Southeast Asia |
Martial law declared in parts of S. Philippines |
2009-12-05 |
(Xinhua) -- Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has declared martial law in parts of a volatile southern province as security forces moved to arrest members of a local political clan linked to last week's gruesome massacre of 57civilians. Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita on Saturday announced the proclamation of martial law in Maguindanao province, imposed by Arroyo on Dec. 4. Civil rights in the province will be suspended and the President is entitled to order troops to crush rebellion attempts to maintain public order and safety. The drastic measure taken by the government came as security forces arrested and held two prominent members of the Ampatuan clan over the massacre on Nov. 23. Police took away Andal Ampatuan Sr., a three-term governor of Maguindanao, and his son Zaldy Ampatuan, incumbent governor of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, from the family mansions in the provincial capital of Shariff Aguak before dawn Saturday. Andal Ampatuan Jr., mayor of Datu Unsay town of Maguindanao, was tagged as the prime suspect in the massacre. He has been arrested and charged with 25 counts of murder before court. Thousands of troops moved in Maguindanao since last week and the authorities have ordered the relief of over a thousand local law enforcement personnel and started to disarm Ampatuan family's private armies. |
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Southeast Asia | ||
Philippines considering ban on sailor deployment | ||
2009-04-16 | ||
Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita in his weekly news briefing said the Department of Labor and Employment and the Department of Foreign Affairs will be asked to study the advisability of such a ban. He said that based on a DFA report, 100 Filipino seafarers spread among seven ships are still captives of Somali pirates, who in the last two or three days have again seized three more merchant vesselsand some of the crew of these newly-captured ships are Filipinos. Ermita added that a Greek ship with 22 crewmembers was hijacked by pirates in the Gulf of Aden on April 14, but it remains to be known how many Filipinos are onboard. Its getting to be very alarming in the sense that there are already 100 such Filipino seamen still under custody, and so we will ask the DFA and the DOLE for their specific recommendations on making an official pronouncement announcing that measure if that becomes very necessary at this moment. Ermita added theres no foolproof action that we can take to really prevent Filipino sailors from getting employed in such ships. For this reason, he said, the government has directed the DOLE to ensure that there is contact with the local manning agencies and discourage them from bringing in Filipino seamen that will be plying the route in the Gulf of Aden and in the area where these hijackings or kidnappings are happening. He said the Philippines is not contemplating moves similar to what the US and French governments had done to help their kidnapped citizens. Instead, it will monitor negotiations being done by the manning agencies and ship owners with the kidnappers since our experience has been that we have not had any casualty from among those kidnapped by the Somali pirates. So far, he said, there have been a lot of successes in the negotiations being done by the manning agencies and the ship owners. You can see that the motive really other than just gaining mileage through media is ransom. And the manning agencies as well as the ship owners have been willing to pay, he said. Ermita said, however, the Philippines continues to observe an official policy of not paying ransom as it only encourages the kidnappers, which is the fact as far as the Somali kidnappers are concerned. He added: Of course the government will support whatever action the UN will take in order to address the problem.
The Philippines is the biggest source of maritime manpower in the world . | ||
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Southeast Asia |
Al-Qaeda bomb plot in Philippines bared |
2008-03-07 |
An al-Qaeda operative sent to the country to carry out bomb attacks was captured middle of last month, sources in the Philippine National Police told the Philippine Daily Inquirer on Thursday. Investigators were verifying if Khalil Hasan Al-Alih of Jordan was also involved in the purported plot to assassinate President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. Al-Alih was picked up at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport on Feb. 15 after arriving from Saudi Arabia, the sources, who sought anonymity for lack of authority to speak, said. One source, a ranking police officer, said Al-Alih was sent to the Philippines to bomb targets that included the American and British embassies. He reportedly used a Kuwaiti passport and had been coming in and out of the Philippines since the 1990s. Lost in airport The source said Al-Alih dropped a package that contained documents in Arabic that detailed the plot. The package was picked up by an airport security guard and turned over to police, he said. The documents were reportedly shown to intelligence and security personnel from the US and other embassies for assessment. PNP Director General Avelino Razon was to report Al-Alihs capture at an international conference of the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol) in Hong Kong Thursday. Razon was to deliver a report on terror links between Central Asia and the Southeast Asia-Pacific region and the Philippines efforts to combat terrorism. More embassy targets The Associated Press, quoting Filipino officials, said local authorities had arrested three suspected Middle Eastern militants suspected of involvement in a plot to bomb the US