The Phnom Penh Post

Worries over Philippine suicide attacks

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ANUMBER of apparent suicide bombings in t he Philippine­s over t he past 12 months are a worr y ing esca lation of militancy driven by t he influence of t he Islamic State in Southeast Asia, securit y experts say.

A decades-old Islamist insurgency in the southern Philippine­s has killed tens of thousands.

But suicide attacks have been used extremely rarely, with foreign fighters blamed for the few that have been carried out.

Authoritie­s now fear however the most recent suspected suicide attack, which struck a military base Friday on the southern island of

Jolo, killing at least five people, may have been the work of a Filipino.

It was the third suspected suicide attack since July last year.

“The change did not come with [Friday’s] bombing, it came with t he introducti­on of a let hal new ideolog y into t he Philippine­s,” said securit y analyst Sidney Jones.

“The game-changer” was the Islamic State, she added.

As its “caliphate” crumbled in the Middle East, IS has stepped up its strategy of absorbing existing insurgent groups around the world and claiming their attacks.

The group has had a presence for years in t he sout h of t he Philippine­s, where rugged terrain and weak government control prov ide a safe haven for fighters.

Suicide attacks indicate a higher level of commitment to the militant cause, experts say, and are often approved by the central leadership of IS, who trade off the media profile the tactic brings.

The group has taken credit for Friday’s blasts, as well as the deaths of over 30 people, killed in two previous attacks believed to be the work of suicide bombers.

The Philippine­s is a key piece of territory because it is one of the few places in the region where IS can hold ground, like its affiliates did for five months in Marawi.

The rash of suicide bombings and new IS propaganda videos suggests the pull of the militant group in the Philippine­s “remains strong”, Jones said, referring to jihadists who laid siege to the southern Marawi city in 2017.

The army suspects a 23-year-old Filipino carried out the latest attack and are investigat­ing whether it was a suicide bomb, or a remote detonation gone wrong.

“[His] remains were claimed by the mother and the sibling who identified him based on the head,” said Major General Cirilito Sobejana.

“For the benefit of the doubt, we are doing a DNA testing.”

Analysts have long feared suicide attacks would take root in the Philippine­s, given the IS influence and presence of foreign fighters.

At the same time, there are strong motivation­s from loca l militant cells to tr y to catch t he eye of t he IS centra l leadership wit h suicide attacks.

Several figures are vying to be the designated leader in the region, with top candidates coming from the ISaligned Abu Sayyaf network.

The kidnap-for-ransom group has engaged in bombings as well as kidnapping­s of Western tourists and missionari­es since the early 1990s and has in recent years also preyed on cargo ships and fishing vessels.

When IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi released a propaganda video in April it contained no mention of the East Asia wing.

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