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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf claims responsibility for bombing, warns of more attacks
2006-03-30
A man claiming to be a spokesman of the al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group warned Wednesday of impending terror attacks in Zamboanga City and Basilan islands in the southern Philippines, a local radio network reported.

"The next bombings will be in Zamboanga City and Basilan," said Abu Sayyaf self-proclaimed spokesman Abu Omar in a text message to a radio station.

The warning came two days after a powerful Abu Sayyaf bomb ripped through a two-storey convenience store in Jolo island, killing nine people and wounding two dozen others.

Security officials appealed to the public to stay calm and be vigilant, saying authorities were hunting down members of the Abu Sayyaf group, blamed for the series of terrorism and kidnappings for ransom in the southern region.

"We urge the public to cooperate with authorities and report to us any suspicious persons or abandoned package. Do not listen to rumors, but stay vigilant," said Air Force Major Gamal Hayudini, spokesman for the military's Southern Command.

He said Omar had been sending threat letters in the past to different radio and television stations in Zamboanga City, but his real identity remains unknown. Omar also previously threatened to kidnap and kill local journalists who criticized the Abu Sayyaf.

It was not immediately known if Omar also claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Southern Command tagged Abu Sayyaf militant Ismin Sahiron as behind the bombing in Jolo.

Sahiron is the son of Radulan Sahiron, a senior Abu Sayyaf leader in Jolo who is wanted by the United States for terrorism, said Hayudini.

The US Department of Treasury has recently included the elder Sahiron and Abu Sayyaf leaders Jainal Antel Sali Jr. and Isnilon Totoni Hapilon in its list of terrorists.

"The Abu Sayyaf Group instills terror throughout Southeast Asia through kidnappings, bombings, and brutal killings. This action financially isolates senior members of the Abu Sayyaf, who have planned and carried out vicious attacks on Americans, Filipinos and innocent citizens from around the world," said Patrick O'Brien, the Treasury's assistant secretary for terrorist financing and financial crime.

The US government, through the Department of State's Rewards for Justice Campaign, has offered to pay up to P5 million for the capture of individuals belonging to the Abu Sayyaf. In addition, the Department of Defense's US Pacific Command (Uspacom) has added the three terrorists to its Rewards Program offering up to $200,000 for information leading to their capture.

Southern Command chief Major General Gabriel Habacon has ordered a tightened security in the region following the bombing in Jolo. "We are pursuing the terrorists and have tightened security in key areas in Mindanao," Habacon said.

The US had deplored the bombing in Jolo and said it will continue to work closely with the Philippines to fight the threats of terrorism.

Jolo military chief Brigadier General Alexander Aleo said the bomb used in the attack was made from ammonium nitrate and was so powerful that it destroyed the facade of the building.

President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo and Mindanao Senator Aquilino Pimentel condemned the latest attack.

"I condemn in the strongest terms this most recent attack in Sulu. The Armed Forces and police shall leave no stone unturned in the hunt for the perpetrators and I ask our people to remain calm and vigilant," Arroyo said, as she urged the immediate passage of the proposed anti-terrorism law.

The senator feared the bombing was aimed at sabotaging the peace process in Mindanao. "Saboteurs of peace in Sulu are killing innocent people to promote their own ends. It's very unusual incidence that it's budget time and the desire for more appropriations money could be a motive," he said.

Pimentel said the timing of the bombing was "very unusual" as it happened while the Senate is set to take up the budget of the Department of National Defense and Armed Forces of the Philippines. He did not elaborate.

Brigadier General Francisco Callelero, an army spokesman, said the Southern Command was investigating reports the attack was connected to a failed extortion by the Abu Sayyaf group.

"Our investigators found a letter demanding money from the managers of the Sulu Cooperative Store days before the attack," he told reporters in Zamboanga City.
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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 Monday’s 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 building’s 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 Monday’s 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 Monday’s 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 Monday’s attack as an excuse to launch indiscriminate crackdown on Muslims.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf blamed for Jolo bombings
2006-03-28
The military on Tuesday blamed the Abu Sayyaf Group for the latest bombing in Jolo, Sulu, which killed at least five people and injured 17.

