:''"Sword of God" redirects here. For the 7th century Arab Muslim military commander known as the "Sword of God", see
Khalid ibn al-Walid.
The 'Abu Sayyaf Group' (; ''; 'ASG'), also known as '''al-Harakat al-Islamiyya''' is one of several militant
Islamist separatist groups based in and around the southern islands of
the Philippines, in
Bangsamoro (
Jolo,
Basilan, and
Mindanao) where for almost 30 years various groups have been engaged in an insurgency for an Islamic state, independent of the predominantly
Christian Philippines. The name of the group is derived from the Arabic ابو, ''
abu'' ("father of") and ''sayyaf'' ("Swordsmith
[1]").
Since its inception in the early 1990s, the group has carried out
bombings,
assassinations,
kidnappings, and
extortion in their fight for an independent
Islamic state in western Mindanao and the
Sulu Archipelago with the stated goal of creating a pan-Islamic superstate across
southeast Asia, spanning from east to west; the island of Mindanao, the Sulu Archipelago, the island of
Borneo (
Malaysia,
Indonesia), the
South China Sea, and the
Malay Peninsula (
Peninsular Malaysia,
Thailand and
Myanmar).
[2]
The
U.S. Department of State has branded the group a terrorist entity by adding it to the list of
Foreign Terrorist Organizations.
2

The Philippines. Mindanao is the large island in the South East. Indonesia is off the map to the South East, while the Malay Peninsula on the west end of the map extends further South.
Location and view on Abu Sayyaf

Philippines, with Zamboanga Peninsula in red, and Basilan island just below the southwestern tip
Until his death in a gunbattle
September 4,
2006, '
Khadaffy Janjalani' was considered the nominal leader of the group by the
Armed Forces of the Philippines. His older brother
Abdurajik Abubakar Janjalani, the founder of Abu Sayyaf, died in
December 1998. Confirmation of Khadaffy's death was officially confirmed on
January 20,
2007, through
DNA analysis of both brother's remains. Both were natives of
Isabela City, currently one of the smallest and poorest, or so-called "5th-class"
cities of the Philippines. Located on the north of the island of Basilan, Isabela is also the capital of Basilan province, across the Basilan Strait from
Zamboanga City. But Isabela City is administered under the
Zamboanga Peninsula political region north of the island of Basilan, while the rest of the island province of Basilan is now (since 1996) governed as part of the
Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) to the east.

Basilan island, with Isabela City in red

Jolo island, in Sulu Archipelago
Consequently, being on the social or political division line, Isabela City and Basilan island have seen some of the fiercest fightings between government troops and the Muslim separatist group Abu Sayyaf through the early
2000s.
The ASG primarily operates in the southern Philippines with members occasionally traveling to
Manila. It is reported that ASG has begun expanding into neighbouring
Malaysia and
Indonesia by the early
2000s.
The ASG is the one of the smallest but strongest of the Islamic separatist groups in Mindanao. Some ASG members have allegedly studied or worked in
Saudi Arabia and developed ties to
mujahadeen while fighting and training in the war against the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
[3]
Abu Sayyaf always pro-claim themselves as
mujahideen and freedom fighters but are not provided support by many people in Moroland including Muslim
clerics.
Abu Sayyaf is estimated to have a core membership of 200 with an extended membership of over 2000.
2The ASG's low numbers indicate a lack of support among the local population.
The group was originally not thought to receive funding from any group, but intelligence reports from the
United States, Indonesia, and
Australia have found intermittent ties to the Indonesian
Jemaah Islamiyah terrorist group.
[4] The
Philippine government considers ASG to be allied with
Jemaah Islamiyah and notes that initial funding came from
al-Qaeda through the brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden, Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, through Islamic charities in the region.
3[5][6][7] Continuing ties to Islamist groups in the Middle East indicate that al-Qaeda may be continuing support.
[8][9]
State Supporters and Other Sources of Funding
The group obtains most of its financing through ransom and extortion. One report estimated its revenues from ransom payments in 2000 alone between $10 and $25 million. According to the State Department, it may also receive funding from radical Islamic benefactors in the
Middle East and
South Asia. "Libya was a conduit for ransoms paid to Abu Sayyaf and other Filipino Muslim groups...[Libya] also offered money for ‘livelihood projects’ in its role in the 2000 hostage negotiations...this raises the possibility that Libyan money gets channeled to Abu Sayyaf."
