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 Was
the bloody end to the Taguig siege a rubout?

THE VIOLENT end to the siege of the Camp Bagong Diwa prison
facility in Taguig town in Metro Manila, in which 22 Muslim
inmates and a policeman were killed by security forces storming
the facility on Tuesday, leaves one wondering whether things
could have been done differently.
The siege began on Monday when a group of Abu Sayyaf convicts
overpowered and stabbed their guards, taking away their firearms
and ammunition. They were allegedly protesting the horrible
and overcrowded conditions in the prison, something that is
all too common in Philippine jails.
Negotiators were quickly brought in, including Interior Secretary
Angelo Reyes and Governor Parouk Hussin of the Autonomous
Region in Muslim Mindanao, to talk to the siege leaders. But
the inmates kept changing their demands, something that tested
the patience of the police. It seems that a demand for food
and water finally blew it and caused the police to launch
their bloody assault.
After the smoke had settled from the barrage of gunfire and
assorted weaponry that was used in the assault, 22 inmates
were dead, including three notorious Abu Sayyaf leaders: Alhamzar
Manatad Limbong, known as Commander Kosovo; Ghalib Andang,
known as Commander Robot, and Nadzamie Sabtulah, alias Commander
Global.
For sure, no tears are being shed over their deaths. All
three were ruthless murderers, responsible for the kidnapping
and deaths of many people, many by decapitation. They all
claimed to be shedding people's blood in the name of Islam,
something any right thinking Muslim would never accept.
We all know about the grinding poverty of Mindanao, and the
neglect shown to it by Manila and the central government.
These are still not enough excuses for some Muslims in Mindanao
to go on kidnapping, looting and killing sprees.
An ex-hostage of Commander Robot, the South African Callie
Strydom, told the Agence France Presse that his captor had
suffered a fate he richly deserved. Strydom and his wife were
kidnapped along with 20 others from a resort in Malaysia in
April 2000 by Robot and his cohorts and taken to Jolo, capital
of the Muslim-populated province of Sulu. They were held for
121 days, and Strydom recalled how Robot prayed five times
a day while also raping several women over the course of their
imprisonment.
While the three Abu Sayyaf members probably deserved to die
in the barrage of bullets on Tuesday, how about the 19 other
dead inmates?
Another question arises: Why didn't the police try negotiating
for a few more days? Twenty-four hours of negotiating hardly
seems enough, unless the inmates were threatening to kill
hostages or detonate a nuclear device, something they were
not.
The only logical conclusion is that the police decided pretty
early on that if the inmates didn't surrender early on a rubout
would the easiest and fastest way to resolve the standoff.
Comments by Ignacio Bunye, President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's
spokesman, that the inmates had it coming to them, lend credence
to the rubout scenario.
There is a growing polarization between Christian and Muslim
Filipinos. If only the siege in Taguig had been handled more
sensitively, then perhaps the bloodbath could have been avoided
as well as the tensions now being felt in the Muslim community.
Filipino Muslims for their part also have to stop buying
into this culture of victimization, where every perceived
slight done to them by the government is turned into a case
of alleged anti-Muslim bias.
Upright Muslim leaders have to stand up and reclaim leadership
of their community from the Abu Sayyaf gangsters who I'm sure
are often looked up to by misguided youth because of the money
and exploits that they brag about.
Kidnapping and beheading innocent civilians is nothing to
be proud of. Yet these acts, and the large sums of money they
earn from them, work to build up Abu Sayyaf members into legendary
"heroes" among some in the Muslim community. This
is unfortunate and wrong.
The youth of Mindanao have to be shown that there is another
road to success that does not include doing what the bandits
do. More Muslim leaders, both male and female, have to speak
out against the Abu Sayyaf. If they don't, we risk losing
a whole generation of youth who will have been seduced by
the glint of easy money and power achieved in a very immoral
and bloody way.
Comments or questions? E-mail the author at rasheed@arabnews.com.
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