Quantcast
Channel: Key Philippine Military and Insurgency-Related Events
Viewing all 71198 articles
Browse latest View live

NPA: 'We ambushed Candoni policemen'

$
0
0
From the Sun Star-Bacolod (Feb 23): NPA: 'We ambushed Candoni policemen'

FOUR days after the deadly ambush in Candoni town, the New People’s Army (NPA) admitted staging the attack on the patrol vehicle that claimed the lives of two policemen, and wounded two others and a civilian.

Andrea Guerrero, spokesperson of the Armando Sumayang Jr. Command of the NPA-Southwest Negros Island Front, in a statement released to the media Tuesday accused personnel of Candoni Municipal Police Station of being protectors of illegal gambling and illegal drug trade, citing the complaints of several residents.

The rebels said they were able to successfully stage the ambush because of the help of the residents.

Police Officer 3 Joeharry Peralta, 38, of Kabankalan City, and PO1 Henry Pacheco, 30, of Candoni.
PO2 Jay Arroyo, 44, of Kabankalan City and PO1 Modesto Bina, 36, of Bacolod City, and a civilian identified as Rey Duales were injured.

The six police officers were on their way back to the station after they responded to a stabbing incident in Barangay Caningay when they were fired upon by the NPA near the Panaculan Creek Bridge.

The injured civilian was not riding in the patrol car, but in a tricycle which happened to have reached the ambush zone at the time, the NPA said.

The rebels said they took two assault rifles, a .45 caliber pistol, and used bullets of M-16 rifles, and documents from the policemen.

The NPA said their members had safely withdrawn from the encounter.

This showed the failure of the intelligence work of the police and the local government of Candoni despite their substantial intelligence fund, the NPA claimed, adding that the government should have spent the intelligence fund instead for social services like agriculture, education, and health.

The police even failed to catch criminals involved in illegal gambling and illegal drugs, the statement said.

The NPA claimed that the ambush exposed the alleged internal feud and lack of coordination between the Philippine National Police and the Philippine Army, which resulted to the delayed response during the ambush.

The rebels also urged the public not to ride in police patrol cars and army vehicles as they are the main targets of the NPA ambush, the statement added.

‘Boils down to intelligence’

Chief Superintendent Conrado Capa, director of Police Regional Office-Negros Island Region (NIR), admitted that they weren’t able to monitor the movement of the rebels.

It happened because there was poor intelligence, he said, adding that “it boils down to intelligence.”

He said they need to intensify their intelligence operation by involving the community since “the reports are coming from the townspeople.”

Capa added that he will discuss with Governor Alfredo Marañon Jr. how to come up with the reward system for every information that results to positive operation.

He stressed that the police should maintain a good relation with the community to gain their cooperation.

Capa said the police are on full alert since January this year, which was reportedly the start of NPA’s Oplan Jupiter that aimed to execute or threaten soldiers and law enforcement personnel.

Asked if some policemen are included in the NPA hitlist, Capa said that he doesn’t know if there’s a hitlist, but admitted that there’s always a threat.

“We always have to assume there’s a threat. Everyone is a target, we have to protect ourselves, and we have to be conscious of our environment,” the PRO-NIR chief said, as he directed his men not to let their guards down.

He said they recently conducted a security survey of all the police stations in the region to identify if there are weak spots.

Saddened, angry

“The thing that saddens me the most is that these men are eager to help and you (NPA) killed them,” Capa said.

“Nasaan ang inyong kaluluwa? (Where are your souls)” he asked, adding that the rebels could have ran after those mobile forces that are hunting them down.

He lamented that the ambushed policemen have no fault, and that they were only serving the public.
“I’m angry,” Capa said.

Senior Inspector Varie Villanobos, Candoni town police chief, dismissed the claims of the NPA that they are involved in illegal activities.

“Their allegations are not true,” he said.

A prayer vigil and candle lighting rites for the ambush victims will be held today at the town plaza, Villanobos said.

http://www.sunstar.com.ph/bacolod/local-news/2016/02/23/npa-we-ambushed-candoni-policemen-458817

NPA owns Candoni ambush

$
0
0
From the Visayan Daily Star (Feb 24): NPA owns Candoni ambush

The New People's Army yesterday claimed responsibility for the ambush on a police patrol car in Taytay Panaculan, Barangay Canigay, Cadoni, that left two policemen dead and others injured on February 18.
 
The NPA warned civilians from riding on police and Army vehicles because they are legitimate military targets, and should avoid their being used as shields during rebel attacks.
 
Andrea Guerrero, spokesperson of the NPA Armado Sumayang Jr. Command Southwest Negros Guerilla Front, claimed in a statement that the ambushed PNP unit is well known for its protection racket of those engaged in illegal gambling and illegal drug pushing in Cadoni town.
 
But Senior Supt. William Señoron, Negros Occidental OIC police director, denied the NPA claim, saying the Candoni police have been actively involved in the arrests of those engaged in illegal drugs and gambling, and the filing of charges against them.
 
The Candoni police have a lot of accomplishments, Señoron said, citing the arrest of Jey-Jech Manzano, son of former Candoni Mayor Jechonias Manzano, on February 7 during anti-drug operations that yielded about P198,000 worth of suspected shabu.
 
But the target of the buy-bust operation identified as former PO3 William Escalada managed to escape and is still being pursued, he said.
 
Guerrero said the February 18 ambush on the police was staged with the cooperation of residents who reported the presence of illegal drugs and gambling operators in the town. The staging of the ambush is a failure of police intelligence work and of the administration of Mayor Cicero Borromeo that has allocated a large intelligence fund for counter insurgency work, Guerrero said.
 
Guerrero said two policemen were killed and three were injured in the ambush, and their troops were able to recover two armalite assault riffles, a .45 caliber pistol, bullets and magazines of M-16 rifles.
 
The civilian who was injured was not on board the police vehicle that was ambushed but on a tricycle that passed the area, Guerrero said.
 
While the NPA claimed three were injured, the police said four were injured.
 
Killed was Police Officer 1 Henry Vell Pacheco and PO2 Joeharry Peralta , and injured were P O2 Jay Arroyo , PO1 Modesto Bena , civilians Rey Duales , 38, who was on board the vehicle and Julius Miravalles , 33, who was in his house nearby, Señoron said.
 
He also said thr ee M - 16 assault rifles and two 9mm pistols of the Candoni policemen were taken by the rebels, contrary to the claim of the rebels.
 
Guerrero alleged that the Army based near the ambush site did not immediately aid the ambushed policemen, as was the case in the Mamapasano incident.
 
