From The Standard (Aug 22): ‘Like dying every day’
2 Coast Guard men tell of captivity at the hands of Abu Sayyaf
TWO Coast Guard men trembled and cried Friday as they recalled their harrowing four months as captives of Abu Sayyaf bandits who beheaded one of their fellow hostages.
Sporting long beards, Gringo Villaruz and Rod Allain Pagaling said luck and quick wit aided their escape from the Abu Sayyaf bandits on the remote southern island of Jolo.
“Each day I felt like I was going to die,” Pagaling told reporters shortly after arriving in Manila, as his 3-year-old daughter, Allaina, clung tightly to his shoulders.
Home again. Coastguard Rod Allain Pagaling is reunited with his daughter Allaina and wife Judith in Manila on Friday following his escape from his Abu Sayyaf captors. AFP
“It was very difficult. We had nothing else to turn to except prayer.”
The men, who were abducted in May along with another hostage, were blindfolded, stripped of their shirts and made to beg for their lives on their knees as their masked captors held machetes to their necks.
A video of the desperate plea was posted on the video-sharing website YouTube as the bandits demanded an undisclosed ransom.
The decapitated remains of the other hostage, Rodolfo Boligao, were found on a dark, deserted Jolo highway last week.
The beheading prompted elite military forces to launch a risky operation to free 11 hostages held by the Al-Qaeda-linked militants— including the two Coast Guard officials, as well as two Malaysians, a Dutch national and a South Korean.
After the military engaged the militants in a firefight late Wednesday, Villaruz and Pagaling were able to slip away.
“The fighting was so intense. There was no time to think hard,” said Villaruz.
“We just made a run for it while there was chaos all around.”
Found an hour apart, they did not know of each other’s escape until they saw one another Thursday at a local military hospital.
The Abu Sayyaf militants are believed to be holding nine remaining hostages. Authorities are continuing to pursue the group, said Capt. Antonio Bulao, a military spokesman in Jolo.
Fifteen Abu Sayyaf militants died in the fighting on Wednesday.
Impoverished Jolo is a known stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf, a loose band of several hundred armed men set up in the 1990s with seed money from Osama Bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda network.
The group engages in kidnappings to finance its operations, often targeting foreigners and sometimes beheading captives if ransoms are not paid.
It has also been blamed for the worst bomb attacks in the country, including the firebombing of a ferry off Manila Bay in 2004 that killed more than 100 people.
Also on Wednesday, one soldier and three Abu Sayyaf terroirsts were killed in Basilan.
Capt. Roy Trinidad, chief of staff of Task Force Zambasulta said six bandits were also wounded in the firefight in Sitio Punoh Timuguen, Barangay Biwas, Sumisip.
“The firefight lasted for one hour before the bandits withdrew in different directions. We’ve one casualty while three bandits were killed and many of them were wounded,” Trinidad said.
Trinidad said ground troops received artillery and air support.
http://manilastandardtoday.com/2015/08/22/-like-dying-every-day-/
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