Sun.Star Network Homepage
eClick for provincial news
| Bacolod | Baguio | Cagayan de Oro | Cebu | Davao | Dumaguete | GenSan | Iloilo | Manila | Pampanga | Pangasinan | Zamboanga |
 
Google
Web
www.sunstar.com.ph

ENetwork Headline
Top Sayyaf leader nabbed

ENetwork News

Palace assures justice for rape victim of 5 GIs

Transport bureau shelves fare increases

Mindanao solons want a say on peace accord with Moro rebels

Sunday, November 06, 2005
Top Sayyaf leader nabbed
By Al Jacinto

ZAMBOANGA CITY -- Security forces on Saturday captured a Muslim extremist group's leader, who is also wanted by the United States for attacks against Americans, officials said.

President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, in a statement on government television, congratulated police and soldiers for arresting Radulan Sahiron, describing him as "a very notorious leader" of the Abu Sayyaf.

The group has been blamed for many deadly bombings and the kidnapping of Western tourists, including missionary couple Martin and Gracia Burnham from the US state of Kansas.

Philippine National Police chief Arturo Lomibao said Sahiron--the Abu Sayyaf's chief of staff--was captured around 4 p.m. in a special police operation in Zamboanga Sibugay province, about 770 kilometers south of Manila.

Lomibao said Sahiron, who is wanted in 21 ransom kidnapping cases, joined the Abu Sayyaf in its early stages in the 1990s with the group's late founder, Abdurajak Abubakar Janjalani.

"It looks like he was hiding down there," Lomibao said, adding that he has ordered officers to fly Sahiron to Manila on Sunday.

US Embassy spokesman, Matthew Lussenhop, said he was unsure if Washington had been officially informed of Sahiron's capture.

"We've seen the reports and we hope they are true and in that way we would welcome them," he said.

Armed forces spokesman Colonel Tristan Kison said the military was not involved in Sahiron's capture.

The one-armed Sahiron had tried to embellish his image as a local "Robin Hood" on the southern island of Jolo, where he used to roam the forests astride a horse.

He eluded numerous military operations, slipping from island to island and taking advantage of familiar terrain and the support of sympathizers in the south.

His group was also implicated in the kidnappings of three Hong Kong and Malaysian fishery workers off Jolo in 1998 and dozens of Filipino missionaries on the island.

He shot to international fame as one of the Abu Sayyaf leaders who carried out the daring abduction of tourists and workers from the Malaysian resort island of Sipadan in April 2000.

The group took 10 Finnish, German, French and South African tourists, plus nine Malaysians and two Filipino workers whom they held for months and released only after Libya reportedly paid millions of dollars in ransom.

A year later, the group raided the Philippine resort of Dos Palmas where they seized the Burnhams, American tourist Guillermo Sobero and 17 Filipino tourists and workers.

The guerrillas allegedly beheaded Sobero, and Martin Burnham died during a military rescue in June 2002.

Security officials described Sahiron as a notorious Abu Sayyaf leader who travels in Jolo's dense jungle on a horse, a rifle on his side and a pistol on the other.

But for security officials, Sahiron was Satan himself. He allegedly chopped off heads of soldiers captured in battle and decapitated civilians suspected of aiding the military in the anti-insurgency operation in Jolo.

The kidnappings prompted US counter-terrorism training of Filipino troops in the southern Philippines. The training has since been credited for the capture and killing of dozens of Abu Sayyaf leaders and commanders.

Sahiron and current Abu Sayyaf chieftain, Khadaffy Janjalani--a younger brother of the group's founder--are among five of the group's leaders wanted by the United States for allegedly killing Burnham and Sobero.

The US government has offered a US$5 million reward for information leading to their arrest and conviction, and has placed the Abu Sayyaf on its list of terrorist organizations.

The Philippine government has also offered a separate P5 million (US$90,900) reward for Sahiron. (AP/Sunnex)

(November 6, 2005 issue)
Write letter to the editor. Click here.
Join the Sun.Star message board. Click here.




Palace assures justice for rape victim of 5 GIs


[return to top] [home]

I © Copyright 2002 - 2005 Sun.Star Publishing, Inc. I Contact the website at onlinedeskatsunstardotcomdotph I