Philippine police checking reports of Abu Sayyaf leader’s death

Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan heads a faction of Abu Sayyaf affiliated with Daesh. (AP/File)
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Updated 09 July 2020
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Philippine police checking reports of Abu Sayyaf leader’s death

  • Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan heads faction of the group affiliated with Daesh
  • The militant oversaw kidnapping of Arab News's Asia Bureau Chief Baker Atyani

Philippine police are investigating whether one of the senior leaders of extremist group Abu Sayyaf has been killed.

Hatib Hajan Sawadjaan, who heads a faction of the group affiliated with Daesh, may have died from gunshot injuries suffered during clashes with government troops on the island province of  Sulu, according to Filipino media.

The report of his death was received by provincial police and is being verified by the Western Mindanao Command, the Philippine Star reported.

The clashes with around 40 Abu Sayyaf militants took place on Monday in Patikul, on one of several remote islands in the far south of the country where the group has its stronghold.

Sawadjaan was accused of masterminding an attack on a Cathedral in nearby Jolo in 2019 that killed 23 people.

He also oversaw the kidnapping of Arab News’s Asia Bureau Chief Baker Atyani in 2012 when he was working as a correspondent for Al Arabiya.

Atyani was held for 18 months before he was freed in December 2013.


Extremists kill 25 workers in northeastern Nigeria

A man sells newspapers in a street, following an attack on the international airport in Niamey, Niger January 30, 2026. (REUTERS
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Extremists kill 25 workers in northeastern Nigeria

  • Boko Haram, Nigeria’s homegrown terrorists, took up arms in 2009 to fight Western education and impose radical laws

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria: Armed extremists in northeastern Nigeria killed dozens of people earlier this week in separate attacks targeting a construction site and a military installation, security officials said on Saturday.
Gunmen killed at least 25 construction workers during an ambush on Thursday in the town of Sabon Gari in Borno State, said a senior officer of the Borno State Police Command.  Authorities in Nigeria often decline to publicly confirm death tolls in attacks, citing security concerns.
“It is a devastating loss, and the hallmarks point directly to Boko Haram insurgents who have long resisted developmental projects in these areas,” the police official said.
Boko Haram, Nigeria’s homegrown terrorists, took up arms in 2009 to fight Western education and impose radical laws.
The insurgency now includes an offshoot of the Daesh group, known as ISWAP.  It has spilled into Nigeria’s northern neighbors, including Niger, killing about 35,000 civilians and displacing more than 2 million people, according to the UN.
Abdurrahman Buni, a senior officer of the Civilian Joint Task Force, a volunteer vigilante group helping the military fight extremist groups and armed gangs, confirmed that at least 25 construction workers were killed during the Thursday attack.
Buni and the police officer said extremist fighters, backed by armed drones, had raided an army base in a separate attack in the same town hours earlier.  The police officer said the dead were nine soldiers and two members of a civilian task force, while about 16 injured security personnel were evacuated for medical treatment following the heavy gunfire.
He said it was unclear if the base attack was carried out by Boko Haram or the rival ISWAP, both of which are active in the region.
Nigeria is in the grip of a complex security crisis, with an insurgency by militants in the northeast alongside a surge in kidnappings for ransom by gunmen across the northwest and north-central regions over the recent months.
Last month, the US launched airstrikes in northern Nigeria, targeting terrorists.