The Phnom Penh Post

Suspected rebels dead in clash with Philippine army

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FIFTEEN suspected communist guerrillas including six women have been killed in a gunbattle, the Philippine military said yesterday, days after President Rodrigo Duterte called off peace talks.

Duterte last week vowed to go to war with the rebels and threatened to categorise them as a “terrorist” group over deadly attacks against soldiers and police.

Late Tuesday residents reported seeing armed men boarding a van and a truck in the town of Nasugbu 65 kilometres south of Manila, prompting authoritie­s to send troops, said local military spokesman Colonel Teody Toribio.

When soldiers tried to flag down the vehicles on a highway, a gunbattle broke out that left 15 suspected guerrillas dead, including a female university student, while five soldiers were wounded, added Toribio.

One suspect was captured while an undetermin­ed number escaped. Thirteen firearms were recovered, he said.

Regional military chief Briga- dier General Ernesto Ravina said the operation was “anchored on the pronouncem­ent of the president on the terminatio­n of peace talks”.

The Communist Party of the Philippine­s has been fighting since 1968 to overthrow a capitalist system that has created one of Asia’s biggest rich-poor divides.

Talks to end the conflict, which the military says has claimed 30,000 lives, have been conducted on and off for three decades.

They were revived last year after Duterte – a self-declared socialist – was elected president. But the fiery Duterte steadily backed away from the talks, accusing the guerrilla’s 3,800member armed wing, the New People’s Army, of carrying out attacks despite his peace efforts.

One of the fatalities in Tuesday’s clash was identified as a student of the premier state university. Toribio said the military believed she was an NPA member and the suspects had been under surveillan­ce for some time.

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