Connections With Foreign Organizations
Links between ASG and Al Qaeda are the subject of debate. It is generally believed that the group received funding from Al Qaeda in the early 1990s through Mohammad Jamal Khalifa, a brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden. Al Qaeda collaborator Ramzi Yousef operated in the Philippines in the mid-1990s and reportedly trained Abu Sayyaf fighters. However, there is little information about recent cooperation between Al Qaeda and ASG. Some have claimed that Abu Sayyaf is subordinate to Al Qaeda, but others contend that because of the group’s blatant use of ransom and extortion for profit, a close association between the two is unlikely. The
2002 edition of the U.S. State Department’s Patterns of Global Terrorism does not mention any ties to Al Qaeda.
Though Janjalani’s first recruits were dissidents from the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF), radical Islamic groups in the Philippines, such as the separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and the MNLF, deny having links with Abu Sayyaf. Both distance themselves from ASG because of its attacks on civilians and its profiteering. The Philippine military, however, has claimed that elements of both groups provide support to Abu Sayyaf.
History
In the early
1970s, the
Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) was the main Muslim rebel group fighting in the Basilan and Mindanao region of the southern Philippines.
2
''
Abdurajik Abubakar Janjalani', Khadaffy Janjalani's older brother, was a former teacher from Basilan, who had studied
theology and
Arabic in
Libya,
Syria and
Saudi Arabia during the
1980s.
3 Abdurajik then became a veteran of the war against the
Soviet Union during the
Soviet war in Afghanistan. During that time, he allegedly met
Osama Bin Laden, and was given $6 million to establish his own offshoot group in the southern Philippines, out of members of the extant MNLF.
[10]
By then, as a political solution in the southern Philippines, ARMM had been created, in 1989.
Abu Sayyaf Group under Abdurajik Janjalani
Abdurajik then returned home to Basilan island in 1990,where he gathered radical members of the old MNLF, to found 'Abu Sayyaf Group'.
2 It was named after his own alias, which was ''Abu Sayyaf''. MNLF had moderated into an established political party, which eventually became the ruling party of the ARMM, by the time of its full institutionalization in 1996 on the southern Philippines island of Mindanao.
Meanwhile, Abu Sayyaf Group had started out on their own by 1991 under the leadership of the elder Janjalani brother, Abdurajik. By 1995 Abu Sayyaf had been active in large scale bombings and attacks in the Philippines, and also had become associated with
Ramzi Yousef (of the 1993
World Trade Center bombing, the 1994
Philippine Airlines Flight 434 bombing, and the foiled 1995
Operation Bojinka), and also with
Jemaah Islamiyah (
al-Qaeda's southeast Asia associated branch led by
Hambali10)
3
Ramzi Yousef and
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, both of whom were involved with Operation Bojinka, allegedly took
scuba trips to
Puerto Galera. The trips may have been a cover for the training of Abu Sayyaf terrorists. After
Ramzi Yousef bombed
Philippine Airlines Flight 434, killing a
Japanese passenger, a man stated in a telephone call, "We are [the] Abu Sayyaf Group. We explode[d] one plane from
Cebu." The bombing was perpetrated as a test run for
Operation Bojinka, which was discovered by
Manila police on
January 6,
1995.
At some point in the early
1990s, the younger brother Khadaffy Janjalani had also joined Abu Sayyaf, as a teenager, and was eventually imprisoned by the Philippine government.
Abu Sayyaf's first large-scale action was the beachhead assault on the town of
Ipil in
Mindanao in April 1995. This year also marked the escape of 20 year-old Khadaffy Janjalani from
Camp Crame in
Manila along with another member named
Jovenal Bruno.
On
December 18,
1998 the founding older brother Abdurajik Janjalani was killed in a firefight with the
Philippine National Police on Basilan Island.
5 He is thought to have been about age 39 at the time of his death.
The death of Aburajik Abubakar Janjalani marked a turning point in ASG operations, shifting from its ideological focus to more general kidnappings, murders and robberies, as the younger brother Khadaffy Janjalani then rose to succeed Aburajik.
Abu Sayyaf Group under Khadaffy Janjalani
The 23 year-old Khadaffy Janjalani then took power of one of Abu Sayyaf's factions in an internecine struggle.
[11]5He then worked to consolidate his power within Abu Sayyaf, causing the group to appear inactive for a period. After Janjalani's supremacy was secured, Abu Sayyaf began a new tactic, as they proceeded to take hostages.
