India-Pakistan |
Three Lashkar-e-Taiba guerrillas arrested in Kashmir |
2007-10-16 |
![]() |
Link |
India-Pakistan |
Two Algerians accused of assassination attempt against Pakistani President |
2007-10-07 |
Two Algerians living in Pakistan were arrested in 2005 accused of an assasination atempt against Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. According to Pak institute report, security forces arrested the Algerians Abu Al-Ghayas and Abu Sofiane who were coming from Rawalpindi where Musharraf escaped an assassination attempt in 2005. Pakistani intelligence said the Algerians who were illegally staying in Pakistan had links to an armed group that attempt to assassinate the Pakistani president in 2005. Pakistani President's plane was fired on as it took off in July 2007 from a military airfield in Rawalpindi. At that time, security officials said Pakistani intelligence foiled a new plan of Al-Qaeda to assassinate the Pakistani president. According to Pakistani authorities, Mushtaq Ahmed, a former officer in Pakistani air force was a suspect in the failed assassination attempt on 14 December 2003. He had been sentenced to death by a military court days before he escaped from military detention in Rawalpindi. Pakistani minister of information Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said security forces had arrested a non determined number of suspects involved in the assassination attempt since the arrest of Abu Faraj al-Libbi a Libyan believed to be al-Qaeda's third-highest-ranking official. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
Muslim Cleric Detained |
2006-08-04 |
![]() Known for its kidnapping and ransom activities, Abu Sofia often provides sanctuary to members of the militant Islamist separatist group Abu Sayyaf and both organisations have been involved in terrorism. Obatay said Abedin's arrest came 10 days after three other suspected Abu Sofia bandits were nabbed while holding meetings with their recruits in the village of Bulalo, in Sultan Kudarat town, Mindanao. The three named Alo, Talip and Manan and all surnamed Binago - were involved in the abduction of Korean Jae Kwon Yoon and his Filipino partner Belonio, in February 2004. Yoon and Belonio were snatched by heavily armed men in Palimbang, Sultan Kudarat province, while surveying sites there for treasure hunting. The victims were released after relatives paid ransom. Colonel Julieto Ando, the army's Sixth Infantry Division spokesperson, said that Abedin was also a renowned bomb-maker. "He is also involved in bomb making. The suspect was detained at a military prison facility located in Pedro Colina Hill," Ando told AKI. However, the arrest of the cleric has upset local Muslim militant organizations that have staged protests. Amirah Lidasan, head of Suara Bangsamoro group, denounced Abedin's arrest, saying the victim is a Muslim cleric who belongs to United Youth Bangsamoro for Peace and Development, a non-government organization based in Maguindanao. "We demand his immediate release. We denounce the use of Uztads (religious teachers) as fall guys of [Filipino] President Arroyo's renewed campaign against Abu Sayyaf and Jemaah Islamiyah in Mindanao," Lidasan told AKI in a telephone interview. Demanding the release of Abedin is also Eid Kabalu, spokesperson for the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), who confirmed that the cleric belongs to their organization. "But he is not a member of any Abu Sayyaf group or kidnap gangs. He was a victim of mistaken identity," Kabalu said. The MILF, which is engaged in peace talks with Manila, repeatedly denies links with Abu Sayyaf militants. The Abu Sayyaf Group is a home grown terrorist organisation in the Philippines which in the early 1990s received financial support from the al-Qaeda terrorist network via Osama bin Laden's brother-in-law, Saudi Arabian businessman Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, who at that time headed a network of Islamic charities and universities in Zamboanga City, Mindanao. The group gained international notoriety with the kidnapping for ransom and murder of foreigners and Christian clerics. Since its inception the group has also carried out bombings, assassinations and extortion in its fight for an independent Islamic state in western Mindanao |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
Arroyo addresses the situation in Mindanao |
2005-09-23 |
