Friday, July 2, 2010

Swiss-Filipino Carl Rieth freed by kidnappers

By Mario J. Mallari

The Daily tribune, Thursday, June 17, 2010

Security forces said they rescued an elderly
Swiss national but a Filipino citizen who was
kidnapped over two months ago by suspected
Islamist militants in a lawless part of the
southern Philippines.

Tribune sources yesterday said that his
kidnappers had already freed him, after a
“negotiated” ransom demand was met. This was,
however, denied by the police-military
contingent.

Carl Rieth, 72, was abandoned in a coastal
village outside the southern port city of
Zamboanga by his captors, who fled after
seeing police and army troops who rushed
to the area following a tip from an inform-ant,
officials said.

“He was rescued before dawn at 3 a.m. yesterday,
” regional military chief Lt. Gen. Benjamin
Dolorfino told AFP. “Follow up operations
(against the kidnappers) are ongoing.”

Rear Adm. Alexander Pama, commander of the
military’s Task Force Trillium, said Rieth was
safely rescued by elements of the Task Force
Charlie along the shoreline of Barangay Labuan
in Zamboanga City.

Pama added that Rieth was being moved by his
captors when the government forces caught up
with the group. “They (Reith captors) were
cornered and they left him,” Pama said.

There was no firefight during the rescue
operation.

“He was being moved, it looked like he would
be transferred,” added Pama.

The military official said Rieth, whom he
described as having lost weight, was
subsequently turned over to his family.

“I have talked to him, I have seen him and
confirmed that he has been rescued. He lost
a bit weight but he is in very good spirits.
He is very happy that he has been rescued,”
he added.

Rieth was snatched by more or less 30 armed men,
wearing camouflage uniforms, from his beach
resort in Barangay Patalon, Zamboanga City last
April 4 while he was having a picnic with his
family and friends.

Government authorities later tagged Abu Sayyaf
leader Khair Mundos and MILF commander Malista
Malaca as the group behind the kidnapping.

For his part, Navy spokesman Lt. Col. Edgard
Arevalo welcomed the safe rescue of the Filipino-
Swiss.

“The successful rescue that caught the abductors
by surprise is the fruit of an extensive
intelligence build-up by the police and the
Philippine Navy operatives,” said Arevalo, adding
“although follow up operations are ongoing, this
is a welcome development as the personnel involved
here can augment other forces pursuing the abductors
of other kidnap victims who were murdered in Basilan.”

Rieth, who friends said suffered from pneumonia
and a weak heart, was immediately rushed to a
private hospital, according to Dolorfino.

His freedom came just weeks after his kidnappers
released a video in which the frail-looking
hostage pleaded to be freed.

In the video Rieth said his unidentified captors
had demanded at least P 20 million in exchange for
his freedom, according to relatives and friends
who saw the footage.

Rieth had a Swiss father and Filipina mother and
is well-respected within the local business
community. He is a Filipino citizen and has no
Swiss citizenship, friends said.

No one claimed responsibility for his abduction,
although Dolorfino said the al Qaeda-linked Abu
Sayyaf group was suspected of being behind the crime.

“That’s our initial information but it is still being
verified,” Dolorfino said.

The Abu Sayyaf is a small group of Islamic militants
on the US government’s list of foreign terrorist
organizations that is well known for staging
kidnappings for ransom in the southern Philippines.

The group is also blamed for the Philippines’ worst
terrorist attacks, including the 2004 bombing of a
passenger ferry that killed over 100 people in
Manila Bay.

However a complex array of other Muslim armed groups
and pirates operate in the southern Philippines and
have for years also snatched locals as well as
foreigners to secure often huge ransom rewards.

Elements of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, a
Muslim rebel group that has been waging a separatist
insurgency in the southern Mindanao region since the
1970s, have also been involved in kidnappings.

Ransoms are often paid to secure the hostages’
freedom, even though authorities typically deny
money is handed over.

In Rieth’s case, both the military and police denied
any ransom changed hands.