The group's motive for kidnapping became more financial and less religious during the period of Khadaffy's leadership, according to locals in the areas associated with Abu Sayyaf. The hostage money is probably the method of financing of the group.
10
The group expanded its operations to
Malaysia in 2000 when it abducted foreigners from two different resorts.This actions was condemned by many parties including Muslim government such as Libyan and Malaysia. It was also responsible for the kidnapping and murder of more than 30 foreigners and Christian clerics and lay-workers, including
Martin and
Gracia Burnham.
[12][13]
A commander named
Abu Sabaya was killed in 2002 while trying to evade forces.
[14]
Galib Andang, aka Commander Robot, was captured in
Sulu in December 2003.
[15][16]125
A blast at a military base on Jolo island on
February 18,
2006 was blamed on Abu Sayyaf by Brig. General Alexander Aleo, an Army officer.
[17]
Khadaffy Janjalani was indicted in the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia for his alleged involvement in terrorist acts, including hostage taking by Abu Sayyaf and murder, against United States nationals and other foreign nationals in and around the Republic of the Philippines.
[18]
Consequently on
February 24,
2006, Janjalani was among six fugitives in the second and most recent group of indicted fugitives to be added to the
FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list along with two fellow members of Abu Sayyaf,
Isnilon Totoni Hapilon and
Jainal Antel Sali, Jr.[19][20]
On
December 13,
2006, it was reported that Abu Sayyaf may have been planning attacks during the ASEAN summit in the Philippines. The group was reported to have been training along side Jemaah Islamiyah militants which have links to Al-Qeada. The plot was reported to have involved detonating a car bomb in the town of Cebu where the summit is scheduled to take place.
[21]
On
December 27,
2006, the Philippine military reported that Janjalani's remains had been recovered near Patikul, on Jolo Island, southern Philippines, and that DNA tests had been ordered to confirm the discovery. He was allegedly shot in the neck in an encounter with government troops on September on Luba Hills, Patikul town, Sulu Island.
Jainal Antel Sali, Jr. (aka Abu Solaiman) was killed by government troops on
January 16,
2007.
2000 Sipadan Kidnapping Crisis
On Wednesday,
May 3,
2000, Abu Sayyaf guerillas armed with M-16s and rocket launchers beached their high-speed boats on Sipadan, Malaysia's renowned dive resort island, and abducted 21
hostages. As CDNN issued daily reports linking the Abu Sayyaf rebels to
Al Qaeda terrorists and warning dive travelers to avoid the area, Malaysia's Ministry of Tourism, the dive industry and local Sipadan dive operators colluded to downplay the threat to tourists.
The rebels have freed two
Malaysians early because they are
Muslims and are demanding $2.4 million for the release of the other hostages which include at least 10 foreigners.
According to Philippine military sources, the hostages are being held in Sulu, a remote province in the southern Philippines where the Abu Sayyaf is based. The area is less than one hour away from Sipadan by high-speed boat.
Meanwhile, the
rebels are fighting
Philippine government troops who are trying to free 27 other hostages kidnapped five weeks ago. The rebels have beheaded two of the adult hostages and are threatening to kill five more if government troops do not withdraw
The Abu Sayyaf has demanded the release of various Muslim terrorists including
Ramzi Yousef, who was convicted of masterminding the bombing the World Trade Center in 1993.
Few days after the abduction,
Malaysia police chief, Norian Mai, stated that several Malaysians have been arrested on charges of helping gunmen .
More than 12 locals have been detained and police stated that more might be arrested as their investigation continues into the kidnapping of dive tourists and resort staff.
Police stated that some of the arrested were former employees of the Sipadan resort who have strong ties with the Philippine fishing community, however, Malaysian
tourism industry officials have denied the reports.
Martin and Gracia Burnham's Kidnapping
Mrs Burnham and her husband Martin were kidnapped with 18 others from a Philippine beach resort in 2001.
Martin Burnham died during a rescue mission by troops in June 2002. Another American man and several Filipinos were also beheaded by the Abu Sayyaf militants, who held the hostages for ransom.
Mrs Burnham is said to have identified six out of the eight suspects on trial as being her erstwhile captors. Mr Reyes said he had shown her a rusty dog chain used by the militants to restrain her husband, as well as a pair of blue rubber boots she had worn during her captivity. Mrs Burnham is said to have come close to tears as she recounted the death of her husband.