Señoron said that is not true, the police was working in close coordination with the Army.
It was agreed that the police would enter the area first, he said.
 
Señoron said it is good that the NPA claimed responsibility for the ambush as it backs their initial findings. He said they are conducting pursuit operations on the culprits, and investigating who their conduits are.
 
Negros Occidental Gov. Alfredo Marañon Jr. said no words in the dictionary can describe the atrocities committed by the NPA, referring to the Candoni ambush.
 

Army, PNP slam rebels

$
0
0
From the Visayan Daily Star (Feb 24): Army, PNP slam rebels

The Armed Forces of the Philippines and National Police yesterday slammed the New People's Army for admitting that they were behind the recent ambush of policemen in Candoni, Negros Occidental.
 
“It was plain murder, that was done with treachery, and cannot be justified,” Lt. Col. Rey Tiongson, 3rd Infantry Division spokesman, yesterday said.
 
Tiongson dismissed claims that the slain and injured policemen were involved in illegal activities and called them a mere propaganda, to justify their atrocities.
 
Chief Supt. Conrado Capa, regional police director of Negros Island Region, said he is fuming mad over the ambush and killing of the Candoni policemen, who were just performing their normal and a routine assistance function.
 
Capa said the policemen were not even engaged in security operations against the New People's Army.
 
The ambush in Brgy. Caningay, Candoni, claimed the lives of two policemen, and caused injuries to four others, including two civilians. They were also stripped of their police uniforms, personal belongings and firearms by the NPA.
 
By conducting an ambush against policemen and also causing injuries to two civilians, what were the NPA trying to prove, Romeo Baldevarona, chairperson of the Committee on Human Rights in Negros Occidental, asked yesterday.
 
As accusations that the policemen had been linked to illegal activities, Baldevarona said they should have been given a warning, and not by killing them instantly.
 
Tiongson said the NPA should realize the futility of their armed struggle, which is against the interest of the people. “There are civilians who were victims of their treacherous act”, he added.
 
He maintained that the NPA ambush is a blatant violation of the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law, of which the rebel group is a signatory.
 
Baldevarona said he noted that there is no compliance with CARHRIHL, which he describes as a “most violated” agreement.
 
Municipal officials and residents of Candoni are holding a prayer vigil today in the town poblacion, in connection with the ambush incident.
 
Baldevarona said that as soon as they complete their investigation of the incident, they will recommend financial assistance to the families of the slain and injured Candoni policemen.
 
Senior Supt. William Senoron, officer-in-charge of the Negros Occidental Police Provincial Office, said yesterday that Pacheco and Peralta will be accorded full police honors during their burial on Sunday.
 

Soldiers cordon off area of armed group in Lanao Sur attacks

$
0
0
From GMA News (Feb 24): Soldiers cordon off area of armed group in Lanao Sur attacks

Government soldiers have already surrounded the area where members of a suspected new terrorist group in Mindanao have been hiding.

Armed Forces of the Philippine spokesman Brig. Gen. Restituto Paddilia told News To Go on Wednesday that the nameless armed group began to launch attacks in Lanao del Sur on Saturday,  leaving three soldiers dead ang six others wounded.

Padilla said that soldiers are closing in on the armed group, 40 of whose members were responsible for the attack on a military detachment in Barangay Bayabao in Butig town.

Citing a military source, Padilia said that members of the group are followers of Moro Islamic Liberation Front's 102nd Base Command head Edris Salindawan alias Abu Hanif.

The group is suspected to have links with international terrorist group Jemaah Islamiah.

Moreover, Padilla said security forces are coordinating with the MILF through a peace mechanism supervised by  an ad hoc committee.

A military report on Tuesday said three soldiers were killed while six others were wounded in the clashes that also killed at least 20 members of the rebel group.
"This is subject to verification," Padilla admitted earlier.

"The initial information from various sources is that around 20 enemies were killed and scores wounded."

"The motive of the attack remains unknown," ge added.

One of the fatalities, he said, was killed in an ambush on Tuesday morning and was among the troops sent to reinforce government forces in Butig.

Reinforcements were able to cordon off the enemies, whose number has swelled to more or less 80, Padilla said.

According to him, some 5,000 residents in areas covered by the operation fled their homes.

 http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/556545/news/regions/soldiers-cordon-off-area-of-armed-group-in-lanao-sur-attacks

MILF's Bravo denies hand in ambush which killed soldier

$
0
0
From CNN Philippines (Feb 24): MILF's Bravo denies hand in ambush which killed soldier



Commander Bravo of the MILF's Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces

A commander of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front's (MILF) army denied having a hand in an ambush on a military convoy that killed one soldier and wounded several others on Tuesday noon (February 23) in Balindong, Lanao del Sur.

Abdurahman Macapaar, alias Commander Bravo, of the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF) said his group had nothing to do with the attack in Barangay Bualan located a few miles from MILF's Camp Pokta.

Residents — some of whom needed to be temporarily evacuated during the firefight — recounted that a small group of unidentified masked men ambushed a three army trucks while the soldiers were escorting a heavy equipment carrier.

Balindong town mayor, Raisalam Bagul Mangondato, confirmed that the assailants were not from the MILF but were lawless elements.

Residents returned to their homes when the fighting had stopped.

Meanwhile, Bravo also said his troops were not involved in a firefight raging in another town, Butig, which erupted over the weekend.

Related: Thousands displaced by ongoing firefight in Lanao del Sur

Bravo also denied having allegiance with ISIS and said that he remained loyal to the MILF leadership.

http://cnnphilippines.com/regional/2016/02/24/Soldier-killed-ambush-near-MILF-camp-Bravo-denies-involvement.html

PHP18.1-M allocated for acquisition of OV-10 spares

$
0
0
From the Philippine News Agency (Feb 24): PHP18.1-M allocated for acquisition of OV-10 spares

In line with efforts to ensure that all of its available air assets are mission-worthy at all times, the Philippine Air Force (PAF) announced that it is allocating the sum of PHP18,103,676.69 for the acquisition of spare parts needed for the maintenance of the engine, electrical, instrument systems of one of its Rockwell OV-10 "Bronco" attack aircraft.

Submission and opening of bids is on March 8, 9:00 a.m. at the PAF Procurement Center Conference Room, Villamor Air Base, PasayCity.

Prospective bidders should have an experience in similar project within the last five years.

The OV-10s are the PAF's premier ground attack aircraft. Around six to eight units are still in service as of this posting.

http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=860457

Head of local terrorist organization killed in Lanao del Sur

$
0
0
From the Philippine News Agency (Feb 24): Head of local terrorist organization killed in Lanao del Sur

The Western Mindanao Command, citing intelligence reports, announced on Wednesday that local terrorist organization leader Omar Maute was killed in the ongoing military operations in Lanao del Sur.

