New
York, October 2, 2002The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
is concerned about the safety of television reporter Carlo Lorenzo and
cameraman Gilbert Ordiales, who went missing on the southern island of
Jolo, Sulu Province, on September 28. CPJ fears that the journalists may
have been kidnapped.
Lorenzo and Ordiales, who work for GMA television broadcasters, were in
Jolo to report on rebel groups in the region, according to Philippine
and international news reports. The journalists were last seen after they
met a group of armed men in the town of Indanan, according to an account
by their driver. The driver left the group momentarily to check on his
car, and when he returned, the journalists and the armed men had disappeared.
Before their disappearance, Lorenzo and Ordiales had
made arrangements to interview rebels who are holding three Indonesian
fishermen and four Filipino hostages, according to a report in the Philippine
Daily Inquirer. The report also quoted a local police chief who said
that the journalists had arranged to interview members of a renegade faction
of the Islamic separatist group Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF).
It is not clear who may be responsible for the journalists' disappearance,
but in recent weeks, the Philippine army has escalated efforts to fight
several rebel groups in the southern province of Sulu. The armed group
Abu Sayyaf, which claims to be fighting for a separate Islamic state,
has sought refuge in Sulu since last year, when the military waged an
intensive campaignwith assistance from U.S. troopson their
former stronghold of nearby Basilan Island. The MNLF, which also advocates
an independent Muslim state, signed a peace agreement with the government
in 1996, but a breakaway rebel faction is still active in the province.
The Philippine military and local police are currently searching for Lorenzo
and Ordiales, but officials have not confirmed that the journalists were
abducted.

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