Southeast Asia |
Aussies deny involvement of elite troops in Philippines hunt |
2005-10-11 |
The Philippines has denied that elite Australian troops have joined Filipino soldiers in hunting for Jemaah Islamiah militants. Philippines military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual said Australian security forces have only been involved in investigations into recent bomb attacks in the country, and the Philippine constitution bars any foreign troops from engaging in military operations. He was responding to reports in News Ltd newspapers, citing an unnamed former agent as saying that Australian agents and Special Air Service Regiment troops were cooperating with Filipino soldiers in the hunt for senior terrorist figures. Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer confirmed earlier this week that Australian personnel were in the Philippines, providing assistance to Filipino police and armed forces, but would not provide further details. However, Pascual also warned that at least two terrorist cells composed of Filipino and Indonesian Muslim militants were plotting bombings in the Philippines capital Manila. He said military intelligence agents were tracking down at least four people in each of the cells, but identified them only as members of the al-Qaeda linked groups Jemaah Islamiah and Abu Sayyaf. Philippine security officials said earlier that Abu Sayyaf chieftain Khaddafy Janjalani was hiding with alleged Jemaah Islamiah militants Dulmatin and Umar Patek in the southern Philippines. "They obviously are believed to still be in South-East Asia, possibly the Philippines. But the nature of these terrorist organisations is that they can move from country to country," US Embassy spokesman Matthew Lussenhop told Manila Radio DZBB today. "We're working very closely with the Philippine government, Philippine security, to shut down that kind of possibility that terrorists can move in and out of the country," he said. |
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Southeast Asia |
Abu Sayyaf guerrilla captured |
2005-06-27 |
A Muslim Abu Sayyaf rebel was captured yesterday by government troops in a raid in a southern Philippine city, a military spokesman said. Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual said Hajan Maldam was captured in a predawn raid in Zamboanga City, 875km south of Manila. Pascual said Maldam was among the group of Abu Sayyaf rebels who kidnapped Catholic priest Cirilo Nacorda and 16 public school teachers in the nearby province of Basilan on June 8, 1994. âThe suspect was positively identified by two kidnap victims,â he said. âHe is undergoing interrogation.â |
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Military deploys more troops to Metro Manila | |||
2005-06-10 | |||
THE MILITARY deployed more troops to Metro Manila from the provinces in anticipation of anti-government protests after a former official of the National Bureau of Investigation directly linked President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to cheating in the May 2004 election. Lawyer Samuel Ong, former deputy director of the National Bureau of Investigation, disclosed on Friday that he had a "master tape" in which Arroyo sought the help of an election official in ensuring that she would win the presidential election by at least one million votes. Arroyo has kept mum following Ong's expose save for a brief statement from Malacañang, which said that the President did not violate any law. "It is our duty to protect the people and the Constitution," Military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual said early Saturday, as GMA Network's "Saksi" newscast showed truckloads of soldiers from the Special Operations Command (Socom) in Northern Luzon headed towards the capital. The same report said that at least six military trucks have reached Metro Manila. Pascual said the Socom soldiers would help their counterparts from the National Capital Region Command (NCRCom), which had been on placed on "red alert." The NCRCom has been deploying a Marine battalion each to the North and South Luzon Expressways and the Coastal Road, the main roads leading to Metro Manila, since Thursday. Army spokesman Major Bartolome Baccaro confirmed that they expected at least 13 truckloads of soldiers from the Socom but downplayed their presence, saying they are "parading troops" for the Independence Day celebrations on June 12, Sunday.
Malacañang came out with two versions of Ong's disclosure in compact discs on Monday, claiming that one was the "original" while the other was "tampered." Following his exposé Friday, Ong appealed to the public for support and then sought refuge at the San Carlos Seminary along the area of Guadalupe in Makati City.
These conversations have apparently been recorded by members of the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines or ISAFP. The wiretaps were supposedly done on the instructions of high-ranking ISAFP officials. There are various theories as to why the wiretapping was ordered. One is that the officials wanted to keep an eye on Garcillano, to make sure that he would not switch sides and favor actor Fernando Poe Jr. instead. Another is that the officers wanted to protect themselves because they were being asked to help in the Arroyo campaign, and they needed to cover their backs by gathering evidence to show they were doing these on orders from above. Another theory is that the officers were aghast at the extent of the manipulation of the vote and wanted to record the fraud.
