at a rebel hideout in Zamboanga City. They were charged with rebellion together with Ahmad Islam Santos, founder and leader of the Muslim convert group. Authorities said a suspected Rajah Solaiman member had planted a bomb that caused a fire and sank a domestic ferry at the mouth of Manila bay in February 2004, killing more than 100 people -- the worst terrorist attack in the Philippines. Alimuddin's group also helped carry out coordinated bombings in Manila and two southern cities on Valentine's Day this year that killed a dozen people and wounded about a hundred others, police said. |
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Southeast Asia |
Former Abu Sayyaf members say the group is in cahoots w/ cops, journalists |
2005-11-15 |
Two former Abu Sayyaf members who turned state witnesses have revealed links between the terror group and some members of the press and police office in Mindanao and Manila, in confirmation of the allegations of the military. In separate sworn statements, Malik Alimuddin alias "Malik" and Gappal Bannah alias "Boy Negro" confirmed earlier reports of the military that the Abu Sayyaf has the support of some members of the media and the police. Gappal and Malik were arrested in connection with the Makati City bus bombing last February 14 and other terrorist activities in Mindanao but they were discharged from the cases in exchange for their turning state witnesses. Government earlier issued a similar statement, saying some members of the media are suspected of backing the cause of some terror groups such as the Abu Sayyaf and the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP). Citing raw military intelligence reports, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo earlier named ABS-CBN television broadcaster Julius Babao as a supporter of the Abu Sayyaf after he allegedly provided the bail for Tyrone del Rosario Santos, also known as "Dawud", a member of a group of Islamic converts linked by the military to terror bombings. Dawud is the brother of Hilarion Santos alias "Ahmed", leader of the Rajah Solaiman Movement (RSM) that is being linked to the Abu Sayyaf, Southeast Asian terror organization Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), and Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda. Dawud was arrested last March 22 and charged with illegal possession of explosives before a court in Alaminos, Pangasinan but he went into hiding after posting bail for his temporary liberty. Gappal, who was among those who plotted the Valentine's Day bombing in Makati City in 2005, said in his extra-judicial confession that Sayyaf leader Khaddafy Janjalani told them the group's media contacts are helping them get good press in their "propaganda war" against the government. "Maraming tumutulong sa amin na taga-media hindi lamang sa Mindanao kundi mismong Maynila, mga taga-dyaryo, telebisyon at radio. Ang mga taga-media na ito ay kanya (Janjalani) ring napapartehan sa mga perang kinikita ng ASG sa pangki-kidnap. Kaya pinagmalaki ni Janjalani na mabango kami sa press sa tulong na rin ng nasabing mga kontak sa media (Many members of the media in Mindanao and from Manila help us, from the newspapers, television and radio. The same members of the media get a cut from the money that the ASG gets from their kidnapping activities. That is why Janjalani boasts about his closeness to the press because of their contacts)," he said but did not name the "contacts". Jainal Sali alias Abu Solaiman, one of the respondents in the rebellion charges filed by the Department of Justice (DOJ), was reportedly the one who gets in touch with the media contacts, supposedly to help them explain to the people the importance of establishing a Muslim state in Mindanao. His testimony was corroborated by Malik in his sworn statement during a debriefing with 1st Lieutenant Leo Madarang of the Philippine Army on October 17 in Camp Aguinaldo. "May mga myembro po ng media at iba pang kawad ng pulisya na nagbibigay ng proteksyon sa RSM at Abu Sayyaf. Ang mga supporters sa hanay ng media ay tumutulong sa mga kasapi ng RSM at ASG na nahuhuli ng mga awtoridad (There are members of the media and of the police who protect the RSM and ASG. The supporters from the media help out the RSM and ASG if they get caught)," Malik said. Aside from the media, he said there were some police officers who are supportive of their cause and provide them protection, information and even guns and ammunitions. One of them was Police Officer 3 San Amdal, who eluded arrest during a raid of his hideout in Zamboanga City last October 26. Also named respondents were Hannah Santos; Mursidi Balao; Ismael Idiris; Anne Añover; and Bodot Abdullah. They are currently detained at the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (Isafp) headquarters in Camp Aguinaldo. Authorities seized from their possession a map of Metro Manila, 49 rounds of anti-tank rockets, six blasting caps, four M16 rifle bullet clips, ammunition bandoleers, electrical tools, computers and subversive documents. Malik said his role in the RSM was to identify those who would compose a planned terror attack and their respective roles. He was also charged with taking care of putting in a bank account money from contacts in Indonesia. He said the group had been planning to launch an attack at the Makati City Regional Trial Court (RTC), which earlier convicted Indonesian and suspected JI leader Rohmat Abdurrahim and his Filipino cohorts Angelo Trinidad alias "Tapay," and Gamal Baharan alias "Abu Khalil" in connection with the Valentine's Day bus bombing in Makati that killed four people and wounded 60 others. "He opened an account with Land Bank in Zamboanga under his name, but the account was being used to get funding from foreign sources. His role basically was to deposit, withdraw and deliver money to Ahmed," Malik's lawyer Raymund Palad said. Sometime in October or before they were arrested, Malik withdrew P9,500 from the bank, supposedly for their every day expense. The money supposedly came from Indonesia. Senior State Prosecutor Emmanuel Velasco, head of the Department of Justice Task Force on Rebellion, said government has already asked the Anti-Money Laundering Council (Amlac) to determine if there are other bank accounts being used by the group to put in force its terror activities. When Malik was presented to Gonzalez, he was greeted by Bannah. All 18 ASG and RSM suspects were arraigned for rebellion before the sala of Makati RTC Judge Encarnacion Moya last November 10. Aside from Ahmed's group, also charged but are still at-large were Ahmed's brother Dawud; Janjalani, Amdal, Fatima Santos; Khalil Pareja alias "Rash" or "Raffy"; Pio De Vera, Abdul Kareem Ayeras, Omar Lavilla, and Mike Rueca alias "Britney" or "Ashty Dan." Velasco said the accused violated Article 134 in relation to Article 135 of the Revised Penal Code for rebellion, a non-bailable offense, for allegedly advocating a separate and independent "Islamic State". He said since 2000, the accused "rose publicly and took arms against the Philippine Government for purposes of removing from the allegiance to the government or its laws, the territory of the Republic of the Philippines." |
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