Appendix G – Statement of Reasons – Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG)
(Also known as: Abou Sayaf Armed
Band; Abou Sayyef Group; Abu Sayaff Group; Al-Harakat Al-Aslamiya; Al-Harakat
Al-Islamiyya; Al-Harakat-ul Al-Islamiyya; Al-Harakatul-Islamia and Mujahideen
Commando Freedom Fighters)
The following information is based on publicly available
details about the ASG. To the Australian Government’s knowledge, these
details are accurate and reliable and have been corroborated by reliable and
credible classified information.
Basis for listing a terrorist
organisation
Division 102 of the Criminal Code
provides that for an organisation to be listed as a terrorist organisation, the
Attorney-General must be satisfied on reasonable grounds that the organisation:
(a)
is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing,
planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or
not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur); or
(b)
advocates the doing of a terrorist act (whether
or not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur).
Details of the organisation
Objectives
The ASG’s founding objective is to create an autonomous
Islamic state encompassing the southern Philippines islands of Mindanao and
surrounding islands and the Sulu Archipelago, whose main islands are Basilan,
Jolo and Tawi Tawi. The ASG was founded in 1991 as a militant Islamic movement
by Abdurajak Janjalani, who fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s where he was
influenced by radical Wahhabi thought. Janjalani’s original intent was to fuse
Salafi Wahhabist ideology with a southern Philippines separatist agenda.
The ASG is a fundamentally clan-centric terrorist
network with a fluid peripheral membership which includes foreign jihadists and
enjoys support from a portion of the local population in Jolo and Basilan. The
ASG’s sub-groups also undertake criminal activities in order to sustain its
leaders and membership and to provide resources for its terrorist activities,
including its capacity to oppose military operations of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines (AFP).
The ASG views kidnap-for-ransom ventures as a
profitable operational tactic – along with extortion and related activity – and
these attacks have been a trademark of ASG since its creation and represent the main funding mechanism for the ASG and
subordinate groups. Aside from the financial gains for ASG in conducting
the above activities, ASG’s activities – including the targets chosen for
kidnapping and extortion operations – remain heavily influenced by the
religious, political and ideological considerations as originally dictated by
Janjalani. Westerners and other wealthy foreign nationals, as well as local
politicians and business people feature among the targets.
Leadership
It is currently unclear whether a single leader of the
ASG has emerged since former Emir, Khadaffy Janjalani, was killed in an AFP
operation in September 2006. There are a number of key leadership figures with
extensive operational experience, such as Radullan Sahiron, Gumbahli Jumdail (aka Dr Abu), Isnilon Hapilon and Yasir
Igasan, all of whom maintain contact and retain the ability and personnel to
conduct their own independent operations.
Membership
The ASG membership consists primarily of young Tausug
Filipino Muslims from the Sulu archipelago, but the ASG attracts poverty-stricken
unemployed young Muslims from across the southern Philippines. The ASG
originally consisted of jihadi volunteers who had fought in Afghanistan.
Janjalani was eventually able to attract hundreds of recruits who were mostly
derived from the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF). ASG rank-and-file numbers fluctuate in response to successful terrorist
operations and pressure from the Philippines military, which dictate the
available resources and relative incentives for membership.
Since its inception, the ASG has consisted of loosely
affiliated groups, mostly organised along traditional clan and familial lines,
with as many 26 clan groupings of security interest to the Philippines
authorities. These sub-groups are based mainly in the Sulu archipelago in the
southern Philippines – primarily on the Islands of Jolo and Basilan. The
commanders of each sub-group are largely autonomous clan leaders. Despite its
relatively small core numbers, the ASG draws its strength from a large local
support base.
Current
Status of the ASG
Since the expulsion of the ASG from Mindanao and the
subsequent death of senior leaders, the ASG has continued to fragment, leaving
the ASG clan groups largely confined to their home islands in the Sulu
archipelago and under significant operational constraints compared to its first
decade of existence. The AFP, with US military logistical support, has
continued to mount operations against ASG groups in the Sulu archipelago and
still consider the group to be a significant threat, particularly when acting
in concert with other Philippines-based militant groups, including the Moro
Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
Terrorist activity of the organisation
Directly or indirectly engaged, or
assisting, in the doing of terrorist acts
The ASG has been responsible for the planning and
conduct of terrorist attacks against a wide range of targets, but particularly
Philippine government, Christian and Western interests. ASG attacks in the past
few years (2008 to 2010) have to a large degree been motivated by financial
gain rather than purely political, religious or ideological purposes – but the
proceeds of these attacks are used to support the ASG’s operations. Funding is
especially important for sustaining ASG’s capacity to resist pressure from the
AFP counter-insurgency operations – including its interaction with other
terrorist groups (MILF, MNLF, Indonesia-based networks).
The history of target locations also highlight the
ongoing operational interest and reach of ASG into areas frequented by tourists,
including in Malaysia’s Sabah State located southeast of the Sulu archipelago.
Attacks attributed to the ASG have included:
- 23 April 2000: 21 people, including 10 foreign tourists, were
kidnapped from the Malaysian resort island of Sipadan. This kidnapping was
resolved in 2001 when the ASG received a $15 million ransom.
- 28 August 2000: US national Jeffrey Schilling was kidnapped in
Zamboanga City; the ASG reportedly believed he was a CIA spy. Schilling was
rescued in April 2001.
- 27 May 2001: 20 people were kidnapped from the Philippine tourist
resort of Dos Palmas on Palawan Island, in the course of which several victims
were murdered – including a US citizen. Another US citizen was killed during
the rescue operation.
