CAGAYAN DE ORO CITY – A Filipino ISIS sub-leader involved
in bloody battle with security forces in the southern Philippines has surrendered
to the military in the battle-scarred city of Marawi in the Muslim province of Lanao
del Sur, officials said Wednesday.
Philippine Army photos released to the regional newspaper Mindanao Examiner show Abdullah Lumzed Arumpac, alias Afghan, with Colonel Jose Maria Cuerpo II during the ISIS sub-leader's surrender Monday, July 14, 2020.
Officials said Abdullah Lumzed Arumpac, alias Afghan,
also yielded an automatic rifle when he surrendered Monday to the 103rd
Infantry Brigade.
Brigade commander, Colonel Jose Maria Cuerpo II,
said Arumpac was among those who laid siege on Marawi in 2017 and battled
troops alongside other pro-ISIS groups, including the Abu Sayyaf, for 5 months
until he escaped the massive military assault that killed most of the terror leaders,
among them the Maute Brothers.
“Afghan was involved in numerous terroristic
activities in Lanao del Sur province that include encounters against military
troops at Barangay Sandab, Butig sometime on 2015 and in Barangay Ragayan,
Poona Bayabao town in Lanao del Sur in 2017 where he suffered gunshot wound in
his lower right abdomen while three of his members died during the encounter.
He was also involved in the planning of the devastating Marawi Siege which
claimed thousands of lives and destroyed millions worth of properties,” Cuerpo
said.
He said Arumpac sought the help of Mayor Allan Lao
of Lumbatan town to arrange his peaceful surrender. Cuerpo also quoted Arumpac
as saying: “I realized that the best option for me is to return to the folds of
the law and sought the help of the local government of Lumbatan led by Mayor
Allan Lao.”
Cuerpo praised the surrender and urged other
militants to return to the fold of the law. “I am grateful that he chose to
return to the fold of the law and to help in the peace and development of the
area. I am hoping that this surrender would encourage other terrorist members
to follow. The government is always ready to help former rebels to return to
their normal lives,” he said.
Major Jeorge Jallona, Civil-Military Officer of the 1st Infantry Division based in Zamboanga del Sur province, said the terrorist leader is tired of fighting and wanted to live peacefully with his family.
“Afghan is tired of fighting and he wanted to live peacefully with his family. Now, the provincial government has this reintegration program for rebel returnees so Afghan can fully return to normalcy,” he told the Mindanao Examiner regional newspaper.
Major Jeorge Jallona, Civil-Military Officer of the 1st Infantry Division based in Zamboanga del Sur province, said the terrorist leader is tired of fighting and wanted to live peacefully with his family.
“Afghan is tired of fighting and he wanted to live peacefully with his family. Now, the provincial government has this reintegration program for rebel returnees so Afghan can fully return to normalcy,” he told the Mindanao Examiner regional newspaper.
Security forces had killed at least a
dozen foreign militants - some of them were from Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore
and Saudi Arabia - along with over 600 local ISIS fighters in
Marawi during the siege, but over 150 soldiers also died in the battle when
militants occupied the city and declared it a province of the Islamic State. The war, which
began in May ended in October. (With a report from Rhoderick BeƱez.)
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