Brig. Gen. Jose Angel Honrado, Armed Forces spokesman, said the bombing is consistent with previous Abu Sayyaf attacks.

He said five people were confirmed killed in the blast with 17 more injured. Wires reports earlier counted nine people killed and more than 20 injured.

Tho bomb blast occurred at around 1:15 p.m., Monday, at the two-story Sulu Consumers Cooperative near the Mount Carmel Cathedral in Jolo Town Plaza. Authorities said the bomb was planted on the ground floor of the building.

Initial military reports suggested that the bomb was made from a combination of chemicals, possibly ammonium nitrate and shrapnel.

"It was probably ammonium nitrate, but we are still investigating the blast," Army Brig. Gen. Alexander Aleo said.

Air Force Maj. Gamal Hayudini, a spokesman for the Southern Command, said troops sent to the blast site searched the area for explosives but so far have found nothing. "The situation is under control and authorities have tightened security in Jolo," Hayudini said in a separate interview.

Two weeks ago in Jolo, Abu Sayyaf weapons courier Julkaram Hadjail was captured, and several militants killed in a separate clash.

Security forces also recovered early this month a cache of Abu Sayyaf explosives and homemade bombs near a highway in Indanan, Jolo, where troops regularly pass.
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Southeast Asia
Jolo bombing kills 2
2006-03-27
Two people were killed and seven injured on Monday when a crude bomb exploded at a small retail store in a suspected Muslim extremist attack in the southern Philippines, an army spokesman said.

Major Gamal Hayudini said no group had claimed responsibility for the attack on the island of Jolo, but local police suspected that the al Qaeda-linked militant group Abu Sayyaf was behind it.

"We're still investigating to determine the type of bomb," Hayudini told reporters, adding that troops in the area had gone on alert to ease tension and prevent an escalation of violence.

Last month, a crude bomb ripped through a row of night clubs outside an army base on Jolo, killing a man and wounding 13 people, days before 250 U.S. troops were due to conduct humanitarian missions on the island.

Hayudini said there were still teams of U.S. soldiers on Jolo to complete several construction projects, such as roads, potable water wells and school buildings as part of annual exercises with the Philippine military.
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Southeast Asia
MILF Disowns Rebels Who Surrendered
2006-03-17
An official of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) yesterday disowned the 50 rebels who surrendered on Wednesday to government troops in the southern province of North Cotabato. MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu said the rebels, led by Pendi Ampatuan and Ismael Pagiloyen, belonged to the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) of Nur Misuari, which signed a peace agreement with Manila in Sepember 1996.

“They were former members of the Moro National Liberation Front, and not the MILF. There is no reason for MILF members to surrender because the MILF is a revolutionary organization fighting for self-determination,” Kabalu said in an interview. The surrender of the group of Ampatuan and Pagiloyen, held at a Philippine Army camp in Carmen town, North Cotabato, coincided with the MILF’s announcement that it will resume peace talks with government negotiators next week.

Maj. Gamal Hayudini, a spokesman for the military’s Southern Command, said the rebels voluntarily surrendered. “The rebels have finally returned to the folds of the law after long years of being with the MILF. They have pledged their allegiance to the government and we will help them start a new life and transform them into productive and responsible citizens,” Hayudini told Arab News.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf member captured in the Philippines
2006-03-15
Government soldiers captured a second Abu Sayyaf member in a continuing operation against the al Qaeda-linked terror group, blamed for the spate of bombings and kidnappings of foreigners in the southern Philippines, officials said Tuesday.

Major Gamal Hayudini, a spokesman for the Southern Command, said military intelligence agents nabbed Julkaram Hadjail on Monday in Jolo island. "Hadjail is believed to be an ammo and food courier of the Abu Sayyaf. He is now being interrogated," Hayudini said.

He did not say if the terror man was carrying weapons when security agents captured him in downtown Jolo town.

Fighting also erupted Monday between security and Abu Sayyaf forces in Jolo's Patikul, where Hadjail's group is operating, Hayudini said. "There were no reports of casualties, but troops are pursuing the group of senior Abu Sayyaf sub-leader Jul Asbi Jalmaani," he said.

