Abu Sayyaf seeks ransom for Malaysian | Global News

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Abu Sayyaf seeks ransom for Malaysian

/ 09:29 PM May 20, 2011

ZAMBOANGA, Philippines—Islamist militants blamed for the Philippines’ deadliest terror attacks are holding a Malaysian man hostage and have demanded a ransom, local police said Friday.

The Abu Sayyaf group holding Mohammad Nazaruddin bin Saidin relayed its ransom demand to a Malaysian consular official, who alerted police in the southern Philippines, according to regional police chief Felicisimo Khu.

The hostage, who has been described by local authorities as a 38-year-old who traded in lizards, was abducted on May 7 by about 10 gunmen near the town of Indanan on Jolo island.

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Khu had previously identified the hostage as Mohammad Nasaruddin Bensaidin.

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The consular official called up the Indanan police to alert them about the gunmen’s eight-million-peso ($186,000) demand, Khu said.

The group have since been seen with their hostage in a nearby village, Khu added.

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Founded in the 1990s with seed money from Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda network, the Abu Sayyaf is responsible for the country’s worst attacks, including a 2004 ferry bombing that left more than 100 people dead.

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The group is also blamed for repeated abductions of foreigners, local businessmen and missionaries, typically to raise money through ransom demands.

It is considered a terrorist organization by the United States, and hundreds of American soldiers have been training Filipino troops to crush the group since 2001.

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TAGS: Abu Sayyaf, Acts of Terror, Kidnapping, Malaysian, Terrorism

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