Philippine security forces arrested on Wednesday a sub-commander of the notorious Abu Sayyaf group in Basilan province, a military official said. In a statement, Air Force spokesman Lt. Col. Miguel Ernesto Okol said Said Usman alias Kaiser was nabbed about 5 a.m. inside his home in Bulanbulan village in Lantawan town. Basilan is a known bailiwick of the al-Qaeda-linked bandit group.
At the time of his arrest, Usman carried a P1.2-million reward for his capture.
Okol said Usman was arrested by virtue of an warrant of arrest issued by the Isabela Regional Trial Court for kidnapping and illegal detention charges.
In a phone interview with Manila-based reporters, Lt. Col. Fernando Gomez, commander of the Marine Battalion Landing Team 1, said the arrest of Usman came following weeks of case build-up conducted by military units.
Gomez said Usman’s father, mother, second wife, and five children — including a four-month-old baby — were inside the suspected bandit leader's residence when arrested.
The Abu Sayyaf has been blamed for various kidnap-for-ransom and bombing activities in the southern Philippine island of Mindanao, as well as in Metro Manila. Last Saturday, the bandit group beheaded three loggers they earlier abducted at the hinterlands of Maluso town, also in Basilan.
Security officials believe the latest killings were a retaliation for the ongoing military and police operations that have killed a number of Abu Sayyaf members. — Andreo Calonzo/KBK/RS
Showing posts with label basilan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label basilan. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Monday, April 19, 2010
News Update Three militants killed in Philippines
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Monday, April 19, 2010
MANILA (AFP) - – Three Al-Qaeda-linked militants suspected of being behind deadly bomb attacks in the southern Philippines were killed in a gunbattle with troops, the military said Saturday.
Two soldiers were also wounded in the firefight Friday when troops caught up with fleeing Abu Sayyaf extremists on Basilan island, said Lieutenant General Ben Dolorfino.
The gunmen are believed to be part of the Abu Sayyaf group that set off two bombs and fired on civilians and security forces in Basilan's capital on Tuesday in an attack that left 15 people dead, Dolorfino said.
Two rifles and a machinegun were recovered from the dead extremists, said Dolorfino, who is head of military forces in the southern Philippines.
Troops accompanied by sniffer dogs also discovered and safely detonated a bomb believed to have been left by the Abu Sayyaf in a creek on Basilan on Friday, officials said.
Security forces have imposed tight security on Basilan and surrounding areas following the Abu Sayyaf attacks, the worst such assault by the group in months.
The Abu Sayyaf is a small gang of Islamic militants on the US government's list of foreign terrorist organisations.
It was founded in the 1990s with seed money from Osama bin Laden's Al-Qaeda network to fight for an independent Muslim state in the south of the mainly Catholic nation, Philippine military intelligence officials say.
The most brutal of several armed Muslim groups in the south, the Abu Sayyaf is also blamed for the country's worst terrorist attacks, including a 2004 bombing of a ferry in Manila Bay that killed more than 100 people.
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