File photo of Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) Abu Misry Mama with his followers. AFP
Hardline Muslim guerrillas in the Philippines
said Friday they have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State, the extremist
jihadists who now control large swathes of Iraq
and Syria .
Clips have been uploaded in recent weeks on the video
sharing site YouTube showing both southern Philippines-based Bangsamoro Islamic
Freedom Fighters (BIFF) and the Abu Sayyaf rebels pledging support to the
Islamic State (IS).
"We have an alliance with the Islamic State and Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi," BIFF spokesman Abu Misry Mama told Agence France-Presse
by telephone on Friday, referring to the brutal jihadist group's leader.
Misry confirmed that a YouTube video uploaded on Wednesday,
showing a purported BIFF leader flanked by armed men reading a statement of
support for the IS, had come from his group.
BIFF split in 2008 from the Philippines ' main Muslim rebel
group, the 12,000-member Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF). The latter
signed a peace agreement with President Benigno Aquino III's government last
March.
BIFF, which is believed to have a few hundred fighters, has
rejected the peace talks and pursued the decades-old armed campaign to
establish an Islamic state in the southern Philippines which was begun by the
MILF.
Abu Misry, described by the Philippine military as a BIFF
spokesman, said his group had no plans to impose the radical IS brand of Islam
in the Southeast Asian nation.
Beheadings, mass executions and the taking of child brides
have marked the IS campaign across large parts of Iraq
and Syria .
Abu Misry said his group had not sent any fighters from the Philippines to
help the IS, nor was it recruiting people to join the IS.
"But if they need our help, why not?" he added.
Colonel Dickson Hermoso, spokesman for a southern
Philippines-based army division, described BIFF as a "terrorist"
group engaged in extortion to finance its activities.
"There's no evidence that Filipino fighters are being
sent there (to Syria and Iraq ),"
Hermoso said, while adding that both BIFF and IS followed an
"extreme" brand of Islam.
A purported Abu Sayyaf video has also been uploaded on
Youtube showing one of the group's most senior leaders, Isnilon Hapilon,
mentioning al-Baghdadi as he read out a statement that pledged allegiance to
the IS.
He was filmed linking arms with more than a dozen men, some
with faces swathed in fabric, as they stood at a forest clearing to pray and
listen to his statement.
Hapilon carries a $5-million reward on his head by the United States
which considers his group a "foreign terror organization" engaged in
beheadings, bombings, and kidnappings.
Philippine military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Ramon
Zagala dismissed the video clips.
"This is propaganda and we will not give these
terrorists the satisfaction by commenting," Zagala said.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/93413/biff-abu-sayyaf-pledge-allegiance-to-islamic-state-jihadists
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