It was unknown if Hadjail's arrest was connected with the clashes.

The military earlier announced the capture of senior Abu Sayyaf commander Burham Sali, also known as Commander Abu Sanny, linked to the killings in 2001 of kidnapped US citizens and Filipino hostages in the southern Philippines.

Major General Agustin Dema-ala, commander of the Army's 6th Infantry Division, said security forces raided an Abu Sayyaf hideout in Facoma village in Parang town in Maguindanao province and arrested Sali, who is facing a string of kidnapping and murder charges in Basilan island.

Dema-ala implicated Sali to the killing of Kansas missionary Martin Burnham and California man Guillermo Sobero and several Filipino hostages in Basilan island.

Sali escaped a massive military operation in Basilan in 2002 and hid in central Mindanao until security forces tracked him down Sunday.

Many of those kidnapped, including Catholic priest Roel Gallardo, were tortured and beheaded, and the women raped by their captors, a military dossier on Sali's group said.

Sobero, Burham and his wife Gracia, and 17 other Filipino holiday-goers were kidnapped by the Abu Sayyaf group on May 2001 and brought to Basilan island. Sobero was beheaded by the Abu Sayyaf and a year later Martin Burnham died in a US-led military rescue while his wife was wounded.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf kills 2 in Jolo
2006-02-11
Unidentified men killed a police intelligence agent and a decapitated a man in separate attacks Friday in the island of Jolo, ahead of a joint anti-terror training between the Philippines and the US, officials said.

The attacks coincided with the arrival of a small group of US soldiers and humanitarian equipment in Jolo.

Officials said the policeman, Henry Elumbaring, was shot in the head near a bakery store in downtown Jolo, just several meters away from where the unidentified headless body was discovered near a garbage dump by civilians.

"We still don't know who were behind the attacks, but we are taking precautions to protect the Filipino and US troops, participating in the joint anti-terror training here," the commander of the Philippine Army on the island, Brigadier General Nehemias Pajarito, said.

US and Filipino military officials said the training, which will begin on February 20, would involve about 250 American troops and over four thousand soldiers.

Police said it is still investigating the killings and officials would not say if the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group has anything to do with the attacks.

Major Gamal Hayudini, a military spokesman, said the killings were not connected to the training. "This has nothing to do with the joint RP-US training and purely criminal in nature," he said.

Security was tight in Jolo as US soldiers unloaded tons of equipment they will use to build mosques and school rooms and bridges and repair roads as part of the humanitarian aspect of the Balikatan 2006, the codename of the month-long joint RP-US anti-terror training.

Filipino and US troops were spotted guarding the central pier in Jolo where a Philippine Navy cargo vessel transporting the humanitarian aid and equipment arrived from Manila.

Hundreds of civilians lined up the road leading to the pier to take a glimpse of the US troops. "Hey Joe, give us humanitarian aid, bring us food please," a Muslim villager Abdul Omar shouted as a pair of US soldiers walked past them.

On Friday, suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen attacked a group of farm workers in Jolo's Patikul town, killing at least five people, including an infant, and wounding four others. The attack came barely a week after 20 people had been wounded in separate attacks by unidentified men in Patikul and Jolo towns.

Abu Sayyaf gunmen last week also killed a father and his son in Jolo's Busbus village on suspicion the man was a military spy. The group has previously attacked and killed dozens of civilians suspected of aiding the military on the island.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf kill 5 in Sulu
2006-02-04
Suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen attacked a group of farm workers on the island of Sulu, killing at least five people, including an infant, and wounding four others, military officials said on Friday.

Officials said the gunmen, clad in camouflage uniform, raided the farm early Friday morning in the remote village of Liang, Patikul. "Five people are confirmed dead and four others are also wounded in the attack," said Brig. Gen. Alexander Aleo, the island’s military chief.

"Survivors of the carnage told military investigators that the attackers asked them if they were Christians and when they answered yes, the gunmen just opened fire," Aleo told The Manila Times.

The victims said the gunmen had long hair and were armed with automatic weapons, a separate military report said.

Maj. Gamal Hayudini, a spokesman for the military’s Southern Command, said some 20 gunmen were involved in the attack. "We believed this has something to do with a family feud," he said without elaborating.