and three other embassies in Manila. There is a high probability they are involved in some kind of plan to sow trouble, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita told reporters on the sidelines of an annual antiterrorism and business security conference in Makati City. All were Middle Eastern nationals, Ermita added. One of the militants was arrested in Metro Manila and the others were captured separately in the southern Philippines recently, he said. Ermita refused to provide details, but two senior Filipino security officials told AP that investigators were verifying intelligence information the three may have been involved in a plot to bomb the US, British, Australian and Israeli embassies in Manila. Authorities believed the three had links to the Indonesia-based regional terror group Jemaah Islamiyah and the Abu Sayyaf in the southern Philippines. Funds released Funding for the plot had been secured, indicating an attack against one of the embassies may be in an advanced stage, one of the officials said, adding that all the embassies concerned had been notified. The two officials were concerned the threat would be dismissed by the political opposition as a government effort to justify a heavy military and police presence in the capital while President Arroyo grapples with the NBN-ZTE corruption scandal. One of the officials said there was no indication the terror plot involved a direct threat against Ms Arroyo. Ermita, in his speech at the Protect 2008 conference in Makati, said terrorists were planning to use the street demonstrations against President Arroyo to launch their attacks. He said the authorities took two suspects into custody before the Feb. 29 interfaith rally in Makati. |
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Southeast Asia |
Arabs 'plotted Aussie embassy bombing' |
2008-03-06 |
THE Philippines has arrested two Arab militants believed to be planning to bomb embassies of Australia, the US, Britain and Israel in Manila, government officials said today. The two men were picked up in raids last month on the southern island of Mindanao after weeks of surveillance, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, the seniormost member of the Cabinet, said. "I don't have the names and the complete details of their arrests, but they were involved in teaching local terrorists on how to make bombs," Mr Ermita said after a speech at a counter terrorism forum in Manila. Police and army intelligence authorities said one of the arrested militants was holding a Jordanian traveling document but they were checking their real identities. "We found documents showing plots to bomb several embassies in Manila, such as the United States, Australia, United Kingdom and Israel," said a police intelligence official. "We're still validating the information taken from these two men. They were brought to Manila for further debriefing but we've informed some of the embassies concerned." A diplomat from one of the four embassies said they were aware of the plot and have been keenly monitoring the situation. Last week, Avelino Razon, the head of the national police, announced the arrest of another Middle Eastern man for an alleged plot to assassinate President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. Mr Razon said the suspect was also being linked to the plot to attack the US and Australian embassies in Manila after some sheets of paper in Arabic seized from his possession indicated his role in the plots. |
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Southeast Asia |
US offers $30m to Philippine jihadis for peace pact |
2006-11-10 |
The United States is prepared to offer $30 million in aid to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front after it signs a peace agreement with the Philippine government, an official said yesterday. US Ambassador Kristie Kenney made the statement after President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo ordered an immediate resumption of peace talks with the group, which has been fighting for independence since 1981. We are absolutely ready to step in again with a strong economic assistance if there is an accord, Kenney told reporters in a chance interview in Malacañang. We really want to help the ex-combatants of the MILF, so we are hoping the peace deal is signed. The US government first offered the $30 million to the group three years ago, but it diverted the money to other projects after the groups signing of a peace accord with the government was delayed. Mrs. Arroyo ordered the talks with the MILF resumed after the government dropped its charges against group chairman Ebrahim Murad, who is accused of planning a series of deadly bombings in Mindanao last month. Six people died and 33 others were injured in explosions in Tacurong City in Sultan Kudarat and Makilala in North Cotabato in October. Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita said the dropping of the case against Murad on Wednesday was a sign of the governments goodwill. Secretary [Silvestre] Afable, our chief negotiator, has already cleared it with the President that the resumption of the exploratory talks will begin as soon as possible, he said. Government negotiators failed to sign peace with the MILF two months ago, when the two sides disagreed on the villages to be included in the so-called Bangsamoro territory. But MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu said by telephone that they were willing to take up the governments counter-proposal that only 613 villages be included in the Bangsamoro territory under the ancestral domain agreement. This is really a hot issue for both parties. The Kuala Lumpur talks failed to come up with a formula acceptable to both sides, Kabalu said. But we are willing to consider the proposal of the government. That is the beauty of negotiations. There will always be bargaining involved. The MILF had earlier proposed to include more than 1,000 villages in its territory, a number that government negotiators found too high. |
