A joint team of police and military operatives arrested Sunday night in General
The Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) said
Ustadz Mohammad Ali Tambako, leader of the United Islamic Movement for
Justice (UIMJ), and five cohorts were arrested on Sunday in Barangay (village)
Calumpang around 9 p.m.
The UIMJ, which some reports identify as the Justice for
Islamic Movement or JIM, is a breakaway group of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom
Fighters (BIFF).
BIFF spokesperson Abu Misri Mama confirmed that Tambako had
bolted the BIFF.
A military source told the Philippine Daily Inquirer that
Tambako was a trusted lieutenant of BIFF founder Uztadz Ameril Umra Kato.
“He was the second highest leader of BIFF who formed his own
separate group,” said the officer who asked not to be named for lack of
authority to speak on the matter.
Joint elements of the CIDG, Special Action Force, General
Santos police, and the military served warrants of arrest on Tambako for murder
and double frustrated murder, the CIDG said in a report.
A military source identified four of the men arrested with
Tambako as Ali Ludisman, Abdusama Badrudin Guiamel, Datukan Kadiwang and a
certain Ibrahim. The CIDG did not provide names of Tambako’s arrested cohorts.
Reports said the UIMJ men were on board separate tricycles
when accosted by authorities.
They were one their way to a seaport when served an arrest
warrant issued by Regional Trial Court Judge George Jabido.
The arresting team seized three hand grenades and three
handguns. They did not resist arrest.
Before bolting the BIFF, Tambako assumed its leadership
after Kato became seriously ill. He was tagged in various crimes in North Cotabato villages last year and involved in the
series of attacks against the military in Maguindanao.
His named emerged as among the armed men in a clash with
members of the Special Action Force (SAF) in Mamasapano town where the police
commandos killed suspected Malaysian bomber Zulkifli bin Hir alias “Marwan.”
Mohaqher Iqbal, peace panel chair of the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front (MILF), has said the BIFF had split into three groups:
One headed by Kato, the other headed by Kagi Karialan and the third group by
Tambako who reportedly has about a hundred armed followers.
Ibrahim Malang, acting spokesperson of the UIMJ, earlier
said their forces participated in the clash with SAF men. Malang said he was speaking in behalf of
Tambako.
Iqbal told a Senate committee investigating the Mamasapano
incident that Tambako’s group joined the MILF’s 105th Base Command under
Zacaria Goma, and the BIFF, under Kagui Karialan, in fighting the SAF.
Tambako was reportedly to be flown to Manila for further interrogation, radio
reports said.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/679091/rebel-leader-in-killing-of-saf-men-falls-to-govt-troops
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