Philippines Defense chief Delfin Lorenzana said Monday a former rebel chieftain – wanted by authorities for the 2013 deadly attacks in Zamboanga City – is asking for a halt in military offensives against the Abu Sayyaf in the southern Sulu province to allow peaceful negotiations for the safe release of a dozen hostages still in the hands of the notorious group tied to Islamic State.
He said Nur Misuari, chieftain of the Moro National
Liberation Front, relayed this message for him through Presidential peace adviser
Jesus Dureza.
Lorenzana said he will not allow a total halt in the
operations against the Abu Sayyaf, but he would let local military
commanders to decide on a localize truce to pave the way for peaceful
negotiations by Misuari to the Abu Sayyaf.
He said among the hostages are Malaysians tugboat crew
members kidnapped in Sabah ,
Malaysia this
year.
The Abu Sayyaf recently freed Norwegian Kjartan Sekkingstad
and three Indonesian tugboat crew members Teo Kopong, Lorenz Koten and
Emmanuel in Sulu following negotiations by Misuari. Army reports said some
P30 million were paid to the Abu Sayyaf and P30 million more for the Indonesian
hostages to buy out their liberty.
Abu Sayyaf militants also released a Filipino
couple, Levy Gonzales – a telecommunication technician working for Power
City Corporation – and his pregnant wife Daniela Taruc in the village
called Tiptipon in Panglima Sugala town in Sulu, one of 5 provinces under the
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.
The couple was spotted late Sunday by a civilian walking in
the village and immediately informed authorities upon learning they were freed
by the Abu Sayyaf. They were later brought to an army base in Jolo town
where Western Mindanao Command officials were quick to say that the release was
the result of the on-going military operations against the Abu Sayyaf, the same
claims they made following the release of the Norwegian and Indonesian
hostages.
It was unknown whether Gonzales’ company or their family
paid ransoms to the Abu Sayyaf in exchange for their freedom. The duo was
kidnapped in August 6 along with their driver Shariff Julhasan Abirin in
Timpook village in Patikul town. There was no information on the fate of Abirin
or whether he had been freed or not. The Abu Sayyaf previously demanded P1
million for the safe release of the hostages.
Basilan operations
Security forces are also operating against the Abu Sayyaf in
Basilan province where troops captured a stronghold of the militant group in
the village of Baguindan in Tipo-Tipo town.
Governor Mujiv Hataman, of the Autonomous Region in Muslim
Mindanao, led the government and military officials in the handover of the Abu
Sayyaf camp to civilian authorities and spearheaded a humanitarian and medical
mission in the area.
Hataman was also quoted by a television report as saying
that foreign members of the Islamic State are being coddled by the Abu Sayyaf
in Basilan. He said the foreign jihadists, including a Malaysian and Jamaican
bomb experts, were training the Abu Sayyaf in the manufacture of improvised
explosives.
Speaking to hundreds of residents, Hataman – accompanied by
his wife, Representative Djalia Turabin and his deputy governor, Haroun Lucman
– called on civilians to support the government’s peace efforts and called for
unity in achieving long lasting peace.
“It’s about time for this place –Baguindan – to receive
various programs and projects from the government. Ang Baguindan ay para sa
Baguindan. Nandito kami para protektahan ang mga tao dito,” he said.
The town’s mayor, Arcam Istarul, also pledged his support to
the military and thanked the soldiers for liberating the village from the Abu
Sayyaf. He said more than 1500 families in the area benefited from the
humanitarian mission.
http://mindanaoexaminer.com/misuari-wants-a-halt-in-anti-sayyaf-ops-in-sulu/
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