Bangkok Post

Militants free hostages

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s president said yesterday that four citizens held hostage for nearly a month in the southern Philippine­s have been released.

Joko Widodo said in a televised address that the men are under the protection of Philippine authoritie­s and are in good condition.

They were kidnapped at sea in mid-April by suspected Abu Sayyaf militants, the third in a series of attacks on tugboats that sparked a regional maritime security alarm.

Mr Jokowi said a meeting last week of foreign ministers and military chiefs from Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s on improving security in border areas facilitate­d the release of the hostages.

“I am grateful,” he said. “This operation is one of the results of the implementa­tion of the meeting.”

Earlier this month, Abu Sayyaf militants freed 10 Indonesian crewmen who were seized at sea in March and believed taken to a jungle camp in Sulu, about 950km south of Manila. Indonesia has denied it paid a ransom. In late April, Abu Sayyaf gunmen beheaded a Canadian hostage in Sulu after they failed to receive a large ransom by a deadline they had set. At least eight foreign and local hostages remain in the hands of Abu Sayyaf.

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