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Southeast Asia |
JI member was an Abu Sayyaf bomb trainer |
2005-03-23 |
HE LOOKED young enough to pass for a teenager. And nothing in his lean frame suggested he was what the military portrayed him to be: a man who trained terror bombers. A faint hint of a smile even crossed Rohmat's face when the Armed Forces yesterday presented the Indonesian -- hands bound in cuffs -- to the media, saying he helped plan with the Abu Sayyaf Group leaders the Valentine's Day bombings in Makati City. Intelligence officials said Rohmat trained the Abu Sayyaf in bomb making, particularly the use of mobile phones to trigger explosions. Like many Indonesians, Rohmat goes by one name only. Linked to the al-Qaeda network of Osama bin Laden, the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) has been blamed for a string of terrorist attacks in Southeast Asia, including the 2002 bombings at Indonesia's Bali resort, which killed nearly 200 people. "He is a big fish," Armed Forces public information chief Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual said. "He was responsible for training the people involved in the Makati attack." A military statement said Rohmat -- also known by the aliases "Zaki," Hamdan and Akil -- had admitted a mouthful to investigators: ⢠He was present when the ASG leaders planned the Feb. 14 bombings in Makati, General Santos City and Davao City, which killed eight people and wounded more than 150;If what Rohmat said was true, it would belie earlier military reports that Janjalani had been killed in a military bombing in Maguindanao province last year. Only 25 years old, Rohmat was the liaison officer with the ASG of the Southeast Asian regional terror network Jemaah Islamiyah, the military statement said. Tall and slim, he carried a deep scar on the right side of his mouth -- the only visible mark in his face that jarred with his boyish looks. He and a Filipino companion were arrested at a military checkpoint in Datu Saudi Ampatuan town, Maguindanao, last March 16 while on board a motorcycle, the military said. Soldiers became suspicious of him because he could not speak Tagalog well. Rohmat was the latest of a number of Indonesian militants arrested in the country in recent years for alleged involvement with JI. They included three Indonesians who, along with an ASG member, were arrested in Zamboanga last Dec. 14. The top JI operative in the country, Fathur Roman Al-Ghozi, was killed in North Cotabato province in 2003 after escaping from a Camp Crame detention center. "With Zaki's capture, the Philippine government dealt another serious blow to the JI's and the ASG's financial linkages, operational capability and organizational morale," declared Armed Forces Deputy Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Edilberto Adan as the Indonesian stood behind him. "It was revealed by our suspect Zaki that he was present during the planning of the bombing. Charges that will be filed are now being prepared," Adan said. When pressed by reporters, Adan could not elaborate on the alleged bomb conspiracy. "The name Zaki has been appearing in our various investigations of captured personalities," he said. "It is very possible that he is involved in the other atrocities or operations of the Abu Sayyaf in the previous years." Authorities said Rohmat illegally entered the country through Zamboanga City in January 2000. He told investigators that he was appointed by a JI leader named Zulkifly, a top regional terror suspect arrested in Malaysia two years ago, as liaison officer with the ASG, Adan said in a statement. Adan said Rohmat trained in the MILF's Camp Abubakar in Maguindanao and, when it was overrun by government forces in 2000, Rohmat's group moved to Camp Jabal Quba in Butig town, Lanao del Sur province. There he finished top of his "class" in October 2002 and the following year began training ASG members on explosives in Patikul, Jolo, Sulu. Rohmat also told investigators that he was wounded last November in an air raid in Datu Piang town but was sheltered by some elements of the MILF's 105th Base Command while he recuperated, the military said. Authorities immediately cleared the MILF of links to the JI. "The involvement of the MILF here is never on an organizational basis. Certain members may now and then cooperate, never the organization," Defense Undersecretary Ricardo Blancaflor said. On the other hand, he said, the "tactical alliance between the Abu Sayyaf and JI has shown itself several times in the past." Immigration Commissioner Alipio Fernandez said he issued a "mission order" against Rohmat last March 13 based on Army intelligence reports. The mission order empowers immigration agents to detain a suspected illegal alien. Fernandez said it was only during Rohmat's interrogation that the latter confessed his true identity. He said the Indonesian would undergo deportation proceedings for being an undesirable alien but only after criminal charges against him were resolved. Malacañang commended the military and the Bureau of Immigration for Rohmat's arrest. "The Philippines is doing its share in fighting terrorism in this part of the world and we will continue to work with our neighbors in seeing to it that the threat is contained," Press Secretary Ignacio Bunye said. Bunye said the government drive against terrorism had nothing to do with religion. "Religious faith is never an issue in our campaign against terrorism," Bunye said. "This is a matter of enforcing the rule of law among all, regardless of creed, ethnic origin or social station." Bunye added: "We have to deal with the bad eggs hiding under the cloak of religion to foment terrorist goals." |
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Southeast Asia |
Police arrest Valentine's Day bombing |
2005-03-04 |
![]() The suspect will be presented to the public by Interior Secretary Angelo Reyes later Friday said police spokesman Senior Superintendent Leopoldo Bataoil. Bana, who was wounded in a clash with police Thursday before escaping and later turning himself in, is believed to have supplied the explosives used in simultaneous bombings in the financial district of Manila which left as many as six dead and about a hundred injured on Valentine's Day. |
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Southeast Asia |
MNLF festivities up to 16 dead, more info |
2005-02-08 |
A Muslim rebellion entered its second day on the southern Philippines island of Jolo Tuesday as the toll rose to 16 dead, military officials said. Skirmishes were reported around the town of Panamao between several hundred followers of Nur Misuari, a politician and former separatist guerrilla leader, and Philippines security forces. Thirteen Marine soldiers died in one ambush in Patikul in southern Jolo on Monday after fighting erupted earlier in the day between soldiers and rebels, Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual said. Also on Monday another soldier was slain in fighting in Panamao while two Muslim soldiers, who were rebuilding a mosque as part of a civic project, were killed in an attack in Parang, Brigadier General Agustin Dema-ala said. Dema-ala, commander of an anti-terrorist task force based on Jolo, said there were reports of the rebels also suffering casualties. The rebellion started when at least 400 Misuari supporters had attacked several Jolo military detachments at dawn Monday, armed with recoilless rifles and other assault weapons. Aside from the military outposts, security sources said the raiders also targeted government projects including bridges, roads, and clinics. Military officials said they believed the Misuari faction had received help from the Abu Sayyaf, a Muslim kidnap gang based on Jolo that is on the US list of foreign terrorist organizations. Misuari, who led a decades-old Muslim separatist rebellion in the south from the early 1970s, signed a peace pact with the government in 1996, and was later elected governor of a Muslim autonomous region in the area. But he and his followers launched a new rebellion in 2001 after the national government refused to endorse his re-election bid. The government crushed the uprising in Jolo and nearby Zamboanga city with the loss of more than 100 lives and Misuari fled to nearby Malaysia, where he was arrested and deported in early 2002. Misuari is now detained at a police camp south of Manila while on trial for rebellion. |
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Southeast Asia | |
Eight Philippines troops killed in armed Muslim attacks | |
2005-02-08 | |
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Southeast Asia | ||
Five communist rebels, Muslim gunmen killed in Philippine clashes | ||
2005-02-04 | ||
ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines - Two ranking communist rebels and three Muslim gunmen were killed in separate clashes with government troops in the southern Philippines, the military said on Friday.
