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Filipinos' link to Syria militancy under probe
(MENAFN- Arab News) MANILA: The Philippines is investigating the involvement of Filipino militants in the three-year civil war in Syria after two locals were reported killed fighting for IS militant group an intelligence official said on Saturday.
A senior police intelligence official said Manila was also monitoring young Filipino Muslims who have gone to Syria and Iraq and then tried to radicalize others on their return home.
The Philippines has been battling its own small but violent militant group Abu Sayyaf which has been blamed for kidnappings beheadings and bombings in the south. Since 2002 a US special forces unit has been advising and training local troops.
Thousands of fighters from dozens of countries have travelled to Syria and Iraq to fight with extremist groups prompting the US to draft a UN Security Council resolution demanding countries 'prevent and suppress' the recruitment and travel of foreign fighters.
'These are disturbing developments that could affect our internal security situation' the intelligence official who declined to be named because he was not allowed to talk to the press told Reuters.
'We have scant data based on intermittent information made available from different agencies including the Department of Foreign Affairs. We are now exchanging intelligence with our foreign partners so we can build our own data base.'
Based on these exchanges he said they have noted a gradual increase of foreign fighters heading to Syria coming from Indonesia Malaysia the Philippines Thailand and Xinjiang a troubled province in western China.
But the movement is not only one way he said. Some locals who saw action in Syria labeled themselves as 'veterans' had returned to the south of the country to spread extremist Muslim ideologies.
Documents seen by Reuters showed two Filipino Muslims had died in the Syria conflict in March. The foreign ministry also reported in May that about 100 Filipinos traveled to Iran to undergo military training and were subsequently deployed in Syria.
'One of them was raised in Syria and the other was a local passport holder' said the intelligence official.
Rommel Banlaoi of the Center for Intelligence and National Security Studies said the threats from IS militants in the Philippines 'is real rather than imagined.'
Militants from Abu Sayyaf Khilafa Islamiyah Mindanao BIFF and the convert group Rajah Solaiman Islamic Movement had pledged support to IS militants in Syria and Iraq.
On Wednesday Washington authorized airstrikes for the first time in Syria and more attacks in Iraq in a broad escalation of a campaign against the IS which has seized large stretches of Iraq and Syria.
A senior police intelligence official said Manila was also monitoring young Filipino Muslims who have gone to Syria and Iraq and then tried to radicalize others on their return home.
The Philippines has been battling its own small but violent militant group Abu Sayyaf which has been blamed for kidnappings beheadings and bombings in the south. Since 2002 a US special forces unit has been advising and training local troops.
Thousands of fighters from dozens of countries have travelled to Syria and Iraq to fight with extremist groups prompting the US to draft a UN Security Council resolution demanding countries 'prevent and suppress' the recruitment and travel of foreign fighters.
'These are disturbing developments that could affect our internal security situation' the intelligence official who declined to be named because he was not allowed to talk to the press told Reuters.
'We have scant data based on intermittent information made available from different agencies including the Department of Foreign Affairs. We are now exchanging intelligence with our foreign partners so we can build our own data base.'
Based on these exchanges he said they have noted a gradual increase of foreign fighters heading to Syria coming from Indonesia Malaysia the Philippines Thailand and Xinjiang a troubled province in western China.
But the movement is not only one way he said. Some locals who saw action in Syria labeled themselves as 'veterans' had returned to the south of the country to spread extremist Muslim ideologies.
Documents seen by Reuters showed two Filipino Muslims had died in the Syria conflict in March. The foreign ministry also reported in May that about 100 Filipinos traveled to Iran to undergo military training and were subsequently deployed in Syria.
'One of them was raised in Syria and the other was a local passport holder' said the intelligence official.
Rommel Banlaoi of the Center for Intelligence and National Security Studies said the threats from IS militants in the Philippines 'is real rather than imagined.'
Militants from Abu Sayyaf Khilafa Islamiyah Mindanao BIFF and the convert group Rajah Solaiman Islamic Movement had pledged support to IS militants in Syria and Iraq.
On Wednesday Washington authorized airstrikes for the first time in Syria and more attacks in Iraq in a broad escalation of a campaign against the IS which has seized large stretches of Iraq and Syria.
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