Timeline of Abu Sayyaf attacks

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following is a list of attacks which have been carried out by Abu Sayyaf, a militant group based in and around Jolo and Basilan islands in the southwestern part of the Philippines, where for more than four decades, Moro groups have been engaged in an insurgency for an independent province in the country.

2000

  • 25 February - Abu Sayyaf bombers attacked Ozamiz City in Misamis Oriental.[1]
  • 23 April – Abu Sayyaf gunmen raid the Malaysian diving resort of Sipadan, off Borneo and flee across the sea border to their Jolo island stronghold with 10 Western tourists and 11 resort workers.
  • 27 May – The kidnappers issue political demands including a separate Muslim state, an inquiry into alleged human rights abuses in Sabah and the restoration of fishing rights. They later demand cash multimillion-dollar ransoms.[citation needed]
  • 1 July – Filipino television evangelist Wilde Almeda of the Jesus Miracle Crusade (JMC) and 12 of his follsited the Abu Sayyaf headquarters.[2] A German journalist is seized the following day.[3]
  • 9 July – A three-member French television crew was abducted.[3]
  • 27 August – French, South African and German hostages are freed.[4]
  • 28 August – United States Muslim convert
    Jeffrey Schilling is abducted.[5]
  • 9 September – Finnish, German and French hostages are freed.[6]
  • 10 September – Abu Sayyaf raids Pandanan island near Sipadan and seizes three Malaysians.[7]
  • 16 September – The government troops launch military assault against Abu Sayyaf in Jolo. Two kidnapped French journalists escape during the fighting.[8]
  • 2 October – JMC Evangelist Wilde Almeda and 12 "prayer warriors" were released.[9]
  • 25 October – Troops rescue the three Malaysians seized in Pandanan.

2001

  • 12 April – Jeffrey Schilling is rescued, leaving Filipino scuba diving instructor, Roland Ullah, in the gunmen's hands.[10][11]
  • 22 May – Suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen raid the luxurious Pearl Farm beach resort on Samal island in southern Philippines, killing two resort workers wounding three others, but no hostages were taken.[12]
  • 28 May – Suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen
    Manila Times owner Reghis Romero. Arroyo rules out ransom and orders the military to go after the kidnappers.[12]
  • 29 May –
    Malacañang imposes a news blackout in Basilan province where the Abu Sayyaf are reported to have gone.[13]
  • 30 May – United States Department Spokesman Philip Reeker calls for the "swift, safe and unconditional release of all the hostages." An Olympus camera and an ATM card of one of the hostages are found in Cagayan de Tawi-Tawi island. Pictures of Abu Sayyaf leaders are released to media by the Armed Forces of the Philippines.[14]
  • 31 May – The military fails to locate the bandits and hostages despite search and rescue operations in Jolo, Basilan and Cagayan de Tawi-Tawi.
  • 1 June – Military troops engage Abu Sayyaf bandits in Tuburan town in Basilan. Abu Sayyaf spokesman Abu Sabaya threatens to behead two of the hostages.
  • 2 June – Abu Sayyaf invaded Lamitan town and seize the José Maria Torres Memorial Hospital and the Saint Peter's church. Soldiers surround the bandits and engage them in a day-long firefight. Several hostages, including businessman Reghis Romero, were able to escape. Witnesses say the bandits escape from Lamitan at around 5:30 in the afternoon, taking four medical personnel from the hospital.
  • 3 June – Soldiers recover the decapitated bodies of hostages Sonny Dacquer and Armando Bayona in Barangay Bulanting.
  • 4 June – Military officials ask for a state of emergency in Basilan. President Gloria Arroyo turns the request down.
  • 5 June – At least 16 soldiers are reported killed and 44 others wounded during a firefight between government troops and Abu Sayyaf members in Mount Sinangkapan in Tuburan town. President Arroyo promises 5 million pesos to the family of retired Col. Fernando Bajet for killing Abu Sayyaf leader Abu Sulayman on 2 June 2000. Abu Sayyaf leaders contact a government designated intermediary for possible negotiations.
  • 6 June – Abu Sayyaf leader Abu Sabaya tells Radio Mindanao Network that United States hostage Martin Burnham sustained a gunshot wound on the back during a recent exchange of gunfire.[15]

2002

  • 21 July – A provincial governor and three others were wounded when fighters of the Abu Sayyaf ambushed them in the southern Philippines, the military said.[16]
  • August – Six Filipino Jehovah's Witnesses were kidnapped and two of them were beheaded.[17]
  • 2 October – One American serviceman was killed and another seriously injured by a bomb blast in Zamboanga City.[18]

2003

  • 12 February – The Philippines expelled an Iraqi diplomat, accusing the envoy of having ties to the Abu Sayyaf terrorist group. Second Secretary Husham Husain has been given 48 hours to leave the country, according to a statement by Philippine Foreign Secretary Blas Ople. The government said it had intelligence that the Iraqi diplomat has ties to the Islamic extremist group. The decision was taken more than a month before the 2003 invasion of Iraq.[19]
  • 5 March – Abu Sayyaf claimed responsibility for the bombings in
    Davao International Airport in the southern Philippines, killing 21 and injuring 148.[20]

