Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

Military checking reported killing of extremist leader

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THE Philippine military said Saturday, May 5, it is checking intelligen­ce reports that a Middle East-educated commander of the Abu Sayyaf extremist group has died after being wounded in an artillery strike in the south.

Brig Gen. Cirilito Sobejana said that if the reported killing of Yassir Igasan in southern Sulu province turns out to be true, it would add to a leadership crisis within the Abu Sayyaf. The brutal group has lost many commanders to combat and surrenders in recent years.

The military received intelligen­ce that Igasan was seriously wounded in the leg by artillery fire in the hinterland­s of Sulu’s Patikul town in October and then died later, Sobejana said.

Some of Igasan’s men, who have surrendere­d, have told the military that Igasan has not been seen nor appeared in meetings in recent months, said a military intelligen­ce officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of a lack of authority to speak about the terrorism issues.

Igasan is one of about half a dozen factional leaders of the Abu Sayyaf but is distinguis­hed because of his connection­s to Middle East-based militant groups and ability

to speak Arabic. Igasan, who was educated either in Libya or Jordan, has been regarded as a candidate to be the next regional leader of the Islamic State group, Philippine security officials say.

The group’s previous leader, Isnilon Hapilon, who was killed in the final battle in southern Marawi city last year. The city was seized by Islamic State group-linked militants on May 23 and troops quelled the disastrous insurrecti­on after five months.

Emerging in the late 1980s as an offshoot of the decadeslon­g Muslim separatist rebellion in the south, the Abu Sayyaf lost its top commanders early in combat and descended on a bloody path toward terrorism and criminalit­y.

The United States and the Philippine­s have blackliste­d the Abu Sayyaf as a terrorist organizati­on for bombings, ransom kidnapping­s and beheadings.

Despite battle setbacks, the small but violent group remains a key security threat.

Two policewome­n and a villager were kidnapped in Patikul last weekend by suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen, who have demanded a ransom for their release, police said. (AP)

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