Philippine policeman arrested over Australian's kidnapping


Philippine policeman arrested over Australian's kidnapping

AFP 


Australian Warren Rodwell gives a statement as he arrives at Manila International Airport on March 25, 2013 after...

A Philippine policeman who is a cousin of one of the nation's top Islamic militants has been arrested over the kidnapping-for-ransom of an Australian, police said Monday.

Jun Malban went on the run after he was charged with kidnapping Australian Warren Rodwell from his home in a southern Philippine coastal town in December 2011.

He was detained in Malaysia early this month and deported back to the Philippines on Friday last week, national police anti-kidnapping unit head Senior Superintendent Roberto Fajardo told reporters.

The abductors, members of the Abu Sayyaf Islamic militant group with a long history of kidnappings for ransom, posed as policemen when they seized him and initially demanded $2 million for his release.

Rodwell was released 15 months later in return for a ransom that a local politician said was worth about $100,000, although such a payment has never been officially acknowledged by the Philippine or Australian governments.

Fajardo said Malban was believed to have been working with Rodwell's kidnappers and brokered a ransom.

"Rodwell identified Malban as the negotiator of the Abu Sayyaf during his captivity," he said.

Malban, who had worked for a southern Philippine police unit that provides bodyguards to civilians under threat, is a cousin of Abu Sayyaf leader Khair Mundos, he said.

Mundos, who had a $500,000 US government reward on his head, was arrested in a rundown Muslim quarter near Manila airport in June last year. The US government described him as a "key leader and financier" of the Abu Sayyaf.

Founded in the 1990s with seed money from Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda network, the Abu Sayyaf has gained international notoriety for kidnapping sprees that target locals and foreigners in the Muslim-majority southern Philippines.

The Philippines' lowly paid police force has an enduring reputation for corruption and it is not unusual for officers to be accused of involvement in kidnappings or other crimes related to earning more money.

It is not also unheard of for law enforcement officials to have blood links to criminals, particularly in the southern Philippines where powerful clans dominate political, security and underground industries.

In March, the grandson of a powerful southern Philippine politician on trial for the murder of 58 people graduated from the country's premiere police academy.

Many of the accused politician's relatives hold local political posts, while one of his sons and some other relatives are also on trial for their alleged involvement in the massacre.







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