SHORT stint, but with a very tough is what new Southern Command chief Lieutenant General Edilberto Adan will face in Mindanao where the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) is having its biggest battle against terrorists. The AFP made this assessment in Metro Manila as Malacañang reportedly ordered Adan to get all the terrorists operating in the Island. Ten different factions in Mindanao--including the Abu Sayyaf group, Jemaah Islamiya (JI) and the New People's Army (NPA)--were included in the assessment report. The other leading forces mentioned in the assessment was the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) Misuari breakaway group based in Western Mindanao, the Abu Sofia Group and the Pentagon Kidnap-for-Ransom Group (KRG) based in Central Mindanao and the Al-Qaeda linked group. Three others are identified with "lost command groups." As this developed, government troops battled the Misuari break-away forces in Sacol island, west-coast of the city last Monday morning, according to a report reaching the Southern command. No immediate casualties on either side were reported. The security forces deployed in the island were making their morning patrol when they chanced upon the heavily armed group. They clashed for several minutes before the armed group retreated, a Southcom source disclosed. The AFP lists the Misuari-renegade forces as among the ten active terrorist groups operating in Southern Philippines. They are mostly scattered in Sulu, Basilan and Zamboanga. The group formed part of the Misuari rebel forces that staged a short-lived uprising in Cabatangan this city in 2001. The incident gained worldwide attention when they held hostage more than 200 civilians living near their Cabatangan lair, which was overrun later by the military with air support from the Philippine Air Force that bombarded their hideout. Many people perished in the attack. The group set free all their hostages after a successful three-day negotiation that also led to their freedom somewhere in the Eleven Islands near Sacol. Meantime, President Gloria Macapagal Arrovo denied reports that the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) is giving sanctuary to the terrorists in their territory here in Mindanao. The President made the denial following persistent insinuations against her government that the MILF, with whom her administration is currently locked in peace talks, is coddling terrorists in Central Mindanao. She said, on the contrary, that the MILF is helping the government hunt down the Abu Sayyaf and the JI militant forces in Liguasan Marsh, where they reportedly hide from pursuing government troops. The vast Liguasan marshland is hard to penetrate by security forces, the AFP admitted. Arroyo made the statement when interviewed in Manila. After her successful trip to the United Nations Security Council last week, where she had the prestigious honor of presiding over the powerful council, she was hailed as the first Filipino leader, first Asian and the first woman to bang the gavel as chair of the UN Security Council. One of her main appeals to the rest of the world leaders is to vigorously fight terrorism that grips the entire free world. Her last minute instruction to Adan when the latter assumed his post here last August 9 was to capture Abu Sayyaf overall chieftain Kadaffy Janjalani dead or alive, utilizing all AFP available resources under his AOR here in the South. "This will help tone down his critics who are against his appointment as Southcom chief," a Malacanang news source said when reached for comment. Adan's post here was contested by newly promoted Lt. General Samuel Bagasin, who recently assumed as AFP deputy chief of staff, the post vacated by Adan. Bagasin was the former 4th Infantry Division commander based in Cagayan de Oro. He was highly recommended as the supposed 27th Southcom commander by the Board of Generals to replace retired Southcom head Lieutenant General Alberto Braganza; but his appointment was overturned by Arroyo, as the commander-in-chief, and instead placed Adan at the helm of the biggest AFP unified command outside Manila. Adan said he will do his very best to get Janjalani before he retires in January, next year. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
Bad Guys forming alliance in the Philippines |
2005-03-13 |
The Muslim extremist group Abu Sayyaf has forged alliances with local bandits and militants other than al-Qaida-linked Jemaah Islamiyah, widening its reach and making it more lethal despite battle setbacks, officials said. The cooperation has allowed militants to undergo joint terror training in the southern Philippines, share resources and combatants, and provide refuge to guerrillas on the run, according to officials and security documents. Such collusion was shown in the Feb. 14 bombing of a bus that killed four people in Manila's financial district. The Abu Sayyaf collaborated with Muslim converts to carry out the attack, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The Valentine's Day assault was one of three almost-simultaneous bombings that killed eight people and injured more than 100 in Manila and two southern cities. An