Oh SHIT! MSK FLED AGAIN while Gurkhas fell ASLEEP!

JI_Fled

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
Nov 3, 2008
Messages
237
Points
18
Whoever was that asleep tiok court martial liao! :D

http://globalnation.inquirer.net/20731/us-teener-escaped-as-abu-sayyaf-captors-slept

US teener escaped as Abu Sayyaf captors slept
By Julie S. Alipala
Inquirer Mindanao
12:08 am | Monday, December 12th, 2011

kevin-300x225.jpg


ESCAPE STORY American Kevin Lunsmann (his face intentionally blurred as he is a minor) narrates to soldiers in Zamboanga City his escape from Abu Sayyaf kidnappers in Basilan. AP

ZAMBOANGA CITY—A 14-year-old American who escaped from Abu Sayyaf bandits after five months in captivity wandered without shoes for two days in the jungle, surviving on candies and coconut juice, before villagers found him, officials said on Sunday.

Kevin Eric Lunsmann made his getaway while his kidnappers were sleeping, Mayor Celso Lobregat told reporters.

Exhausted, hungry and still stunned, Lunsmann initially fled from the villagers, said Senior Superintendent Edwin de Ocampo, the Zamboanga City police chief.

“He was in fear so there was a bit of a chase before the villagers convinced him that they were friends,” De Ocampo told The Associated Press. He said the teenager was fine but exhausted and had bruises on his arms and feet.

Initial news reports (not the Philippine Daily Inquirer) had said the teenager was freed by his captors.

“He (Kevin) escaped from his captors two days ago and he was hiding in bushes when he was found,” Mayor Roderick Furigay of Lamitan City in Basilan told the Inquirer. “Instinct told him to follow a river trail until he reached the boundary of Lamitan.”

A happy Christmas

Lobregat said at a news briefing that Lunsmann had told him he escaped while his captors were asleep and that he followed the river “with the idea that he’ll reach the ocean.”

He said the teenager had been flown to Manila and turned over to US officials.

US Ambassador Harry Thomas said the teenager would be reunited with his family soon.

“In this holiday season, nothing makes me happier than knowing that an innocent victim is returned to his family in time for holiday celebrations,” Thomas said. “I also want to acknowledge the courage of Kevin himself, and his family, throughout this long ordeal.”

He said there would be a “speedy investigation and prosecution of all those involved in the kidnapping of American citizens.”

Phone talk

Lobregat said the teenager had talked by phone with his Filipino-American mother, Gerfa Yeatts Lunsmann.

The boy was kidnapped with his mother and a cousin, Romnick Jakaria, in Zamboanga City on July 12 and taken by boat to nearby Basilan Island. Gerfa was freed in Maluso town on October 2, while Jakaria was freed in the same town on November 12.

Gerfa, a member of the Sama tribe, was adopted by an American couple when she was young. She returned to Zamboanga City to meet her biological family. She bought a piece of land, planted with coconut trees, on Tigtabon Island here, where she had planned to build a vacation house.

Furigay said the young Lunsmann told him he walked for almost two days and did not know he was already in Barangay (village) Bulingan, 8 kilometers from the Lamitan City proper, on Thursday.

Furigay said the teenager told him he survived by eating candies presumably given him earlier by his captors, and climbing coconut trees to get its fruit, eating its meat and drinking its juice.

A barangay councilman, Kenny Ismail Illul, was planning to fish in the river when he saw the boy running at around 5:30 p.m. on Saturday.

“He followed the boy and found him, terrified, hiding under the thick bushes just near the river,” Furigay said.

Using his limited English, Illul talked to Lunsmann and learned that he was a kidnap victim from Zamboanga City. Illul tried to convince him to come out as he was already in safe hands, “but the boy refused,” Furigay said.

“So Illul called his barangay chair, Mercedita Villarin, to convince the boy,” Furigay said. Villarin, with policemen and militiamen, went to Sitio (sub-village) Linggisan, 6 kilometers from the village center of Bulingan, to see the teenager.

‘Good guys’

When Villarin’s team arrived at around 7 p.m., the village chairperson called Furigay and had Lunsmann speak with the mayor over the phone.

“I assured him that he was being fetched by good guys and he’ll be brought to authorities that can bring him to his family,” the mayor said. “I met him at the military headquarters around 9 p.m. (Saturday). He looked so skinny, with rashes all over his body.”

Furigay said that when Illul first saw Lunsmann, the teenager’s body was covered with m&d. Lunsmann later said he was planning to bathe in the river when Illul saw him.

The captors earlier called the Lunsmann family in Campbell County, Virginia, to demand a ransom. Lobregat said he did not know if any ransom was paid.

‘I did it by myself’

Army Colonel Ricardo Visaya said the kidnappers were believed led by Puruji Indama, an Abu Sayyaf bandit notorious for ransom kidnappings and beheadings.

