Thursday, June 2, 2011

Malaysian terrorist suspect arrested in Davao del Sur

By Rommel C. Lontayao
The Manila Times,Friday, June 3, 2011

A Malaysian suspected of being a member of an international terrorist group was arrested in Mindanao by immigration and naval intelligence operatives.

Immigration Commissioner Ricardo David Jr. announced on Thursday the arrest of one Abdul Aziz Usman, also known as Aziz Bin Othman, and his aide Omar Abu in a village in Davao del Sur.

The operation was conducted by joint elements of the Bureau of Immigration’s (BI) Mindanao intelligence unit and the Navy’s intelligence command in Region 11.

David said Usman and Abu, both Malaysians, were arrested after months of intensive surveillance by authorities on their activities in Mindanao.

Usman is suspected of working as a finance officer for a terrorist group, which is closely associated with the Abu Sayyaf bandit group and the Al-Qaeda network of slain terrorist Osama Bin Laden.

manilatimes.net

Agents arrest terror suspect

By Vito Barcelo
Manila Standard Today,Friday,June 3, 2011

AUTHORITIES have arrested a Malaysian allegedly linked to the Al-Qaeda network of slain terror leader Osama Bin Laden.

The suspect, Abdul Aziz Usman, also known as Aziz Bin Othman, was nabbed by Immigration agents and Region 11 Navy intelligence officers during an operation in Inawayan village in Sta. Cruz, Davao del Sur.

Immigration chief Ricardo David said Usman, 50, was arrested with aide Omar Abu after months of surveillance.

Reports showed that he was a finance officer associated with the Abu Sayyaf in the south.

Unable to present travel papers, he will be deported as an undocumented alien, said David, a former armed forces chief.

Lawyer Maria Antonette Mangrobang, BI acting intelligence chief, said Usman was about to marry a Filipina in a ceremony at a mosque when he was picked up.

She said the suspect took up accounting and finance at the University of Tennessee, USA from 1996 to 1999.

"He confessed that he has been traveling back and forth to our backdoor via Jolo, Sulu from Sabah, malaysia,"Mangrobang said.


Suspected JI finance officer falls

By Jaime Laude,
Philippine Star,Friday, June 3, 2011

MANILA, Philippines - A Malaysian national suspected to have links to the regional terrorist network Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) was arrested after he was monitored to be actively propagating the teachings of slain al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden, in a joint intelligence operation by naval intelligence and immigration agents in Davao del Sur recently.

Col. Omar Tonsay, Navy spokesman, said the arrest of Abdul Aziz Usman, also known as Aziz Bin Othman, in Barangay Inawayan, Sta. Cruz town last May 9 came after almost a month of surveillance conducted by the Naval Intelligence and Security Group based in eastern Minda­nao.

Immigration reports said 50-year-old Usman was suspected to be working as a finance officer for JI, which has links to the Abu Sayyaf.

Usman was turned over to the immigration bureau in Davao for custody and further questioning.

Tonsay said Usman failed to present legal documents of his stay in the country. He was arrested while he was about to marry a Filipina in Muslim rites at a mosque in Barangay Inawayan.

Prior to his arrest, Usman was reportedly monitored to be actively advocating the cause and teachings of bin Laden among local Muslims.

Arrested along with Usman was his aide Omar Abu, also believed to be a Malaysian national as he cannot speak Tagalog or any local dialect.

Tonsay said Usman was initially seen attending a local gathering in Sta. Cruz town in the first week of May.

The Navy said it was still conducting a background check to determine the true identity and affiliation of Usman.

With Evelyn Macairan

Philstar.com

How the al-Qaeda Threat Lingers

By Luke Hunt

The Diplomat, Thursday, June 2, 2011

Osama bin Laden is dead, but in Southeast Asia, nagging problems persist for law enforcement officials seeking to stamp out al-Qaeda’s influence in the region.

Most of the focus is on Mindanao, where the Philippines military has drawn up a list five foreigners who had established links to bin Laden, and who are believed to be currently hiding out in the country’s south.

Most wanted is the Malaysian-born, US-trained engineer Zulkifli bin Hir, aka Marwan, who has made it his business to train aspiring members of the Abu Sayyaf Group in bomb making.

Commander of the Philippine Navy, Vice Adm. Alexander Pama, says bin Hir had lived in Tipo-tipo in Basilan, working with Abu Sayyaf leader Khair Mundos before moving to Sulu, adding the Armed Forces of the Philippines had intensified its intelligence operations in a bid to locate ‘these terrorists.’

Bin Hir fought alongside bin Laden in Afghanistan, and is on the FBI’s list of most wanted terrorists for his activities in Indonesia and the Philippines and was head of Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia (KMM) as well as a member of Jemaah Islamiyah's (JI) central command.

Parma also named a Singaporean known as Mauwiyah as significant. Authorities believe Mauwiyah, a seaweed farmer, is hiding in Sulu along with two Indonesians, Saad and Qayyim, and a Malaysian suspect Amin Baco.

