Filipino cops storm prison : 28 killed
AP, Manila
The Philippines braced for retaliatory attacks after some of the country's most hardened terror suspects were killed in a failed prison uprising that left 28 people dead, most of them inmates killed in a barrage of bullets as hundreds of police stormed the maximum security facility. The dead included three leaders and a fourth member of the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf, a group notorious for deadly attacks and ransom kidnappings in which hostages have been beheaded. The crisis began with an Abu Sayyaf suspect snatching a guard's weapon and quickly turned into a prolonged standoff with at least 10 of the group's top suspects leading the rebellious inmates. Three guards and 24 inmates died 22 in Tuesday's assault to take back the prison. A police officer also was killed, his body discovered under debris hours after the operation ended. Sweat-soaked police marksmen filed out of the building after the assault to the applause of bystanders, escorting prisoners stripped to their underwear and with hands clasped behind their heads. "The terrorists got what was coming to them," Ignacio Bunye, press secretary for President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, said in a statement. "The crisis team gave them all the chances to peacefully surrender." The raid began after authorities gave the inmates a 15-minute deadline to surrender an ultimatum that came after hours of fruitless negotiations. Six officers were wounded in the assault, which saw some detainees scale down walls inside the compound as thick smoke billowed out.
|
Relatives of Abu Sayyaf prisoners look over the barbed-wire fence in an effort to find their kin after police commandos stormed the Camp Bagong Diwa prison in Bicutan suburban Manila yesterday to end the militant prison revolt. PHOTO: AFP |