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Philippines rebels blame renegade member for attacks
18 Oct 2006 07:37:23 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Manny Mogato

MANILA, Oct 18 (Reuters) - The largest Muslim rebel group in the Philippines blamed a former member on Wednesday for three recent bombings and protested a murder charge against its leader, warning it could affect peace talks with the government.

On Tuesday, police charged Ebrahim "al haj" Murad and 20 members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in absentia for plotting a bomb attack which killed seven people and wounded more than 30 in a southern town last week.

A spokesman for the MILF said the charges were designed to break a 2003 truce and long-running negotiations to end nearly 40 years of fighting between Muslim separatists in the south and troops of the mainly Catholic central government.

"We see a third party here out to destroy the image of the MILF," Eid Kabalu told reporters, adding his group has asked the police to drop charges against Murad to save the negotiations.

Kabalu said the MILF was cooperating with local security forces in hunting a former member, Abdul Basit Usman, who was suspected to have carried out the attack on Makilala town and two other towns on the southern island of Mindanao.

"We're also running after Usman because he's destroying our name," he added.

The MILF and Manila have been talking for nearly a decade to try and end a conflict that has killed more than 120,000 people since the late 1960s but negotiations stalled in May over the size and wealth of a proposed homeland for Muslims in the south.

There has been an upsurge in violence in the southern region of Mindanao over the past week. Late on Tuesday, Muslim gunmen abducted four people, including three engineers, working on a U.S.-funded road project on a remote southwestern island.

Brigadier-General Reynaldo Sealana, army commander on Jolo island, said the Filipino engineers were inspecting sections of a road project funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development when gunmen stopped their truck and snatched them.

Jolo is the stronghold of the Philippines' most violent Muslim rebel group, Abu Sayyaf, which gained international notoriety several years ago for kidnapping and, in some cases decapitating, western tourists and local churchworkers.

Sealana said they were still looking for a motive for Tuesday's kidnapping.
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