2004

2005

  • 14 February – The Valentine's Day bombings took place in three major cities of the Philippines namely; Makati, Davao City and General Santos. The incidents claimed numerous lives (including children), injuries and big amount of damaged properties. Immediately after an hour there was a claimed coming from the Abu Sayyaf Chieftain Khadaffy Janjalani and Abu Solaiman via media interview that the bombings were the terrorists' Valentines gift to President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and to the citizenry to praise their belief. This was recorded as terrorist attack that caused the biggest downfall effects in the Philippine economic history in terms of tourism industry, foreign investors and socioeconomic undertakings of the people. The issuance of travel advisories from numerous nations was paramount after the incident.
  • 15 March – Several Abu Sayyaf top leaders attempted to escape from the Camp Bagong Diwa in Bicutan, Taguig City. They killed 4 government soldiers in revenge of killing his 2 men. They barricaded the Special Intensive Care Area (SICA) compound. This started the Bagong Diwa siege. 29 hours later, the Special Action Force of the Philippine National Police sieges the compound, killing 22 men, including its leaders.[22]
  • 17 November – A prominent leader of the Islamist group Abu Sayyaf, Jatib Usman, has been killed in ongoing clashes between rebels and the military. Usman was confronted in the most southeastern province of Tawi-Tawi, an island region which is close to the Borneo coast of Malaysia.[23]

2006

2007

  • 17 January – Abu Sayyaf leader, Abu Sulaiman is killed in a gun battle against the Philippine Army in Jolo.[25]
  • 11 July – Eight
    Filipino government soldiers
    were killed, nine others injured and six missing following a gun battle against Abu Sayyaf soldiers, supported by armed villagers in the southern island province of Basilan, according to a military source.
  • 9 August – The military said it lost 26 soldiers and killed around 30 militants in three days of fighting on the volatile island of Jolo, in the beginning of month. The heaviest toll occurred after militants ambushed a military convoy.[26]

2008

  • 17 January – Abu Sayyaf militants raided a convent in Tawi-Tawi and killed a Catholic missionary during a kidnapping attempt.[27]
  • 14 February – Failed assassination plot of the President of the Philippines, Gloria Arroyo.[28]
  • 8 June – ABS-CBN Journalist Ces Drilon and her TV Crew kidnapped. 10 days later they were released after families paid a portion of the ransom.[29]
  • 23 September – A mid-level leader of the Abu Sayyaf group and a follower surrendered to the Marine Battalion Landing Team-5 (MBLT-5) in Sulu province. Colonel Eugenio Clemen, chief of the 3rd Marine Brigade, identified the bandits who surrendered as Hadjili Hari and Faizal Dali, his son-in-law.[30]

2009

  • 15 January – Three Red Cross officials, Swiss Andreas Notter, Filipino Mary Jane Lacaba and Italian Eugenio Vagni were kidnapped. Andreas Notter and Mary Jane Lacaba were released four months later.[31] Eugenio Vagni was released six months later on 12 July.[32]
  • 14 April – Abu Sayyaf militants executed Cosme Aballes, one of two hostages they took during a raid on a Christian community in Lamitan City in Basilan on Good Friday, the military said. The bandits were with members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) and of kidnap for ransom groups. Aballes and Ernan Chavez were taken by at least 40 Abu Sayyaf, rogue Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) rebels and KFR elements when they raided Sitio Arco in Lamitan City. On their way out, the kidnappers shot dead a resident, Jacinto Clemente.
  • 18 May – Abu Sayyaf militants in Basilan beheaded a 61-year-old man who was abducted from this city about three weeks before, the police said.[33]
  • 12 July – The Italian Red Cross hostage, Eugenio Vagni, was released.[34]
  • 12 August – A group of Abu Sayyaf militants and members of the MNLF ambushed a group of AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines) soldiers as they conducted a clearing operation in the mountains of Tipo-Tipo, Basilan. 23 AFP soldiers were killed in the engagement, 20 of which were members of the Philippine Marines Corps. In addition, 31 Abu Sayyaf militants were killed in an initial body count.[35][36]
  • 20 September - The AFP took an Abu Sayyaf camp at Sitio Talibang, Brgy Buansa, Indanan, Sulu.[37]
  • 21 September – AFP overran a camp in Sitio Talatak, Brgy Bato-Bato, Indanan, Sulu belonging to the Abu Sayyaf, killing nearly 20 militants. 5 soldiers were wounded.[37][38]
  • 29 September – Two United States soldiers were killed in Jolo, near the town of Indanan, by Abu Sayyaf militants.[39]
  • 14 October – An Irish-born priest was kidnapped from outside his home near Pagadian city in Mindanao.[40] He was released on 11 November 2009.[41]
  • 9 November – A school teacher in Jolo was captured on 19 October and beheaded by Abu Sayyaf militants.[42]
  • 10 November – Abu Sayyaf militants captured several Chinese and Filipino nationals in Basilan.[43][44]