“No,” Dolorfino said when asked about a ransom
payment being paid.

Local police chief Senior Supt. Edwin de Ocampo told
reporters in Zamboanga that at least one of the gunmen
who seized Rieth was believed to be also involved in
the kidnapping of an Irish missionary last year.

The missionary, Michael Sinnott, was freed in November
after more than a month in captivity in the hands of
Muslim bandits who had demanded a $2 million ransom.

The Irish government, Sinnott’s superiors and local
authorities said no ransom was paid in that case.

The Abu Sayyaf last year also kidnapped an Italian,
a Swiss national and a Filipina working for the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

They were subsequently freed allegedly after ransoms
were paid, a claim that the ICRC and governments
involved denied.

In one of their most notorious acts, the Abu Sayyaf
beheaded one of three American hostages they seized
from a resort on Palawan island in 2001. One of the
other hostages was killed during a rescue attempt
over a year later.

Philippine National Police (PNP) Chief Director
General Jesus Verzosa also yesterday confirmed that
combined police and military forces were able to rescue Rieth.

Police intelligence gatherings claimed that Rieth and
his kidnappers just came from Sibuco in Zamboanga del
Norte and were about to transfer him to another place
when chanced upon by combined police and military forces.

Zamboanga City Mayor Celso Lobregat, head of the crisis
management committee, said Rieth was in good condition
but lost weight. He also grew a beard.

Lobregat added that the wound on Rieth’s arm, which was
shown on the video sent by the kidnappers, has healed.

Rieth had been brought to the regional military
headquarters at Camp General Navarro in Zamboanga
City for medical treatment and debriefing.

Honor guards during Cory burial now undergoing training

By Alexis Romero, Cecille Suerte Felipe

The Philippine Star, Thursday, June 17, 2010

Four honor guards who accompanied the casket
of former President Corazon Aquino during her
funeral procession last August will not be
given special treatment once they are designated
as security escorts of president-elect Benigno
Aquino III. Incoming Presidential Security Group
(PSG) commander Col. Ramon Mateo Dizon told The
STAR the honor guards will undergo the usual
training.

“The PSG is a professional unit,” he said.

“We work as a team and no one is above the others.
They (honor guards) have to undergo the usual
processes. It is hard to treat people differently.”

Just like any other member of the PSG, Dizon said
he expects the honor guards to do their best in
securing the incoming president.

“It would be an honor to be a protector of the
President. You don’t say no to the President,”
Dizon said.

Army Private First Class Antonio Cadiente, Airman
Second Class Gener Laguindan, Navy Petty Officer 3
Edgardo Rodriguez and Police Officer 2 Danilo Malab
Jr. are being eyed as close-in security of the
incoming president. Dizon said the transfer papers
of the three military personnel are now being
processed. “We have requested their transfer from
J1 (deputy chief of staff for personnel),” he said.

“Hopefully, their transfer orders would be approved
before July 1.” Dizon said the transfer papers of
other military personnel who secured Aquino’s funeral
last year are also being processed.

Seaman First Class Arturo Roadilla, Jr. Airman First
Class Sherwin del Rosario, and Army Private First
Class Rico Seno escorted Mrs. Aquino’s remains from
the funeral home to the Manila cathedral in Intramuros.
Dizon said the honor guards will undergo the usual
45-day training on securing prominent persons.

Information from the Armed Forces Public Affairs
Office showed that such training include food tasting,
marksmanship, bomb disposal, crowd control, and media
relations.

The honor guards were lauded for their dedication to
duty after they stood for more than eight hours during
the long funeral parade of Aquino, who died of colon
cancer on Aug. 1 last year. The late president’s casket
was brought in a procession from the Manila Cathedral
in Intramuros, Manila to the Manila Memorial Park in
ParaƱaque.

4 'honor guards' sa libing ni Cory, mapabilang sa PSG

Taliba wire monitoring

TALIBA, Linggo, Hunyo 13, 2010

NAIS umano ni Presidente-elect Noynoy Aquino
na mapabilang sa Presidential Security group
(PSG) ang apat na honoe guards sa libing ng
yumaong inang si dating pangulong Cory Aquino.

