2002 Zamboanga City bombings | |
---|---|
Location | Four separate locations in Zamboanga City |
Date | First bombing: October 2, 2002 Second bombing: October 17, 2002 Third bombing: October 21, 2002 |
Target | Two department stores, Fort Pillar shrine and a karaoke bar/restaurant opposite a military base. |
Deaths | at least 11 |
Injured | at least 180 |
Perpetrators | unknown ( MILF, Abu Sayyaf, and Jemaah Islamiyah suspected) |
The 2002 Zamboanga bombings were a series of attacks perpetrated on the October 2, 17 and 21, 2002, around the southern Philippine port of Zamboanga City, Mindanao island. [1] Eleven people died and over 180 others were wounded in the four bomb attacks allegedly perpetrated by Islamic extremists with connections to the Abu Sayyaf insurgent group. [2] [3]
A bomb blast in front of a Malagutay district [1] karaoke bar near a military arms depot [4] in Zamboanga City killed an American Green Beret commando and three Filipino civilians. [1] [2] At least 25 other people, one of them another American trooper, were wounded in the blast. [5] Investigators were looking at the possibility of a suicide attack as the rider of a motorcycle where the explosives were rigged was among the fatalities. [5] A military intelligence report said the attack was staged by a "four-man urban terrorist group" of Abu Sayyaf, which has been linked to al-Qaeda. Philippine National Police chief Director General Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. stated the motorcycle driver had been identified as a member of Abu Sayyaf from a sketch based on witnesses' accounts and the body. [5] According to police, the bomb that exploded in Malagutay weighed around a kilo and contained "brownish" explosive that may have been a mixture of gunpowder and TNT. [1]
Two TNT bombs exploded around noon inside a shopping centre in the commercial district of Zamboanga City, when the mall was most busy, killing at least seven and wounding about 150 people. [3] [6] Two department stores were devastated in the attack. [6] The first blast occurred at 11:30 a.m. at the Shop-o-Rama department store and was followed a half hour later by a second explosion at the adjacent Shoppers Central store. [6] Police Chief Mario Yanga said the bombs were deposited at counters where shoppers leave packages as they enter. [6] The explosions occurred as ceremonies were being held in the city to hand over command of the military's Southern Command from Lt. Gen. Ernesto Carolina to Lt. Gen. Narciso Abaya. [1] [6] Following the blasts, Zamboanga police bomb squads blew up five suspicious packages, however further examination found they contained no explosives. [6]
A Philippine Marine guarding the church was killed and 18 others wounded after a bomb, placed in bag left at a candle store, exploded at Fort Pilar, [3] a Catholic shrine in Zamboanga City. [1] [2]
Hours before the October 21 blast, police in Manila captured a man they said was a senior member of the Muslim extremist group, Abu Sayyaf, suspected of staging the earlier blasts. Police arrested five more suspects on the 22nd. On November 15, Abdulmukim Edris, who had a million peso bounty on his head, [2] was arrested in Pasay after the issuing of 11 warrants of arrest by the regional trial court in Isabela, Basilan for a string of pending criminal cases, including murder and kidnapping for ransom. Edris was tagged as the mastermind in the October 17 bombings. [2]
2002 Zamboanga City bombings | |
---|---|
Location | Four separate locations in Zamboanga City |
Date | First bombing: October 2, 2002 Second bombing: October 17, 2002 Third bombing: October 21, 2002 |
Target | Two department stores, Fort Pillar shrine and a karaoke bar/restaurant opposite a military base. |
Deaths | at least 11 |
Injured | at least 180 |
Perpetrators | unknown ( MILF, Abu Sayyaf, and Jemaah Islamiyah suspected) |
The 2002 Zamboanga bombings were a series of attacks perpetrated on the October 2, 17 and 21, 2002, around the southern Philippine port of Zamboanga City, Mindanao island. [1] Eleven people died and over 180 others were wounded in the four bomb attacks allegedly perpetrated by Islamic extremists with connections to the Abu Sayyaf insurgent group. [2] [3]
A bomb blast in front of a Malagutay district [1] karaoke bar near a military arms depot [4] in Zamboanga City killed an American Green Beret commando and three Filipino civilians. [1] [2] At least 25 other people, one of them another American trooper, were wounded in the blast. [5] Investigators were looking at the possibility of a suicide attack as the rider of a motorcycle where the explosives were rigged was among the fatalities. [5] A military intelligence report said the attack was staged by a "four-man urban terrorist group" of Abu Sayyaf, which has been linked to al-Qaeda. Philippine National Police chief Director General Hermogenes Ebdane Jr. stated the motorcycle driver had been identified as a member of Abu Sayyaf from a sketch based on witnesses' accounts and the body. [5] According to police, the bomb that exploded in Malagutay weighed around a kilo and contained "brownish" explosive that may have been a mixture of gunpowder and TNT. [1]
Two TNT bombs exploded around noon inside a shopping centre in the commercial district of Zamboanga City, when the mall was most busy, killing at least seven and wounding about 150 people. [3] [6] Two department stores were devastated in the attack. [6] The first blast occurred at 11:30 a.m. at the Shop-o-Rama department store and was followed a half hour later by a second explosion at the adjacent Shoppers Central store. [6] Police Chief Mario Yanga said the bombs were deposited at counters where shoppers leave packages as they enter. [6] The explosions occurred as ceremonies were being held in the city to hand over command of the military's Southern Command from Lt. Gen. Ernesto Carolina to Lt. Gen. Narciso Abaya. [1] [6] Following the blasts, Zamboanga police bomb squads blew up five suspicious packages, however further examination found they contained no explosives. [6]
A Philippine Marine guarding the church was killed and 18 others wounded after a bomb, placed in bag left at a candle store, exploded at Fort Pilar, [3] a Catholic shrine in Zamboanga City. [1] [2]
Hours before the October 21 blast, police in Manila captured a man they said was a senior member of the Muslim extremist group, Abu Sayyaf, suspected of staging the earlier blasts. Police arrested five more suspects on the 22nd. On November 15, Abdulmukim Edris, who had a million peso bounty on his head, [2] was arrested in Pasay after the issuing of 11 warrants of arrest by the regional trial court in Isabela, Basilan for a string of pending criminal cases, including murder and kidnapping for ransom. Edris was tagged as the mastermind in the October 17 bombings. [2]