2010

  • 21 January – Suspected Abu Sayyaf militants detonated a bomb near the house of a Basilan province mayor. One teenager was injured.[45]
  • 21 February – One Abu Sayyaf senior leaders, Albader Parad, has been killed.[46]
  • 27 February – Suspected Abu Sayyaf militants killed one militiaman and 12 civilians in Maluso.[47]
  • 16 March – Suspected Abu Sayyaf militants killed a police officer in
    Zamboanga.[48]

2011

2012

  • 1 February – Dutch national Ewold Horn and Swiss citizen Lorenzo Vinciguerra, both birdwatchers, were kidnapped during a research trip in Tawi-Tawi. On 6 December 2014, Lorenzo Vinciguerra was rescued after he escaped from his captors when the troops under the Joint Task Force Sulu attacked the Abu Sayyaf group about 5:20 a.m. However, one of the ASG shot and wounded the Swiss national as he was escaping.[52] As of that date, Dutch national Ewold Horn is still in captivity by the Abu Sayyaf.[53][54]

2013

  • 27 May – At least 7 militants and 7 marines were killed when the government forces tried to rescue 6 hostages.[55]
  • 15 November – Abu Sayyaf gunmen raid the Malaysian resort in Pom Pom, off Semporna, killing one Taiwanese tourist and flee across the sea border to Sulu Archipelago with another Taiwanese hostage.[56][57] The hostage was later rescued by the Philippines security forces in Sulu Province.[58]

2014

  • 2 April – Abu Sayyaf gunmen raid another Malaysian resort in Semporna and flee across the sea border to Sulu Archipelago with a Chinese and Filipino hostages.[59][60][61] The two hostages were later rescued on 31 May with a collaboration by the Malaysian and the Philippines security forces.[62][63] 25 April – Abu Sayyaf gunmen abduct a retired German doctor and his girlfriend from their yacht near the island of Palawan. They are released on 17 October. The group claims to have collected a $5.6 million ransom from the German government.[64]
  • 6 May – Five Abu Sayyaf gunmen raid a Malaysian fish farm in Baik Island near the shores of Silam and kidnap the fish farm manager.[58] The hostage was later taken to the Jolo island in the Sulu Archipelago.[65] He was later freed on July with the help of Malaysian negotiators.[66]
  • 16 June – Two Abu Sayyaf gunmen raid a Malaysian fish farm and kidnapped a Chinese fish farm manager and one Filipino in Kampung Air Sapang, Kunak, Sabah.[67][68] The Filipino hostage managed to escape while the fish farm manager has been taken away to Jolo.[69][70][71] The fish farm manager was later released on 10 December.[72]
  • 27 June – Abdul Basit Usman, a bomb maker with links to Abu Sayyaf, reportedly is training others to carry out bombings in the Philippines.[73]
  • 28 July – Abu Sayyaf members ambush a civilian vehicle loaded with celebrators of Eid in Sulu, killing 21 people.[74]
  • 20 August – There are alleged reports that Abu Sayyaf members are training in Iraq under the Islamic State.
    Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant[76] followed by Radullan Sahiron. ISIS accepted their pledge.[77]

2015

2016

2017

  • 31 January – An ASG bandit who was involved in 2000 Sipadan hostage crisis was arrested in Barangay Cawit, Zamboanga City.[113]
  • 7 February – Five suspected ASG bandits were killed in an armed clash with Philippine Marines on Capual Island near Omar, Sulu.[114]
  • 9 February – A joint operation by the PNP and AFP in Bongao, Tawi-Tawi resulted in the death of an ASG leader of the "Lucky 9" group along with another bandit.[115]
  • 14 February – A German national appeared in a video to say that the ASG threatened to kill him if P30 million ransom is not paid.[116]
  • 23 May 2017, The Abu Sayyaf join forces with
    Islamic State. However their plan to take-over the city to make them as the wilayat of Islamic State are ultimately failed because they are completely wiped out by the combined forces of the Military Ground forces and police forces due to airstrikes and artillery bombardment.[117]

2019

  • 27 January 2019, their sub-faction the
    hatred of Christians as they declare a Jihad against Christians with the help of the Indonesian couples using the mobile phones, ammonium nitrate and IED's.[118][119] However the mastermind of the attacks along with their comrades are recently arrested after a week of pursuit operations against the Ajang-ajang members, they are identified as Albaji Kisae Gadjali (alias Awag), Rajan Bakil Gadjali (alias Radjan), Kaisar Bakil Gadjali (alias Isal) and Salit Alih (alias Papong), Later the police filed murder charges against the suspects but other remaining 14 other suspects who still at large.[120][121][122]
  • 2 February 2019, the
    a cathedral in the neighboring city of Jolo.[124]

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