Major Filemon Tan, Western Mindanao Command spokesperson, said that Maute was one of the two brothers who led the attack against a detachment of the 51st Infantry Battalion in Butig, Lanao del Sur last Feb. 20.

An estimated 40 to 80 lawless elements took part in the raid which lasted until early Feb. 21.

Strafing and bombing runs also killed an estimated 15 to 20 of the bandits, Tan said.

He added that artillery and air strikes are still ongoing.

The Mautes are believed to be allied to elements of the Jemaah Islamiyah and have connections to a foreign terrorist neutralized in 2012.

http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=860475

DBM issues circulars for implementation of compensation adjustmentAbad: Military and Uniformed Personnel to get same pay adjustment as civilian personnel through Hazard Pay increase, new allowances

$
0
0
From the Philippine News Agency (Feb 24): DBM issues circulars for implementation of compensation adjustmentAbad: Military and Uniformed Personnel to get same pay adjustment as civilian personnel through Hazard Pay increase, new allowances

Starting next week, agencies may start processing adjustments in compensations with the issuance on Wednesday by the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) of the National Budget Circular No. 562 and Local Budget Circular No. 108.

These circulars will implement the first tranche compensation adjustment for government workers and additional allowances for Military and Uniformed Personnel (MUP), as mandated under Executive Order 201 (s. 2016).

“With the issuance of these circulars, the salaries of civilian personnel will be adjusted in accordance with the First Tranche Monthly Salary Schedule as provided in the Executive Order. Likewise, the new allowances for MUP will be granted in accordance with the schedule provided in the EO. Meanwhile, the Hazard Pay for MUP shall be increased from the current rate of P240 per month to P390 per month,” Budget Secretary Florencio B. Abad said.

Abad added that since the compensation adjustment is retroactive to Jan. 1, 2016, civilian personnel will receive salary differential and MUPs will receive the Hazard Pay differential and new allowances due them since January.

National Budget Circular No. 562 prescribes the guidelines for the implementation of the EO for civilian personnel in the executive, legislative and judicial branches, including constitutional commissions, state colleges and universities (SUCs), and government-owned and -controlled corporations (GOCCs) covered by the Compensation and Position Classification System (CPCS).

Local Budget Circular No. 108 covers local government unit (LGU) personnel and barangay personnel positions that are paid monthly honoraria.

Funds to be released to agencies next week

Abad explained that the funds for the compensation adjustment and related fixed expenditures for civilian and MUP will be released next week to the agencies based on the number of filled positions as of Dec. 31, 2015. Funds for newly-filled positions after the December cut-off date shall be released separately and subject to submission of requirements.

However, Abad clarified that while the funds will be released directly to agencies next week, this does not mean the adjusted salaries and new allowances will be received by all covered personnel next week.

“The Human Resource Office of agencies will, of course, need time to implement the procedures for salary adjustment and process the release of funds to employees,” he said.

For covered GOCCs, the funds shall for charged against their approved corporate operating budgets. For LGUs, the funds shall be charged against LGU funds subject to the Personnel Services (PS) limitation in LGU budgets and income classification. If the funds are insufficient to fully implement the salary schedule, the Sanggunian may adopt a modified salary schedule with lower rates but at a uniform percentage of the rates in the applicable salary schedule provided in the circular.

Military and Uniformed Personnel to get same pay adjustment as civilians

The President signed Executive Order 201 last week modifying the salary schedule for civilian government personnel and authorizing the grant of additional benefits for both civilian and MUP in response to the congressional deadlock on the issue of the indexation of MUP pension. This resulted in the non-passage of the proposed Salary Standardization Law of 2015.

The EO effects compensation adjustments for this year as an interim measure to implement Tranche 1 of the proposed SSL, the full year requirement for which has already been provided in the 2016 Budget.

For civilian government personnel, the EO effects the adoption of the same proposals in House Bill 6268 and Senate Bill 2671 for the salary increase, the grant of the mid-year bonus equivalent to one month’s basic salary, and the Productivity Enhancement Incentive (PEI) of P5,000.

For MUP, EO 201 provides for two new allowances: the Provisional Allowance and Officers’ Allowance, in lieu of an increase in Base Pay in consideration of the pension implications of Base Pay adjustment of active MUP. These two new allowances approximate the added remuneration had the Base Pay been increased. The amounts of these allowances are also based on the proposed increases in Base Pay under the proposed bills on SSL 2015.

Abad said this is an interim measure to supplement the total compensation of MUP until such time that a pension reform measure is passed in Congress that will mitigate the impact of pension indexation.

“This will ensure that they will get at least the first tranche of the pay increase that we have planned for them,” said Abad.

http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=860464

Sandiganbayan finds 2 ex-Marine officials, 4 others guilty of gun smuggling

$
0
0
From the Philippine News Agency (Feb 24): Sandiganbayan finds 2 ex-Marine officials, 4 others guilty of gun smuggling

Two former officials of the Philippine Marines and four others are facing an imprisonment of from two to six years for their involvement in gun smuggling in 2000.

This after the Sandiganbayan on Wednesday found the six accused guilty in the attempted smuggling of firearms from the government.

Among those found guilty were former Philippine Marines Commandant Percival Subala and former Philippine Marines Assistant Chief of Staff Cesar Dela Pena.

The case stemmed from the recovery of five MP5 sub-machineguns which were included in the 96 assorted short firearms and rifles from the Taiwanese-led gunrunning syndicate on Oct. 5, 2000 in Subic, Zambales.

It appeared in the investigation that the serial numbers of the five MP5 sub-machineguns were included in the 72 units of firearms already delivered to the Philippine Marines in June 2000.

http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=860359

ARBs appeal to government to resolve NPA harassment

$
0
0
From the Philippine News Agency (Feb 24): ARBs appeal to government to resolve NPA harassment

Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries (ARBs) are appealing to the government to stop the New People's Army (NPA) rebels from attacking plantations in Mindanao because they might shut down their operations, laying off hundreds of thousands of farm workers.

Last year, the NPA rebels attacked Mindanaoplantations almost on a monthly basis beginning in January until November. They burned heavy equipment, container vans and cargo trucks loaded with bananas in various parts of Mindanao, such as T’boli and Surallah in South Cotabato; Barobo and Lianga in Surigao del Sur; Quezon, Bukidnon; Maco, CompostelaValley; and Maasim, SaranganiProvince.

The farmers said the attacks stopped, probably because of the annual Christmas ceasefire agreement in December, but the NPAs have stepped up their violent activities against the plantations starting late January 2016 up to last week.

