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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Palace eases US fears of terror, kidnappings

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MALACAÑANG on Friday assured Americans of their safety in the country after a travel advisory warned US citizens to avoid the southern part of Cebu amid reports that terrorist groups plan to kidnap foreigners who frequent Dalaguete, Santander and Sumilon Island.

“PNP commanders at various levels have taken the necessary steps to harden or protect possible targets,” Presidential Spokesman Ernesto Abella said in a statement. 

“Moreover, other measures are being undertaken in public venues to safeguard crowds from harm.” 

In a travel advisory, the US Embassy in Manila said terrorist groups were planning kidnappings in places in the Visayas that are popular with tourists.

WATCHING OVER. Filipino soldiers, in this photo taken on Sept. 5, stand guard in front of an armored personnel carrier inside a military camp in Jolo, Sulu, following reports terrorist groups plan kidnappings in the central islands popular with foreign tourists. On Nov. 3, the US Embassy in Manila warned Americans to avoid the southern regions of Cebu, a popular tourist attraction with idyllic beaches, spectacular diving and whale watching. AFP

Cebu is one of the Philippines’ most popular tourist sites because of its idyllic beaches, spectacular diving and whale-watching.

“The US embassy alerts US citizens that terrorist groups are planning to conduct kidnappings in areas frequented by foreigners on the southern portion of Cebu Island,” the advisory said.

The embassy identified three locations: Dalaguete and Santander in Cebu and nearby Sumilon island. Those areas are a short boat ride to tourist hot spots Bohol and Dumaguete.

The warning came after a surge in kidnappings by Islamic militants in the southern Philippines, which included the first attack on a cargo ship in the high seas and the murders of foreigners after ransoms were not paid.

President Rodrigo Duterte’s office released a statement on Friday confirming police had reported an unspecified kidnapping plan in southern Cebu and that security had been increased in the area.

The US embassy did not name who was planning the attacks, but the strife-torn south of the mainly Catholic Philippines is home to various militant groups that have in recent years sworn allegiance to the Islamic State group.

The most notorious is the Abu Sayyaf, a loose network of militants formed in the 1990s with seed money from Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda network, which has earned millions of dollars from kidnappings for ransom.

The Abu Sayyaf is based on islands about 500 kilometers southwest of Cebu, and most often kidnap people from the coastal regions and vessels close to their strongholds of Jolo and Basilan islands.

However, the militants kidnapped two Canadians, a Norwegian and a Filipina from Samal, a tourist island about 500 kilometers to the east of Jolo last year. The Canadians were beheaded and the other two were released after ransoms were reportedly paid.

The Abu Sayyaf has also been blamed for the abductions of dozens of Indonesian and Malaysian sailors in smaller vessels in the area.   

Last month, the captain of a South Korean cargo ship was abducted in the waters off the southern Philippines in the first such attack on a large merchant vessel.

Duterte has launched a military offensive to eradicate the Abu Sayyaf.

Another extremist group, the Maute gang, was blamed for a bombing in Duterte’s hometown in the southern city of Davao that left 15 people dead in September. With AFP

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