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Philippines
Philippine President Arroyo takes hardline stance over hostage
crisis
By Keith Morgan and Peter Symonds
22 June 2001
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The hardline stance taken by Philippine President Gloria Arroyo
over the current hostage crisis on the southern island of Basilan
has once again confirmed the rightwing and anti-democratic orientation
of her administration. With the backing of the United States,
she has repeatedly ruled out any negotiations with the hostage
takers, dispatched 5,000 troops including special forces to the
area, imposed a media blackout and threatened to prosecute anyone
found assisting the Abu Sayyaf rebels.
Summing up her attitude last week, Arroyo pledged to wage a
long and bloody battle against the Islamic extremists.
We will meet fire with fire, and more, she said. No
ransom. No deal. No cease-fire. No suspension of the military
operation.... The Abu Sayyaf is a plague on our race, a curse
to their religion. They live by the draconian code of an eye for
an eye, a tooth for a tooth. We have responded in kind.
Arroyo has made clear that the fate of more than two dozen
hostages comes a poor second to the immediate interests of Philippine
capitalism. We must address this decisively to show the
world that we can protect our citizens, our visitors and our investors,
the president said. Noting the importance of the countrys
$2.5 billion tourist industry, she reassured big business that
the kidnapping on Basilan was just a blip.
The response contrasts with that of her predecessor, Joseph
Estrada, whom she ousted earlier in the year. When confronted
with a similar Abu Sayyaf kidnapping last year, Estrada, who was
by no means averse to playing the military tough guy, bowed to
pressure from the European Union. With the assistance of Libya,
he negotiated the release of hostages seized from a Malaysian
resort in return for an estimated $25 million in ransom.
The latest hostages were seized from the exclusive resort of
Dos Palmos on island of Palawan in an early morning raid on May
27. The heavily-armed Abu Sayyaf group travelled more than 500km
by sea in a high-power motor launch from its base on Basilan,
then abducted two local fishermen to act as guides, disarmed the
resort guards and quickly rounded up a group of local and foreign
tourists. Those taken were three Americansa missionary couple,
Martin and Gracia Burnham, and a businessman Guillermo Sobero14
wealthy Filipino guests and three resort employees.
When news of the raid broke, Arroyo responded with an outburst
on television ruling out any talks and vowing to wipe out Abu
Sayyaf. She offered a $2 million reward for information leading
to their capture, saying: I will finish what you started...
Force against force, arms against arms, this is what you asked
for when you challenged me, I will give it to you. The rebels
have threatened to execute their captives unless their demands
are met.
Washington immediately backed Arroyo, dispatching an FBI anti-terrorist
team to the Philippines, and has been providing satellite intelligence
to the Philippine army. One unnamed US official has been quoted
in Time magazine expressing concerns about Arroyos
gung-ho attitude. We need a more coordinated deliberate
Philippine strategy, rather than running blindly through the jungle
in hot pursuit, putting the hostages at maximum risk.
The army now has at least 5,000 troops on Basilana mountainous,
densely populated island just 50km long and 31km wide. Despite
a media blackout on military operations, it has been confirmed
that there has been at least one intense battle in early June
in which the army appears to have come off second best. The army
caught the Abu Sayyaf rebels and their hostages bathing near the
town of Lamintan. After a battle that lasted most of the day,
the group retreated to the town hospital and then managed to give
the army the slip.
Although a number of the captives were freed, the army suffered
heavy casualties and the rebels seized more hostages. According
to the military, 16 soldiers died in the fighting and 52 were
wounded while the guerrillas lost 11 dead and 29 wounded. Indicating
concerns in ruling circles about Arroyos tactics, former
Interior Secretary Rafael Alunan commented: The jungle is
so dense in there that if you lob in mortars, they just explode
harmlessly high up in the forest canopy. And these Abu Sayyaf
guys are unbelievable sharpshooters.
The army complains that it lacks the equipment necessary to
detect and defeat the guerrillas. In operations like this,
we need high-tech equipment, military spokesman Brigadier
General Edilberto Adan commented recently. The army is seeking
helicopters, high-speed patrol boats and reconnaissance aircraft
capable of taking high-resolution photographs.
Whatever the complaints of the military, however, there is
no doubt that Abu Sayyaf has a degree of local support. Sympathy
for Abu Sayyaf and other Islamic separatist organisations in southern
Mindanao has been engendered by the regions grinding poverty,
discrimination against the predominantly Muslim population and
the brutal way in which the army has conducted the war against
these groups over the last two decades.
