January18, 2007:
On Jolo, marines encountered 30 Abu Sayyaf rebels, and killed
ten of them. Three marines were also killed. Two rebels were also captured. The
military has been putting enormous pressure on Abu Sayyaf, putting over 6,000
troops in pursuit of the last few hundred Abu Sayyaf diehards. This pursuit has
gone on for over a year on Jolo, and apparently Abu Sayyaf has run out of
places to hide, and the locals have grown tried of trying to hide the
rebels.
January
16, 2007: On Jolo island, troops clashed with a group of about sixty Abu
Sayyaf, and killed senior terrorist leader Abu Solaiman. Military forces continued
to pursue the fleeing terrorists, and soon discovered, and captured, a rebel
camp. Solaiman is one of the five top leaders who that carried out many
kidnappings of foreigners, and the bombing of a ferry in 2004, that killed 200
people. The U.S. has offered a $5 million reward for his capture.
January
15, 2007: While China and the Philippines may confront each other over
uninhabited islands, Chins still seeks better relations. So the Chinese premier
visited today and signed development deals worth $3.8 billion. China, or at
least Chinese, have long had an influence on the Philippines. Over the
centuries, so many Chinese traders settled in the Philippines, so that today
about two percent of the population is Chinese, and an even greater percentage
is part Chinese. Some of the Chinese trading families have even married into
the few dozen families that have dominated the country from colonial
times. While small, the Chinese minority, because of their
entrepreneurial history, control a disproportionate chunk of the Philippines
economy. However, the current generation of Chinese-Filipinos are
generally more Filipino than Chinese. This is a break with Chinese tradition,
where the "overseas Chinese" tended to marry among themselves and maintain
their Chinese culture, even while living and prospering in a foreign land.