Police Inspector-General Police Khalid Abu Bakar told
reporters in Malaysia
that the sailors are being held by the Abu Sayyaf. No further details were made
available by the Malaysian police and Philippine authorities were also silent
on the reports.
But the Borneo Post reported last week that suspected Abu
Sayyaf militants demanded P200 million in ransoms in exchange for the safe
release of the sailors.
It said that one of the hostages, Tayudin Anjut, 45, phoned
his employer to say that they are being held captive in Basilan, one of 5
provinces under the troubled Muslim autonomous region in southern Philippines .
Anjut said the kidnappers were demanding the ransoms for
their freedom, but Philippine military and police authorities could not
immediately confirm nor deny the reports.
The sailors – Abd Rahim Summas, 62, Fandy Bakran, 26, Mohd
Zumadil Rahim, 23 and Mohd Ridzuan Ismail, 32 – all crew members of the tugboat
Seruduna 3, disappeared at sea off Lahad Datu town on July 18.
Their tugboat was recovered by Sabah
authorities with its engine still running. The boat was set to return to
Semporna after its barge delivered a cargo of stones in Sandakan
City also in Sabah ,
according to the Malaysian media.
The Abu Sayyaf also seized 7 other Indonesian tugboat
crewmen on June 22 in the Sulu Sea near the Philippines border and the hostages
– Ferry Arifin, the tugboat skipper; M. Mahbrur Dahri, Edi Suryono, Ismail,
M.Nasir, M.Sofyan and Robin Piter – were last reported being sighted in Luuk
town, local military intelligence reports said.
The boat – owned by PT Rusianto Brothers – was heading to
Samarinda in East Kalimantan following a trip from the Philippines
when gunmen on speedboats intercepted it. Indonesian media reported that Arifin
phoned his wife and told her that they were intercepted at sea by gunmen, who
introduced themselves as Abu Sayyaf and were also demanding over P200 million
for their safe release.
The Abu Sayyaf previously kidnapped 14 Indonesian tugboat
crewmembers in separate attacks at sea off Sabah
and brought them to Sulu province and eventually released through the
intercession of the Moro National Liberation Front.
Raid
Just last week, Philippine Marines raided
a suspected Abu Sayyaf hideout in Tawi-Tawi and captured 3 people and three
speedboats in a daring operation near the Sabah
border.
Officials said members of the elite Amphibious Ready Group
(ARG) under Colonel Fernando Gomez launched the operation near Sitangkai Island . A shotgun and ammunition were
also seized from the men, who are currently being interrogated to determine if
they were involved in cross-border kidnappings.
It was not immediately known whether the speedboats are
being used in kidnapping activities in Sabah in Malaysia . No other details were
made available by security officials on the raid because the operation is going
on, but the ARG includes the BRP Tarlac, the newest ship of the Philippine
Navy.
The capture of the trio coincided with the arrest July 21 of
an Abu Sayyaf militant – Bads Adjam alias Abu Jihad – in Santa
Maria village in Zamboanga
City . Adjam has been
linked to the 2002 kidnappings of six members of the Jehova’s Witness in
Patikul town in Sulu province and 21 mostly European holidaymakers in Sipadan Island
off Sabah in 2000.
Officials did not say if Adjam’s arrest was connected to the
military operations in Tawi-Tawi, but both provinces are part of the Muslim
autonomous region.
http://mindanaoexaminer.com/malaysia-confirms-sailors-kidnapped-by-sayyaf/
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