Bangkok Post

Army nabs cleric over Islamic State bomb

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MANILA: The Philippine military said yesterday it has arrested a Muslim cleric who knew in advance about a bomb that killed 11 people on Basilan island in an attack earlier this week that raised fears of Islamic State (IS) involvemen­t.

Acting on a tip off, scout rangers raided the home of Indalin Jainul, alias Ustadz Abdulgani, 12 hours after Tuesday’s bombing in Lamitan town.

Informants told the army that the cleric, 58, knew the bomb would go off and had been helping foreign operatives reach Basilan from Malaysia, according to army spokesman Gerry Besana. A grenade was found at his home.

Jainul is charged with multiple murder and illegal possession of explosives. His family protested against what they said were trumped-up charges. The IS claimed responsibi­lity for the attack which killed five militias, a soldier, and four civilians, including a child, calling it a “martyrdom operation”. The driver of a van carrying the device also died. He was believed to have detonated the device when questioned at the checkpoint. Defence and military officials dismissed the IS claim as propaganda, with Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana describing the claim as “just speculatio­n”. Basilan is a stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf, a group better known for its banditry and kidnapping, though it has pledged loyalty to the IS.

The attack came days after Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte made peace overtures towards the Abu Sayyaf, following his approval for an autonomy plan sought for decades by leaders of the region’s Muslim minority.

Vehicle bombings are rare in the Philippine­s, despite decades of separatist and Islamist violence that have destabilis­ed the southern Mindanao region.

Security experts say that although the IS has no known affiliate in the southern Philippine­s, it has ties with local extremists who have given refuge to foreign radicals, particular­ly from Malaysia and Indonesia.

The scope of IS influence became clearer last year when an alliance of blackclad fighters occupied Marawi City for five months, taking hostages, destroying churches and flying black flags in scenes reminiscen­t of Iraq and Syria. More than 1,100 people were killed.

 ?? EPA ?? Filipino soldiers stand guard on a street in Manila, Philippine­s, on Wednesday. According to news reports, government forces had been on heightened alert and security tightened.
EPA Filipino soldiers stand guard on a street in Manila, Philippine­s, on Wednesday. According to news reports, government forces had been on heightened alert and security tightened.

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