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In April last year, two homemade bombs exploded hours apart on one bus, wounding the conductor and five passengers. A bomb exploded at a Cotabato city bus terminal in February the same year, wounding two people. Troops last year captured a suspected Al-Khobar leader, Mokasid Dilna, who allegedly trained with militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan in the 1990s. Military officials said he provided refuge to foreign militants and acted as a link with two local Muslim groups
-- the violent Abu Sayyaf and the larger Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which has been engaged in peace talks with the government. Mohagher Iqbal, the chief negotiator for the Moro rebels, said his group had no involvement in Thursday's bombing. "We have forces there, but not along the highway," he told The Associated Press. "We will never get involved in matters like that."
[Associated
Press;
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