The number of attacks in less than a month, covering Jan. 22 to Feb. 19, 2016, already equaled the number of attacks for the whole of 2015.

During the period, the farmers said the NPAs burned four Martignani spray trucks, a warehouse inside a packing house compound and other heavy equipment from eight different plantations in Bukidnon, Agusan del Norte and South Cotabato.

The turbulent situation in Mindanao could stop further expansion of the plantations, at the very least, but it could worsen when multinationals start packing up and leaving for other countries eyeing to grab the lucrative fruits export market in Asia and the Middle East from Mindanao exporters.

CASUALTIES

The attacks have not yet resulted in any physical casualty to plantation workers but a much greater injury awaits, not only the farm laborers but also the economy in general, said Eduardo Maningo, a spokesman for the ARBs.

Banana plantations alone account for 83,000 hectares in Mindanao and at an average of four direct and indirect workers, the banana industry employs 332,000 workers. Together with their families, a potential of two million people will lose their livelihood if these attacks by the rebels continue.

The government will also lose the taxes collected through property taxes, business permits, value added tax (VAT) and income taxes, among others, derived from investments of the multinationals.

The country’s employment problem is seen to worsen if the government is not able to solve the Mindanaocrisis. Thousands of the country’s overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) are projected to be laid off in the Middle East as the region suffers a crisis due to the declining oil prices.

With the potential plantation workers losing their jobs and the OFWs with jobs returning from overseas, the country faces a serious problem.

"The government should step in and do something about it. If the government doesn’t do anything, then we will all be losers," said Maningo.

http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=1&sid=&nid=1&rid=860375

Army convoy ambushed in Lanao del Sur; one killed

$
0
0
From MindaNews (Feb 23): Army convoy ambushed in Lanao del Sur; one killed

Gunmen ambushed a military convoy in Balindong town, Lanao del Sur shortly before noon Tuesday, killing one soldier and stopping vehicular traffic for an hour along the provincial highway that links Marawi and Cotabato cities.

Balindong town Mayor Raysalam Mangondato said soldiers fired back and a fierce gun battle ensued forcing residents from barangays Abaga and Barit to flee to the town center for safety.

“Weeping children and nervous parents were running because of the loud explosions,” he said.

Lanao del Sur police director Senior Superintendent Rustom Duran said the gunmen ambushed a military convoy consisting of two Simba armored personnel carriers (APC); a truck trailer carrying an M113 APC; and two Humvees from the Army’s 103rd Infantry Brigade headquarters in MarawiCity.

Duran said the convoy was bound for the Army’s firebase inLumbatan town in Lanao del Sur when the attack took place in Barangay Bubong Cadapaan at around 11 a.m. Tuesday.

He identified the casualty as Private First Class Emmanuel Buhilag, a member of the 51st Cadre Battalion.

Mangondato said vehicular traffic was suspended for an hour when the fighting intensified.

Fr. Chito Soganub of the Prelature of Marawi told MindaNews they passed by Wato-Balindong at around 3 p.m. on their way back to MarawiCityfrom a priests’ meeting in Malabang town, Lanao del Sur, and found no checkpoints along the way. He described the highway as “normal” and said they felt no tension as they passed.

The attack came three days after a band of armed men described in military reports as “foreign and local terrorist organization” attacked an army detachment in Butig town, Lanao del Sur on Feb. 20.

Two soldiers died in the attack, prompting Army officials to launch a full-scale military operation to catch the suspects. Police said at least 1,500 residents from Butig town fled their homes to escape the fighting.

Mohagher Iqbal, chair of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) peace panel, told MindaNews Tuesday that when the military launched operations against the perpetrators of the February 20 attack, the MILF ordered members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces (BIAF) in Lanao del Sur, including Abdurahman Macapaar alias Commander Bravo, to move back from the area where the military was operating. This is intended to ensure there is no misencounter between the peace partners.

The government and the MILF signed the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) on March 27, 2014.

The repositioning was coordinated through their joint Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH) and the Ad Hoc Joint Action Group.

The repositioning was similar to what happened in Maguindanao around this time last year, when government troops launched operations against the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF).

In three weeks, the operations displaced 123,537 persons from 15 towns in Maguindanao.

The MILF last year repositioned “more than 4,000 MILF fighters” from the areas where the military was operating, as coordinated by their respective CCCH.

Brig. Gen. Carlito Galvez, then chair of the government peace panel’s CCCH, told participants of the Mindanao Media Forum in Cotabato City last July that “more than 4,000 MILF fighters were repositioned in Camp Afghan and other cantonment areas for more than 70 days – from February 27 to May 3 – until the death of Basit Usman” on May 3.

http://www.mindanews.com/top-stories/2016/02/23/army-convoy-ambushed-in-lanao-del-sur-one-killed/

Indonesian among slain in Lanao clashes – military

$
0
0
From Rappler (Feb 24): Indonesian among slain in Lanao clashes – military

About 60 alleged terrorists attack an army patrol base in Butig town

RED CROSS TO THE RESCUE. A Red Cross team in Butig town to assist evacuees. Contributed photo

RED CROSS TO THE RESCUE. A Red Cross team in Butig town to assist evacuees. Contributed photo

LANAO DEL NORTE, Philippines – About 2,000 residents fled Butig, Lanao del Sur, on Wednesday, February 24, following clashes between soldiers and alleged terrorists that killed two soldiers and 6 other armed men, including an Indonesian.
 
Authorities said the fighting began Saturday, February 20, after 60 armed men attacked an army patrol base in Butig town. The military refers to the armed group as Local and Foreign Terrorist Organization, avoiding any reference to ISIS (Islamic State), which intelligence reports showed has begun operating in this part of Mindanao.
 
Two soldiers were killed in the attack while an Indonesian was slain along with 5 other armed men from the side of the terrorists, the military said.
 
Authorities identified the Indonesian as Mohammad Muktar.
 
The attack prompted the army to launch a full-scale operation in the area.
 
Jennie Tamano, provincial information officer of Lanao del Sur, said that 2,067 people have been evacuated from the area and are now in Marawi City.
 
The clashes followed an ambush of an army convoy last February 16 in Barangay Cadapaan along Wato-Balindong town, that killed one soldier.
 
Intelligence reports said the ISIS may soon declare a wilayat or province in the southern Philippines, following the circulation in January this year of an ISIS-inspired video from Mindanao.
 
The military has dismissed this claim even if the Moro Islamic Liberation confirmed ISIS recruitment in Central Mindanao.

In November last year, 8 members of a criminal group – including an alleged Indonesian bomb maker – were killed in a clash with government troops in Palimbang town in Sultan Kudarat.
 

