Philippines says 2nd Canadian hostage beheaded

This undated handout photo released by Eastern Mindanao Command (EASTMINCOM) on September 22, 2015 shows Norwegian employee Kjartan Sekkinstad (L) and Canadian tourist John Ridsdel (R), two of the three kidnapped foreigners who were seized by gunmen from aboard yachts just before midnight on September 21, 2015 on Samal island, a short boat ride from the southern commercial centre of Davao on Mindanao island.   Islamic militants holding two Canadians and a Norwegian in the southern Philippine jungles have set a one-month deadline for millions of dollars in ransom to be paid, according to a video released on March 10, 2016.  / AFP PHOTO / EASTMINCOM / STRINGER / ---- RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / EASTMINCOM" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS / “The erroneous mention[s] appearing in the metadata of this photo by STRINGER has been modified in AFP systems in the following manner: [shows two people] instead of [showing three]. Please immediately remove the erroneous mention[s] from all your online services and delete it (them) from your servers. If you have been authorized by AFP to distribute it (them) to third parties, please ensure that the same actions are carried out by them. Failure to promptly comply with these instructions will entail liability on your part for any continued or post notification usage. Therefore we thank you very much for all your attention and prompt action. We are sorry for the inconvenience this notification may cause and remain at your disposal for any further information you may require.”

 

Manila / AFP

Philippine authorities on Tuesday confirmed that extremist guerrillas had beheaded a second Canadian hostage, as they defended their inability to save him despite months of pursuit.
” We strongly condemn the brutal and senseless murder of MrRobert Hall, a Canadian national, after being held captive by the Abu Sayyaf group in Sulu for the past nine months,” presidential spokesman Herminio Coloma said in a statement.
A military statement also confirmed that a severed head, believed to be Hall’s, was found near the Jolo island cathedral on Monday night.
“The discovery confirmed the brutal beheading by the evil, criminal ASG (Abu Sayyaf group) of a kidnap victim,” the statement added.
Earlier, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declared that his government has “every reason to believe” that Hall had been killed by the Abu Sayyaf, the second Canadian captive to be slain this year.
Members of the notorious kidnap-for-ransom Abu Sayyaf gang had said they would murder Hall if they did not receive 300 million pesos ($6.5 million) ransom by Monday afternoon.
Hall was among four people abducted in September last year from aboard yachts at a tourist resort on Samalisland in the southern Philippines. Another Canadian kidnapped at the same time, John Ridsdel, was beheaded in April after a similar ransom demand of 300 million pesos was not paid. The fates of the two other people abducted at the Samal resort—Hall’s Filipina girlfriend MaritesFlor and Norwegian resort manager KjartanSekkingstad—were not known.
The beheadings have taken place despite the heavy deployment of military and police forces to locate them in the strife-torn island of Jolo, the largest island in the Muslim-populated archipelago of Sulu, about 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) from Manila.
Major Filemon Tan, spokesman of military forces in the south, said Tuesday that the kidnappers were evading military pursuers with the help of the impoverished Muslim residents of the island. “They have relatives in the community. They are the ones that give them a warning when there are soldiers in the area,” he told radio station DZMM. He also said the island’s forested, hilly terrain, a broad coastline that allows for swift movement by boat and the kidnappers’ tactic of breaking up into smaller groups, were all hindering pursuit.
“But we are studying this deeply and I can say we are adjusting and it will be a matter of time that we will hit them also,” he added. Listed by the United States as a terrorist organisation, the Abu Sayyaf is a loose network of Islamic militants that was founded in the early 1990s with money from Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda network.

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