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Philippine rebels make millions through extortion: military

Peru announces capture of key Shining Path guerrilla
Lima (AFP) Dec 30, 2010 - Peruvian armed forces have captured "Comrade Sergio," an important figure in the leftist Shining Path guerilla that has shown signs of re-emerging, officials said. Interior Minister Miguel Hidalgo announced Wednesday the arrest of Mario Antonio Sifuentes Sandoval, who was known by his nom de guerre Comrade Sergio and had previously served 12 years in prison on charges stemming from his activities with the Maoist group. Officials said Sandoval was an associate of Florencio Flores Hala, "Comrade Artemio," who heads the guerrillas in the upper Huallaga valley in the Huanuco department of Peru.

Officials said that hours before his capture, Sandoval had participated in an attack on a military patrol in which one soldier was injured. Hidalgo said the arrest of "Sergio" puts officials a step closer to capturing the head of the group in the area, "Artemio." The Shining Path was largely crushed by the mid-1990s, but remnants of the Maoist-inspired group are still active in the Upper Huallaga Valley and in the jungles of southeastern Peru. A brutal guerrilla war launched by the Shining Path in 1980 resulted in the deaths of some 70,000 people, according to Peru's independent Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
by Staff Writers
Manila (AFP) Dec 30, 2010
Communist insurgents in the Philippines have raised millions of dollars through extortion of businesses every year and now rely on the crime as their main source of funds, the military said Thursday.

Since 1998, the communists have raised 1.5 billion pesos (34 million dollars) from extortion and raked in 95.5 million pesos in the first 11 months of 2010 alone, said military spokesman Brigadier General Jose Mabanta.

However he said their 2010 profits would not match the 136 million pesos they raised through extortion in 2009, indicating that their influence may be on the wane, Mabanta told reporters.

"We perceive them to be less of a threat to security but the main point is they are now perceived more as a threat to development," he said.

He warned that no matter how marginalised the communists become, the Philippines would always be perceived as "the sick man of Asia," if it suffers from the stigma of being host to a left-wing rebellion.

Mabanta also expressed doubt that the Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP) would agree to stop using extortion even if the government raises the issue in peace talks scheduled for early next year.

"It may be hard on their part to desist from extortion because these are the only fund sources that they get. They have lost their sponsors and their (donations) from external sources," he said.

On Tuesday, President Benigno Aquino's government denounced the communist rebels for extorting money from businesses, warning that the issue could affect the peace talks.

This threat came after seven mining firms in the southern island of Mindanao threatened to pull up due to demands by the CPP's guerrilla arm, the New People's Army (NPA) that they pay protection money or face attacks,

Earlier, the military accused the 4,700-member NPA of using a truce with government forces over the Christmas holidays to intimidate businesses into submitting to rebel extortion.

Mabanta said that mining firms, logging companies and plantations were the main targets of communist extortion efforts.

He said the single biggest amount, of 39.5 million pesos this year, came from the southern region of Davao where many plantations and mining companies operate.

The NPA has earlier said businesses operating in its zones of influence must pay "revolutionary taxes" that help fund the insurgency.

The communists began their Maoist uprising in 1969, and it is now one of Asia's longest-running insurgencies.



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