Philippine extremist planning attacks when killed
Jim Gomez, Associated Press, February 5th, 2012
Jim Gomez, Associated Press, February 5th, 2012
MANILA, Philippines—A key Abu Sayyaf commander killed in a
US-backed airstrike in the southern Philippines was planning terror attacks,
including new kidnappings of foreigners and bombings, when he was slain,
security officials said Sunday.
The pre-dawn military bombing offensive on Thursday killed
longtime Abu Sayyaf commander Umbra Jumdail and several other militants while
they slept in huts and hammocks in a jungle hideout on southern Jolo island,
officials said.
Military spokesman Colonel Arnulfo Marcelo Burgos said
Jumdail’s death was a major blow to his al-Qaida-linked group because he
harbored several Southeast Asian terrorist figures, who have provided funds and
bomb-making trainings. He had a larger civilian following compared with more
brutal Abu Sayyaf commanders which helped him evade military offensives.
“He had the charisma and was the real link used by foreign
militants,” Burgos said. “He was a big loss.”
Jumdail’s group was planning some kind of terrorist attacks
when he was killed, Burgos said, adding intelligence indicated that six
Malaysian militants traveled to Sulu in December and joined his group for unspecified
reasons.
Two security officials said future plots by Jumdail’s group
included kidnappings of foreigners and bombings.
A few villagers, who were secretly working for the military,
traveled to Jumdail’s hideout and pretended to seek medical treatment to be
able to bring in and leave some kind of sensor, which was later used by the
bomber planes to zero in on the Abu Sayyaf lair, one of the officials said.
Jumdail, who was also known as Dr. Abu Pula, had knowledge
of medicine and has drawn support from poor villagers and loyalty of his men
partly by treating ordinary illnesses and performing surgeries on wounded
combatants, the official said.
The two officials spoke on condition of anonymity because
they were not authorized to talk to reporters.
Philippine security officials have given different accounts
on whether top Southeast Asian terror suspect Zulkifli bin Hir from Malaysia
and Singaporean militant Abdullah Ali were also slain in the
intelligence-driven offensive. Not a single body was retrieved by police in the
bombed hilly jungle lair near Lanao Dakulah village, fueling different versions
of who was killed.
Regional military commander Major General Noel Coballes said
Thursday that bin Hir, who used the guerrilla name Marwan, and Ali, also known
as Muawiyah, were killed along with Jumdail and 12 other gunmen when their
encampment was bombarded by two OV10 planes with 500-pound (227-kilogram) bombs
at 3 a.m.
Two Philippine security officials with knowledge of the operation,
however, told The Associated Press that new intelligence showed Jumdail, along
with his son and seven other militants, was killed but Marwan and Muawiyah were
not in the vicinity. The bombs destroyed huts, toppled trees and dug shallow
craters in the gently sloping hills.
If Marwan’s death is confirmed, it would mark a major
success in further disrupting the already-weakened Jemaah Islamiyah terror
network, which has been blamed for some of the most spectacular bombing attacks
in Southeast Asia, including the 2002 bombings that killed 202 people in the
Indonesian resort of Bali.
But if the initial report proves incorrect, it would turn a
largely successful strike into a partial embarrassment for the Philippine
military, while burnishing the reputation of the elusive terrorist.
The US has offered a $5 million reward for the capture of
Marwan, a US-educated engineer accused of involvement in deadly bombings in the
Philippines, organizing terror trainings and plotting attacks.
Malaysia has sent a police team to the Philippines to help
determine through DNA tests if some of the human flesh found at the bombed
militant lair were his, Burgos said.
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