Hayudini identified those killed as Itting Pontilla, 45; Emma Casipong, 16; Melanie Patinga, 9 months; Selma Patinga and Pedro Casipong. The wounded were Norde Patinga, 38; Jason Patinga, 3, Jennifer Pontilla, 19; and Lucring Casipong, 50.

The attack came barely a week after 20 people were wounded in separate attacks by unidentified men in Patikul and Jolo.

On Wednesday Abu Sayyaf gunmen also killed a father and son in Jolo’s Busbus village on suspicion that the man was a spy for the military. The group has previously attacked and killed dozens of civilians suspected of aiding the military on the island.

Abu Sayyaf militants also fired two rounds of rifle grenades Tuesday at a military post in Indanan where troops from the 53rd Infantry Battalion were stationed. There were no reports of casualties.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf member killed in Jolo
2006-02-02
Government soldiers killed on Tuesday a member of the militant Abu Sayyaf, tied by the authorities to the al-Qaeda terror network, in the island of Jolo, about 950 km south of Manila, a military spokesman said. The fighting erupted ahead of the joint antiterror training exercise between United States and Philippines troops on Jolo island. The Marines attacked an Abu Sayyaf group around 6 a.m. in the town of Patikul, a known lair of the militants blamed for the series of kidnappings and bombings in the Philippines, said Air Force Major Gamal Hayudini of the Southern Command. “One Abu Sayyaf was killed and we have recovered his body. There are no military casualties,” Hayudini said, adding, soldiers tracked down the Abu Sayyaf after civilians tipped off the military.

He said security forces were pursuing other Abu Sayyaf members who managed to escape. The offensive came barely a week after suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen killed a government soldier in Mauboh, Patikul, while he was about to meet two civilian informers. It was unknown if the informers helped set up or were involved in the attack.
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Southeast Asia
3 Abu Sayyaf members surrender
2006-01-21
Three members of the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf group surrendered voluntarily to the military in Jolo island in the southern Philippines, officials said Friday.

Officials said the trio -- Amin Julhari Jarad, 40; Mansul Nusuri Abdul, 35; and Julpadal Nusuri Pandithi, 24 -- handed over two automatic rifles and ammunition to Marine Battalion Landing Team 9 in Patikul town Thursday, said Maj. Gamal Hayudini, chief information officer of the Southern Command.

"They are still being investigated in Jolo," Hayudini said.

A military dossier on the three men implicated them in the kidnapping of trader Ramon Inoferio on Jolo island in November 2004. Inoferio was rescued by government soldiers four months later in Maligay village in Patikul town.

The trio was also linked to many attacks on patrolling soldiers on the island.

Their surrender came barely a month before the Philippines and the United States are to hold joint anti-terror training exercises in Jolo, about 950 kilometers south of Manila.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Sayyaf fleeing arrival of US troops in Sulu
2006-01-10
Abu Sayyaf terrorists are reportedly running scared and have gone into hiding in anticipation of the arrival of US Special Forces troops in Sulu.

"The arrival of the US forces sent some psychological impact on the Abu Sayyaf and probably scared them away," said Maj. Gamal Hayudini, Armed Forces Southern Command information chief.

The arrival of US troops is part of the "Balikatan 2006" military exercises in Sulu, which are expected to start on the last week of this month or first week of February.

It will replicate the Balikatan in Basilan in 2002 where the Abu Sayyaf leadership was flushed out by Filipino troops backed by US technical assistance and advice.

However, the Balikatan in Sulu will focus on the development aspect to wage war against poverty.

Hayudini said since the military exercises were announced, government forces have not encountered any Abu Sayyaf band in the province.

The relentless military offensive has forced the Abu Sayyaf leadership to flee their jungle strongholds, he added.

However, Hayudini said the Abu Sayyaf might have broken up into small factions to escape the massive military manhunt.

"Perhaps they are just observing and in a wait-and-see position," he said.

The military cannot really say what the Abu Sayyaf commanders have on their minds "because these are terrorists," Hayudini said.

