The chair of the largest of three factions of the MNLF, Muslimin Sema, has backed the MILF’s ongoing peace process with the government, despite a faction under founding chairman Nur Misuari considering the MILF’s 2014 peace deal with the government a betrayal of a 1996 Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC)-brokered agreement
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“[Nur] Misuari sent word to me that he is already marshaling
his forces there in order to try and work out the release of seven or 10
Indonesians that are being held [by the Abu Sayyaf],” the presidential adviser
on the peace process told a forum at the Foreign Correspondents Association of
the Philippines.
GMA News quoted Jesus Dureza as saying that the Moro
National Liberation Front (MNLF) leader asked him to relay to President Rodrigo
Duterte the need to coordinate with the Armed Forces of the Philippines to
avoid possible mis-encounters.
In May, the Abu Sayyaf released four Indonesians to the
MNLF, following negotiations initiated by Misuari.
At least four abductions targeting Indonesian crew have
taken place this year in the seawaters where kidnap-for-ransom gangs operate
between the Philippines ’
Muslim south and eastern Malaysia .
Earlier this month, three Indonesian sailors were kidnapped
by armed men off Malaysia ’s Sabah state.
In June, seven tugboat crew members were seized in a
hijacking off the southern Philippine island province of Sulu
-- an Abu Sayyaf stronghold.
Those seized in the two earlier incidents were later
released, with Indonesia
insisting that the government had not paid ransom but later warned employers to
follow suit as such negotiations put others in jeopardy.
Dureza said Thursday that he did not know how Misuari would
rescue the Indonesians, but underlined that “the goodwill between Indonesia and the MNLF is good" as the
country had acted as facilitator in the group’s peace talks with the Philippines
government.
Misuari is currently a fugitive, eluding charges filed
against him and his men for a siege on the predominantly Christian city of Zamboanga in September
2013, in which around 300 people were killed.
Dureza also revealed that there was no update on the status
of a Norwegian tourist who was kidnapped from a resort on Samal island in
September alongside two Canadians who were beheaded earlier this year.
"We don't have communication. They [Abu Sayyaf] cut it
off especially when the operations were intensified. We lost contact already,
my channels and those helping me have also lost [contact]," he was quoted
as saying.
Kidnap-for-ransom gangs operating in the Sulu and Celebes seas are known to hand over their captives to the
Abu Sayyaf and negotiate for a ransom that, if paid, is shared with the group.
Since 1991, the Abu Sayyaf group -- armed with mostly
improvised explosive devices, mortars and automatic rifles -- has carried out
bombings, kidnappings, assassinations and extortions in a self-determined fight
for an independent province in the Philippines .
The Abu Sayyaf is among two militant groups in the Philippines
south who have pledged allegiance to Daesh, prompting fears during the stalling
of a peace process that Daesh could make inroads in a region torn by decades of
armed conflict.
http://aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/philippine-rebel-chief-to-help-find-indonesian-hostages/617489
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