The government says the reports are 'not confirmed' but a group has been formed to monitor Filipino extremists' activities in relation to ISIS
The information
on two Filipino jihadists reportedly killed last year while fighting for the
Islamic State (ISIS) came from an Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) in Syria who reported the incident to the
Philippine Embassy in Damascus ,
Rappler learned.
The OFW saw two
dead opposition fighters on the streets of an area outside Damascus after a massive firefight between
Syrian government troops and the rebels. A Syrian government soldier supposedly
asked where the OFW was from and when the Filipino replied “Philippines ,”
the soldier pointed to the bodies and said: “Philippine. Abu Sayyaf.”
The OFW would
report this to the Philippine Embassy in Damascus ,
which would relay the report to Manila .
It’s an old report based on an incident that happened in December 2013,
according to a source privy to the information.
The death of the
2 Filipino fighters wasn’t the first report about Filipino involvement with ISIS . Two months earlier, in October 2013, the embassy in
Damascus came across a report published in an
Iranian news site which claimed that a Filipino “terrorist” was killed in Syria .
Citing a military
source, the report of FARS News Agency (FNA) named the dead Filipino fighter as
“Abo Ahmad Shiko from
the Philippines .”
ISIS now controls
parts of Iraq and Syria in a bid to establish a so-called Islamic
Caliphate prompting the US
to carry out airstrikes that
target ISIS camps. The Abu Sayyaf, on the
other hand, is a terrorist group notorious for kidnap-for-ranson and bombings
in the Philippines .
Rappler executive
editor Maria Ressa reported in June 2014 how ISIS is boosting
membership in Southeast Asia, citing intelligence reports of at least one Filipino
joining 200 Australians, 50 Indonesians, 20 Malaysians going to fight the jihad
in Syria .
“It’s impossible
that only 3 Pinoys went and they’re all dead,” said the source privy to the
report.
A confidential
Malacañang memo that recently circulated among journalists cited fears by the
Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) that "some Filipino fighters,
pronouncing themselves as veterans, have already returned to the country and
are teaching the cause of Islamic fundamentalists and extremists in Syria ."
DFA memo
The President
received the information about the 2 Filipino jihadists only in March 2014
through a DFA memo. The same information was relayed to the Department of
National Defense and the National Security Agency.
The reported
death of the 2 Filipino jihadists made local headlines early September
following a Reuters report
revealing the government inquiry into their death. The same Reuters report said
about 100 Filipinos who were trained in Iran
were deployed in Syria .
The DFA responded
to the Reuters report by saying the deaths “remain unconfirmed” but that
"the Philippines will
do its part in global efforts to thwart ISIS .”
The reports came
out as the Philippine military denied that Filipino fighters have left the
country to fight for ISIS in Syria .
Military officers denied earlier claims by former President Fidel Ramos
and Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte that at least a hundred fighters have
joined ISIS . They also dismissed a video of Abu Sayyaf members
swearing their oath of allegiance to the ISIS .
The Bangsamoro
Islamic Freedom Freedoms (BIFF), the breakway group of the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF) which opposes the peace agreement also claimed pledging
allegiance to ISIS.
Confidential
Malacañang memo
A confidential
Malacañang memo would also circulate among local media showing police official
Felizardo Serapio of the Law Enforcement and Security Integration Office asking
Executive Secretary Pacquito Ochoa Jr "to consider the creation of a
Technical Working Group (TWG) that will create a database on monitoring and
profiling foreign fighters, as a significant contribution to manage and inhibit
further presence of Filipinos, as reported, in conflict-stricken areas as
foreign fighters."
Serapio's memo
raised fears about the Middle East becoming
yet again a training ground for Filipino extremists. "The deliberate
acquisition of terrorist skills introduces governments to a disturbing fact
that radical recruits will be utilizing such type of experience into their home
countries."
Serapio's
concerns are echoed by other governments. In a speech last week before the UN
Security Council, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said her country and
Southeast Asia are also at risk from the brutality of
ISIS.
“We’ve seen this
before. Extremists, foreign fighters returning home, responsible for terrorist
attacks in our region,” she said.
Ramos earlier
expressed the same concern, citing how the slain Abdurajak Janjalani fought
alongside jihadists in Afghanistan
and then returned home to form the Abu Sayyaf Group.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/69817-dead-filipino-isis-jihadists
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