An army raid on
7 June,
2002 killed Mr Burnham and Filipino nurse Ediborah Yap, and left Mrs Burnham with a gunshot wound in her thigh. The eight suspects sat silently during her three-hour testimony, separated from her by a wooden grill. They face the death sentence if found guilty of kidnapping for ransom. The trial began this year and is not expected to end for several months.
Gracia Burnham has caused controversy since returning to the US, by claiming that Philippine military officials were colluding with her captors. She made the claim in a book about her experiences called
''In the Presence of My Enemies''.
Superferry 14 Bombing
Main articles: Superferry 14
Superferry 14 was a large
ferry destroyed by a bomb on
February 27,
2004, killing 116 people in the
Philippines' worst
terrorist attack, and the world's deadliest terrorist attack at sea.
On that day, the 10,192
ton ferry was sailing out of
Manila, with about 900 passengers and crew. A television set filled with 8 lb (4 kg) of
TNT had been placed on board. 90 minutes out of port, the bomb exploded. 63 people were killed immediately, and 53 were missing and presumed dead.
Despite claims from terrorist groups, the blast was initially thought to have been an accident, caused by a gas explosion. But after divers righted the ferry five months after it sunk, they found evidence of a bomb blast. Also, a man named
Redendo Cain Dellosa admitted to planting the bomb on board for the
Abu Sayyaf guerrilla group.
President
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo announced on
October 11,
2004, that investigators had concluded the explosion was caused by a bomb. She said six suspects had been arrested in connection with the bombing and that the masterminds,
Khadaffy Janjalani and
Abu Sulaiman, were still at large. It was believed that Abu Sayyaf bombed Superferry 14 because the company that owned it, WG&A, did not comply with an Abu Sayyaf letter demanding
protection money.
Timeline of the Abu Sayyaf
★ April 23,2000 - ASG gunmen raid the Malaysian diving resort of
Sipadan, off
Borneo, and flee across the sea border to their Jolo island stronghold with 10 Western tourists and 11 resort workers.
★ May 27, 2000 - The kidnappers issue political demands including a separate Muslim state, an inquiry into alleged human rights abuses in Sabah and the restoration of fishing rights. They later demand cash multimillion-dollar ransoms.
★ July 1, 2000 -
Filipino television evangelist Wilde Almeda of the Jesus Miracle Crusade (JMC) and 12 of his "prayer warriors" are captured during a visit to the ASG lair. A
German journalist is seized the following day.
★ July 9, 2000 - A three-member French television crew was abducted.
★ Aug. 27, 2000 -
French,
South African and
German hostages are freed.
★ Aug. 28, 2000 -
American Jeffrey Craig Schilling is abducted.
★ Sept. 9, 2000 -
Finnish, German and French hostages are freed.
★ Sept. 10, 2000 - ASG raids Pandanan island near Sipadan and seizes three Malaysians.
★ Sept. 16, 2000 - The government troops launches military assault against ASG in Jolo. Two kidnapped French journalists escape during the fighting.
★ Oct 2, 2000 - Soldiers rescue the JMC prayer warriors.
★ Oct 25, 2000 - Troops rescue the three Malaysians seized in Pandanan.
★ April 12, 2001 - Schilling is rescued, leaving Filipino scuba diving instructor, Roland Ullah, in the gunmen's hands.
★ May 22, 2001 - Suspected ASG
guerrillas raid the luxurious Pearl Farm beach resort on Samal island in southern Philippines, killing two resort workers wounding three others, but no hostages were taken.
★ May 28, 2001 - Suspected ASG gunmen raid the Dos Palmas resort off the western Philippines island of Palawan and seize 20 hostages including a US couple and former Manila Times owner Reghis Romero. Arroyo rules out ransom and orders the military to go after the kidnappers.
★ May 29, 2001 -
Malacañang imposes a news blackout in Basilan province where the
Abu Sayyaf are reported to have gone.
★ May 30, 2001 - US State Department Spokesman Philip Reeker calls for the "swift, safe and unconditional release of all the hostages." An Olympus camera and an ATM card of one the hostages are found in Cagayan de Tawi-Tawi island. Pictures of Abu Sayyaf leaders are released to media by the Armed Forces of the
Philippines.
★ May 31, 2001 - The military fails to locate the bandits and the
hostages despite search and rescue operations in Jolo, Basilan and Cagayan de Tawi-Tawi.
