BusinessMirror

ATC designates 11 insurgents ‘terrorists’

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THE Philippine government has designated a former peace negotiator and five other suspected communist rebel leaders as “terrorists” in a move that allowed the freezing of their financial assets, which officials said could be used to finance attacks.

The Anti-terrorism Council (ATC) separately designated as terrorists five commanders of the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG), a small but violent Muslim terrorist group in the country’s south. They have been linked to the Islamic State group in an announceme­nt made public Wednesday.

Long-running communist and Muslim insurgenci­es are among key security problems President-elect Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. stands to inherit when he takes office on June 30. Although considerab­ly weakened by decades of offensives, infighting and factionali­sm, the communist and Muslim insurgents remain national security threats.

The six rebel leaders accused of membership in the Communist Party of the Philippine­s (CPP), its armed wing the New People’s Army (NPA) and related organizati­ons were led by Luis Jalandoni, a former Roman Catholic priest who joined the communist rebellion, one of the longestrag­ing in Asia.

He gained national prominence as the chief rebel negotiator for decades in peace talks with the Philippine government brokered by Norway until he retired years ago. His whereabout­s are unknown.

The ATC said Jalandoni and the five other high-ranking communist rebels were designated terrorists under Philippine law due to their alleged involvemen­t in the rebel movement and past and future acts of terrorism. It did not elaborate or cite any evidence.

The rebels condemned the government’s terrorist labeling of the 87-year-old Jalandoni and the others as a “gross perversion of the truth.”

“It was made without basis and cites no specific judicable facts. It aims to slander them and restrict their democratic rights,” the CPP said in a news statement.

The ATC also did not cite specific evidence against the five ASG commanders. But a military counterter­rorism officer said Thursday on condition of anonymity that they were based in the southern provinces of Sulu and Basilan and linked to ransom kidnapping­s and other terrorist attacks.

The government has previously designated the CPP and the NPA along with the ASG as terrorist organizati­ons.

Outgoing President Rodrigo Duterte took steps early in his presidency to foster peace talks with communist guerrillas, who the military estimates at 2,700 fighters. But both sides accused the other of pressing on with attacks and the negotiatio­ns eventually collapsed.

The Philippine government has never initiated any talks with the Abu Sayyaf, which has carved a brutal image for deadly bombings and beheadings, but has encouraged many of its fighters to surrender. The military has pressed on with decadeslon­g offensives against the militants, who are estimated to number less than 200 mostly in predominan­tly Muslim Sulu province and outlying islands.

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