Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Purported photo of slain Malaysian bomber Marwan surfaces in Southern Philippines (Warning graphic photo)

From the Mindanao Examiner BlogSpot site (Jan 29): Purported photo of slain Malaysian bomber Marwan surfaces in Southern Philippines





Purported photo of slain Zulkifli bin Hir sent to the regional newspaper Mindanao Examiner. (Text by Mark Navales)

A notorious Malaysian leader of the Jemaah Islamiya, Zulkifli bin Hir, may have been slain in fighting with Filipino police commandos in the southern Philippines.

A purported mug shot photo of Zulkifli, alias Marwan, was sent to the regional newspaper Mindanao Examiner as proof that the dreaded terrorist – who had a $5 million bounty offered by the United States - is dead.

The photo showed blood oozing from Zulkifli’s nose. The picture was believed taken by one of the raiders, who reportedly cut off one of Zulkifli's fingers so it can be used for DNA analysis, the source of the photo said.

 The daring raid was similar to the US mission ordered by President Obama in Pakistan that killed al-Qaeda leader Usama bin Laden.

The once feared Malaysian bomber is on the US list of most wanted terrorists. He was believed to be the head of the Kumpulun Mujahidin Malaysia terrorist organization and a member of Jemaah Islamiya’s central command. Since August 2003, he has been present in the Philippines, where he is believed to have conducted bomb-making training for the Abu Sayyaf.

There was no report about another Filipino terrorist Basit Usman, who was reportedly with Zulkifli, when police commandos raided the village of Tukanalipao in Mamasapano town in Maguindanao province.

Police said 44 commandos were killed when they intruded into the 105th Base Command of the former rebel group Moro Islamic Liberation Front which signed a peace agreement with Manila last year.

The MILF said members of the police Special Action Force commandos attacked its base, sparking daylong clashes on January 25. The US military was believed to have played a vital role in the operation that killed Zulkifli.

Mohagher Iqbal, MILF vice chairman, said the operation of the police commandos was uncoordinated. “We were not even informed about this (operation) and it was not coordinated with us. They attacked the 105th Base Command and our members defended themselves from the attack,” he told the Mindanao Examiner.

The army also said the police failed to inform or coordinate with them when they mounted the operations that led to fierce clashes with former rebels. Another rebel group, the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, also attacked police commandos and killing more than a dozen of them.

Emmanuel Fontanilla, a spokesman for the former rebel group Moro National Liberation Front which signed a peace deal with Manila in 1996, said Zulkifli was not even in Maguindanao’s Mamasapano town when police commandos raided a purported JI hideout in Tukanalipao village on January 25.

“Masakit po yung nangyari (at) mga kapatid din natin yung namatay. Ang pagkakaalam namin yung kanilang subject ay wala po doon. Wala po doon. Nasa Lanao po. Mali yung intelligence nila. Mabuti pa nagtanong sila sa amin,” Fontanilla said in a radio interview with dzMM.

Mamasapano town Mayor Tahirodin Benzar Ampatuan also said there were no reports that Usman or Zulkifli were hiding in his town. “We have no reports that Usman or Zulkifli are hiding in our town. What the police raided was the 105th Base Command of the MILF,” he told the Mindanao Examiner.

Ampatuan said police also did not inform or coordinate with him when they launched the operation in Tukanalipao village. “We are not even aware of the police operation and police did not coordinate with us,” he said.

Defense chief Voltaire Gazmin and Interior Secretary Mar Roxas, citing intelligence information, earlier said Zulkifli was killed in the battle and that there is a photograph of his cadaver to prove the terrorist was slain. Roxas said they are waiting for the DNA results to back up the report.

Regional Governor Mujiv Hataman also claimed that Zulkifli was killed and that his body was recovered by civilians and immediately buried in accordance with the Islamic tradition. He said the body cannot be exhumed because it is against Islam.

“Kagabi nagva-validate din tayo, ang sabi eh inilibing na. Community na ang naglibing. Kasi usually, by tradition, kung mayroong Muslim na namatay, mayroong obligasyong ilibing within 24 hours. Not necessarily and BIFF or MILF ang naglibing sa kanya, “Hataman also told dzMM.

Murad Ebrahim, the secluded chieftain of the MILF, has ordered an investigation into the clashes. “Our concern is the truth. There will be a lot of speculations as to what happened and until what happened is established with credibility and integrity, the said incident will weigh down our current efforts to bring peace to our homeland,” he said in a statement.

“In order to give meaning to their deaths, we must resolve not to let something like this happen again. To this end, the MILF is convening a Special Investigative Commission to be composed of members of the MILF Central Committee and BIAF (Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces) General Staff who are tasked to investigate the events at Mamasapano, Maguindanao that resulted in the death of members of the MILF and of soldiers of the Philippine Government,” he added.

Despite the violence and mounting calls by politicians to review the peace accord with the MILF, Ebrahim reiterated their commitment to the peace process. “We hereby reiterate the MILF’s full commitment to the peace process with the Philippine Government. An enduring peace and justice remain to be our primary objective. In this regard, all actions and pronouncements of our political and military units of the MILF should advance and adhere to this primary objective as much as possible and with due regard to the safety and security of our people and communities,” he said.

Ebrahim also condoled with the families of the slain police commandos.“First and foremost, we express and send our deepest sympathies to the families and friends of those who died in the armed encounter in Mamasapano, Maguindanao. The emotions of loss and pain are not alien to us Bangsamoro and Mujahideen. Nevertheless, respect and solidarity is due to all, irrespective of which side they belong,” he said.

http://www.mindanaoexaminer.net/2015/01/purported-photo-of-slain-malaysian.html

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