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2 Abu Sayyaf leaders fall in Zamboanga del Sur

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Saturday, January 05, 2008
2 Abu Sayyaf leaders fall in Zamboanga del Sur

ZAMBOANGA CITY -- Two al-Qaeda-linked Muslim militants, including one wanted for the 2001 kidnapping of three Americans and 17 other people from a resort island, were captured in separate raids in the province of Zamboanga del Sur, officials said Friday.

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Combined military and police operatives arrested suspected Abu Sayyaf sub-leader Tuwatin Anahalul following a raid around 3:30 p.m. Thursday in his hideout in Igat Island, Margosatubig town.

Anahalul, also called Abu Basilan, has a P2 million (US$48,700; euro33,010) bounty on his head. The troops seized from his possession a caliber .45 pistol.

"He (Anahalul) was involved in the Lamitan siege and Dos Palmas kidnapping," said Western Mindanao Command (Westmincom) chief Lieutenant General Nelson Allaga.

Allaga was referring to the 2001 kidnapping at the Dos Palmas resort in western Palawan province. The Abu Sayyaf kidnappers brought their hostages by boat from Palawan to southern Basilan island, where they raided a hospital in Lamitan town. The militants, with hostages in tow, escaped four days later from the hospital after battling government troops.

Anahalul later guided troops as they arrested another Abu Sayyaf figure in Margosatubig. Officials have declined to name the second suspect because operations related to the case are continuing.

Last month, 14 Abu Sayyaf militants were sentenced to life in prison for the kidnapping of US missionary couple Martin and Gracia Burnham, as well as Guillermo Sobero of Corona, California, and 17 others from Dos Palmas resort.

Gracia Burnham survived the yearlong jungle captivity ordeal, which prompted a US-backed offensive against the guerrillas. Her husband Martin was killed during a Philippine military rescue in 2002. Sobero had been beheaded earlier by the Abu Sayyaf rebels.

US-backed offensives have dislodged the guerrillas from their bases on Basilan, but they remain a major threat. Officials estimate their number is down to about 300 guerrillas, from roughly 1,000 in 2001. (AP/With Bong Garcia/Sunnex)

For more Philippine news, visit Sun.Star Zamboanga.

(January 5, 2008 issue)
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