‘Welcome home, my soldiers’: The AFP 30 years after EDSA

$
0
0
From Rappler (Feb 24): ‘Welcome home, my soldiers’: The AFP 30 years after EDSA

What was the military like after the 1986 EDSA People Power Revolution? A military that had trouble growing up.

COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. President Cory Aquino and AFP chief of staff Fidel Ramos stand in attention as the 1986 graduates of the Philippine Military Academy pass in review at a commencement exercise in Fort del Pilar, Baguio City. File photo by Romeo Gacad/AFP

COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF. President Cory Aquino and AFP chief of staff Fidel Ramos stand in attention as the 1986 graduates of the Philippine Military Academy pass in review at a commencement exercise in Fort del Pilar, Baguio City. File photo by Romeo Gacad/AFP

“Once more you are back where you have longed to be: on the side of the people.”
The sun shone brightest in the field of Fort del Pilar in Baguio City on March 22, 1986, when the first female commander-in-chief of the Philippine armed forces spoke before the first military graduates after the EDSA People Power Revolution.
 
“You leave this academy to play your part as officers in helping our nation back onto its feet after years of shameful prostration,” President Corazon Aquino told the 1986 graduating class of the Philippine Military Academy (PMA).
 
“Welcome home, my soldiers.”
 
An Army colonel who belonged to PMA Class 86 recalled that occasion 30 years later: “We felt like we were on top of the world, feeling guwapo dahil high na high ang Pilipino.” (We felt like we were the best-looking guys around because Filipinos were euphoric.)
 
Little did Cory Aquino know that it would take more years for Filipino soldiers to finally come home. They mounted at least 6 coups against her, including the one in December 1989 that forced her to seek the US military’s help – through a flyby of two F-5 fighter jets – just to keep her administration alive.
 
Ramon Yogyog was one of the young lieutenants who mutinied against Mrs Aquino in the 1989 coup. He graduated in 1985, and was battling communist guerrillas in the hinterlands of Davao when the 1986 EDSA People Power Revolution broke out.
 
He, like most lieutenants during those 4 heady days of the revolution, was clueless about what was happening at EDSA.
 


“I was doing patrol in the hinterlands of Maco (in Compostela Valley). We were waiting for a vehicle to fetch us, but it didn’t arrive. We had to walk 20 kilometers back to the camp,” Yogyog, now a brigadier general and deputy chief of the AFP Special Operations Command (Socom), told Rappler in a February 18, 2016 interview.
 
It was SOP for patrolling soldiers to use a counter-sign in the field to distinguish them from the enemy. Yogyog said it so happened that on that day, the counter-sign used on their guns was yellow.
 
When he and his men arrived in Tagum City using the yellow counter-sign, people on the streets began cheering them on and clapping. “They all thought we were on the Cory side. But we were just doing our job doing the patrol. We could see people clapping, so we ended up raising our firearms and shouting ‘hurrah’… enjoying the euphoria.”
 
Amid the cheers, Yogyog’s troops had a basic concern: “Sir, paano ito? Nag-collapse na ang gobyerno sa Manila? Saan tayo ngayon susweldo para pakainin ang ating pamilya?” (What will happen now, sir? The government in Manila collapsed? Where will we get our pay?)
 
Yogyog countered in jest: “Don’t you want that, we’d have two governments paying for us!”
 
Coup after coup
 
Much has been said about the military that revolted 30 years ago against Ferdinand Marcos, the dictator who used and spoiled this institution to perpetuate himself in power under a martial law regime.
 
But what about the military that operated under a new world, where civilian leaders reigned, elected politicians screened officers’ promotion, human rights abuses were reported, and military transactions were scrutinized?
 
It was a military that had trouble growing up.
 


More than a year after Mrs Aquino was swept to power, the very same officers who plotted against Marcos attacked Malacañang in a bloody attempt to bring her down and set up a civilian-military leadership council.
 
Angered by what they described as “communist infiltration” in government, her “weakness” as commander-in-chief, and the military’s diminished power, then Lt Col Gregorio “Gringo” Honasan recruited troops for the August 1987 coup that burned down the military headquarters in Camp Aguinaldo and wounded Aquino’s only son, now President Benigno Aquino III.
 
AUGUST 1987 COUP. The headquarters of the Armed Forces of the Philippines in Camp Aguinaldo is bombed by rebel soldiers. Photo courtesy of Malacañang








 
AUGUST 1987 COUP. The headquarters of the Armed Forces of the Philippines in Camp Aguinaldo is bombed by rebel soldiers. Photo courtesy of Malacañang

Many other mutinies were launched throughout the 6-year term of Cory Aquino, including the December 1989 coup that came close to toppling her.
 
Those coup attempts served personal and political interests, said Brig Gen Edgardo Davalan, PMA classmate of Yogyog who now heads the Ranger Regiment, where bulk of the coup forces had come from.
 
Coups belong to the past, he asserted.
 


The coup attempts were all crushed by the officers and soldiers who stood by her, led by her loyal defense chief, retired Constabulary general Fidel V. Ramos.
Thus by 1992, when Cory Aquino was to step down from the presidency, she looked for no one else to endorse to be her successor: the man who wanted to seize power not through the barrel of the gun but through the ballot – Ramos.
 
After getting elected as president, the cigar-chomping general succeeded in signing a peace pact with the mutinous faction of the military and rewarded them with reinstatement and appointments to civilian bureaucracy. He also deployed officers to civilian posts.
 
No coup attempt was ever launched during this period, but it was under his leadership that he made the military ascendant in the civilian bureaucracy.
 
Ramos appointed at least 100 retired and active-duty military officers to government positions and board seats of government-owned corporations, based on our own research. Of these officers, one of them, Renato de Villa, would run for president against Ramos’ favored candidate, Speaker Jose de Venecia Jr. Both men lost to the popular actor, Joseph Estrada.
 
Shortly after getting elected in 1998, Estrada unwittingly revived the rebellious streak of the armed forces. Despite catering to the soldiers’ war instincts in Mindanao – crushing the headquarters of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front at Camp Abubakar through sheer military might – Estrada eventually lost control of his troops as he lost credibility in the face of charges of corruption and high living.
 
In January 2001, bowing to public pressure, then Armed Forces chief of staff General Angelo Reyes led the military in withdrawing its support from Estrada, triggering the 2nd civilian-backed military revolt against a Philippine president in 15 years.
 
When the military again brokered a leadership transition from Estrada to Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the latter did not hesitate to reward the organization by appointing key officers to her new government. Arroyo named at least 51 retired and active-duty military officers to various posts in government, led by Ramos himself whom Arroyo named as special envoy abroad, according to our own research.
 
