A Time For Prayer
As mutineers seize a Manila complex and demand that the government resign, Arroyo faces her presidency's toughest test
Standoff a big blow for Arroyo
The mutiny is over but the Filipino president may still feel the destructive effects 
Her Other Problem
A confession by a Filipino terrorist could deal a blow to Arroyo's negotiations with Islamic rebels
Exclusive Interview
"It's Not a Sprint: It's a Marathon"
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It's the Economy ...
The Philippines' economy is still troubled
The Lawless South
Mindanao: A hotbed of militant groups
Thickening Plot
A terrorist duo plans a wave of attacks in Manila

Power and Gloria
The Philippines' president survives her first year—barely
[01/28/2002]
He's Out; She's In
Abandoned by his allies, President Estrada cedes power to his VP
[01/29/2001]
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ROMEO RANOCO/REUTERS
Conference of Terror: Muklis, left, told interrogators of a new plot to target Manila landmarks with al-Ghozi, right


Her Other Problem
A confession by a Filipino terrorist could deal a blow to Arroyo's negotiations with Islamic rebels
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Posted Monday, June 28, 2003; 21:00 HKT
When Saifullah (Muklis) Yunos set out on a bombing mission two months ago, he knew that as the Philippines' most wanted terrorist he risked recognition. So Muklis came up with a novel disguise. He appeared at the airport in Cagayan de Oro, a city on the strife-torn southern island of Mindanao, on a stretcher, complete with a heavily bandaged face and a plaster cast on one leg. As if to complete what could be interpreted as a sickening homage to his previous victims, he swallowed a tranquilizer at the advice of his traveling companion, Egyptian Diah al-Gabri, and passed out.

Muklis didn't stay asleep for long. Security officials, tipped off when al-Gabri's name popped up on a terrorist watch list issued by the U.S., arrested the two men before they could board their flight and whisked them to police headquarters in Manila. There, Muklis was subjected to an intensive, four-day grilling by members of a joint team of interrogators assembled from a range of Philippine law-enforcement agencies.

Muklis' confession, detailed in a 92-page transcript and an accompanying 18-page analysis obtained by TIME, is explosive. A key bombmaker and trainer for the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which has been waging a guerrilla campaign for an independent Muslim state on Mindanao for decades, Muklis told his interrogators that he was on his way to Manila to launch a bombing campaign that was to include a suicide attack on the presidential palace using a gasoline tanker. Muklis said he had been hired for the mission by al-Gabri at the direct orders of Miston Maumar, father-in-law to the MILF's veteran leader Hashim Salamat. Most revealing of all was Muklis' casual acknowledgment—despite strenuous denials by both the MILF and Manila—that large numbers of non-Filipino Islamic radicals have been—and probably still are—receiving military training in jungle camps located in guerrilla-controlled areas of Mindanao. The confession could prove to be a stumbling block to the resumption of peace talks between Manila and the MILF, currently scheduled to restart by Aug. 8 in Kuala Lumpur.

During the 1990s, hundreds of militants from Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand trained in Mindanao under the auspices of the MILF, many of them graduating to become key operatives for Jemaah Islamiah (JI), the loose confederation of radical groups blamed for numerous deadly bombings across Southeast Asia, including last October's Bali blasts. In theory, however, militant training was supposed to have stopped when Philippine army units overran the main MILF base, Camp Abubakar, in 2000 and captured three adjacent JI training camps.

1 | 2 | 3 | Next


Terrorism Released [July 21, 2003]
Criticism falls on Manila's security apparatus as JI bombmaker escapes

First Bali, now Davao [March 13, 2003]
The bombing at an airport in the Philippines shows the threat that terrorists still pose in Asia

The Philippines' Terrorist Refuge [February 17, 2003]
Mindanao's Islamic separatists are back to harboring and training the region's terrorists

The Long Goodbye [January 6, 2003]
Arroyo vows to step aside in 2004, but the Philippine President's self-sacrifice might backfire

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FROM THE AUGUST 4, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED MONDAY, JULY 28, 2003


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