Fourteen years after 21 people (including two
Americans) were kidnapped from Sipadan Island,
a popular dive site off the Borneo island of Sabah,
one more tourist -- and a resort worker -- have been
grabbed in the town of Semporna, a quick ferry ride
away.
At least seven gunmen raided the Singamata
Adventures and Reef Resort, a five-star PADI resort
in Semporna, on April 2 and seized a 29-year-old
Chinese tourist and a 40-year-old Filipino resort
worker. The two victims are being held by members
of the militant group Abu Sayyaf, who were
also involved in the 2000 kidnappings in Sipadan,
and in the November kidnapping of a 58-year-old
Taiwanese woman on Pom Pom Island, who was
eventually released a month later after paying ransom.
The Abu Sayyaf has resorted to ransom kidnappings
to raise money for weapons and to fund terror
attacks in the Philippines.
Undercurrent contributor Larry Clinton took
a ferry from Semporna to Sipadan for diving in
August 2012, and says "the town itself looks like a
seedy backpacker destination," with nothing that
would entice divers to stay. While the U.S. State
Department doesn't have a Travel Alert currently
issued for Malaysia, it does state on its website that
U.S. citizens are accordingly advised against travel
to the coastal resorts in Eastern Sabah, including the
divers' favorite Sipadan, because "kidnappings-forransom
occur frequently in these areas."