Manila Bulletin

Police kill Abu Sayyaf militant implicated in 15 beheadings

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Philippine police, backed by military intelligen­ce agents, killed Nawapi Abdulsaid in a brief gunbattle Wednesday night in the remote coastal town of Hadji Mohammad Ajul on Basilan island after weeks of surveillan­ce, security officials said.

Abu Sayyaf is a small but violent armed Muslim group, which has been blackliste­d by the United States and the Philippine­s as a terrorist organizati­on for ransom kidnapping­s, beheadings, bombings and other bloody attacks.

It has been considerab­ly weakened by battle setbacks, surrenders and infighting, but remains a security threat particular­ly in the southern Philippine­s, home to minority Muslims in the predominan­tly Roman Catholic nation.

Abdulsaid, who used the nom de guerre Khatan, was one of several Abu Sayyaf militants who aligned themselves with the Islamic State group.

A confidenti­al police report said that Abdulsaid had been implicated in at least 15 beheadings in Basilan, including of 10 Philippine marines in Al-barka town in 2007 and two of six kidnapped Vietnamese sailors near Sumisip town in 2016. The Vietnamese were seized from a passing cargo ship.

He was also involved in attacks against government forces in 2022 and a bombing in November that killed two pro-government militiamen and wounded two others in Basilan, the report said.

Abdulsaid was placed under surveillan­ce in February, but police forces couldn’t immediatel­y move to make a arrest because of the “hostile nature” of the area where he was eventually gunned down, according to the report.

On Monday, Philippine troops killed the leader of another Muslim rebel group and 11 of his men blamed for past bombings and extortion in a separate clash in a marshy hinterland in Datu Saudi Ampatuan town in southern Maguindana­o del Sur province, the military said.

Seven soldiers were wounded in the clash with the members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters.

The Abu Sayyaf and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters are among a few small armed groups still struggling to wage a separatist uprising in the southern Philippine­s.

The largest armed separatist group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, signed a 2014 peace pact with the government that eased decades of sporadic fighting.

Moro Islamic Liberation Front rebel commanders became parliament­arians and administra­tors of a five-province Muslim autonomous region in a transition arrangemen­t after signing the peace deal. They are preparing for a regular election scheduled for next year.

 ?? ?? EXERCISE — People exercise using a jump rope at the Freedom Park in Marikina City on Saturday, April 27, 2024, amid a high heat index. (Mark Balmores)
EXERCISE — People exercise using a jump rope at the Freedom Park in Marikina City on Saturday, April 27, 2024, amid a high heat index. (Mark Balmores)

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