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Southeast Asia |
100 JI members, 400 trainees in Mindanao - Gunaratna |
2006-04-22 |
A noted regional security analyst said here yesterday the regional Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) terror network has 100 foreign militants in Mindanao who have trained 400 to 500 fighters for new attacks. Dr. Rohan Gunaratna, head of the Singapore-based International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research, told reporters on the sidelines of a three-day international experts conference on counterterrorism here that nearly 100 JI militants were being given refuge by rogue guerrilla leaders of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). "The JI is very patient, very cunning, very clever and it takes its time planning its attack," Gunaratna said, adding that "it is just a matter of time" before another attack takes place in the region. "The JI believes in doing a few attacks but makes sure that it makes a huge impact," he said. Gunaratna urged Southeast Asian governments to launch joint military and intelligence operations against the JI to head off new attacks. He said the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia should develop a "new platform" in its fight against the JI, and deploy joint forces to track down the extremists in their jungle bases. "Because we see that the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia enjoy a common sea border, it is important for the militaries and navies of these countries to conduct joint operations." Gunaratna warned the JI militants are the most "deadly and lethal." "Although the numbers are very small, JI is a very deadly and a very lethal organization so the government of the Philippines and other governments that are fighting JI must work together to track JI leaders and kill them or to put them in prison," he said. Gunaratna said the JI continues to operate jungle camps in Indonesia and in Mindanao, where they are training the extremist Abu Sayyaf and the MILF. "JI is a very patient organization, it is like al-Qaeda. It is a very cunning and clever organization. It will take its time to plan, prepare and execute large-scale attacks," Gunaratna warned. He claimed the JI has a small number of camps operating in Southeast Asia. "It is important to dismantle those camps and capture or kill those members who are operating those camps and those individuals who are leading the JI network in the Philippines and Indonesia," Gunaratna said. He warned the JI is now making efforts to "develop capabilities" like those of their counterparts in the Middle East in staging suicide attacks. "In the future, we could have suicide attacks in the Philippines its a question of time and how they could convince people to do it," Gunaratna said. "Filipino Muslims are very tolerant compared to others in the region but were seeing more radicalization," he said. During the summit here, Gunaratna urged the Indonesian government to "criminalize" the JI as an organization and keep behind bars its spiritual founder Abu Bakar Bashir, who reportedly expects to walk free in June after serving only 29 months in prison for his role in the 2002 bombings. Gunaratna also revealed a faction led by JIs most wanted leader Malaysian Noordin Mohammad Top is closely working with the Abu Sayyaf, while another led by Indonesians Umar Patek and Dulmatin is being sheltered by the MILF. The three JI leaders are all accused of playing key roles in the Bali bombings. While the MILF is engaged in peace talks with the Philippine government, Gunaratna said the Muslim group continues to shelter the JI militants. He said the MILF should be held "accountable" for their presence. Gunaratna also urged governments to check if millions of dollars in private funds from the Middle East intended for poor Muslim regions were reaching the rightful beneficiaries. He said the funds were being diverted to the hands of extremists. Noting the efforts of the Philippine government to retain terrorism as a capital crime despite the abolition of the death penalty, Gunaratna said no country "has fought terrorism effectively without appropriate anti-terrorism legislation." "It is important to have the death penalty but it also important to exercise discretion when it comes to sentencing someone to death," he said. "But the death penalty is a very important instrument in the fight against terrorism." On Easter Sunday, President Arroyo announced her decision to commute all death sentences to life imprisonment. Among those who would reportedly benefit from the commutation are convicted terrorists. Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita, however, told reporters Mrs. Arroyo might make an exception to her order in the case of convicted terrorists. Ermita said there were ongoing efforts to reconcile proposals to abolish the death penalty with the pending anti-terrorism bill in Congress. Both measures have been certified as urgent by the President, he said. The proposed anti-terrorism bill imposes the death penalty for some offenses. Ermita noted that abolishing the death penalty for convicted terrorists might send a weak signal to the international community on its global effort against terrorism. Gunaratna, an acknowledged expert on the terror organizations in the region, said the Philippines "biggest weakness" in dealing with terrorism is that it does not have an anti-terrorism law as he urged Filipinos to "put to task" their political leaders for their inaction on the measure. He noted many suspected terrorists arrested in the country have been allowed to post bail, thus giving them the opportunity to stage more deadly bombing attacks. "This is a huge mistake," Gunaratna said. "Philippine law enforcement authorities can be effective on the ground only if they have legal coverage. "This is huge failure on part of political leadership and the political opposition in the Philippines," he added. |
