Evidence of Jemaah Islamiyah expansion in the Philippines
[From: Terrorism Focus, (The Jamestown Foundation, USA) 03 March 2005
Volume II, Issue 5]

Philippine intelligence searching for suspects for the February 14
bomb attacks in Makati, Davao and General Santos - detailed in the
last edition of Terrorism Focus - claim to have been swamped with raw
information on plots to bomb shopping malls and transport systems.
They are also pursuing leads on whether the near-simultaneous
bombings, carried out by Abu Sayyaf, were orchestrated by the Jemaah
Islamiyah (JI) group. As evidence of the link, police authorities on
February 24 announced that they had arrested three members of JI last
December - two Indonesians and a Malaysian, alongside a Filipino Abu
Sayyaf militant - in southern Zamboanga. Authorities confiscated at
the time bomb-making manuals, bomb parts and funds to be used for the
preparation of explosives. According to the Philippines daily Manila
Times, the suspects were "preparing to go into car bombs" which would
be carried out by foreign militants, "Filipinos at this point not
being ready" (www.manilatimes.net). The targets were to be an airport,
shopping malls, a church and U.S. troops.

The February 24 announcement (delayed so as to "safeguard tracking
operations") is significant in that it gives flesh to the suspicions
of continued JI training activity in the Philippines, and its
increasing collaboration with groups such as Abu Sayyaf, the most
active terror group in the country. It also raises concerns over
Manila's strategy in dealing with Muslim radicalism and the potential
expansion of JI's alliances, now that the recent hostilities in Jolo
Island have seen Moro Islamic Liberation Front guerrillas ally
themselves with Abu Sayyaf militants.

http://www.jamestown.org

....................................................................

Friday, February 04, 2005
Links between Abu Sayyaf and JI increasing-analysts
By Jason Gutierrez, Agence France-Presse

THE Abu Sayyaf group in Mindanao is slowly transforming into a major
terrorist group capable of carrying out Bali-type attacks with the
help of the Jemaah Islamiya (JI), experts said Thursday.

The JI's strategy is to "insert" itself in conflict areas and foment
sectarian violence, and there has been evidence to suggest that the
Abu Sayyaf has received some form of training from them, said Zachary
Abuza, director of the East Asian studies program at Simmons College
in Boston.

The Islamic militant group Abu Sayyaf gained notoriety in 2000 and
2001 with a series of kidnappings of western tourists, including
Americans.

More recently, the group has claimed credit for the fire bombing of a
ferry on Manila Bay last year that killed more than 100 people, and
simultaneous bombings of three targets in Makati and Mindanao last
month that left 12 people dead.

Abuza, an acknowledged expert on cross-border terrorism, noted that
the Abu Sayyaf's recent bombing attacks appear to have the hallmarks
of JI, whose alleged leader Abu Bakar Bashir was convicted Thursday
for taking part in a "sinister conspiracy" that led to the Bali
bombings in Indonesia that left 202 dead in 2002.

"The Abu Sayyaf is back in business and we should be very concerned,"
Abuza told reporters after a lecture in Manila.

At the moment, Abuza said, the Abu Sayyaf has the capability of
carrying out "relatively small" bombings compared to the attacks
elsewhere in the region that were blamed on JI, which has been using
car bombs.

"Technologically, they haven't quite crossed the threshold that the JI
has," Abuza said, but "they certainly are" learning quickly.

"There is no reason why they can't learn this stuff," he said, noting
that bomb-making materials were readily available in Mindanao.

He noted that Philippine authorities last week arrested two
Indonesians and a Malaysian member of JI in connection with a foiled
plot to bomb US and local targets. Arrested with them was an Abu
Sayyaf member, and police said a 10-man Abu Sayyaf cell was still
operating in Manila.

The Abu Sayyaf "reentered the arena of terrorism," with the ferry
bombing, Abuza said.

National Security Adviser Norberto Gonzales had called the Abu Sayyaf
"the most dangerous" Muslim militant group in the Philippines.

Even more so than the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), the
country's main Muslim separatist group waging rebellion in the south
since 1978, Gonzales said in a briefing paper to the government.

Abuza agrees: "Say what you want about the MILF, but it has never
engaged in an all-out sectarian [war], it has never made this into a
religious war."

He said more and more Filipino Christians were also being recruited to
join the "Return to Islam" movement spearheaded by the Abu Sayyaf,
which authorities believe to number around 400 from a high of more
than 1,000 members in 2000.

The Philippines is a mainly Roman Catholic nation with a large Muslim
minority.

"That allows the Abu Sayyaf group to expand its reach," Abuza said.

Julkipli Wadi, a professor in Islamic studies at the University of the
Philippines, said that it was natural for the Abu Sayyaf to seek
"linkages" outside of the country.

"It is a way to broaden their network and boost their organization,"
Wadi told AFP, but added that the group has a long way to go before it
acquires the capabilities of the JI.

"To say that they have become a major regional terrorist group is an
overstatement in the sense that this could be part of an attempt [by
the military] to just prop up a supposedly local bandit group," Wadi said.

"Even before this rhetoric on terrorism, there is already the Abu
Sayyaf. Except that now, they may have grown big with the alleged
presence of the JI," he said.

The Abu Sayyaf has been previously called a "spent force" by the
Philippine government after a US-backed massive military operation
began in 2000 and flushed them out from their strongholds.

The group was founded in the early 1990s by Afghan-trained Mujaheedin
Abubakar Abdurajak Janjalani to fight for a separatist state in the
south. Janjalani died in a clash with police in 1998 and factions
within the group disintegrated into banditry, specializing in kidnapping.

In 2000 it kidnapped and later ransomed off a group of mostly European
tourists, and the following year three Americans and a group of
Filipinos. Two of the Americans died in captivity and the Abu Sayyaf
earned a place in the terrorist organization list of the US State
Department.

http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2005/mar/04/yehey/opinion/20050304opi7.h
tml








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