SYDNEY, Australia (3rd UPDATE) - Islamic militants in the lawless southern Philippines were paid US$97,750 for the release of Australian Warren Rodwell who survived 15 months in captivity, a report said on Sunday, March 24.
A gaunt Rodwell, a former soldier, 54, was set free at Pagadian, a port city on Mindanao island, Saturday, some 100 kilometers (60 miles) east of where he was kidnapped on December 5, 2011.
Philippine and Australian authorities refused to say if a ransom was paid, but
This was substantially less than the $2 million the kidnappers, members of the Abu Sayyaf militant group, had initially demanded soon after they broke into the house Rodwell shared with his Filipina wife in Ipil town.
The negotiator, Al Rashid Sakalahul, told
But what they accepted was far less, he said. (The amount verifies Rappler's original estimate on the money paid to free the
'Middlemen' did not profit from ransom - Sakalahul
Sakalahul said he had succeeded in getting them to lower their demand to P4 million.
"It was really a tough negotiation but in the end, with God's help, we managed to secure the release of Rodwell," Sakalahul, vice-governor of the
He said he was revealing how much was paid to douse speculation he benefited from negotiating with the kidnappers and deny speculation from
"I don't want to be accused by anyone that I benefited from this negotiation -- that's why I came up with this admission," he said.
"My only mission is to save the life of Rodwell by getting him out of the Abu Sayyaf. I am clean. My conscience is clean," he said.
Sakalahul said he did not know where the money was sourced but it was passed through Rodwell's wife Miraflor Gutang and her brother Roger.
He said the negotiations were conducted with an emissary of Puruji Indama, an Abu Sayyaf commander in Basilan feared for beheading and mutilating his victims.
Indama gained prominence after he and other Muslim militants attacked a Philippine military convoy, killing and mutilating 14 marines in 2007.
In November 2009, Indama kidnapped three ethnic Chinese factory workers and beheaded one of them before releasing the other two.
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Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr said
"Just be clear that the Australian government never pays ransoms," he told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
"I won't comment on arrangements that may have been made by Mr Rodwell's family and Abu Sayyaf, made through the
Rodwell was Saturday flown by helicopter to a military base in Zamboanga, one of the major cities in the southern
Regional military spokesman Colonel Rodrigo Gregorio also said he had no knowledge of any ransom.
Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte also could not confirm whether or not a ransom was paid.
"We have no information," she told a radio interview.
However, she stressed that the government's policy on ransom has not changed. "The policy of the government remains that we do not pay ransom."
Australian media said he was expected to remain in hospital for up to a week.
Senior Philippine military sources said he was being cared for in a tightly-secured, special
A rotating force of 600 US Special Forces has been stationed in the southern
The Abu Sayyaf is one of many armed Islamist groups operating in the southern
It is believed to have only a few hundred members but has been blamed for the worst terror attacks in recent Philippine history. It also has a history of kidnapping foreigners, Christians and local business people for ransom.
Nigel Brennan, an Australian photojournalist who was held hostage for 462 days after he was kidnapped in
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