[iwar] [fc:(Philippines).Gov't.releases.video.of.Abu.Sayyaf.beheadings.AFP.|.10:35]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2002-02-23 22:22:29


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Subject: [iwar] [fc:(Philippines).Gov't.releases.video.of.Abu.Sayyaf.beheadings.AFP.|.10:35]
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(Philippines) Gov't releases video of Abu Sayyaf beheadings AFP | 10:35
AM (Manila Time) | Feb. 19, 2002 | Jason Gutierrez

THE PHILIPPINE government has released gory video footage of Muslim
gunmen beheading captured Filipino soldiers in a move meant to quash
opposition to joint US operations to crush the kidnap gang.

Aired over at least two leading television networks late Monday, the
footage shows Abu Sayyaf gunmen armed with machetes questioning a
soldier, his hands tied and kneeling on the ground.

The soldier was asked to pray as a rebel later approached from behind,
and with one swift swing, chopped off the man's head. Another wounded
soldier sprawled on the ground was also beheaded, as cameraman barked
instructions.

Press Undersecretary Roberto Capco said the amateurish videotape was
recovered by troops after overrunning an Abu Sayyaf camp in Basilan
Island, where the gunmen are still holding hostage a US Christian
missionary couple Martin and Gracia Burnham and a Filipina nurse.

The videotape, which includes scenes shot way back in 1994, has been in
the custody of the government in the past several years, Capco said.

Initial reaction to the footage in this largely Roman Catholic nation
was of shock but Capco said the government decided to release the tape
in a bid to quell opposition to the joint US-Philippine operations
against the Abu Sayyaf.

The exercises launched last month against the group, linked by both
governments to the al-Qaeda terror network of Osama bin Laden, involves
some 660 US troops, some of whom would be deployed in batches over the
next several months in Basilan.

While independent surveys show there is widespread public support for
the exercises, some sectors, including opposition senators and leftwing
groups, have criticized it as another form of colonization.

"There was an encounter between the Abu Sayyaf and the soldiers in
Basilan, and it so happened they captured several soldiers. There is one

portion there showing the Abu Sayyaf finishing off a nearly dead soldier

by chopping off his head," Capco said over DZRH radio.

"The tape was recovered by our military in one raid in an Abu Sayyaf
camp," he said, but did not give details.

Experts who analyzed the footage said it was taken by a camera system
used largely in Europe and the Middle East, Capco said.

The footage was apparently meant as a propaganda material by the Abu
Sayyaf to show their "sponsors abroad that they are winning against our
military," he said. "We are studying if this evidence can prove that the

al-Qaeda helped the Abu Sayyaf."

Beheading captives is a "terror trademark" of the Abu Sayyaf, a group
founded in the early 1990s and which means "Bearer of the Sword."

Among their recent victims were Californian Guillermo Sobero and 14
Filipino mostly Christian farmers seized in a kidnapping spree last
year. Sobero's decapitated head was found in a shallow grave in a
Basilan jungle.

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