Filipino accused of kidnapping Americans nabbed
MANILA, Philippines – Philippine troops arrested a suspected Muslim  militant accused in the high-profile kidnappings of three Americans, two  of whom were later killed, and dozens of Filipinos nine years ago, the  military reported Friday.
It said Jumadali Arad was captured at Manila harbor  Thursday as he was about to board a ship bound for the southern  Philippines, where the al-Qaida-linked  Abu Sayyaf group has planted bombs and carried out kidnappings despite  U.S.-backed military offensives against the militants.
Two soldiers were killed and one wounded on southern  Basilan Island on Friday when they tripped the wire on a homemade bomb  during an operation to track down militants, said regional commander  Rear Adm. Alex Pama.
They are believed to be holding two Chinese workers  snatched from a plywood factory last year, Pama said. A third hostage, a  Filipino, was beheaded a month after the November abductions.
Arad had been in hiding since 2001, when Abu Sayyaf abducted three  American and 17 Filipino tourists from the Dos Palmas resort in southwestern Palawan  province at the start of a yearlong kidnapping spree, said marine  commandant Maj. Gen. Juancho Sabban.
American  missionary Gracia Burnham survived the jungle captivity, but  husband Martin was killed in the military rescue in 2002. The third  American, Guillermo Sobero, was beheaded by the militants on Basilan.
Arad, who allegedly drove a speedboat loaded with the  hostages during the kidnappings, was reportedly on a mission to buy  ammunition for Abu Sayyaf  commander Isnilon Hapilon when he was arrested Thursday, the  military said in a statement. Hapilon has been indicted in the U.S. on  kidnapping and murder charges, and Washington offered a $5 million  reward for his capture.
The kidnappings and violence prompted Washington to  deploy hundreds of troops to the southern Mindanao region, where they  have been training Philippine forces and sharing intelligence. U.S. military personnel  are not allowed to engage in combat in the Philippines.
Although the government claims to have crippled Abu Sayyaf after several  offensives, the group still poses a major threat. It held three Red  Cross workers and several others hostage last year, attacked troops and  blew up bridges. A roadside bomb in September killed two U.S. soldiers.
The militants, however, have remained without a  central leader following the killings of its top commanders and have  split into at least five factions, police said.



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