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Southeast Asia |
Negroponte sez JI uses Philippines as a haven |
2005-12-08 |
Regional terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah is using the Philippines as a sanctuary and the country must confront the threat, Americaâs top spy said yesterday. US Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte, who was in Manila as part of a visit to allies in East Asia, said the United States continues to see the Philippines as a "close partner" in the war on terror and is ready to provide assistance to improve the countryâs counterterrorism capability. At a dinner Tuesday with President Arroyo at Malacañang, Negroponte prodded the Philippine government to pass an anti-terrorism law. "Southern (Philippines) is a focal point of terrorist and security threats," Negroponte told The STAR yesterday. "International terrorists, especially Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), have... used Philippine territory as a sanctuary for some of their activities." Security officials in the region have expressed concern that JI, loosely linked to al-Qaeda, continues to maintain terrorist training centers in areas protected by certain members of the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in Central Mindanao. Two Malaysians tagged as the brains behind the nightclub bombings that killed 202 people on the Indonesian island of Bali in 2002 are believed to have taken refuge in these sanctuaries in Mindanao. Washington has put up a combined bounty of $11 million for the capture of the two fugitives. Singapore authorities reportedly warned Manila that JI militants had plotted to launch terror attacks during the just concluded 23rd Southeast Asian Games in the Philippines. Negroponteâs arrival in Manila Tuesday afternoon coincided with the suspension of public services at the US Embassy in Manila in the wake of what Press Attaché Matthew Lussenhop described as a "plausible threat." The services will resume today. Lussenhop denied that the threat was connected to the visit of Negroponte - his first to the country where he served as ambassador from 1993 to 1996, and his first to Asia since becoming the first US director of national intelligence earlier this year. As part of a "national intelligence strategy" released by Negroponteâs office last October, the US is strengthening foreign intelligence relationships and human intelligence capability. Negroponte declined to go into specifics about US intelligence cooperation with the Philippines, but said Washington planned to increase human intelligence capabilities worldwide by as much as 50 percent over the next years. "With the end of the Cold War, we allowed our human intelligence capabilities to decline somewhat and there was, if you will, a hollowing-out of our intelligence services," Negroponte told The STAR in an interview at the US Embassy residence in Forbes Park in Makati City. "In the wake of 9/11, the decision was made that we had to restore and increase those capabilities." Asked if he thought the Philippines had the capability to contain the terrorist threat, he cited the arrest of the Valentineâs Day bombers and said, "I think this is a dynamic, ongoing process... youâve had some successes, and you have captured some significant terrorists." "In a long-term struggle such as this, people have their ups and downs, they have their wins and their losses," he added. "I think by strengthening your own institutions, by passing your anti-terrorist legislation - I think thatâs one of the areas we think would be very important." He said he discussed this with the President at the Malacañang dinner where National Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales was also present. "I think that all the Filipino officials that I spoke to believe that itâs desirable to seek the passage of that legislation, and that it would be a helpful tool in confronting the terrorist threat that you see in this country," Negroponte said. Forging peace with the MILF, he said, could help neutralize the support given by rogue separatist militants to JI and the Abu Sayyaf. "That is one of the reasons it is considered important that the peace talks between the government of the Philippines and the MILF be successful and that the talks being brokered by the government of Malaysia bear fruit, because that would help deny JI sanctuary," Negroponte said. US Embassy Chargé dâ Affaires Paul Jones agreed. "We have seen the MILF come out publicly and in our observations, the leading elements of the MILF are now saying that the terrorists are not welcome in MILF territory. And that has been a very important factor, which could be consolidated with a peace agreement being signed," Jones said. "We are very encouraged by that." Negroponte and embassy officials clarified that his arrival had been planned for some time and was not a surprise visit. He left yesterday for visits to South Korea and Japan. Since assuming his post in April after serving as the United Statesâ first ambassador to post-war Iraq, Negroponte has visited the United Kingdom and parts of the Middle East. His ongoing Asian tour is just his third foreign trip as Americaâs top spy. "I am visiting friendly allied countries, countries with which we have important security interests," Negroponte said yesterday. He said his meetings with Mrs. Arroyo Tuesday and with Philippine national security and intelligence officials yesterday morning were meant "essentially to compare notes on how we view the international terrorist situation, since the United