Abu Sayyaf leader, Abu Sulaiman, said the attacks were to avenge military operations against Muslim guerrillas on southern Jolo island. "This indicates they could now launch nationally coordinated attacks," said Rodolfo Mendoza, a police official with extensive knowledge of Islamic militant groups. Aside from known ties with Jemaah Islamiyah, the Abu Sayyaf has forged alliances with the Rajah Solaiman Movement, comprising Christian converts to Islam; the kidnap-for-ransom gang Abu Sofia; hard-line members of the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front, known as MILF, and gunmen loyal to jailed Muslim rebel leader Nur Misuari, Mendoza and other officials said. Abu Sofia gunmen, based in the central region of southern Mindanao island, have given refuge to Abu Sayyaf guerrilla leaders Khaddafy Janjalani and Isnilon Hapilon and their followers after military offensives displaced them three years ago from southern Basilan island, military officials said. A police intelligence report said the Abu Sayyaf plotted bombings and kidnappings with Muslim converts based in Luzon. The converts also have sheltered Abu Sayyaf guerrillas in Manila and outlying provinces, the report said. Abu Sayyaf guerrillas led by Janjalani have received sanctuary and bomb-making and combat training in MILF strongholds, military officials said. The MILF is engaged in sporadic peace talks with the government and officially denies links to the Abu Sayyaf. Several commanders of the Abu Sayyaf, the MILF and Misuari's followers met last year near the southern town of Siocon to discuss tactical cooperation and unspecified joint plans, said a senior security official who spoke on condition of anonymity. Abu Sayyaf's links with the MILF have incensed military officials. They say Abu Sayyaf guerrillas have sought cover in MILF lairs, knowing that the military finds it difficult to attack those areas because of a truce agreement and peace talks between the MILF and the government. Security officials differ in their analysis of alliances between the Abu Sayyaf and other armed groups, with most saying they were on a "tactical or operational level." Government officials have acknowledged the links but were unclear on their depth. "There are new groups that are coming in and being recruited by the Abu Sayyaf, like this Balik Islam (Muslim convert) group," President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's spokesman, Silvestre Afable, said. "I don't really know the nature of this phenomenon, but I think it makes it dangerous," he said. Mendoza said statements from captured rebels indicate the groups formed a formal coalition two to three years ago. Though the government says the group is a spent force with about 300 gunmen on the run most of the time, officials acknowledge it remains lethal. Authorities have said the rebels, employing Muslim converts, were behind a bomb attack that set a popular ferry ablaze last year, killing more than 100 people in the country's worst terrorist attack. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
Rift in MILF threatens Filippino peace talks |
2005-02-22 |
Lakma Kalidatu was having dinner with her six grandchildren when they were interrupted by a burst of automatic gunfire. In an instant, she spirited away the children to a nearby Islamic school, leaving behind everything. "We're still afraid to return to our village," Kalidatu, 60, said as she washed clothes outside the school where about 300 other refugees have been staying since early January. They have every reason to be concerned about their safety. Since December 2003, the villages around the marshy area in Maguindao province on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao have seen frequent and bloody battles between soldiers and rebels from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). Military and local officials blame a small and radical MILF faction for the violence, which they say is an attempt to sabotage peace talks aimed at ending a 36-year separatist insurgency that has claimed at least 120,000 lives. "They are the enemy of the people, the enemy of development," said Hadji Yasan Ampatuan, a member of the provincial legislative council and a nephew of Maguindanao governor Datu Andal Ampatuan. The military said splits have emerged in the MILF, dividing it along ideological, political and economic lines. It said there could be as many as seven groups jostling for control. Major-General Raul Rellano, the army's regional commander, said the rogue MILF faction posed a "real threat" to the talks that have been brokered by Malaysia since 2001. "There is a rift among them," Rellano told Reuters, saying the peace process would be moving at a much faster pace if the MILF were a solid organization. Citing army intelligence estimates, Rellano