From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jun 27): Kidnappers demand P20M for gov’t clerk; abductors of Bansil sisters
silent
Nadjoua Bansil and Linda Bansil INQUIRER file photo
The kidnappers of a 56-year-old clerk at a government-run university here
have demanded a P20-million ransom, the military said.
Meanwhile, another group of kidnappers belonging to the Abu Sayyaf remained
silent on what it wanted for documentary filmmakers Nadjoua and Linda Bansil,
whom they abducted in Sulu on June 22.
In the case of Alrasid Rojas, a clerk at the Western Mindanao State
University here, Colonel Andrelino Colina, commander of the military-led Task
Force Zamboanga, said the abductors made the demand on Monday by calling one of
the victim’s children.
“In fact, that particular child of the victim’s managed to talk to him over
the phone,” he said.
Colina would not confirm the military was using a tracking device to locate
Rojas but he said the call was traced from “the vicinity of Luuk, Sulu.”
Rojas, who was assigned at the WMSU’s Islamic Studies department, was
forcibly taken from his house on Amping Drive in Barangay (village) Campo Islam
here by about a dozen men wearing military uniforms.
He resisted the kidnapping but the kidnappers, whose identities remained
unclear to this day, beat him, Senior Superintendent Edwin de Ocampo, city
police director, said.
The police chief said police had leads on the identities of the kidnappers
“based on the testimonies provided by the witnesses during the abduction.”
De Ocampo said the initial police theory was that Rojas’ abduction had
something to do with his “relationship” with colleagues at the university.
“We see it more as work related. First, the victim is not wealthy even if he
owns a small coffee shop at the public market. The coffee shop is not really
making money,” he said.
In Sulu, meanwhile, amid the silence of the military and the police, Governor
Abdusakur Tan said he had ordered an investigation of all individuals associated
with the Bansil sisters, including the 19 members of their party.
Tan said the 19 members of the Bansil sisters’ party had to explain why they
had some of the victims’ belongings.
For example, Tan said the siblings’ guide, Yasir Rajim, got their mobile
phones, camera and other personal gadgets.
Rajim is allegedly the spokesperson of Mauzidin Bantilan, the supposed
caretaker of the Sultanate of Sulu. Mauzidin’s claim had been denied by Abraham
Idjirani, an aide to Sultan Jamalul Kiram III.
Colonel Jose Johriel Cenabre, commander of the military-led Joint Task Force
Sulu, said authorities have been investigating Rajim who was also asked to turn
over all the belongings of the victims.
Cenabre admitted that Rajim and some members of the Bansil sisters’ party
have become suspects because they could not properly explain why they had the
personal belongings of the victims.
Tan said he wanted Mauzidin to work for the release of the victims because he
was the one responsible for their visit to Sulu.
The Bansil sisters were shooting a documentary on the defunct Sulu sultanate
when abducted in Patikul town.
The Bansil family said they were at a loss over the fate of their kin because
even authorities had not updated them as of Thursday.
“It has been five days since they were taken but not a single policeman came
to us to ask us. We might be of help if they had approached us,” Medmessiah
Bansil, brother of the victims told the Philippine Daily Inquirer.
Nadjoua, a respected filmmaker, was nominated at the Gawad Urian for her
film, “Bohe, Sons of the Waves.”
Maguindanao Governor Esmael Mangudadatu said he has been exerting effort to
locate Nadjoua, whom he described as a close friend, and her sister Linda.
As of Thursday, authorities said they had no update on the negotiations being
conducted by Sulu locals to secure the victims.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/434241/kidnappers-demand-p20m-for-govt-clerk-abductors-of-bansil-sisters-silent
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