MANILA, Feb. 10 (Xinhua) -- The Philippine military said on Saturday it has
set a new, open-ended deadline to finish off remaining Abu Sayyaf militants in
the southern island province of Sulu "in the very immediate future."
Armed Forces of the Philippines Chief of Staff General Hermogenes Esperon
Jr. imposed the new deadline six months after the military's intensified hunt
for Abu Sayyaf group started in August under the codename "Oplan Ultimatum" with
more than 8,000 soldiers operating in the island province.
"We have imposed another deadline, a self-imposed deadline to our
operations in Sulu. We are adding some more special forces there to add to the
current punch that we have there," Esperon told reporters in Camp Aguinaldo, the
headquarters of the Philippine military.
"Within the year, in the very immediate future, that's what we're aiming
for," he said.
Last month, the military reported having killed Abu Sayyaf chieftain
Khadaffy Janjalani and his deputy Abu Sulaiman, and seven other sub-commanders
in a series of encounters in Sulu and the neighboring province of Tawi-Tawi.
The military is hunting for in Sulu two Indonesian Jemaah Islamiyah
militants, Dulmatin and Omar Patek who allegedly masterminded the 2002 bombings
in Bali, Indonesia, as well as a few remaining Abu Sayyaf leaders include
Radullan Sahiron alias Kumander Putol and Isnilon Hapilon, who are on the
"wanted" list issued by the Philippine and U.S.
governments.