![]() Local communist rebel leader Bandi Mamauag died during the fighting, while a woman guerrilla identified only as Imee, a squad commander, died in hospital from gunshot wounds. In the southern province of Zamboanga del Sur, troops clashed with Muslim gunmen in the town of Dinas also on Thursday, killing three of them, Pascual said. Troops recovered three high-powered firearms and one pump boat from the armed men. Pascual said the military was uncertain whether the gunmen were affiliated with any of the Muslim rebel and criminal groups that operate in the southern Philippines. | ||
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Southeast Asia |
2 soldiers, 1 child, 3 hard boyz killed in Sulu |
2005-02-02 |
A CHILD, three Abu Sayyaf bandits, and two government soldiers were killed following an encounter on the island province of Sulu on Tuesday, a military spokesman said. The child, hurt in the crossfire, was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital, Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual said. One of the slain bandits was identified as Padiwan Tarsim while those on the government side were identified as Private First Class Ruel Abrenica and Private Eddie Dalipas, Pascual said. Another male child and two soldiers, identified only as Technical Sergeant Tabunicao and Private First Class Marcos, were injured and were brought to the Southern Command (SouthCom) Hospital, he said. While on pursuit operations in barangay (village) Kapok Pungol, Maimbung town at aroud 6 a.m., soldiers from the 53rd Infantry Battalion engaged some 60 Abu Sayyaf bandits in a two-hour firefight, Pascual said. Three M16 rifles and two M203 grenade launchers were recovered from the scene, Pascual said. The clash came amid the government's intensified counter-terrorist offensives in Mindanao. |
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Southeast Asia |
Janjalani may have fled to Malaysia |
2004-11-29 |
THE MILITARY is verifying reports Abu Sayyaf leader Khadaffy Janjalani has escaped to Malaysia, its spokesman said Monday. Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual issued the statement in response to Tawi Tawi governor Sadikul Sahali's claim that the elusive bandit slipped past a military dragnet in Central Mindanao. "We are verifying those reports," Pascual told reporters in Camp Aguinaldo military headquarters. Sahali was quoted as saying that Janjalani and some 20 other bandits went to Mardanas and Mamanok Islands in Malaysia from Sibutu town in Tawi Tawi. Last week, the military said Janjalani was in Central Mindanao, seeking cover in areas where a ceasefire between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) was in place. |
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Southeast Asia |
2 Filippino JI jugged |
2004-08-03 |
Two Filipino members of the Al Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah network allegedly behind a deadly bombing attack that left 22 people dead in the Philippine capital four years ago have been captured, an army spokesman said Tuesday. Lieutenant Colonel Buenaventura Pascual said the two suspects, Mamasao Naga and Abdul Pata, were arrested in the southern city of Marawi in the past two days but he declined to give further details. The two had earlier been identified by captured Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) bomb-maker Fathur Rohman al-Ghozi as the perpetrators of the bombing of the Manila light rail system in December 2000 that left 22 people dead, Pascual said. He said the JI had planned to use the remainder of the stockpile for a bombing campaign in Singapore. Pascual said al-Ghozi had previously identified the two arrested Filipinos as part of the team that carried out the actual bombing and that warrants for their arrest had already been issued. |
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Southeast Asia | ||
Toe tag for 3 MILF hard boyz | ||
2004-07-13 | ||
Three Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILT) rebels who are said to be protecting illegal fishermen were killed in a clash with government forces off the southern Philippine city of Zamboanga on Monday, the military reported Tuesday. The clash with the disgruntled MILF rebels occurred early Monday at the vicinity of Barangay Licomo, Vitali district, local Army Infantry Division commander Major General Trifonio Salazar said in a statement.
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