(UPDATED) Previously identified as one of the two most influential voices inspiring and guiding foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq, Cerantonino is charged for being 'undocumented and for being an undesirable alien'
ARRESTED.
Australian Musa Cerantonio arrives in Manila
from Cebu .
He is being kept at Camp
Bagong Diwa in Bicutan.
File photo by Edwin Llobrera
A 29-year-old
Australian citizen believed to be a leader of a group of Islamic militants
calling for global jihad is now under the custody of Philippine immigration
authorities.
Immigration chief
Siegfred Mison identified the alleged terrorist as Robert Edward Cerantonio who
was immediately arrested by joint elements from the Bureau of Immigration and
the Philippine National Police in Cebu shortly after a warrant for
his deportation was issued on Thursday, July 10.
Authorities
immediately brought Cerantonio to the Immigration’s holding facility in Bicutan
where he remains while waiting for his actual deportation to Australia .
On July 7, the
Australian police informed Philippine Immigration officials about the
cancellation of Cerantonio’s passport. The Australian Ministry for Foreign
Affairs cancelled his passport after Australian intelligence authorities
identified him as being the one behind messages sent to suspected terrorists
calling for extremism.
Social media
Cerantonio,
believed to be staying in the Philippines
for about a year already, is a Christian convert to Islam who has been using
social media to encourage terrorism and urge Muslims to join the jihad in Syria and Iraq . He has been identified as one
of the two most influential voices inspiring and guiding foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq .
Reports said he
combined traditional media with new media: his radical teachings are on
YouTube, and he engages and spreads the same ideology espoused by al-Qaeda on
Twitter and Facebook.
With the Philippines as
his haven, Cerantonio used the Internet to urge people to undertake extremist
activities. These acts violate anti-terrorism laws, especially those of Australia and the Philippines .
According to a
paper published by the International
Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR)
in April, one in 4 foreign fighters followed Cerantonio’s Twitter account. On
Twitter, he uses highly inflammatory language. (READ: ISIS online cheerleader Musa Cerantonio spotted in PH)
Cerantonio was
observed to be far more active on Facebook. His Facebook page was the third
most “liked” page among jihadists and has been “explicit in his endorsement of
violent jihad and support for jihadist organizations operating in Syria ,”
according to ICSR.
Deportation
Cerantonio has
been seen in Manila , Cebu
and Zamboanga, Rappler sources said. His activities in the Philippines , according
to Mison, “pose a risk to public interest.” He added, "Cerantonino was
charged for being undocumented and for being an undesirable alien."
"Cerantonio
will be deported to Australia
when all the documents necessary for deportation are complete," Mison
said. (READ: Online preacher Musa Cerantonio leaves Philippines to join ISIS?)
"Among the
documents required for deportation is the NBI clearance to make sure that the
subject has no pending case in our local courts," Mison added.
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