On the other hand, Brig. Gen. Alexander Aleo, anti-terror unit Task Force Comet chief based in Sulu, said the Abu Sayyaf might have been scared of the US Special Forces troops.

The Abu Sayyaf had split into small groups and are very mobile, unlike before when they were holding out in jungle camps, he added.

Aleo said the military is also ready to face any impending threat of the Abu Sayyaf against US troops participating in the Balikatan in Sulu.

Security measures have been set up to protect Filipino and American soldiers who will conduct humanitarian missions as what was done in Basilan in 2002, he added.

Aleo, Army commander in Basilan when the Balikatan 02-1 was staged in 2002, said while the military exercise was being held the offensive against the Abu Sayyaf was ongoing.

Armed Forces chief Gen. Generoso Senga has a standing order to "neutralize" the Abu Sayyaf leadership, he added.

Earlier, US Col. James Linder, Joint Special Operation Task Force-Philippines (JSOTF-P) chief, assured the military that the Balikatan in Sulu will be more of a humanitarian mission involving rehabilitation of schools, building of water wells, road rehabilitation, and the bringing of health facilities and medical mission to depressed and poor areas.

Marines and Army troops have been running after the remaining three top leaders of the Abu Sayyaf in Sulu.

They are Radulan Sahiron, Umbra Jumdail alias Dr. Abu Pula, and the youngest leader Albader Parad, who were dislodged from their camps in Karawan complex in Indanan and Patikul towns in Sulu.

There are reports that Abu Sayyaf chieftain Khaddafi Janjalani and two of their leaders Isnilon Hapilon and Jainal Antel Sali alias Abu Solaiman have sneaked into Sulu after slipping out of Central Mindanao.

However, the military is verifying information that the elusive Janjalani has been moving around in Basilan and Sulu to escape pursuing troops.
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Southeast Asia
Mindanao troops warned of attacks
2006-01-04
Troops have been told to maintain high alert over the possible incursions of suspected local and foreign terrorists in big cities and large towns in Mindanao.

The order was made following minor blasts that rocked Cotabato recently, the military said on Monday.

The Southern Command (Southcom) of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) admitted that the al- Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf and the Jemaah Islamiya groups remain big threats to the generally peaceful situation in Mindanao.

Maj. Gamal Hayudini, Southcom information officer, said the military does not discount the possibility of terrorism in the command’s area of responsibility, adding "the Abu Sayyaf and the Jemaah Islamiya remain security risks in the South."

As the year 2006 ended, a couple of minor blasts happened in Cotabato City, including one that hit a passenger bus. However, no major injuries were reported.

"It was meant to scare people and not necessarily to physically harm anyone", the Southcom official said.

Task Force -Zamboanga (TF-Zambo) uniformed and non-uniformed personnel, including women, were deployed in downtown areas here to complement mobile and foot patrols and monitoring activities undertaken by the Philippine National Police (PNP) and other peacekeeping units.

TF Zambo is assigned to go over the internal defense of this city.

The Southcom official said the main priority of military personnel in Mindanao is on the government’s anti-terror campaign.

Hayudini added that vigilance has been heightened to ensure that there is round-the-clock monitoring and surveillance of groups that may attack this city and other areas under Southcom.,

The military does not intend to give suspected terrorists half-a-chance to pursue their bloody activities, he stressed.

The Abu Sayyaf is still the main target of the Southcom in Sulu while some elements believed to belong to the regional Jemaah Islamiya terror network are being pursued by troops in the rest of Mindanao.

"Pursuit operations against the Abu Sayyaf is a continuing effort. We will see to it that the group will be crippled down to its last element. We intend to do this to prevent the gang from recruiting people and expanding its depleted membership," Hayudini explained.

"When left unattended, the Abu Sayyaf and Jemaah Islamiya will continue to sow terror, kill innocent civilians, and destroy government and civilian targets" Hayudini said.

Despite a strict security set-up, key cities and provinces in Mindanao have been previously bombed by the Abu Sayyaf and the Jemaaah Islamiya for more than a decade now.

The police, military and public officials have appealed to the people to be vigilant and report suspicious behavior of strangers in their areas to enable authorities to neutralize terror gangs.
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