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Journalist
disappears in Southern Philippines
Febuary 6, 2002
According to Metro Manila
newspaper reports,
a cable television reporter for Net 25 has been missing since last
January 19, when she was last seen by the Philippine military and
police in Basilan, Mindanao. The reporter was allegedly in Basilan
to conduct exclusive interviews with the Abu Sayyaf Group, which
has been holding two Americans and one Filipino captive for several
months.
The Basilan Crisis Management
Committee (BCMC) is also investigating rumors that Arlyn de la Cruz,
also a contributor for the broadsheet Philippine Daily Inquirer,
was carrying a P50-million-ransom for the three hostages.
A military spokesperson however
said in another Manila newspaper that the report on de la Cruz’
disappearance was “raw information” that has yet to be verified.
The Philippine military has declared the de la Cruz case a missing
persons case.
Soldiers in Mindanao, however,
claim that de la Cruz was in fact abducted. She allegedly angered
Abu Sayyaf members when she failed to pay them for the interviews
with the hostages. CBS, a United States-based TV station, allegedly
paid $20,000 to Net 25 for exclusive rights to the footage and the
equipment used for the interviews.
Net 25 has a “no comment”
policy on the issue. It has issued no statements about her disappearance
and what she was doing in Basilan.
However, an Inquirer report
said that Net 25 executives had told the defense department that
de la Cruz has been regularly calling the station since her alleged
abduction. De la Cruz allegedly told the paper she was working on
an exclusive story in Mindanao.
An Inquirer report
last February 5 said that the military had been monitoring her movements.
A provincial police chief said she was seen alighting from a boat
on January 19 and left with a companion on January 20. He also claimed
that the film grabs of the three kidnap victims still under Abu
Sayyaf custody published in the Inquirer on January 23 were
from de la Cruz, confirming the military’s suspicions that she has
in fact been to the Abu Sayyaf camp.
However, neither the photos
nor the article accompanying it were credited to de la Cruz.
De la Cruz has previously
done exclusive interviews with the top members of the Abu Sayyaf
and its hostages, most notably with the hostages taken from Sipadan
Island, Malaysia in April 2000. The last article to appear in the
Inquirer with her byline was published last January 15.
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