Call for martial law
On June 4, two days after the militarys failure at Lamintan,
General Adan called for the introduction of martial law on the
island in order to crack down on anyone assisting the guerrillas.
The Abu Sayyaf could be anywhere, he complained, arguing
that the army had to have the power to deal with terrorist
basesin other words, areas of the island providing
support to the Abu Sayyaf. While Arroyo did not immediately impose
martial law, she did warn that anyone found assisting the rebels
would be dealt with severely.
The call to impose martial law provoked protests in Manila.
The Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) and the human rights
group Karapatan expressed fears that declaring martial law would
lead to human rights abuses. The Ecumenical Movement for Justice
and Peace (EMJP) commented: Even if the military have not
fired their guns at the innocent civilians, the unarmed populace
of Sulu and Basilan will definitely be the first victims of a
militarist state imposing a curfew, checkpoints, arbitrary arrests,
blockades, limited movements and other military imposed restrictions.
There is already evidence of military atrocities. On June 10,
the Philippine Daily Inquirer revealed that the media had
questioned General Adan over the killing of two suspected guerrillas
captured on the outskirts of the Basilan capital Isabela. The
general claimed that when nine suspects were being taken for questioning
to the headquarters of the 24th Special Forces company, two of
the guerrillas tried to grab the firearms of the soldiers.
A back-up team at the rear opened fire and killed them.
In the commotion that followed four suspects escapedtwo
were later recaptured at the Basilan Hospital while being treated
for bullet wounds. When reporters said that the shootings appeared
to be a case of extrajudicial execution, Adan replied: We
just have to believe our troops that this was what happened.
Reports from the relatives paint an entirely different picture.
Moira Salim, mother of 16-year-old Salim, one of those detained,
said that her son was only collecting timber. But they were
stopped by the soldiers who inspected their cargo. They were ordered
to alight from the jeep. They were told they were being arrested,
she said. They were then asked to remove their shirts. My
son told me that they were ordered to run and then the military
started shooting them.
Vilduma Luma said his cousin Hadj Alih Lukman, one of those
killed, was an ordinary civilian. Why are they finding it
difficult to find members of the Abu Sayyaf? Now they have committed
a mistake, they are making it appear that the victims were Abu
Sayyaf members. Do they have a conscience? she asked.
General Adan responded to publication of these accounts by
blaming civilians for assisting the guerrillas and repeating his
call for special emergency powers. According to a report this
week, a staggering 50,000 people out of the islands total
population of 300,000 have already been displaced
as a result of the last three weeks of military operations.
When Arroyo visited Basilan on June 18 she had nothing but
praise for army, handing out medals and money to injured personnel
and calling on the soldiers to finish off Abu Sayyaf. She is under
mounting pressure from powerful sections of big business, for
whom the hostage crisis has been a disaster.
Benedict de Borja of Magnum International Securities commented
recently: We still have a never-ending Abu Sayyaf story
and the thing about it is, it is wreaking havoc on the local currency.
The peso fell to a five-month low of 52.30 this week.
Benjamin Chua, president of the Filipino-Chinese Chamber of
Commerce, complained: All of this criminal activity definitely
is not conducive to economic growth. Noting that the hostage
crisis came at a bad time for the economy, he said: I would
not go to the extent of saying that there has been capital flight,
but the general international economic slowdown is also taking
its toll on our economy.
The US credit rating agency Standard & Poors added
to the pressure on Arroyo warning on Wednesday that it may downgrade
the countrys credit rating if the government fails
to stabilise and reverse its increasing debt burden.
The presidents crackdown on Abu Sayyaf is part of her
attempt to demonstrate to international finance capital that she
is in control and willing to implement whatever economic and other
measures are demanded regardless of their popularity. Both the
IMF and World Bank are insisting that her administration rein
in the government budget and speed up the program of privatisation
and economic restructuring.
The hostages are being left to take their own chances. The
Abu Sayyaf group announced last week that it had beheaded one
of the American hostages, Guillermo Sobero, but his body has yet
to be found. Several other Filipino hostages, as well as two captured
soldiers, have been killed. Three hostages were released but only
after their families paid an estimated $US200,000 to the guerrillas.
See Also:
Philippine president fails
to obtain a clear mandate in national elections
[19 May 2001]
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