SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT

Peace in Palestine = Peace in the World

ADVERTISEMENT

SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT

Indonesia, Philippines, Malaysia Work to Secure Sea Borders

muhadjir - Thursday, 30 June 2016 - 01:58 WIB

Thursday, 30 June 2016 - 01:58 WIB

76 Views ㅤ

The Outgoing Philippine Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin. DND

Manila, Philippines, 24 Ramadan 1437/30 June 2016 (MINA) – Defense officials from the Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia are working out an arrangement for the deployment in the Sulu Sea of a combined force of sea marshals to deter kidnapping for ransom by the Abu Sayyaf and other cross-border crimes like piracy.

This was bared Wednesday by outgoing Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, who also revealed the plan was raised at a recent trilateral defense meeting held at Camp Aguinaldo between him and his Malaysian and Indonesian counterparts, Philstar reported.

“We have to resolve it… it has become a big issue that destroys our image in the international community… They (Indonesian and Malaysian) also need to be part of the arrangement because they are the victims,” Gazmin said.

Earlier, a senior security official said that the Abu Sayyaf kidnapping menace has become an international security concern, as the bandits are now operating in international waters.

Also Read: AWG Partners with Pemuda Pancasila to Deliver Free Hijama and Support Gaza Aid

Only last week, the bandits on two motorboats intercepted an Indonesian tugboat and abducted seven of the boat’s 13 crewmembers in the waters off the coast of Tawi-Tawi.

The kidnappers later handed over their captives to the Abu Sayyaf in Sulu. The bandits are demanding 20 million ringgit for the freedom of the hostages.

“They have become so systematic,” Gazmin said of the terrorists.

He said he and Indonesia’s defense minister, in a meeting last Saturday at Camp Aguinaldo, agreed to make use the 1975 cross border agreement.

Also Read: AWG Advisor Outlines Three Phases for the Liberation of Al-Aqsa Mosque

The 1975 agreement allows Indonesian and Philippine security forces to conduct pursuit operations against the bandits within each other’s maritime zones.

But he stressed every operation should be coordinated between countries involved.

“They should coordinate with us all their actions, in the way that we will also coordinate with them our own actions inside their maritime domain,” Gazmin said.

He stressed that foreign troops are not allowed to operate inland. However, under extraordinary circumstances, Indonesians and Malaysians – provided they are unarmed – can be allowed to work together with Filipino troops to serve as interpreters or to provide needed information. (T/R07/R01)

Also Read: AWG to Hold Special Webinar: “Zionism in the Perspective of Islam, Christianity, and Judaism”

Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)

Recommendation for you

Indonesia
Asia
Asia
Asia
Indonesia