US issues security alert for Metro Manila

A man walks past the U.S. Embassy in Manila, Philippines on Thursday Sept. 13, 2012 as its flag is on half mast following the death of U.S. diplomats in Libya. Manila police tightened security in the area following the attack that killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans in Libya. AP PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines—The United States issued a security alert for Metro Manila on Friday, warning its citizens they could be the target of an unspecified attack.

The US embassy in Manila released a statement calling for US citizens to exercise extreme caution and consider cancelling American gatherings in the sprawling megacity of 15 million people.

“The US Embassy advises American citizens in the Philippines that a threat against American citizens in metropolitan Manila, specifically the Pasay City neighborhood, has been detected by reliable security forces,” the statement said.

“This threat remains in effect until October 10, 2012,” it said.

The statement said US Ambassador Harry Thomas had ordered stepped-up security for all US government facilities in Manila.

Pasay, a major district in the capital, is home to a heavily guarded US embassy compound called Seafront that contains housing for diplomats, a library, an outpatient clinic and a clubhouse.

The compound is near the Department of Foreign Affairs, as well as a red-light district that attracts foreigners.

In an phone interview, US embassy spokeswoman Tina Malone  told INQUIRER.net that US Ambassador to the Philippines Harry Thomas Jr. has requested for an “augmented security profile for all our offices in Manila.”

“The concerned Philippine authorities have assured us that they would provide ample security and we are confident in their ability to do so,” Malone said.

She added that the move was part of a world-wide caution amid the continuing terror threat and violence against US citizens and interests around the world.

DFA spokesman Raul Hernandez released a short statement following the alert saying the government was working to ensure the safety of US citizens, but without giving further details.

“Protection of the welfare of its nationals in the Philippines is a duty of the US Embassy in Manila. The DFA sees this emergency message as a fulfillment by the US embassy of this important duty,” Hernandez said.

“It is also worth noting that the embassy is coordinating with Philippine law enforcement agencies in assessing, monitoring and, if necessary, responding to this threat.”

The US government issued an alert in November 2010 that warned of an attack in Manila, particularly areas frequented by foreigners.

It prompted similar travel advisories by Britain, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and France.

However the attack never materialized, and President Benigno Aquino subsequently criticized the United States and other Western allies for damaging his country’s tourism prospects.

The foreign governments eventually lifted their warnings for Manila.

The United States has a general warning about the risks of travel in the Philippines, a former US colony that has for decades battled Islamic separatist rebels and more hardline Muslim militants in the far south of the country.

A longstanding general warning cautions US citizens to avoid areas of the southern island of Mindanao, about 850 kilometers   from Manila, because of the threat of kidnappings.

The Abu Sayyaf, a small band of Muslim militants that authorities say was set up in the early 1990s with funds from the Al Qaeda network, has kidnapped and killed Americans in Mindanao.

About 600 US troops have been rotating through the southern Philippines for a decade to help train local troops in hunting the Abu Sayyaf. However the Americans are barred from taking part in combat. With Fat Reyes, INQUIRER.net

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