MEMBERS of Ghuraba, a local
jihadist group in Lanao del Sur, have declared that an Islamic caliphate or Khilafah
Islamiyah has been established in the country and has started fulfilling its
mission of propagating its doctrines and beliefs.
Ghuraba
is Arabic for strangers or foreigners.
“The
Islamic caliphate has just begun,” said a member of Ghuraba at their secret and
members-only group at the social networking site Facebook.
He was
referring to the Khilafah governance that was last seen during the Ottoman
Empire in Turkey.
The
group’s recent declaration was in contrast to claims of Philippine authorities
that aside from occasional proclamations of several militant groups in
Mindanao, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has not yet established
its presence in the country.
Sources
said Ghuraba is working to establish an Islamic Caliphate in the country and is
headed by a certain Humam Abdul Najid, leader of the upstart Khilafah Islamiyah
Mindanao-Black Flag Movement (KIM-BFM).
According
to the same sources, the group was responsible for several violent criminal
activities in Mindanao, including the killing of American Michael Alan Turner
in Cagayan de Oro City on February 17, 2013.
Ghuraba
is also known in the United Kingdom, Pakistan and Indonesia.
Meanwhile,
local leaders in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) continued to
deny the presence of ISIS-like groups in Mindanao.
ARMM Gov.
Mujiv Hataman and ARMM police regional director Chief Supt. Noel delos Reyes
earlier dismissed as “hearsay” reports about recruitments by the ISIS.
Even the
Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) denied the existence of such groups but
warned about their virus-like ideology that could contaminate disgruntled
Muslims in Mindanao.
Reports
indicated that Muslim cleric Jamil “Mutawwa” Yahya, who is based in Marawi
City, has been very vocal in declaring to his followers his strong support to
the ISIS.
On
Saturday, during a congregational prayer for Eid’l Adha or Feast of the
Sacrifice, Yahya professed his loyalty to ISIS and even challenged the military
and the police to arrest him.
Reportedly
the organizer of the gathering in Marawi City, he confirmed the mass
convergence.
“It is
not only 100 who made the bai’ah but hundreds, old men, youth, women, even
young children. There are still many who wish to make the pledge,” Yahya was
quoted as saying.
These
developments came after other radical terrorist groups undertook their bai-ah
or pledge of allegiance to the caliphate of the ISIS.
A recent
video uploaded in YouTube by a group Ansarol Khilafah on September 8, showed 20
masked men holding high-powered weapons led by Abdul Basit Usman.
Usman, an
ethnic Maguindanaoan and bomb expert with links to the Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG)
and the Southeast Asian terror organization Jema’ah Islamiyah (JI), has a $1
million reward on his head.
He was
earlier reported killed by an American drone attack in Pakistan but that report
turned out to be false.
Aside
from the ASG and the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF), the Rajah
Solaiman Movement (RSM) has also pledged loyalty to ISIS.
In Marawi
City, the influence of the ISIS is reportedly having a positive impact on local
business especially among vendors selling pirated digital-video-discs (DVDs) in
public markets.
A vendor
said they have now reached “Series 8” of their best selling DVDs that feature
the gathering in Masjid Islamic Center with Yahya’s followers. Reports from
television were also included in the videos.
The
videos show footage of the ISIS’s mujahideen [soldiers of Islam] in Iraq and
Syria, including mass killing of infidels or apostates who allegedly betrayed
the ISIS, with some portions aimed at indoctrinating the viewers.
Aside
from DVDs, pamphlets and e-books are being freely distributed to select local
civilians containing the extreme ideology authored by al-Qaedah clerics Osama
Bin Laden, Anwar Awlaki, Hambali who are all advocating and calling for global
jihad (holy war).
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