Suspected Maute leader, wife nabbed

Bato

PNP Chief Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa. Noy Morcoso/INQUIRER.net

Philippine National Police Director General Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa on Monday admitted that a suspected subleader of the Islamic State-inspired Maute group was able to escape at the height of the Marawi siege last year and settle in Manila with his wife despite President Rodrigo Duterte’s declaration of martial law in Mindanao.

The Maute subleader, identified as Nasser Lomondot alias Muhamad Lomondot, and his wife, Raisalam Lomondot, were arrested on Saturday at their clothes stall in Recto, Manila, and presented to the media at a press conference in Camp Crame.

“We don’t have any excuses that they were able to escape. We don’t have any alibi to give you. It appears that we really have shortcomings and I accept that they were able to slip out of Mindanao and then enter Manila,” Dela Rosa said.

Lomondot’s wife was “undergoing medical treatment” on Monday, said Chief Supt. Joel Coronel, head of the Manila Police District.

Key planners

Coronel said Lomondot took part in the fighting in Marawi City and had close ties with one of the slain Maute brothers.

“He was one of the key planners of the attack in Marantao town … while the firefight was still ongoing,” Major Ronald Suscano, regional military spokesperson, told reporters.

Lomondot was able to escape the dragnet set up by security forces in November and hid in Lanao del Sur and then in Cagayan de Oro City before traveling to Manila using public utility transportation in January “to escape and avoid ongoing military operations in Mindanao,” Coronel said.

Lomondot and his wife sought refuge with their relatives in Manila, but Dela Rosa said civilian informants were also instrumental in their arrest.

Coronel said Lomondot allegedly tried to detonate a grenade while his wife created a scene in an effort to distract the arresting officers.

‘Very uncooperative’

The couple, allegedly armed with a hand grenade and a .45-caliber handgun during the arrest, were “very uncooperative,” according to Chief Insp. Rizalino Ibay of the Manila Police District’s Intelligence and Operation Unit.

Ibay said Lomondot could not speak Tagalog, while his wife could but refused to cooperate.

“They were highly trained and well indoctrinated,” Ibay said.

Lomondot would not even reveal his age. “He said he’s 28 but also claims he was born in 1968,” Ibay said.

The couple’s presence in Manila was first monitored in December 2017, but it was only in February that authorities were able to verify the information.

On Saturday afternoon, Ibay’s men, assisted by the Army and National Intelligence Coordinating Agency, swooped down on Lomondot after they allegedly saw him place a gun inside his bag.

A slight commotion ensued after he resisted arrest.

Coronel said Lomondot initially denied being part of the Maute group.

“But when confronted with hard facts, he started giving information,” Coronel said, adding that Lomondot would continue to undergo debriefing by authorities.

Dela Rosa said the recent arrests of suspected terrorists should not alarm the public but instead make them more vigilant, especially since authorities had determined that terrorists were recruiting new members.

“The mere fact that their recruitment is ongoing [means] they have a plan to retaliate [after their loss in Marawi]. But it will take time for them to regroup and restock resources. The desire is on their minds, but it will take time for an attack to happen,” Dela Rosa said.

He said any retaliation by the terrorist groups would unlikely be in the scale of the Marawi siege. —With a report from AFP

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