Cheating, corruption
 
GLORIA'S ARMY. A file photo of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in Camp Aguinaldo. File photo by EPA






 
GLORIA'S ARMY. A file photo of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo in Camp Aguinaldo. File photo by EPA

Arroyo took a step further by calling on the AFP to be at the forefront of her campaign to weed out poverty and take a more active role in governance.
 
Along the way, the military once again reared its ugly head. Its generals and officers were linked to election cheating when Arroyo ran for president in 2004, causing agitated soldiers to mount two botched mutinies against her.
 
Arroyo's military also had to confront the biggest corruption scandal ever to hit the institution, post-Marcos: the arrest in 2003 at a US airport of the two sons of a military comptroller, who tried to smuggle into the US at least $100,000 – in cold cash.
 
Military comptroller Brig Gen Carlos Garcia, incidentally a PMA classmate of Honasan, gave face to the massive and systemic corruption in the military, which has been going on for decades through a process called conversion.
 
Because of delays in the release of government funds, the military resorted to shortcuts in funding their operations. They issued fake receipts to fake suppliers, who gave them cash in exchange for a fat interest. But many officers used the so-called converted funds to build houses and properties, and live luxurious lifestyles.
 
Garcia was jailed, the comptrollership office was abolished, and the military once again vowed to reform itself. One general who was dragged into the scandal simply gave up. General Reyes, who led the military revolt against Estrada, killed himself at the grave of his mother.
 
Today, President Aquino is about to end his term with the good thought that no faction has ever tried to seize power from him.
 
Davalan said the military is now faced with new challenges – terrorism and external threats. It's "useless" to be mounting coups nowadays, he said. "Life is better now. The international community looks down on coups, and more people are now aware of the democratization process."
 
Aquino's level of comfort with the military is palpable. He's given them equipment that his predecessors failed to do.
 
In fact, this February, the 30th anniversary of the EDSA revolution, he promoted colonels to one-star rank, including Yogyog, who joined the bloodiest coup attempt against his mother.
 
The soldiers have finally come home, however imperfect that home is.
 

Philippine gov’t, MILF vow to protect road project

$
0
0
From Anadolu Agency (Feb 23): Philippine gov’t, MILF vow to protect road project

One-time largest rebel group pledges to support project, targeted by breakaway outfit opposed to peace process, to connect war-torn villages

Philippine gov’t, MILF vow to protect road project

 
The Philippines’ government and its one-time largest Moro rebel group have expressed commitment to countering security threats against a road project aimed at connecting war-torn villages in southern Mindanao island, according to a statement Tuesday.

The Office of Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process stressed the need to protect the farm-to-market road project in Cotabato province, on which work was suspected last month due to threats from a splinter rebel group, Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF).

The project is expected to benefit more than 300 households, many of them indigenous Bangsamoro and civilian members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), some factions of which are opposed to the ongoing peace process.

The renewal of commitment comes after Congress adjoined for election campaigning earlier this month without passing a law that would have sealed the government-MILF peace process – aimed at bringing an end to a separatist conflict that has killed around 150,000 people.

Tuesday’s statement quoted Butch Malang of the MILF’s Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH) as saying the front would “support and participate on security matters relative to the completion of the [road] project”.

The secretariat director of the government’s CCCH has also assured that they would “not let any lawless group sabotage a project for the people”.

“The ceasefire mechanisms of the government and the MILF will work with our security mechanisms to help ensure the security and welfare of the workers and construction facilities in the area," Carlos Sol, Jr. said earlier this month.

The road project has been the target of extortion and security threats, with the BIFF demanding a percentage of the project’s cost, valued at more than P500,000 ($10,500).

When local officials did not respond to the letter, the BIFF had set fire to a van owned by the Department of Public Works and Highways and the project contractor, and attacked the residence of Pagangan village’s chairman.

The national police force is investigating the extortion and violence, while the 45th Infantry Battalion has set up a temporary patrol base to protect the project.

During their recent meeting, government and MILF officials agreed that security cooperation would be set up before starting the project to ensure the protection of equipment, personnel and others involved in the construction.

After the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) was stalled in Congress, the government and MILF panels had expressed their disappointment.

They, however, reaffirmed their commitment to the process and to preserve the gains of the more than 17 years of negotiations through a Joint Resolution issued during a meeting in Kuala Lumpur.

The two parties further committed to implement the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro (CAB) – the original peace deal signed by the government and the MILF in 2014 – and agreed that the means forward is the early passage of the BBL in the next administration and congress.

Passage of the BBL is a requirement for implementation of significant aspects of the CAB, including the decommissioning of MILF weapons and combatants.

Both panels further vowed to exert efforts to promote understanding and greater acceptability of the proposed law.

They also agreed to renew the mandate of the Ad Hoc Joint Action Group (AHJAG) until March 31, 2017 as part of ensuring the long-standing cease-fire.

AHJAG is a cease-fire mechanism that prohibits criminal syndicates/kidnap for ransom groups and terrorist groups operating in the southern Muslim region of Mindanao.

http://aa.com.tr/en/politics/philippine-gov-t-milf-vow-to-protect-road-project-/525923

Foreign jihadist, 4 soldiers killed

$
0
0
From The Standard (Feb 24): Foreign jihadist, 4 soldiers killed

Indonesian jihadist, 24 members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters and four Army soldiers were killed in heavy fighting since Saturday as part of a three-week offensive against the bandit group in various parts of Mindanao.

The Indonesian terrorist was identified by a source as Mohammad Muktar, who was operating under the BIFF’s Abdullah Makapaar, alias Commander Bravo.

The Indonesian and two local bandits were killed after soldiers from the Army’s 51st  Infantry Battalion repulsed an attack on a military post in Bayabao Poblacion, Butig, Lanao del Sur Saturday  evening.


Muktar was the second Indonesian terrorist killed since Sucipto Ibrahim Ali, a member of the Mujahidin Indonesia Timur, one of the 10 foreign jihadists with apparent links to the Islamic State that slipped into the country and were hiding in Mindanao.

The fighting in Lanao del Sur started after the BIFF attacked Charlie Company of the 51st Infantry IB and the 2nd Platoon of the 5th Mechanized Infantry Battalion in Butig town.

Shortly after, the group launched another attack on Army troopers at a nearby post, prompting Army commanders to mobilize armored tanks reinforced by two MG520 attack helicopters and OV-10 bomber planes, which pounded rebel positions until  Sunday.

The fighting spilled over to a nearby village in Alog, Lumbatan town, after rebels said to be affiliated with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front ambushed a convoy of military reinforcements at  10:45 a.m.  Monday.