The five are the most prominent remains of al-Qaeda’s heyday, when they could count on JI to go on the rampage with some support from Abu Sayyaf. JI was responsible for many of the region’s worst attacks and much of the carnage over the past 12years, including the 2002 Bali bombings, which left 202 dead. But the group seems all but extinct now, with its co-founding cleric and last standing senior figure Abu Bakar Bashir now before the Indonesian courts, where he claims the United States, along with liberal Muslims, are trying to frame him.

The 72 year-old is accused of funding Jemaah Ansharut Tauhid (JAT), which was born lout of JI. JAT was dubbed ‘al-Qaeda in Aceh,’ and was allegedly plotting attacks and the assassination of senior politicians in Indonesia. Prosecutors have demanded the maximum life sentence for Bashir.

Since bin Laden’s death at the hands of the US special forces last month, counter terrorism experts, military analysts, politicians and commentators have gone into overdrive warning that the Saudi militant could still pose a threat, perhaps more so in death than in life, as a symbolic figure for wannabe jihadists.

In Africa, this argument certainly has some merit. Somalia and Yemen provided a fertile breeding ground for like-minded affiliates that established strong relations with al-Qaeda. Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq, where the presence of US-led troops serve as a magnet for bin Laden acolytes, also figure prominently. In Southeast Asia, however, not everyone is so sure, and some analysts are sceptical about claims that bin Laden remains a threat from beyond the grave.

Pivotal to this argument is Mindanao, says Jakarta-based security analyst Keith Loveard of Concord Consulting. ‘You have to ask how relevant the Mindanao factions are to the global jihad process, given the extreme pressure they are under from the Philippines military and the US advisers,’ he says. ‘There’s a sense that they are so tied down in their local area that it’s very difficult for them to operate beyond the southern Philippines, with even attacks in Manila now rare. That doesn't mean jihad will go away as a threat, but it can be contained.’

Gavin Greenwood, a regional security analyst with Hong Kong-based Allan & Associates, says alleged links between bin Laden through JI and Abu Sayyaf were anyway always minimal ‘at best.’

‘Rather, they have served on both sides as a useful narrative to bolster JI's credibility while also internationalising local insurgent groups as a means to dispense resources and gain assets (from the United States and Australia) for the Armed Forces of the Philippines,’ Greenwood says. ‘Abu Sayyaf has always been intensely local and restricted to a small number of interconnected clans and families, carrying on and updating traditional piracy activities.’


Bin Laden’s death has also provided a timely opportunity to examine the role of the Philippines’ armed forces, their foreign allies and claims that foreigners were persistently involved in the seemingly perpetual conflicts that plague Mindanao.

‘The suggestion that only wicked Malaysians, Singaporeans and Indonesians — led from afar by a Saudi/Yemeni or Egyptian — play a significant part in an insurgency that has barely paused for breath since Magellan was killed by Lapu-Lapu on Mactan island in April 1521 is patronising and manifestly nonsense,’ Greenwood says.

However, he also said there was little doubt that fugitive Muslims have sought sanctuary in the areas controlled by various native Moro groups, where even the military concede that their priorities now are to settle down and make a modest living in professions like seaweed farming.

That’s if they can evade the authorities, who last week arrested a notorious Abu Sayyaf bandit blamed for a series of kidnappings in Western Mindanao and the beheading of coconut plantation workers.

Andurahman Luy Andang, alias Abu Nas, was reportedly captured while riding his tricycle in Isabela City. His arrest followed the capture of the last senior JI figure at large, Omar Patek, who was arrested in Pakistan in January.

The authorities had thought Patek was still hiding out in the Southern Philippines, where he had forged a close friendship with Abu Sayyaf. His arrest raised questions about his presence in Pakistan, in particular Islamabad’s relationship with the West and its role in the war against Islamic militants. Patek was nabbed just a short distance from the luxury mansion in Abbottabad, about 60 kilometres northeast of Islamabad, where bin Laden was killed.

Patek was apparently being protected by an al-Qaeda cell, which among other tasks ran the local post office. Seasoned counter-terrorism observers suggested Patek had transited from Tawi Tawi in the Southern Philippines through East Malaysia onto Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok and then Karachi.

They also said information obtained following his seizure was traced back to Malaysia, where Singaporean businessman Abdul Majid was arrested on May 6. He’s suspected of channelling funds to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which has spent decades fighting for an independent homeland in the Southern Philippines.

Most pointers indicate that the threats posed by Islamic militants who use terrorism as a strategic weapon has now largely diminished. Still, this is cold comfort for governments and intelligence networks that must still deal with the issue on a daily basis.

‘At the moment it would appear that the Southern Philippines isn’t such a threat, but if the heat was lightened, there’s the chance that attacks beyond the immediate area would start again,’ Loveard says. ‘This carries with it a depressing message for governments faced with budgeting large amounts of revenue for "what if" threats.’


The Diplomat