Saturday, July 22, 2006

Military, Police Nab Bandit Leader Linked To Killings, Kidnappings In Mindanao

ZAMBOANGA CITY (Zamboanga Journal / 21 Jun) Filipino security forces captured Friday a notorious bandit leader implicated in a series of kidnappings and killings in the southern island of Mindanao, officials said.

Officials said policemen, backed by marine soldiers, swooped down on a hideout in Iligan City and arrested Elias Makil.

"He was finally captured after a long surveillance operation. Troops are tracking down the rest of his gang behind a failed kidnapping Thursday of three traders in Iligan City," Brig. Gen. Mohamad Dolorfino, deputy commander of the military's Southern Command, told the Zamboanga Journal.

Dolorfino said the bandit leader is being interrogated for his alleged links on the spate of attacks on soldiers and highway robberies in Lanao del Norte province.

His group almost kidnapped the traders, but they managed to escaped and sought help from the military in Iligan City. Makil was also tagged as behind the kidnapping of a 56-year old Muslim provincial poll official Disalungan Pulala last month, Dolorfino said.

Pulala was kidnapped while on his way to mosque in Iligan City and freed days later in the remote village of Ulangu in the town of Balo'i in Lanao del Norte, one of five provinces under the restive Muslim autonomous region in Mindanao, after private negotiators paid some 100,000 pesos in ransom.

Last month, gunmen also seized Pala-o Diamla, a court sheriff in Marawi City in Lanao de Sur province on orders from a politician who lost in the May 2004 elections.
Diamla was returning home May 30 when kidnapped by a band of armed men.
He was freed a week later after Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) rebels, backed by government soldiers, threatened to assault the kidnappers' hideout in the province.
The military said a defeated town vice mayoralty candidate, who has a pending electoral protest, allegedly masterminded the kidnapping to forcethe court to rule on his favor. Even judges in the provinces who were hearing election protests were also under threat.
The MILF, the country's largest Muslim separatist rebel group, forged an agreement in 2004 that paved the way for rebel forces to help government hunt down terrorists and criminal elements in areas where the MILF is actively operating.
Kidnapping for ransom in the southern region has become a lucrative business with many groups operating independently. The proliferation of illegal weapons also aggravated the problem of the peace and order in the Muslim autonomous region.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Always good to see the bad guy falls down.