The Star Malaysia

Extremist surrenders

Senior Abu Sayyaf commander Nurhassan Jamiri and 13 others responsibl­e for bombings and killings give themselves up in south Basilan.

-

ZAMBOANGA: A senior commander of the Abu Sayyaf extremist group blamed for bombings and kidnapping­s has surrendere­d in the south, the defence chief said, expressing hope it would bring the “eventual collapse” of a key militant stronghold.

Nurhassan Jamiri (pic) surrendere­d with 13 of his men to army forces in southern Basilan province on Wednesday.

They handed over 10 assault rifles and a large cache of ammunition and were undergoing questionin­g, military officials said.

Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said that Jamiri’s surrender, which came after negotiatio­ns with authoritie­s, “will hopefully bring the eventual collapse of the Abu Sayyaf group in Basilan”, the birthplace of the small but violent group, “and bring justice to the death of thousands of soldiers”.

Emerging in the late 1980s as an offshoot of the decades-long Muslim separatist rebellion in the south, the Abu Sayyaf lost its top commanders early in combat and descended into a bloody path towards terrorism and criminalit­y.

The United States and the Philippine­s have blackliste­d the Abu Sayyaf as a terrorist organisati­on.

Jamiri has been blamed for years of bloody attacks, including a 2007 ambush in largely Muslim Basilan that killed 24 Philippine marines, several of whom were beheaded. His group has given sanctuary to other Abu Sayyaf militants behind piracy and kidnapping­s, including of Vietnamese sailors in recent years, the military said.

His group has also carried out bombings in the Basilan cities of Isabela and Lamitan and the southern port city of Zamboanga across the Basilan Strait, along with ransom kidnapping­s and extortion, military officials said.

Military officials did not say if Jamiri and his men would be prosecuted for the bloody attacks.

Last month, Malaysian security officials suspected that Jamiri was killed with two other gunmen in a firefight in a plantation in the east coast of the Malaysian state of Sabah.

But Philippine military officials said the militant was in Basilan at the time.

President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered the military to crush the Abu Sayyaf but took a more conciliato­ry tone on Monday when he said in a speech before Abu Sayyaf fighters who surrendere­d that he held no grudge against their group and understood why they took up arms.

He offered houses and livelihood training to the former guerillas.

At least 216 Abu Sayyaf fighters have surrendere­d in recent months. More than 300 fighters remain and government offensives will continue against them, a military official said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia