The Star Malaysia

Abu Sayyaf frees hostages

Captain and Filipino crewman were abducted three months ago in Sulu

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A South Korean captain and a Filipino crewman abducted three months ago have been released.

JOLO: A South Korean captain and a Filipino crewman abducted by suspected Islamist militants in the southern Philippine­s three months ago have been released, the presidenti­al peace adviser said.

Jesus Dureza, a senior aide to President Rodrigo Duterte, fetched the two hostages in Sulu, a remote archipelag­o known as a militant hideout, and brought them to Davao, a city about 600km from Sulu.

“We were almost hopeless, but I am thankful we are able to come home safely with the help of Sir Dureza and the president for assisting us,” Filipino crewman Glenn Alindajao, 31, said in a news briefing.

South Korean captain Park Chung-hung, 38, did not speak with reporters, but like Alindajao, appeared to have grown a beard while in captivity.

In October, the Philippine military said armed men identifyin­g themselves as Abu Sayyaf militants kidnapped the pair from a South Korean cargo ship, the first such attack on a large merchant vessel.

The abduction on board the 11,400-tonne heavy load carrier Dong Bang Giant 2 occurred just off the southern entry of the Sibutu Passage, a 29km–wide channel used by merchant shipping in transit between the Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea.

Dureza said the freed captives would be flown to Manila and would undergo a debriefing.

He added that the Muslim rebel group Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), which was in peace talks with the government, helped in facilitati­ng the hostages’ release.

Dureza reiterated the government’s no ransom policy, but the Abu Sayyaf does not normally free hostages unless a ransom was paid.

The Abu Sayyaf is a loose network of militants formed in the 1990s with seed money from Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network, and has earned millions of dollars from kidnapping­s-for-ransom. Abu Sayyaf militants beheaded two Canadian hostages last year after demands for millions of dollars were not met, and released a Norwegian man along with a number of Indonesian and Malaysian sailors after ransoms were believed to have been paid.

The group began abducting sailors in border waters between Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippine­s last year, taking several dozen hostages.

The spike in abductions sparked Indonesian warnings that the region could become the “next Somalia” and pushed the three neighbours to pledge coordinate­d patrols.

The Internatio­nal Maritime Bureau said this week the number of maritime kidnapping­s hit a 10-year high last year, with waters off the southern Philippine­s becoming increasing­ly dangerous.

We were almost hopeless, but I am thankful we are able to come home safely. Glenn Alindajao

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