A threat by Philippine militants to kill a German hostage in a show of solidarity with Islamic State is the latest sign that the Middle East group's brand of radicalism is winning recruits in
Over 100 people from Southeast Asia's Muslim majority
countries of Indonesia and Malaysia and the southern Philippine region are
believed by security officials and analysts to have gone to join Islamic
State's fight in Iraq and Syria. Malaysian and Indonesian militants have
discussed forming a 100-strong Malay-speaking unit within Islamic State in Syria ,
according to a report from a well-known security group released this week.
Admiral Samuel Locklear, who heads the US Armed Forces'
Pacific Command, said on Thursday around 1,000 recruits from India to the Pacific may have joined Islamic
State to fight in Syria or Iraq . He did
not specify the countries or give a timeframe.
"That number could get larger as we go forward,"
Locklear told reporters at the Pentagon. In addition to India , the Hawaii-based Pacific Command's area
of responsibility covers 36 countries, including Australia ,
China and other Pacific Ocean states. The command does not cover Pakistan .
In the region, thousands have sworn oaths of loyalty to Islamic
State as local militant groups capitalise on a brand that has been fuelled by
violent online videos and calls to jihad through social media, security
analysts say. Security officials say this has disturbing implications for the
region, especially when battle-hardened fighters return home from the Middle East .
The Philippines '
Abu Sayyaf group, which has earlier claimed links with al Qaeda and is led by a
one-armed septuagenarian, has threatened to kill one of the two Germans it
holds hostage by October 10, according to messages distributed on Twitter.
As well as $5.6 million in ransom, the group demanded that Germany halt
its support for the US-led bombing campaign launched against Islamic State this
week.
A spokeswoman for the German foreign ministry told a regular
press briefing in Berlin
that "threats are no appropriate way of influencing German foreign
policy," and that the ministry's crisis group was working on the case.
The Abu Sayyaf, which beheaded a US
man it had taken hostage in 2001, has suffered from dwindling support and
military setbacks over the past decade, and is now believed to have only about
300 followers based on remote islands off the southern Philippines .
Oath of loyalty
Security officials doubt it has any links with Islamic State
beyond pledging allegiance to the Middle Eastern group, and see it as a move by
Abu Sayyaf to revive its fortunes and gain publicity. A senior leader of the
group and several other members made an oath of loyalty to Islamic State in a
video uploaded on YouTube in July, Philippines police and monitoring
services have said.
"We believe that there is no direct link, that they are
possibly sympathizers joining in the bandwagon to gain popular support,"
said Armed Forces of the Philippines
public information officer Lieutenant Colonel Ramon Zagala, a military
spokesman. "We see this as a way to be known, because right now the Abu
Sayyaf is in a decline. To directly say that ISIS (Islamic State) is here --
there are no indications of that."
The German man and woman, who were reportedly seized from a
yacht in the South China Sea in April, are
thought to be held on Jolo by Abu Sayyaf fighters loyal to one-armed Radullan
Sahiron. His group is also believed to be holding a Dutch and a Swiss hostage
seized in May 2012 and a Japanese man.
The three governments have declined comment on the
abductions.
Another Abu Sayyaf leader, Isnilon Hapilon, swore allegiance
to Islamic State in the Youtube video, police officials and the monitoring
services said. Speaking in Arabic, he and several other men read a statement
swearing “loyalty and obedience in adversity and comfort” to Islamic State and
its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi before a prayer and shouts of Allahu Akbar (God
is Greatest), they said.
Abu Sayyaf says it is fighting for an independent Islamic
state but it has mainly been a kidnap-for-ransom gang operating in the lawless
interiors of southern Philippines
islands. The Philippines
is mostly Christian but has a significant Muslim minority in the southern
islands.
The region is the site of a long drawn-out rebellion by
local Muslims against Manila 's rule, but Abu
Sayyaf burst into prominence in 2000 after kidnapping 21 tourists and workers
from a dive resort in nearby Malaysia .
They held the hostages, who included French, German, Finnish
and South African nationals, for months on Jolo before freeing them for
millions of dollars in ransom paid by then Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi,
according to Philippine officials. Libya denied it paid a ransom but
acknowledged government officials were involved in negotiations. Several of the
hostages visited Tripoli
after their release.
Abu Sayyaf is blamed for the worst militant attack in the Philippines , the sinking of a ferry in Manila Bay
in 2004 in which 100 people were killed. But the group has declined in recent
years, with top leaders either killed or too old.
http://www.interaksyon.com/article/96235/islamic-state-brand-gains-ground-among-asian-militants
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