Philippine police arrest suspects in the kidnapping of an American
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[October 30, 2024]
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Philippine police said
Wednesday they arrested three suspects in the kidnapping of an American
in the country’s south and believe the victim, who was shot in the leg
during the abduction, is still alive.
Two of the suspects in the Oct. 17 kidnapping of Elliot Onil Eastman,
26, in Sibuco town in Zamboanga del Norte province surrendered
separately and pointed to a third suspect, who was arrested in Sibuco,
police officials said.
Three other suspects, who may be holding Eastman, have been identified,
police said, adding that more people could be involved. Criminal
complaints of abduction were filed against the six suspects on Tuesday.
“We believe he is alive so our operations are ongoing,” regional police
spokesperson Lt. Col. Helen Galvez told The Associated Press by
telephone. “Our search won’t stop until we locate him.”
A house-to-house search was underway in one unspecified area, Galvez
said without elaborating. She added that the suspects belonged to a
criminal group and not to any of the armed Muslim rebel groups, which
have been blamed for a spate of ransom kidnappings in the southern
Philippines over decades.
The kidnappers were armed with M16 rifles and disguised themselves as
police officers. One of them shot Eastman in the leg when he tried to
escape then dragged him to a motorboat and fled, according to the first
police reports of the abduction seen by the AP, citing a witness.
Two empty casings of M16 ammunition and blood stains were seen by
investigators in Sibuco, where Eastman has been living for about five
months before he was kidnapped, Galvez said.
Eastman, from Vermont, traveled out of the Philippines and recently
returned to attend the graduation of his Filipino wife. He has been
posting Facebook videos of his life in Sibuco, a remote and poor coastal
town, where the suspects spotted him, Galvez said.
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In this photo provided by the Philippine National Police Regional
Office 9, a policeman checks an area Friday Oct. 18, 2024, where an
American identified as Elliot Onil Eastman, from Vermont, was
reportedly abducted by gunmen in Sibuco town, Zamboanga del Norte
province, southern Philippines. (Philippine National Police Regional
Office 9 via AP)
"He was confident. He was the only foreigner there,” according to
Galvez.
Although authorities said the ransom kidnapping was isolated in the
relatively peaceful region, it was a reminder of security problems
that have long hounded the southern Philippines, the homeland of a
Muslim minority in the largely Roman Catholic nation.
The southern third of the Philippines has bountiful resources but
has long been hamstrung by stark poverty and an array of insurgents
and outlaws.
A 2014 peace agreement between the government and the Moro Islamic
Liberation Front, the largest of several Muslim separatist groups,
has considerably eased widespread fighting in the south. Relentless
military offensives have weakened smaller armed groups like the
violent Abu Sayyaf group, over the years, considerably reducing
kidnappings, bombings and other attacks.
The Abu Sayyaf group had targeted American and other Western
tourists and religious missionaries, most of whom were freed after
ransoms were paid. A few were killed, including an American,
Guillermo Sobero, who was beheaded on the island province of Basilan
and a U.S. missionary, Martin Burnham, who was killed while
Philippine army forces were trying to rescue him and his wife,
Gracia Burnham, in 2002 in a rainforest in Sirawai town near Sibuco.
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