★ June 1, 2001 -
Military troops engage Abu Sayyaf bandits in Tuburan town in Basilan. ASG spokesman
Abu Sabaya threatens to behead two of the hostages.
★ June 2, 2001 - ASG troops invade Lamitan town and seize the Jose Maria Torres Memorial Hospital and the Saint Peter's church. Soldiers surround the bandits and engage them in a day-long firefight. Several hostages, including
businessman Reghis Romero, were able to escape. Witnesses say the bandits escape from Lamitan at around 5:30 in the afternoon, taking four medical personnel from the hospital.
★ June 3, 2001 - Soldiers recover the bodies of hostages Sonny Dacquer and Armando Bayona in Barangay Bulanting. They were beheaded.
★ June 4, 2001 - Military officials ask for a state of emergency in Basilan. President Arroyo turns the request down.
★ June 5, 2001 - At least 16 soldiers are reported killed and 44 others wounded during a firefight between government troops and
Abu Sayyaf bandits in Mount Sinangkapan in Tuburan town.
President Arroyo promises P5 million to the family of retired Col. Fernando Bajet for killing ASG chieftain Abu Sulayman alias Kumander Yusuf, last
June 2. ASG leaders contact a government designated intermediary for possible negotiations.
★ June 6, 2001 - ASG leader Abu Sabaya tells Radio Mindanao Network that US hostage Martin Burnham sustained a gunshot wound on the back during a recent exchang
Targeting Americans
Most of its victims are Filipinos. However, Americans also became their target. Abu Sayyaf kidnapped an American Bible translator on a southern Philippine island in 1993. In 2000, Abu Sayyaf captured an American Muslim visiting Jolo Island and demanded that the United States release
Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman and
Ramzi Yousef, who were jailed for their involvement in the 1993
World Trade Center bombing. “We have been trying hard to get an American because they may think we are afraid of them,” a spokesman for Abu Sayyaf said. “We want to fight the American people.” Abu Sayyaf has also captured local businesspeople and Philippine schoolchildren, but Western hostages make for larger ransom payments.
Criticism on Abu Sayyaf
Islamic scholar Sheikh
Yusuf al-Qaradawi has denounced the kidnapping and killings committed by the Abu Sayyaf towards civilians and foreigners, asserting that they are not part of the dispute between the Abu Sayyaf and the Philippine government.
He stated that it is shameful to commit such acts in the name of the Islamic faith, saying that such acts produce backlashes against Islam and Muslims worldwide. It is known that Qaradawi supports the rights of Muslims in Philippines.
Qaradawi spoke of the importance of education in the life of Muslims, stating that educational institutions in the Muslim world should review their educational philosophy in order that it may reflect Islamic values aiming to create pious Muslims good to themselves and non-Muslims as well.
The
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) condemned the Sipadan kipnapping and offered to help secure their release.
OIC Secretary General
Azeddine Laraki who represents the world's largest Islamic body, told the Philippine government he was prepared to send an envoy to help save the hostages and issued a statement condemning the rebels.
"The Secretary General has pointed out that this operation and the like are rejected by divine laws and that they are neither the appropriate nor correct means to resolve conflicts," the statement said.
The Libyan envoy accused the group of inhumanity and violating the tenets of Islam by holding innocent people.
Abdul Rajab Azzarouq, former ambassador to the Philippines, criticised the
kidnappers for holding people who have nothing to do with the conflict. The hostage-takers should not use religion as a reason to keep the hostages isolated from their families, he said. Islam is against any activity that violates human rights.
==Gallery
[22]==
See also
★
Islam in the Philippines
★
Moro National Liberation Front
★
Moro Rebellion
★
Moro Islamic Liberation Front
★
Rajah Solaiman Movement
External links
★
Most Wanted Terrorists,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, US Department of Justice
★
Reward For Information (on five ASG members),
Rewards for Justice Program, US Department of State
★
Profile: Abu Sayyaf,
Public Broadcasting Service
★
Philippines the second front in war on terror?,
Asia Times Online
★
Looking for al-Qaeda in the Philippines
★
Balik-Terrorism: The Return of Abu Sayyaf (PDF),
Strategic Studies Institute,
US Army War College
★
Islamic Terrorism Timeline - Abu Sayyaf Group Overview,
Prophet of Doom
★
Philippines Terrorism: The Role of Militant Islamic Converts