Reports said military convoys with two armored personnel carriers from the 5th Mechanized Battalion were waylaid by gunmen believed to be followers of Edris Salindawan, alias Abuhanif, an MILF base commander.

The rebel force, armed with high-powered firearms, numbered about 100 and launched sporadic attacks on Army positions, leaving one soldier killed and six others wounded.

Armed Forces spokesman Gen. Restituto Padilla said the rebels were trapped by pursuing troops in Cadapaan village, where fighting raged on until late  Monday.

Col. Roseller Murillo, commander of the 103rd Brigade said more reinforcements were mobilized to take out the rebel groups while airborne troops were on standby.

At the town of Datu Salibo, the BIFF also laid out land mines. Padilla said about 100 of these were recovered during clearing operations.

Padilla urged residents not to venture in the surrounding town until all land mines are recovered.

After 24 days of military offensives, government troops captured a major BIFF camp in Maguindanao.

But clearing operations were continuing after the bandits fled the well-fortified stronghold in Barangay Tee, Datu Salibo municipality in Maguindanao.

Three soldiers were killed when an improvised bomb went off, saidMaj. Gen. Edmundo Pangilinan, 6th Infantry Division commander.

Five civilians, including the town treasurer of Datu Salibo, were also killed when a roadside bomb went off in Datu Saudi Ampatuan highway.

The military said the BIFF fighters fled deep into the marshland, probably toward the borders of Maguindanao and North Cotabato.

On Monday, Army bomb experts arrived to help locate the mines so that residents could return home.

The military could not say how many BIFF fighters were killed in the 24 days of fighting that started when the BIFF harassed a private construction company dredging the Butilen River in a flood control project.

The Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process said  Tuesday  construction of a farm-to-market road to connect the towns of Aleosan and Pikit in Cotabato Province would push through despite security threats as part of the government’s commitment under its ceasefire agreement with the MILF.

OPAPP said the road is expected to benefit more than 300 households when completed. Most people in the barangays where the road will be built are Bangsamoro and civilian members of both the MILF and the Moro National Liberation Front.

Work on the project was suspended in January, however, when the BIFF tried to extort P500,000 from the local government of Barangay Pagangan.

When barangay officials did not respond to the demand, the BIFF burned a closed van owned by the contractor Sunstone Construction and strafed the house of Barangay Pagangan Chairman Gregorio Guanzon.

http://thestandard.com.ph/news/headlines/200110/foreign-jihadist-4-soldiers-killed.html

ARMM extends P1.5 million worth of agri-fisheries assistance to MNLF coop in Maguindanao

$
0
0
From the Mindanao Examiner (Feb 23): ARMM extends P1.5 million worth of agri-fisheries assistance to MNLF coop in Maguindanao

To help augment the income of the beneficiaries and increase fish production in the region, the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) has provided P1.5 million worth of agriculture and fisheries support services to a Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) cooperative in Mangudadatu municipality in Maguindanao province.

About 50 members of the Maman Kalilintad Farmers and Fisherfolks Producers Cooperative from Barangay Paitan in Mangudadatu received agri-fishery equipment and inputs that include 1.7 million tilapia fingerlings, fresh-water fish cages, feeds and fishing boats.

The livelihood project is under the Payapa at Masaganang Pamayanan (PAMANA) program, a national government initiative that extends development interventions to isolated, hard-to-reach, and conflict-affected communities to reduce poverty, improve governance and empower communities.

Dong Anayatin, PAMANA-ARMM program manager, said that since 2013, the ARMM’s Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR-ARMM) has extended P61 million worth of agriculture and fisheries support services across the region to benefit MNLF members.

Agri-fishery equipment and inputs given to the cooperatives include fishing boats, motorized banca, non-motorized fishing banca, seaweed farming inputs, cold storages and fish aggregating devices.

“The livelihood assistance can generate additional income to the fisherfolks,” Anayatin said. He also reiterated that PAMANA will help provide the needs of the MNLF communities by giving livelihood assistance to improve their lives.

“Masela i pakadtabang nu inenggay nilan a mga tilapia (The distribution of tilapia fingerlings is a big help to us),” Ronel Linlungan, 42 year-old, member of the cooperative said.

“Pedsukol kami kanu ARMM government ka niyapamba natabangan kami nilan (We are very thankful to the ARMM government because this is the first time that we received support services from the government),” Linlungan added.

Based on the PAMANA report, out of the 180 MNLF cooperatives enrolled in the program, a total of 135 cooperatives were already served. The 45 remaining are those classified under the third batch approved for assistance by the PAMANA Steering Committee.

The PAMANA program was first implemented in the ARMM in 2011 through the national agencies. In 2013, the implementation of projects in the region has been lodged to the Office of the Regional Governor.

Line agencies that serve as the program’s implementing partners in the ARMM include the Department of Social Welfare and Development, Department of Public Works and Highways, Department of Agriculture, and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources.

http://mindanaoexaminer.com/armm-extends-p1-5-million-worth-of-agri-fisheries-assistance-to-mnlf-coop-in-maguindanao/

Soldier’s death in NPA clash refuted

$
0
0
From the Manila Bulletin (Feb 24): Soldier’s death in NPA clash refuted

Iloilo City — No government soldier was killed in a clash with the New People’s Army (NPA) in Tapaz, Capiz.

Lieutenant Colonel Ray Tiongson, spokesman of the Philippine Army’s 3rd Infantry Division (3rd ID), said there was no casualty from the 61st Infantry Battalion  (61st IB).

Tiongson’s statement was meant to refute claims posted on social media site, Facebook  last February 21, 2016 by the rebel New People’s Army (NPA)- Central Panay command under Jose Percival Jr. that a government soldier died during a 10 a.m. encounter between rebel forces and the Philippine Army last Sunday, Feb. 21.

“There is no truth to it. If a soldier died, we don’t hide it.  We are accountable to the public,” Tiongson told Manila Bulletin.
 
Tiongson surmised that the NPA was aiming to boost its morale by spreading propaganda via social networking sites and even sending statement by email to members of media in Capiz.

Meanwhile, the 3rd ID is urging the NPA to respect the Comprehensive Agreement on Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law.

This was after two cops in Candoni, Negros Occidental were killed by suspected NPA cadres last February 19. When the patrol car where the two policemen were riding was on its way back to the station after responding to a hacking incident, the NPA peppered it with bullets.

http://www.mb.com.ph/soldiers-death-in-npa-clash-refuted/

5 terorista bulagta sa sagupaan

$
0
0
From Abante (Feb 24): 5 terorista bulagta sa sagupaan  (5terroristskilled inclash)

Limang suspected terrorists ang nasawi habang isa ang sugatan sa naganap na higit isang oras na pakikipag-engkuwentro sa militar sa Bayabao Poblacion, Butig, Lanao del Sur.
 
