Toronto Star

Video of kidnapped Canadians released

- JIM GOMEZ ASSOCIATED PRESS

Suspected militants demand that Philippine government stop artillery attacks

MANILA, PHILIPPINE­S— Suspected Muslim militants have posted a video that purports to show, for the first time, two Canadians, a Norwegian and a Filipina who were abducted from a southern Philippine resort last month. The militants have demanded that government forces stop their artillery attacks.

Army Brig.-Gen. Alan Arrojado said Wednesday the military would reject any demands from the militants. Two government counterter­rorism experts who examined the video separately concluded that hostages shown in it were the three foreign men and the woman seized from a marina on the island of Samal. They said the military and police were examining details in the video in order to identify the kidnappers and determine their location.

The video was circulated online and by the U.S.-based SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which monitors jihadi websites. It shows the hostages sitting in a grassy clearing with a dozen mostly masked gunmen standing behind them. Two black flags hang in the backdrop of lush foliage.

The three foreign hostages, speaking at gunpoint, urged the Canadian and Philippine government­s to stop the military assaults, particular­ly artillery fire, which one captive said had hit close to them. One of the hostages, who identified himself as John Ridsdel, spoke as a long-haired militant held his head and aimed a machete on him.

“We beseech the Canadian government to please, please help us and the Philippine government ... by stopping all of the operations that have been going on, like artillery fire which came near us,” Ridsdel said.

One of the masked gunmen read a statement saying they would negotiate with the Canadian and Philippine government­s and would issue their demands once the military assaults stopped. The gunmen then erupted in shouts of allahu akbar, Arabic for “God is greatest.”

Arrojado, who has been leading months of offensives against Abu Sayyaf militants in Sulu, a predominan­tly Muslim province about 950 kilometres south of Manila, said the assaults would not stop.

“Our mandate is to go after the enemies of the state,” Arrojado said by telephone.

The kidnappers did not identify themselves, but Philippine authoritie­s suspect Abu Sayyaf militants are behind the abductions because they have a history of kidnapping­s and similar video postings.

They usually seek large ransoms from government­s and relatives of their hostages.

The two government experts said intelligen­ce received by the military and police indicated the involvemen­t of an Abu Sayyaf commander, Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan, in the Samal kidnapping­s. Sawadjaan, who is based in the mountains of Sulu’s Patikul town, was also implicated in the kidnapping­s of two German tourists last year. Sawadjaan’s group posted a video of the Germans, who were later freed, reportedly in exchange for a large ransom.

The video was the first indication that they were still alive. “The positive thing that we derived from this video is that the kidnap victims are in good health,” military spokesman Col. Restituto Padilla told reporters.

Following the Sept. 21 kidnapping­s, Philippine authoritie­s vowed to strengthen security in the south. But three weeks later, gunmen abducted a former Italian Catholic missionary from his pizza restaurant in southern Zamboanga Sibugay province.

The abductions highlight the longrunnin­g security problems that have hounded the southern Philippine­s, a region with bountiful resources, but which also suffers from poverty, lawlessnes­s and decades-long Muslim and communist insurgenci­es.

 ??  ?? Robert Hall, left, and John Ridsdel are seen in a video image.
Robert Hall, left, and John Ridsdel are seen in a video image.

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