Amid loss of leaders, unknown militant rises in Philippines
Source: Associated Press
Amid loss of leaders, unknown militant rises in Philippines
By JIM GOMEZ
February 21, 2019
MANILA, Philippines (AP) Unlike many of his slain comrades, the touted new leader of the Islamic State group in the southern Philippines lacks the bravado, clan name or foreign training.
Not much is known about Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan, but the attacks attributed to him heralding his rise are distinctly savage: A deadly bombing, which authorities say was a suicide attack by a foreign militant couple, blasted through a packed Roman Catholic cathedral in the middle of a Mass.
The Jan. 27 attack, which killed 23 people and wounded about 100 others on southern Jolo Island, and another suspected suicide bombing on nearby Basilan Island last July that officials said he masterminded, put Sawadjaan in the crosshairs of the U.S.-led global campaign against terrorism. It also comes at a time when the Islamic State groups last enclave in eastern Syria is near its imminent downfall, signaling an end to the territorial rule of the self-declared caliphate that once stretched across much of Syria and Iraq.
A recent U.S. Department of Defense report to Congress said without elaborating that it believed Sawadjaan was the acting emir, or leader, in the Philippines of the Islamic State group, also known by its acronym ISIS. It added that no actual leader is confirmed to have been designated by the main ISIS command in the Middle East as of late last year.
-snip-
Read more:
https://apnews.com/730b6ee409364975817a82ad9f15d90c