said about 30 percent of the MILF's 11,000 fighters belonged to radical forces that refuse to halt their war for a separate Islamic state in the southern third of this mainly Roman Catholic country. The Muslim people of Mindanao call themselves Bangsamoro. The military said the radicals, headed by leaders with deep religious backgrounds, have active links with foreign militants from Jemaah Islamiah (JI) and the homegrown groups Abu Sayyaf and Abu Sofia. Rellano said the MILF renegades were behind the attack on an army base in Kalidatu's village that broke a shaky 17-month cease-fire in January. Silvestre Afable, the government's chief peace negotiator and communications director for President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, has warned that hardcore militants might step up attacks as talks inched toward a final peace agreement. "Terrorism is one of the challenges we are facing -- not only as a threat to law and order but as a threat to peace in Mindanao," he told a recent briefing for foreign media. Rebel leaders dispute reports of splits in the movement, saying the violence in some parts of central Mindanao was rooted in intense local politics and ancient blood feuds. Eid Kabalu, a rebel spokesman, said the MILF was dragged into the conflicts among rival local politicians only because some had sought help from relatives within the guerrilla group. "Blood is thicker than water," Kabalu said. "This bloody cycle of vendetta killing, known among locals as 'rido', is often seen as truce violations because some MILF members and militiamen find themselves on opposite fences." Kabalu said there were hundreds of unresolved killings in Muslim areas of the South due to political rivalries, land disputes and even petty quarrels among neighbors. The military says the involvement of MILF elements in the violence had exposed the leadership's weak control over its forces as it struggles to win support from some guerrilla forces influenced and led by Islamic clerics. "They are hiding behind 'rido'," said an army intelligence official. "Based on our sources on the ground, there's really a group, opposed to the talks, that is out to embarrass the MILF leadership." He said some MILF members also were resentful because the peace process not only restrained criminal activities to raise funds but forced them to run after their own comrades engaged in kidnappings, robberies and extortion. "Those are perceptions," Mohaqher Iqbal, the chief MILF peace negotiator, told Reuters, saying the movement allowed for healthy debate among its members. "But, at the end of the day, it is always the central committee that decides." Iqbal said factionalism was not an issue at the moment but could become one if the peace deal is not acceptable to the vast majority of Muslims in the Philippines. "We will never break that vicious cycle of endless violence and bloody struggles," he said. "New groups will emerge to fight for the rights of the Bangsamoro people." |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
MILF not acting against "renegade" commanders |
2005-02-10 |
It has been a month since the Feb. 10 bloody attack by renegade Moro guerrillas on a roadside Army detachment here and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front's ceasefire committee still has not provided the police and the military with any word on the whereabouts of the perpetrators. Seven soldiers were killed and two others where wounded in the attack by some 200 guerrillas led by Ustadz Wahid, now the subject of an extensive police and military hunt. Maj. Gen. Raul Relano, commander of the Army's 6th Infantry Division, said the military will continue to go after Tundok and at least three other commanders who plotted the attack. Relano said Wahid and his men have lately been seen mingling with Abu Sayyaf and suspected Jemaah Islamiyah elements in secluded spots at the Liguasan Marsh, a 220,000 hectare delta at the boundary of Maguindanao, Sultan Kudarat and North Cotabato. "Our informants, some of them Maguindanaon religious leaders, have also informed us that Wahid was also seen in the Butilen area (in Datu Piang, Maguindanao) which we bombarded last month due to the convergence there of Abu Sayyaf and suspected JI operatives," he said. Relano said he is convinced that renegade MILF commanders known for their hardline position on the ongoing government-MILF peace talks, have "personal" links with foreign terrorists. "The MILF leadership has stated repeatedly that it did not order Wahid and his men to attack the detachment in Mamasapano and even emphasized that Wahid did it on his own. We in the military are quite apprehensive that, without the knowledge of the MILF, radical commanders like Wahid may have long been liaising with foreign terrorist organizations," he