The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine troops bomb militants

- Ted Aljibe

PHILIPPINE security forces bombed residentia­l areas in a southern city yesterday as they battled Islamist militants who were holding hostages and reported to have murdered at least 11 civilians.

An initial rampage by gunmen, who have pledged allegiance to Islamic State, through the mainly Muslim city of Marawi on Tuesday prompted President Rodrigo Duterte to impose martial law across the southern third of the Philippine­s.

Authoritie­s said ending the crisis was proving extremely hard because, although there were only 30 to 40 remaining gunmen, the militants were moving nimbly through homes, had planted bombs in the streets and were holding hostages.

Intense gunfightin­g could be heard constantly throughout the day in the city, and the military said it had dropped bombs on residentia­l neighbourh­oods.

“We are using surgical airstrikes,” local military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Jo-Ar Herrera told reporters in Marawi shortly before big clouds of black smoke rose from a bombed area near the provincial government building.

Most of Marawi’s 200,000 residents had fled the city, which is about 800 kilometres south of Manila, but Herrera said those who remained had been warned to get out of the areas where there was fighting.

“We are requesting our people in Marawi to go to safe places . . . and to stay indoors,” he said.

Five soldiers, two policemen and 26 militants have died in the three days of fighting, according to authoritie­s. Thirty-nine soldiers have been wounded.

Herrera said two civilians had also been killed inside a hospital that the gunmen had occupied on Tuesday, and the military was investigat­ing reports that nine people had been murdered at a checkpoint the militants had set up.

Local GMA television network showed images of nine bulletridd­led bodies lying in a field with their hands tied together.

Duterte said on Wednesday that one of the policemen killed was similarly caught at a checkpoint set up by the militants, then beheaded.

The militants are also holding between 12 and 15 Catholic hostages abducted from a church, according to the local bishop, Edwin Dela Pena.

The fighting erupted on Tuesday after security forces raided a house where they believed Isnilon Hapilon, a leader of the infamous Abu Sayyaf kidnapfor-ransom gang and Philippine head of IS, was hiding.

The US regards Hapilon as one of the world’s most dangerous terrorists, offering a bounty of $5 million for his capture.

The raid went spectacula­rly wrong as dozens of gunmen emerged to repel the security forces, then went on a rampage across the city while flying black IS flags. The gunmen belonged to the Maute group, which along with Hapilon’s faction of Abu Sayyaf, had pledged allegiance to IS, authoritie­s said.

The militants raided two jails, leading to the escape of over 100 inmates, according to Mujiv Hataman, the governor of a Muslim self-rule area that includes Marawi. They also set fire to many buildings, including a church and a university.

An enraged Duterte, who was in Moscow to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin, declared martial law shortly after the fighting erupted and cut short his trip to fly home and deal with the crisis.

“It is brutality, cruelty,” Duterte said on Wednesday.

Duterte said martial law was required throughout the southern region of Mindanao, home to 20 million people, to stop the rising threat of hardline militants aligned to IS.

Muslim rebels have been fighting since the 1970s for an independen­t or autonomous homeland in Mindanao, with the conflict claiming more than 120,000 lives.

The main Muslim rebel groups are now involved in peace talks with the government.

But the Abu Sayyaf, Maute and other hardline groups want to set up an Islamic caliphate in the south for IS, according to Duterte and security analysts.

Duterte said on Wednesday he may impose martial law throughout the rest of the country if he believed the terrorism threat was spreading.

 ?? TED ALJIBE/AFP ?? Philippine soldiers arrive to reinforce comrades yesterday at a military camp in Marawi, on the southern island of Mindanao, days after Muslim extremists attacked the city.
TED ALJIBE/AFP Philippine soldiers arrive to reinforce comrades yesterday at a military camp in Marawi, on the southern island of Mindanao, days after Muslim extremists attacked the city.

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