- 2 October 2002: a karaoke bar in Zamboanga City was bombed,
killing four people, including a US soldier and injuring 24 others.
- 27 February 2004: Superferry 14 was bombed, killing over
100 people.
- 14 February 2005: a coordinated series of bombings in
Philippines cities of Makati, Davao and General Santos, killed at least seven
people and left approximately 150 injured.
- 10 August 2005: two bombings in Zamboanga City wounded eight
people.
- 27 March 2006: a convenience store in Jolo was bombed, killing
nine and wounding 24 people after extortion demands were not met.
- April 2007: ASG clansmen led by Albader Parad kidnapped seven
local workers on Jolo. When ransom money was not paid by the local employer all
of the hostages were beheaded.
- 10 June 2007: an Italian priest was
kidnapped in Zamboanga and subsequently released on 20 July 2007.
- 11 October 2009: an Irish priest was
kidnapped in Mindanao and subsequently released on 12 November 2009.
- January 2009: three ICRC representatives were kidnapped on Jolo
and subsequently released.
- September 29 2009: two US servicemen
were killed after an IED struck their vehicle in Jolo.
- 8 February 2010: two Chinese-Malay workers were kidnapped from a
seaweed farm in Semporna, Sabah, Malaysia by suspected ASG members.
- 27 February 2010: suspected ASG gunmen attacked the village of
Tubigan, Basalan, killing 11 people and wounding 10. These revenge attacks
followed the death of ASG sub-commander Parad who was killed during a
Philippine military operation a week earlier; and
- 3 March 2010: three ASG members were
arrested due to their involvement in a plot to launch bomb attacks in
retaliation to the killing of ASG commander Albader Parad. Philippines authorities
confirmed that the men arrested were ASG members and that they had been trained
in bomb-making skills by Jemaah Islamiyah (JI).
Directly
or indirectly fostering the doing of terrorist acts
The ASG has been linked to dozens of kidnappings
over the past decade in Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Zamboanga City and other
areas in Western Mindanao. According to the Philippine authorities, the ASG
has links to al-Qa'ida and Indonesia-based terrorist networks
including JI and they attribute bombings in key areas in Mindanao and in
Manila to ASG.
ASG has a history of association with other terrorist
organisations since its founding – most notably with al-Qa’ida, JI and other
Indonesia-based extremist networks. The current primary association between ASG
and other anti-Western terrorists is its provision of safe haven to JI-linked
fugitives, which was first seen in 2003 and occurs to this day.
Indonesian extremists, under the protection of the ASG,
continue to support terrorist operations by ASG and MILF in the Philippines and
also provide bomb-making training to Philippines-based militant networks.
- Information from March 2009, recovered from ASG training camps,
documented the collusion between MILF, ASG, and JI in effecting
'technology transfer' and the provision of safe haven in exchange for weapons.
- ASG clansmen on Jolo have harboured Indonesian JI members Umar
Patek and Dulmatin (deceased), both of whom fled to the southern Philippines in
2003 to avoid arrest after their involvement in the October 2002 Bali bombings
was exposed.
- As of January 2010, Jolo-based ASG groups also harboured Marwan –
a JI fugitive and US-trained engineer and explosives trainer – who had been in
the Philippines since mid 2007. Patek and Marwan currently have a combined
total of US$6 million in reward money posted for their capture by the United
States.
ASG also maintains operational and logistical links with
other Philippines-based networks that are actively engaged in terrorist
activity, including MILF and MNLF, all of which benefit from the proceeds of
kidnapping operations and fundraising activities.
Conclusion
The Criminal Code provides that for an organisation to be listed as a
terrorist organisation, the Attorney-General must be satisfied that:
(a)
the organisation is directly or indirectly engaged in, preparing,
planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of a terrorist act (whether or
not a terrorist act has occurred or will occur); or
(b) the
organisation advocates the doing of a terrorist act (whether or not a terrorist
act has occurred or will occur).
On the basis of the above information, ASIO assesses the ASG is indirectly
preparing, planning, assisting in or fostering the doing of terrorist acts. As
well as conducting its own terrorist activity, ASG is providing assistance to
terrorist fugitives, who retain the intent to conduct, and continue to plan,
terrorist actions in the Philippines.
ASIO further assesses that elements of the ASG remain active, retain a
capability to conduct attacks, and an enduring intent to directly prepare,
plan, assist in, or foster the doing of terrorist acts. It is submitted that
the acts attributable to the ASG are terrorist acts as they:
(i) Are
done with the intention of advancing a political cause, namely, the
establishment of an Islamic state encompassing the southern Philippines;
(ii) Are
intended to coerce or influence by intimidation the government of a foreign
country, namely the Philippines, and/or intimidate a section of the Filipino
public; and
(iii) Constitute
acts which cause serious physical harm to persons, including deaths, as well as
serious damage to property.
In view of the above information, the ASG is assessed to be
preparing, planning, and fostering the conduct of terrorist acts. Such acts
include actions which are to be done and threats of actions which are to be
made with the intention of advancing a political, religious or ideological
cause and with the intention of coercing, or influencing by intimidation of the
Government and people of the Philippines. The actions or threatened actions
which ASG are assessed to be involved in would, if successfully completed,
cause serious physical harm and death to persons and serious damage to
property.
This assessment is corroborated by information from reliable
and credible intelligence sources
Other relevant information
ASG is listed in the United Nations’ 1267 Committee’s
Consolidated List as an entity associated with al-Qa’ida and as a proscribed
organisation by the governments of Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and
the United States of America. ASG was last proscribed in Australia on 3
November 2008.