said. Relano said the 6th ID's main concern now is to prevent renegade commanders like Wahid and an equally radical preacher, Amiril Kato Ombra, from embarking on attacks to derail the ongoing peace talks and to embarrass the leadership of their moderate chieftain, Al-Haj Murad. Maguindanao Gov. Datu Andal Ampatuan said President Arroyo and the Department of National Defense should look seriously into reports that renegade rebel groups have been coddling key leaders of the Abu Sofia, a local kidnap-for-ransom gang, and the equally notorious Abu Sayyaf. "This is a very serious concern. We need to pool our efforts in addressing this security problem," Ampatuan told The STAR in the Maguindanao dialect. Relano said they remain optimistic that they can neutralize Wahid and other renegade commanders whom the MILF has disowned due to their activities that have unduly affected the supposedly stable implementation of the ceasefire. "What gives us hope now that we will succeed is the outpouring of support for our efforts from Muslim political and religious leaders in a manner never before recorded in the history of Central Mindanao," he said. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
MILF commander text messaged Filippino counterpart before the attack |
2005-01-12 |
JUST BEFORE some 100 Moro guerrillas launched a powerful attack on an Army detachment in Maguindanao province, the leader of the rebel force was texting the commander of the Army unit he was about to assault. "We are text mates," Colonel Jerry Jalandoni, commander of the Army's 604th Infantry Brigade, told the Inquirer. "He was texting me before the attack. He was blaming the Army for the death of Bides Binago." Jalandoni's textmate was Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) commander Abdulwahid Tundok, head of the MILF's 105th Brigade, which assaulted and overran the base of the 37th Infantry Battalion under Jalandoni's command. Bides Binago was the leader of the Abu Sofia kidnap-for-ransom gang whose death in an earlier military operation provoked Sunday's MILF attack. Tundok, now the object of a military manhunt, gave no inkling in his text message that he was about to attack. Troops recaptured the detachment on Monday afternoon and after bloody clashes in Barangay Linantangan in which at least 17 rebels and seven soldiers were killed, the military said. Major General Raul Relano, commander of the Army's 6th Infantry Division, said rebel casualties could rise to as many as 50 since the military had bombarded the rebels with 105-mm howitzer cannons and bombs from OB10 bombers. "We fired 150 rounds of howitzers. They hit their targets accurately," he said. Relano said seven soldiers died while one was wounded. Two soldiers who had been taken hostage by the rebels were later recovered alive. "The firefight has stopped," Relano told reporters in Camp Aguinaldo general headquarters, adding that Moro rebels had torched the detachment before fleeing. The firefight raged until the military brought in reinforcements. MILF spokesperson Eid Kabalu confirmed hostilities had stopped. "Since yesterday, there had been no fighting on the ground," he said. Kabalu said only one MILF fighter was killed. The military said Sunday's attack was led by Tundok and another commander named Faizal and was meant to avenge the death of Bides Binago, who had a brother in the MILF. Government forces have launched pursuit operations against the retreating MILF group. Relano said he hoped the MILF leadership would help in the capture of the renegade group which supposedly acted "independently" of the MILF. "We consider them as rebels and we will run after them," Relano declared. Kabalu said the wayward commander would be punished depending on the results of an investigation by the joint GRP-MILF Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH). "Let us wait for the findings and recommendations of the CCCH," he said. Members of both the CCCH and an international monitoring team composed of Malaysian and other international monitors arrived yesterday morning in Linantangan to conduct an investigation. MILF vice chair for political affairs Ghadzali Jaafar disowned Tundok's group and the attack, saying they had acted on their own. He said the Moro rebels were strictly observing their ceasefire with the government. "This is an independent decision of a few that is totally outside the realm of the MILF who had a 'misdirected' sympathy with Abu Sufyan Commander Bedis Abdulrahman (Binago), who died in battle against government troops in Palimbang, Sultan Kudarat recently," Jaafar said in a statement. He added: "We regret to say that this bloodletting has been taking place even as the ceasefire is holding effectively in Mindanao and the MILF-GRP peace talks have resumed