When Visaya asked the teenager if he was freed, which would indicate that ransom was paid, or escaped, Lunsmann replied that he fled from his captors. “No, I really did it myself,” he quoted Lunsmann as saying.

Ransom kidnappings are blamed mostly on the Abu Sayyaf, an al-Qaeda-linked group on a list of US terrorist organizations.

The Abu Sayyaf, which has less than 400 armed fighters, was founded on Basilan in the 1990s as an offshoot of a violent Moro insurgency that has been raging for decades. Hundreds of US troops have been stationed in the southern Philippines, including Basilan, to train and equip Philippine forces but are barred from local combat.

The escape of Lunsmann came a week after suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen abducted Australian Warren Richard Rodwell, 53, from his seaside house in Zamboanga Sibugay province, near Basilan.

Abu Sayyaf bandits are believed still holding an Indian, a Malaysian and a Japanese on Jolo island. With an AP report

Originally posted: 5:04 pm | Sunday, December 11th, 2011
 
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/12/12/at-least-10-al-qaeda-militants-escape-in-yemen-prison-break/

At Least 10 Al-Qaeda Militants Escape in Yemen Prison Break

Published December 12, 2011

| Associated Press

SANAA, Yemen – Several Al-Qaeda militants escaped early Monday from a prison in the southern Yemeni port city of Aden, officials said, tunneling their way out in the second such spectacular jailbreak this year.

A prison officer said at least 10 convicts escaped through an up to 130 feet long tunnel, which took the inmates from under the western side of the Aden prison to near a petrol station outside the prison walls.

A security official said 15 militants fled in the prison break, including 12 convicted for the killing of security officials and a bank heist.

The discrepancy in the number of escaped prisoners could not be immediately reconciled. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Yemen, the Arab world's poorest nation, has been wrecked by months of political turmoil and unrest. A popular uprising against longtime President Ali Abdullah Saleh's rule -- inspired by other Arab Spring revolts that toppled autocratic rulers in Egypt and Tunisia -- has been met by a fierce government crackdown.

The crackdown triggered widespread defections earlier this year by soldiers and officers who joined the protest movement. Powerful tribes and their armed fighters also turned against Saleh and waged battles against his forces.

Yemen is also home to Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which the U.S. considers the terrorist network's most active and dangerous offshoot. Islamic militants with links to the group have taken advantage of the country's turmoil to seize control of several towns in southern Yemen.

Yemen has seen spectacular jailbreaks before.

In 2003, 11 Al-Qaeda militants convicted for the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole, which killed 17 American sailors and injured 39 others, escaped from the Aden prison.

In 2006, 23 Al-Qaeda militants broke out of a detention facility in Sanaa, including Nasser al-Wahishi, who went on to become the leader of Al-Qaeda's Yemeni offshoot.

And in June, nearly 60 suspected Al-Qaeda militants tunneled their way out of a prison in the southern Mukalla city.

Investigations into these breakouts and subsequent trials showed that some prison security officers were involved in helping the convicts flee and several officers have been jailed.
 
http://af.reuters.com/article/energyOilNews/idAFL6E7NC0Y720111212

UPDATE 1-Al Qaeda members flee in south Yemen jailbreak-officials
Mon Dec 12, 2011 9:35am GMT

Print | Single Page

(Adds more fugitives, background on other escapes)

ADEN Dec 12 (Reuters) - At least 16 prisoners, including members of al Qaeda, escaped from a prison in the southern Yemeni city of Aden on Monday, Yemeni officials said.

A security official in the south of the country, where Islamist fighters have seized chunks of an entire province, said detainees fled by digging a tunnel leading beyond the prison's walls. Sixteen were at large, another local official said.

It was the second major jailbreak involving al Qaeda members since June, when dozens of al Qaeda militants escaped from a jail in another city, Mukalla.

Nearly a year of protests demanding the ouster of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, punctuated by bouts of fighting between his forces and tribesmen and military units who oppose him, have seen Islamists gain power in the south.

Deteriorating security in the area, where parts of the Abyan province are under control of Islamist fighters, have fanned fears in Saudi Arabia and Washington -- which long backed Saleh in its campaign against al Qaeda -- that the Yemeni branch of the group may gain a foothold near key oil shipping routes.

Al Qaeda members, including one convicted in a 2002 attack on the French-flagged oil tanker Limburg off Yemen, escaped from a jail in the capital Sanaa in 2006, helping to revive the group after Saudi security forces weakened it in that country.

Saleh's foes have accused him of deliberately letting Islamists in the south grow stronger to reinforce his argument that his rule alone can prevent the country sliding into chaos that would empower al Qaeda, whose Yemeni wing has planned abortive attacks on U.S. and other targets.

(Reporting by Mohammed Mukhashaf; Joseph Logan)
 
Back
Top