Ayon kay Col. Roseller Murillo, commanding officer ng 103rd Brigade ng Philippine Army (PA) na nakabase sa Camp Ranao sa Marawi City, nakaengkuwentro ng militar ang may 300 kasapi ng grupo ng Foreign and Local Terrorist Organization (FLTO).
 
Sinasabing hinaras ng mga terorista ang patrol base ng Charlie Company ng 51st IB at ang 2nd Platoon ng 5th Mechanized Infantry Battalion ng PA noong Sabado kaya nagsimula ang bakbakan.
 
Bukod dito, nakasagupa rin ng militar ang tinaguriang Maute Brothers na pinaghihinalaang kaalyado ng nasabing terrorists group.
 
Sa sagupaang ito, umalalay sa militar ang Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) na agad namang tumulong na ilikas ang mga residenteng apektado sa labanan.
 
Gumamit ng dalawang MG520 attack helicopters ang militar upang ilunsad ang airstrike noong Linggo.
 
Sa nasabing bakbakan, wala namang iniulat na nasawi o nasaktan sa panig ng mga sundalong nakasagupa.

http://www.abante.com.ph/news/vismin2/42943/5-terorista-bulagta-sa-sagupaan.html

Thousands displaced by ongoing firefight in Lanao del Sur

$
0
0
From CNN Philippines (Feb 23): Thousands displaced by ongoing firefight in Lanao del Sur



According to the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP), soldiers are now running after 40 to 80 members of a group related to Jemaah Islamiyah (JI).

Thousands of residents of Butig, Lanao del Sur have left their homes due to an ongoing firefight between government troops and a local terror group.

Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Office of Civil Defense said around 2,000 civilians have left their homes to avoid getting caught in the crossfire.

The provincial and municipal disaster risk reduction and management offices are now taking care of the welfare of internally displaced persons due to the firefight.

According to Armed Forces of the Philippines spokesman Brig. Gen. Restituto Padilla, three soldiers were already killed and six others were wounded in the sporadic firefights since Saturday night.

Padilla said soldiers are now running after 40 to 80 members of a group related to Jemaah Islamiyah (JI). He said JI remnants led by brothers Abdullah and Omar Maute have regrouped.

"JI affiliated group whose leadership has been neutralized and we thought disbanded. But apparently this group is still there led by this two brothers and they harassed our units in Butig."

Air strikes are being done in the area where the rebels are allegedly seeking refuge, while air and artillery supports are already on the ground.

Padilla also said they are verifying the death of around 40 members of the terror group including an Indonesian national.

http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2016/02/23/thousands-residents-displaced-lanao-del-sur-firefights-afp-government-troops-jemaah-islamiyah.html

Army confirms 2 women killed in operations vs Abu Sayyaf in Lamitan City

$
0
0
From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Feb 24): Army confirms 2 women killed in operations vs Abu Sayyaf in Lamitan City
But village chairman says military operations were triggered by rido

The military has admitted that soldiers killed two women – one of them an elderly — and wounded several others in its clash with Abu Sayyaf bandits last Monday, in Lamitan City.

In a statement issued about 15 hours after the raid, 1Lt. Sally Christine Prima, the military’s spokesman in Basilan, said the “civilian casualties” were relatives of Abu Sayyaf members Totong Ujong and Nurhassan Lahaman.

Prima said the civilians “participated and provided cover during the encounter against the government forces.”
 
Earlier, Maj. Gen. Demy Tejares, commander of the Joint Task Force Zambasulta, said elements of the 13th Scout Ranger Company were providing back up support to the Lamitan Police– headed by Insp. Insp. Gean Gallardo – in serving a warrant of arrest against Lahaman in Barangay Bohe Ibu on Monday when they clashed with Abu Sayyaf bandits.

Lahaman is an Abu Sayyaf member under Nurhassan Jamiri, according to Tejares.

Prima said as the soldiers were entering the village, they were met with gunfire around 5:42 a.m.
“The government forces, while approaching the objective, was met by heavy volume of fire coming from the enemy… However, government forces were able to return fire and out-maneuvered the well-established defense position of the enemy, which ensued for about fifteen (15) minutes,” she said.

Prima said after the clash, two civilians were killed and several others were wounded.
Maklimar Mamang, Bohe Ibu chair, identified the slain civilians as Ananang Ujong, 30; and Amparing Acalul, 65.

Mamang said Ujong’s husband, Totong, 31, and her children – aged 10 and 12, were also injured in the raid.

But he denied that there were any Abu Sayyaf members in the village, about five kilometers away from Lamitan proper.

“Since I was a child, I have not heard of any encounter here between the Abu Sayyaf and government forces. There is no Abu Sayyaf here, but family feud or rido is very common in our place,” Mamang told the Philippine Daily Inquirer by phone.

He said that at the height of the raid, the soldiers had prevented village officials from entering Sitio Tamara, where the slain civilians resided.

He said based on the accounts of survivors, the firing was indiscriminate.

“First, there was no heavy encounter between two armed groups, there’s no ASG here. Second, they launched a raid and killed two innocent women. They committed errors, their assets may have provided them with false information,” Mamang said.

Gallardo said when the police arrived in the community, the Scout Ranger soldiers were already engaged in a firefight.

He said when the gunfire stopped and they searched the area, they saw the two dead women.
Gallardo said the raid was prompted by a report that armed men were roaming the village.

“At about 3 a.m. of same date, government troops left from the 3rd Scout Ranger Battalion in Campo Uno in Lamitan City, Basilan, and upon arrival at Bohe Ibu, the rangers were able to encounter the (lawless) group, fire fights started at 6 a.m.,” a post-incident report that Gallardo sent to the Basilan provincial police office reads.

He said soldiers were able “to penetrate the temporary place of encampment (of the armed group), where several fox holes were discovered at the said place. The encounter ended at about 8:30 a.m. of same date,” he added.

Mamang said the Ujongs were workers in his family’s coconut farm and were not Abu Sayyaf bandits or supporters.

Lahaman, on the other hand, has a standing rido against the Hamja family – which is reportedly close to the military and police, according to Mamang.

Mamang said he was demanding an investigation and the filing of charges against those responsible for the deaths of the two civilians and the wounding of the three others. 

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/768132/army-confirms-2-women-killed-in-operations-vs-abu-sayyaf-in-lamitan-city
Viewing all 71198 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>