States and the Philippines are close partners in the international war on terrorism." Negroponte flew to Australia from Hawaii before visiting the Philippines. "If you are involved in the international war on terror, this is something that cannot be done alone," he said. "No one country can carry out these activities alone." He declined to comment on political developments in the Philippines. Negroponte was also ambassador to Honduras and Mexico. He left the Foreign Service in 1997 to become the executive vice president of McGraw-Hill publishing company. He returned to diplomacy as ambassador to the United Nations in 2001 and helped the US pitch the war on Iraq to the UN. Last year, he was named ambassador to Iraq. At the Palace, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita confirmed that Negroponte had separate meetings with the President and Gonzales Tuesday night where the latter gave a briefing on the governmentâs accomplishments in neutralizing terror suspects. "The purpose of (former) Ambassador Negroponteâs visit is really to take a look at how things are with an allied country such as the Philippines as far as our counterterrorism program is concerned," Ermita said, adding that Negroponte might have wanted to check on the effectiveness of the intelligence exchange. He however said the meeting with the President was more of a social function than anything else. |
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Southeast Asia |
Radulon Sahiron snagged |
2005-11-06 |
![]() President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo lauded security forces for arresting Sahiron, who has a five-million-peso bounty for his capture. âI would like to commend our police and soldiers because at 4:30 p.m. they caught the notorious Abu Sayyaf leader Radullan Sahiron, who has five million pesos on his head,ââ the president said on government television station NBN 4. âThis intelligence project has been on for a long time, from way back to the time of Secretary Eduardo Ermita who was then Defense Secretary. Now he (Sahiron) is caught, congratulations to police Col. Mendoza,â she said. |
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Southeast Asia |
Military spies face probe over wiretapped conversations |
2005-06-10 |
THE MILITARY will investigate its intelligence arm over allegations that it was behind the wiretapping of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's calls concerning the May 2004 election. "This is a serious matter and the AFP [Armed Forces of the Philippines] is conducting an investigation," Chief of Staff General Efren Abu told reporters in Camp Aguinaldo. "We can't pinpoint anyone in particular. Everyone is a suspect," Abu said, when asked if the investigation was zeroing in on specific agents of the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (ISAFP). Commodore Tirso Danga, deputy chief of staff for intelligence or J2, himself a former ISAFP chief, will head the investigation. Early this week, Malacañang released two compact discs of wiretapped cellular phone conversations between the President and an election official in which Mrs. Arroyo allegedly sought assurances of a convincing win in the polls. The Palace claimed that one was authentic and the other was tampered. Abu claimed that he had not asked ISAFP chief Brigadier General Marlu Quevedo if his office was the source of the tape. The military chief also clarified that the Board of Generals had not recommended Quevedo's replacement as ISAFP chief despite an announcement by Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita. When asked to confirm reports that an ISAFP team was grounded and its leaders restricted to quarters, Abu said: "I have not received any report about that." |
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Southeast Asia |
US: MILF tied to 2 al-Qaeda affiliates |
2005-04-01 |
US officials have warned that a group of Muslim separatist guerrillas with whom the Philippine government is set to begin peace talks may have ties to two al-Qaeda-linked outfits. The alert over the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) was raised by a delegation of visiting US officials, including Adm. William Fallon, head of the US Pacific Command, according to Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita. President Arroyo's administration is to begin talks with the MILF in Malaysia on April 16. The 12,000-member MILF has been waging an armed campaign since 1978 to set up a Muslim state on the southern third of the mainly Roman Catholic Philippines. "We have been receiving information from the Americans about the link (between) MILF, Jemaah Islamiyah and Abu Sayyaf," Ermita said, referring to two Islamic militant groups with alleged ties to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda terror network. Washington has included the Southeast Asia-based Jemaah Islamiyah and the Mindanao-based Abu Sayyaf on its "foreign terrorist organization" blacklist, alongside the communist New People's Army (NPA) which is also mounting a guerrilla campaign in the Philippines. Ermita said the Philippine government suspects that a number of MILF factions may be providing shelter or even training facilities to militant groups in Mindanao. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Fallon said: "I think the government here has a big challenge because there are several groups, several insurgencies that are ongoing." The two allies are pursuing counter-terrorism-oriented joint military training. The next exercises are set to start on the Abu Sayyaf stronghold of Basilan next week. Ermita said Manila asked Washington to refrain from including the MILF on the State Department blacklist for now, to give the peace talks a chance to succeed. "The national government has made it known to the US that maybe we should give the peace process a chance to move forward so we have expressed to them that the MILF should not be included in the list of FTO (foreign terrorist organizations), for the moment," he said. "We have some degree of confidence about how the peace process is moving as far as the MILF is concerned," he added. Manila is observing a 2003 ceasefire with the MILF, with Kuala Lumpur and several other Organization of the Islamic Conference states providing a small list of ceasefire monitors to the south. Peace talks with the NPA's parent organization, meanwhile, have broken down over the US blacklist. |
