'We do not negotiate with terrorists,' Philippine Defence Secretary Voltaire Gazmin says
The
The SITE
terrorism monitoring group said Tuesday that the Abu Sayyaf warned it would
carry out its threat within 15 days unless a huge ransom is paid and Berlin halts support for
the US-led campaign against the Islamic State group.
"We do not
negotiate with terrorists," Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin told reporters when asked about the P250
million ($5.62-million) ransom demand.
Gazmin confirmed
that the Abu Sayyaf, a small band of Islamic militants based in the southern Philippines , abducted a German man and woman at
sea earlier this year as they sailed a yacht off the western island of Palawan .
"What the
Abu Sayyaf is doing is like propaganda, so that the government will give in to
their demands. We will not be intimidated by these gestures and actions,"
he said in a separate radio interview, adding that the group was weakened and
contained to small areas.
"They saw
what the ISIS (Islamic State) has been doing, so they used that to increase the
ransom," he said, after SITE released a picture attributed to the group
showing a masked militant with a machete beside a grey-haired white man.
President Benigno
Aquino, who is on a visit to the United States ,
said the Philippines '
struggle against domestic Muslim extremists like the Abu Sayyaf was similar to
the global fight against jihadists from the Islamist State
group.
Speaking in a
media interview while on a US
trip, transcripts of which were releasedThursday by the presidential palace in Manila , Aquino said that
these local groups could not be assumed to be part of the Islamic State.
He also said his
foreign secretary would discuss with US State Department officials what kind of
help they could provide to the American-led global fight against the jihadist
movement.
"Of course,
we want to do something that is do-able and within our capabilities without
posing undue risks," said Aquino whose country is a close US ally.
'Criminal
in nature'
The Abu Sayyaf,
considered a "foreign terrorist organisation" by the United States ,
is a loose band of several hundred Islamic militants originally organised with
Al-Qaeda funding in the 1990s.
The group has
been blamed for the Philippines '
worst terrorist attacks, including kidnappings, abductions and beheadings of
foreign and local hostages.
It is believed to
be currently holding several other hostages, including two European
birdwatchers abducted in February 2012.
Since July, the
Abu Sayyaf has uploaded videos online proclaiming its allegiance to the Islamic
State group, which has taken control of large parts of Iraq and Syria .
"They are
taking advantage of the international attention ISIS
is getting so that the ransom would increase," Guerrero told reporters.
Manila-based
security analyst Rommel Banlaoi said the homegrown militants were mainly
interested in securing a large ransom for the German hostages, rather than in
any political gesture.
"They are
after the money," said Banlaoi from the Philippine Institute for Peace,
Violence and Terrorism Research, adding that the group was trying to re-brand
itself "to justify its existence" via professions of allegiance to
the Islamic State militants.
http://www.rappler.com/nation/70186-philippines-militants-germans-hostages
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