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Australia, Canada, E.U. Close Embassies in Manila After Terror Threats

A sign outside the Canadian embassy in the Philippines

MANILA, November 28 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Australia, Canada and the European Union closed their embassies in the Philippines Thursday, November 28, in response to specific terrorist threats by so-called “Islamic extremists”, officials said.

Armed police secured the Australian embassy and the European Commission office, both occupants of an office tower in the Makati financial district, as well as the Canadian embassy three blocks away.

Police SWAT teams armed with assault rifles also patrolled the streets of Makati, with some seen around the building housing the British embassy, which remained open, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

No other foreign embassies were known to have closed - the U.S. mission is closed for the Thanksgiving holiday but spokesmen said it would reopen on Friday, November 29.

Western diplomatic missions across Southeast Asia have sporadically shut their doors since a wave of threats linked to Osama bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda network and its regional allies around the September 11 anniversary.

Fears of new attacks have intensified since the October 12 Bali terrorist bombing, and a spate of bomb blasts in the southern Philippines and Manila last month which left 23 people dead.

Filipino police said Thursday they saw five foreign-looking men taking photographs and video footage of the Australian embassy last Friday who ran away when accosted. Embassy officials were unavailable for comment.

Philippines police chief Hermogenes Ebdane said the authorities were taking “all necessary measures to ensure public security, with particular emphasis on those who might need it more,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Defense Secretary Angelo Reyes told reporters: “We have directed the intelligence agencies of the defense department to coordinate closely with the Australian embassy officials to see to it that adequate measures are undertaken to prevent such threat from materializing.”

In Australia, Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said the threat concerned the Australian embassy and missions of two other countries which he declined to name.

The Australian foreign ministry said it had “received credible and specific information of a threat to the Australian embassy in Manila.”

Downer said later on television that the threat came from “Islamic extremists, fundamentalist people.”

He said his ministry also renewed a standing advisory for Australians to avoid non-essential travel anywhere in the Philippines.

Australian consular personnel would work from a Manila hotel during the embassy’s indefinite closure.

A foreign diplomat who asked not to be named told AFP: “The European delegation office (was closed) because apparently it was on the same building as the Australian embassy, and no European embassy was closed today.”

Canadian embassy counsellor Heather Forton told AFP: “We have a specific and credible threat that has led us to decide to close the embassy temporarily.”

The Canadian government website said in an advisory issued Wednesday that “Canadians should not travel to the Philippines until further notice.”

Southeast Asia has a growing and unwanted reputation as a frontline in the war against terror. Western intelligence agencies say the Jemaah Islamiyah network (JI), which has been linked to Al-Qaeda, maintained terror cells in the Philippines, home to decades-old Islamic separatist rebellions in the south.

JI has been blamed for the Bali bombings which killed more than 190 people, around half of them Australians.

The latest threat comes a day after Malaysia said it had arrested four members of a JI suicide bombing squad who planned to attack the U.S. embassy in Singapore.

Earlier this month the Philippine government said its arrest of a Filipino Muslim militant had foiled planned attacks on government installations, foreign embassies and shopping malls in Manila.

President Gloria Arroyo’s government has been a key supporter of the U.S.-led campaign against Al-Qaeda and its allies.

Two Indonesian Jemaah Islamiyah militants were sent to jail earlier this year on explosives charges.

The government this week outlawed imports of the agricultural chemical ammonium nitrate, which it suspects is being stockpiled by terrorists for bomb-making. The same chemical was believed used in the deadly Bali attacks.

 

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