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Southeast Asia |
Philippines asks US to keep MILF off the terror list |
2005-03-31 |
The Philippines has asked Washington not to include a Muslim separatist group, which has been linked to Jemaah Islamiyah and other radical groups, on a U.S. terrorism blacklist, saying the move could derail peace talks, an official said Wednesday. There has been speculation that Washington has been considering whether to add the Moro Islamic Liberation Front to its list of terrorist organizations due to widespread reports, mostly from Philippine police and military officials, about the rebel group's alleged terrorism links. Asked at a news conference about such prospects, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita said the government has asked Washington to hold off on any listing to foster Malaysian-brokered talks between Manila and the MILF that are scheduled to resume in Kuala Lumpur next month. "The national government has made it known to the U.S. that maybe we should give the peace process a chance to move forward," Ermita said. "We have somehow expressed to them that the MILF should not be included in the list of foreign terrorist organizations. That is for the moment." Teresita Deles, a presidential adviser on the peace talks, said placing the MILF on the U.S. terror list could derail the talks. Communist guerrillas suspended peace negotiations after Philippine officials declined their demand for the government to push for their removal from U.S. and European Union terror lists. While many military and police officials point to strong links between MILF guerrillas and Jemaah Islamiyah, including joint training in MILF strongholds and involvement in terrorist plots, the president's top aides have said some rebels appear to have linked up with the foreign militants without the knowledge of their leaders. The MILF has renounced terrorism and repeatedly denied any links with Jemaah Islamiyah and other foreign militant groups. It also has forged a cease-fire with the government that has halted major clashes for months. Some security officials have said guerrillas from groups like the extremist Abu Sayyaf and Jemaah Islamiyah have sought refuge in MILF camps, believing troops would not launch offensives there to safeguard the cease-fire and peace talks. U.S. officials have expressed concern about the presence of Jemaah Islamiyah training camps in the southern Philippines, saying militants acquire bombing and other deadly skills there that they could use anywhere. The Jemaah Islamiyah camps are located in MILF lairs, Philippine security officials say. President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on Wednesday visited the MILF's main stronghold, Camp Abubakar, which was captured by troops a few years ago, and inspected U.S.-funded projects with American officials. |
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Philippines: Peace pact with Muslims likely in 6 months | |
2005-02-03 | |
I'm sure the Easter Bunny will deliver it to.... only to be blown up by the Islamics for being christian. A draft document that would serve as "reference material" for government negotiators and Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) leaders was being worked out to kickstart the next round of talks, Executive Secretary Eduardo Ermita told reporters. Ermita said lead government negotiator Silvestre Afable had expressed confidence a peace pact would be signed within six months. "He is confident that an agreement would be signed provided that there will be cooperation on both sides, The Malysian-led IMT has been on the ground in the southern island of Mindanao since late November to check on violations of a ceasefire. The team last month 23 dead is a sign of *success*? A military air strike on the same group Despite the attacks, Afable has said talks would resume at a date still to be specified by Malaysia, which has been brokering the talks. In the southern city of Marawi, meanwhile, Malaysian peace monitor head Major General Zulkefli bin Mohammad Zin said the ceasefire was being maintained by both sides and that "the peace process is very much on track." "We, members of the IMT, can feel the pulse of transparency We *feel* your pain! getting to be stronger. Commitments and cooperation shown by all parties concerned are commendable," Mohammad told a gathering of peace advocates. "We could also see that restraints are being exercised. The peace momentum is now getting to be much stronger," he said. "If the current trend prevails the people of the Philippines and those living in the region should be able to see a bright light at the end of the tunnel soon," he said. Er.... bright lights at the end of tunnels usually mean an oncoming train. The MILF has been waging a separatist rebellion in Mindanao since 1978. It is pushing to create an independent Islamic state in the region, but has struggled to Authorities say that the MILF, despite its repeated denials, are harboring or training members of the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), the al-Qaeda's Southeast Asian arm. Did anybody else notice that there are no 'hopeful' quotes from anyone associated with the MILF? | |
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