Ito ay dahil sa nasukat umano sa pagkakataogn
iyon ang tibay at dedikasyon ng apat na honor
guard sa libing ng kanilang ina.

Kung maaalala, siyam na oras tumayo sa ilalim
ng ulan at araw ang apat na honor guards na
sina PO1 Danila Malab Jr., Pfc. Antonio Cadiente,
Airman 2nd Class Gener Laguindam, at Navy Petty
Officer 3 Edgardo Rodriguez.

Sinasabing sapat na sukatan na iyon kay Noynoy
upang ipagkatiwala sa kanila ang seguridad ng
kanilang pamilya habang nasa MalacaƱang.

Ayon sa isa sa mga honor guard, masaya sila
dahil sa ikalawang pagkakataon ay paglilingkuran
nila ang pamilya Aquino.

Inaasahan din ng apat na honor guards na unti-
unting made-develop ang pakikipagkaibigan sa
kanila at sa pamilya Aquino.

Napag-alaman na dahil sa isang Pangulo na
kanilang babantayan, ay sasailalim sila sa
tinatawag nilang VIP schooling o training.

Kinakailangan kasing matikas at matalino ang
bawat miyembro ng PSG gayundin ang pagiging
handa sa pagsalag ng bala para iligtas ang
Pangulo ng bansa.

Coast Guard honors three retiring flag officers

The Daily Tribune, Sunday, June 13, 2010
By:
PNA

The Philippine Coast Guard has rendered
testimonial honors for three retiring
Navy Flag Officers as a fitting tribute
for their dedicated and glorious service
at the PCG, Philippine Navy and the Armed
Forces of the Philippines.

The PCG, under the leadership of
Adm. Wilfredo Tamayo, PCG commandant,
honored Comm. Robert Noblefranca,
Rear Adm. Josefino Solidum and Vice
Adm. Emilio Marayag at the PCG Headquarters
last June 9.

Noblefranca was assigned to the PCG from
1978 to 1988. He commanded Coast Guard
Stations in Cebu, Dumaguete and Tacloban.

He had also assumed as deputy of Coast
Guard Staff for Plans and Programs in 1988
as his last tour of duty at the PCG headsquarters.
Noblefranca, the incumbent commander of the
Naval Construction Brigade of the Philippine Navy,
is a graduate of the Philippine Military Academy
Class ’77.

Solidum, on the other hand, had served the PCG
for 14 years in his 33 years of service in the
military. When he joined the Philippine Navy,
he was first assigned to a Coast Guard vessel
where he served his junior billets and continued
his sea duty as the EX-O in five PCG capital ships.

He also commanded the premier Coast Guard stations
in Batangas and Cebu. He graduated from the United
States Coast Guard Academy in 1977. He is presently
the commander of the Naval Sea Systems Command.

Marayag graduated at the PMA in 1976 with a
Bachelor of Science Degree. He started his
colorful military career in 1976 when he joined
the Philippine Navy as an ensign.

His dedication and commitment to duty afforded
him to serve various key positions at the PCG.
He has served the PCG from Oct. 29, 1979 to
April 17, 1990.

He had served various staff positions at the
PCG Headquarters and had also been the station
commander of Coast Guard Station General Santos
and Coast Guard Station Davao. He was also
assigned as maritime officer of the 8th Coast
Guard District, deputy commander and operations
officer of the Aids to Navigation Command,
officer-in-charge of the Coast Guard School
and the training director of Aids to Navigation
Command.

Marayag has assumed the second highest post in
the AFP when he served as the deputy chief of
staff.

In his remarks, Tamayo highlighted all the three
honorees’ significant contributions to the PCG,
the maritime industry and, most importantly, to
the Filipino people.

Tamayo said their legacy in the Coast Guard
service would always be remembered and treasured
by the officers, men and women of the PCG.