in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, recently." But Jaafar also protested the "blatant disregard" of the terms of the ceasefire by government troops when soldiers launched the operation in Palimbang town, Sultan Kudarat province, "without the slightest effort to inform us through the MILF CCCH." "Their excessive use of force and firepower has sent thousands of civilians fleeing their homes, leaving behind their properties and work animals," Jaafar continued. The two sides had signed a ceasefire in 2002 but this had been repeatedly breached in the past. The formal peace talks between the two sides are due to start in February in Kuala Lumpur. They are holding exploratory talks at this time. The bodies of the slain soldiers were recovered inside the ravaged military base. Six of them were identified as Cpl. Cesar Piedad, Pfc. Asihkon Matli, Pfc. Alnadzer Atari and Privates Roque Bantolo, Alex Cabaya and Mark Majomot, all members of the 37th Infantry Battalion. Another soldier killed, a certain Pfc. Lumacad, was taken by the withdrawing rebels for unclear reasons. Jalandoni said Sunday's attack proved that there existed an alliance between some MILF fighters and the bandit gangs Abu Sofia and the Abu Sayyaf, whose members were also allegedly involved in the assault. "But we believe the MILF leadership is unaware of this," he said. On Nov. 19, the military attacked an area belonging to the MILF's 105th Brigade following reports that Abu Sayyaf leader Isnilon Hapilon was sighted in the area. "Bides Binago and some MILF members served as Hapilon's local contact and guides while the ASG leader was in Central Mindanao," Jalandoni said. Despite the clashes, Kabalu said the MILF was determined to pursue the peace talks and was abiding by the ceasefire accord. The clashes displaced thousands of villagers who have yet to recover from the effects of previous encounters between soldiers and MILF rebels. Kagi Guimla, a 50-year-old farmer, said civilians, mostly women, the elderly and children, fled at the first gunburst on Sunday night. "We have been through several wars, but this one was too close. I saw the rebels crawling near our house shortly before midnight Sunday," he said. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
Another take on the recent Philippines violence |
2005-01-12 |
Six soldiers who defended an Army outpost here from marauding Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) rebels were executed one after the other as they lay helpless and wounded in the military detachment, barangay officials told military investigators yesterday. All the soldiers were shot in the back. Another wounded soldier was shot and killed while fleeing from the burning military outpost in Barangay Linantangan. Two other soldiers, although wounded, were able to seek refuge in nearby houses.Pfcs. Asibon Matli and Alnadzar Atari two of the soldiers killed were former guerrillas of the Moro National Liberation Front who had been integrated into the Army. In the presence of members of the Malaysian-led International Monitoring Team (IMT), barangay officials told military probers that the rebels stole the personal belongings, combat boots and firearms of the slain soldiers after setting fire to 36 makeshift bunkers inside the fenced detachment. They later fled to a nearby marsh carrying their dead and wounded comrades, the local officials added. Government troops have retaken one of the Army outposts lost to MILF guerrillas following two days of fighting that left at least six soldiers and an undetermined number of rebels dead. At Malacañang, the government demanded yesterday that the MILF surrender the leaders and men of a renegade faction that attacked two Army outposts in Maguindanao on Sunday. "In our case, I think the (MILF) should turn over to the government the identified perpetrators of about 40 to 60 (MILF) people," Palace communications director Silvestre Afable Jr. said. "So we're asking for some sanctions, at the very least, that they (MILF) yield these perpetrators to the government or to the international ceasefire monitoring team." Afable said the MILF has not classified as "lost command" Abdul Rahman Binago, who led the attacks and had been blamed for truce violations in the past. "And therefore, the (MILF renegade group) is under the protection of the rules and regulations of the ceasefire process," he said. "The MILF disowned them already yesterday, and Mr. Eid Kabalu has said they have nothing to do with the attack, but it was an independent action of this renegade MILF commander." The government will elevate the MILF ceasefire violation to the Malaysian-led 50-man International Monitoring Team deployed in eight provinces in Mindanao since last week, Afable said. In Maguindanao, sources at the Provincial Peace and Order