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Saturday, April 27, 2024

ASG hostages escape after ransom ruse

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THREE men kidnapped by Islamist militants in Mindanao escaped while their captors prayed, dodging bullets as they ran, police said Saturday after a ruse using fake ransom money failed.

The fate of a fourth man who ran off in a different direction was unclear.

The construction workers were taken to the police on Jolo island on Friday, four weeks after being abducted by the Abu Sayyaf Group, which is holding more than a dozen other hostages including several foreigners in remote jungles.

The gunmen had received an undetermined amount of cash for the hostages on Thursday, but refused to release them after realizing the money was fake, regional police chief Reuben Sindac told AFP.

“While the abductors performed their afternoon prayer, the victims took advantage and [ran] but they were chased and fired upon,” Sindac said, citing an official report.

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Meanwhile, Maranaos—those who inhabit Lanao del Sur and Lanao del Norte­—have declared the Maute terrorist group as their enemy, according to Lanao del Sur Provincial Crisis Management Committee spokesman and Assemblyman Zia Alonto Adiong.

He told Radio dzBB that all the mayors of the province had signed a manifesto affirming that the ISIS-influenced Maute group was an enemy of the Maranaos.

Quoting Adiong, dzBB’s Benjie Liwanag said that the manifesto also classifies the group as under Daulah Islamiyah or Islamic State, an international terrorist group. 

Dawla Islamiyya (Maute Terrorist Group) and its sympathizers are “Enemies of the Meranao (or Maranao)  People.”  

DARING ESCAPE. Three men kidnapped by Islamist militants in Mindanao escaped while their captors prayed, dodging bullets as they ran, police said Saturday, after a ruse using fake ransom money failed. The gunmen had received an undetermined amount of cash for the hostages on Thursday, but refused to release them after realizing the money was fake,  police said. AFP

“We will engage the Maute on all fronts. Mobilizing all sectors, stakeholders to combine our efforts to counter the spread of false teachings, radicalization of our youth and the  threat of terrorism,” Adiong said.

The Abu Sayyaf, blamed for the worst terror attacks in the nation’s history, is known to behead hostages unless ransom payments are made.

Sindac said a village official found three of the hostages near the Jolo town of Talipao early Friday, one with a gunshot wound to the head that was not thought to be life-threatening.

The official brought them to the police hours later.

The three told police their fourth colleague had run in another direction and it was unclear if he had escaped or been recaptured by the militants.

Sindac said he did not know who paid the fake ransom money.

The Philippine government as a policy does not pay ransom, and the gunmen are known to negotiate directly with the victims’ families or employers.

The militants beheaded two Canadian hostages last year and a German captive in February after ransom demands were not met.

Police said the militants also beheaded seven loggers in Basilan last month, during which a Vietnamese hostage was also killed in a gunbattle between his captors and the security forces.

A Basilan-based Abu Sayyaf faction has pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group and joined up with militants who seized parts of Marawi in May.

The militants have withstood a US-backed military offensive in Marawi that has claimed 725 lives and displaced nearly 400,000 people. 

President Rodrigo Duterte has imposed martial law across the southern third of the Philippines, including Marawi, Basilan and Jolo, to quell the militant threat. 

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