Philippine troops hunt militants behind Malaysia abductions
MANILA, Philippines—Philippine soldiers have been deployed to a remote southern island where suspected Islamic militants are believed to have taken two female hostages seized from a resort in neighbouring Malaysia, the military said Friday.
The Abu Sayyaf, a small band of militants infamous for kidnappings for ransom, are the prime suspects in Wednesday’s abductions of a Chinese tourist and a Filipina resort worker, armed forces spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Ramon Zagala told AFP.
He said seven gunmen aboard a white speedboat are believed to have taken the women from a diving resort in Malaysia’s Sabah state across the maritime border to the remote Tawi-Tawi islands in the southern Philippines.
“What is important is to… block them (from fleeing) and find them,” Zagala said, adding that an undisclosed number of naval forces, including marines, had been sent to one of the islands.
Zagala said the hostages are believed to have been taken to Simunul, a majority-Muslim town of about 35,000 people living on two tiny islands more than 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) from Manila.
Article continues after this advertisementSimunul is about 145 kilometres from the resort where the two were kidnapped, or about a day’s boat ride.
Article continues after this advertisementMalaysian authorities identified the hostages as Gao Huayuan, 29, from Shanghai, and Filipina hotel employee Marcy Dayawan, 40.
The two were allegedly taken by Al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf Group on Thursday and were brought to Basulta (Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi), Captain Rowena Muyuela, spokesperson of the Western Mindanao Command said on Friday.
“Naval Task Force 62 is now conducting extensive search and naval blockade to suspected sea crafts while other Wesmincom units in Basulta area have been alerted since yesterday,” she added.
Zagala said the kidnappers were believed to be affiliated with Abu Sayyaf “sub-commander” Murphy Ambang Ladjia, who was involved in the spectacular kidnapping of 21 people from another Sabah resort in 2000.
Twenty of those hostages — many of whom were Europeans and other foreign tourists — were released within five months, reportedly after hefty ransoms were paid. A final Filipino captive was held until 2003.
The Abu Sayyaf has only a few hundred gunmen but has been blamed for the worst terror attacks in Philippine history, including bombings and kidnappings that have often targeted foreigners or Christians.
It was set up in the 1990s, reportedly with seed money from Al-Qaeda mastermind Osama bin Laden.
Its militants have defied US-backed military campaigns against it by melding into and drawing support from Muslim communities in the southern Philippines who feel they have been persecuted for centuries by Christian rulers in Manila.
The group’s strongholds are the Tawi-Tawi and the neighbouring Philippine islands of Sulu and Basilan.
Last year, suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen kidnapped a Taiwanese couple holidaying in a Sabah resort. The husband was killed during the abduction. His wife was found alive a month later on the main Sulu island of Jolo.
The Abu Sayyaf are believed to still be holding other foreign hostages, including two European bird-watchers abducted in the Tawi-Tawi in February 2012. With a report from Frances Mangosing
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