Council told The STAR the attack was led by Ustadz Wahid, a former MILF brigade commander, who was removed from his post and put on "floating status" by MILF chairman Al Haj Murad last December. Officials of the peace and order council had asked Murad to relieve Wahid as he was involved in extortion, kidnapping and other criminal activities, the sources added. The sources said Abdul Rahman Binago, whom the military had tagged as leader of the marauders, had been invited by Wahid to join his band supposedly to avenge the death of his brother, Bides Binago, leader of the Abu Sofia kidnapping gang, who was killed in a clash with troops last week. Wahid wanted to make it appear that the attack was in revenge for the death of Bides, when in fact his aim was to embarrass Murad, sources added. Members of the IMT, led by Malaysian army Maj. Gen. Dato Zulkifeli, started documenting yesterday the atrocity, the worst ever since military officers from Brunei and Malaysia started helping monitor the government-MILF ceasefire late last year. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
21 dead in MILF attacks on 3 Filippino army posts |
2005-01-11 |
![]() Col. Franklin del Prado, Army 6th Infantry Division spokesman, said reports from the field indicated that at least 13 MILF rebels were killed in the counter-offensive. The MILF attack was launched in apparent retaliation for the killing last week of Binago's brother Fides Binago, leader of the Abu Sofia bandit group, in a clash with government troops. MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu said the rebel leadership was trying to contact Binago to get him to pull out. Kabalu said an international team of ceasefire monitors was being rushed to the area to keep the fighting from spreading. "This is an isolated case, and both the MILF and the AFP exerted efforts to stop the incident immediately," Kabalu said. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
Gunships blast guerillas |
2005-01-10 |
![]() Two soldiers were wounded in the fighting, the colonel said, adding that retreating rebels were seen dragging at least five wounded or dead comrades behind them. Colonel Del Prado said the attack at Mamasapano, about 60km south of Cotabato city, was mounted by forces of MILF commander Abdul Rahman Binago whose brother, Fides Binago, leader of the Abu Sofia bandit group, was killed last week. The attack indicated there was an alliance between the Abu Sofia, which has been involved in kidnappings and robberies, and the MILF which had signed a ceasefire with Manila in 2002, he said. MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu confirmed that the forces of Binago had attacked the outpost in apparent retaliation for his brother's death but stressed that this was not sanctioned by the MILF leadership. Kabalu said the MILF leadership was trying to contact Binago to get him to pull out and that an international team of ceasefire monitors was being rushed to the area to keep the fighting from spreading. About 50 security officials from Brunei, Malaysia and Libya have been deployed to the southern Philippines as part of an international team to monitor the ceasefire between the MILF and the Government. A Malaysian team was proceeding to the site of the fighting along with a joint government-MILF monitoring group, Kabalu said. Colonel Del Prado was unable to confirm if the monitoring team had arrived. The 12,000-strong MILF has been waging a 26-year rebellion in the southern third of this largely Christian archipelago. Despite the signing of the ceasefire and the start of initial peace talks, sporadic clashes and military allegations that rebel commanders are sheltering members of the regional Jemaah Islamiah (JI) terrorist network have strained the peace process. |
Link |
Southeast Asia |
Abu Sofia leader killed |
2005-01-08 |
![]() Southern Command spokesman Col. Domingo Tutaan told Sun.Star Zamboanga that troops from the 27th Infantry Battalion were directed to launch an intensified operation in the area. "We have launched continuous operation in the area, because of the report that some 40 Abu Sofia bandits operating there have established their alliance with the Abu Sayyaf to gain notoriety in their activities," Tutaan revealed. He said the on-going operation so far accounted for the death of the Abu Sofia top leader and one of his armed followers. "The Abu Sofia group is engaged in banditry, including kidnapping for ransom in their area," Tutaan said. He said the troops captured from the group one M-16 rifle, one RPG, one .45 caliber pistol, 100 rounds of ammunition from M-60 Light Machine Gun and one improvised explosive device. The troops continue their massive operation against the terrorists hole-out in their sanctuary in Sultan Kudarat, Central Mindanao. |
Link |