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Malaysian police arrest suspected Abu Sayyaf leader, seven others in crackdown

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KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian police arrested a suspected leader and seven members of the Islamic State-linked Abu Sayyaf Islamist group in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, a police source said on Sunday.

Police detained Hajar Abdul Mubin — otherwise known as Abu Asrie — in the Wednesday raid, according to the source, who was not authorized to speak to the media on the case.

Hajar, a Filipino, was arrested along with one other Filipino and six Malaysians from the Borneo state of Sabah, which shares a porous maritime border with the Philippine­s.

The arrests were first reported by the English daily, The Star.

The Abu Sayyaf is notorious for bombings, beheadings, extortion and kidnapfor-ransom in the south of the mainly Roman Catholic Philippine­s.

The arrests were the latest in an ongoing crackdown on militancy by Muslimmajo­rity Malaysia. More than 250 people have been arrested between 2013 and 2016 for suspected militancy linked to Islamic State.

Government­s in Southeast Asia have been worried over the possible expansion of Islamic State in the region as battlehard­ened militants return home after the collapse of their self-styled caliphate in the Middle East.

Militants loyal to Islamic State seized large parts of Marawi city in the southern Philippine­s in May. Some 620 militants, 136 soldiers and police and 45 civilians were killed in more than 100 days of fighting.

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