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January 8, 2009
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Home > 2002 > June (Web-only)Christianity Today, June (Web-only), 2002  |   |  
"Weblog: As Gracia Goes Home, Fight Against Abu Sayyaf Expands"
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Gracia speaks
Just before her departure from the Philippines to Kansas, widowed missionary Gracia Burnham spoke publicly for the first time since her Friday rescue. "We want to thank each and every one of you for every time you remembered us in prayer," she said. "We needed every single prayer you prayed for us during our ordeal in the jungle. We know there are countless of you who don't even know us who prayed and offered support also, and we thank you, too."

Gracia thanked the Philippine soldiers who rescued her and attacked her captors. "During our ordeal, we were repeatedly lied to by the Abu Sayyaf," she said gravely. "And they are not men of honor. They should be treated as common criminals."

Gracia had a busy day yesterday; she visited with the family of Ediborah Yap, the nurse who was also slain in the rescue attempt. ("Gracia herself told me that Ediborah was a hero," said President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.) Gracia also debriefed American and Filipino military officials about the activities of the Abu Sayyaf.

The buzz in Rose Hill, Kansas, this morning is about how much better Gracia looks than she did in images from her captivity (lots of photos of both here). The family is eager to see her when she arrives on a commercial flight in Kansas City (about a three-hour drive from Rose Hill) this afternoon. (She is not expected to address the public today.) Several papers report on yesterday's church services, but you can read Christianity Today's coverage here.

Meanwhile, in the Philippines, the pursuit of the Burnhams' abductors continues. More than 600 troops are pursuing the Abu Sayyaf, which is estimated to number 242—with 30 in the cell that held the Burnhams.

The Philippine military is watching the country's ports, recruiting leaders on the island of Mindanao to watch for the bandits, and—perhaps most importantly—asking the U.S. military to extend its operations in the country. "The American forces in Basilan want to do it. The Philippine forces want to do it. Why not do it?" defense minister Angelo Reyes said. "If you are able to prevent just one terrorist attack, it's worth it."

The U.S. has reportedly agreed. "The United States has declared assistance to the [Philippine] Armed Forces to prevent the terrorists from escaping, should they escape internationally," Ambassador Francis Ricciardone said today. "We will have to see what more we can do to make sure these people are wiped out."

This worries some Filipinos. "With the unfortunate death [of Martin Burnham and Ediborah Yap], the government might, instead of being mindful of the unspeakable cost to human life of the war, proceed forth into a foreign policy altogether not in the Philippine interest," said Rep. Imee Marcos, a member of the country's House of Representatives and daughter of former president Ferdinand Marcos.

The deaths of Burnham and Yap "looked like the botched ending to one chapter of the American effort against terrorism," writes Raymond Bonner in today's New York Times. "American and Philippine officials disagree. But the episode raises many questions about the American military role [in the Philippines]."

Bonner questions whether the U.S. should be giving so much attention to the Abu Sayyaf. "If the United States is going to go after groups like Abu Sayyaf, whose links to Osama bin Laden are tenuous, the list of further targets is potentially long," he writes. America's real goal—though unspoken—was to free the Burnhams, but even so "it was not the first time the Abu Sayyaf group had seized Americans."





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