Global Times

Marawi hostages forced into sex slavery

Philippine army gets alarming info from Marawi residents who escape

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Civilians held hostage by Islamist militants occupying a southern Philippine city have been forced by their captors to loot homes, take up arms against government troops and serve as sex slaves for rebel fighters, the army said on Tuesday.

Citing accounts of seven residents of Marawi City who either escaped or were rescued, the military said some hostages were forced to convert to Islam, carry wounded fighters to mosques, and marry militants of the Maute group loyal to the Islamic State.

“So they are being forced to be sex slaves, forced to destroy the dignity of these women,” military spokesman JoAr Herrera told a news conference.

“So this is what is happening inside, this is very evident ... these are evil personalit­ies.”

Their accounts, which could not be immediatel­y verified, are the latest harrowing stories to come out of a conflict zone that the military has been unable to penetrate for five weeks, as well- armed and organized rebels fight off soldiers with sniper rifles and rocket- propelled grenades.

Some escapees say bodies of residents have been left in the streets, some for weeks, and civilians are distressed by government air strikes and artillery bombardmen­ts that have reduced parts of Marawi to rubble.

The protracted seizure has worried the region about the extent the Islamic State’s agenda may have gained traction in the southern Philippine­s, which is more used to banditry, piracy and separatism than radical Islam.

The rebels’ combat capability, access to heavy weapons and use of foreign fighters has raised fears in the mainly Catholic country that the Marawi battle could just be the start of a wider campaign, and be presented by Maute as a triumph to aid their recruitmen­t efforts.

Heavy clashes broke out on Tuesday as the battle entered its sixth week, with intense bombings by planes on a shrinking rebel zone.

The government ruled out negotiatio­ns after reports that Abdullah Maute, one of two brothers who formed the militant group carrying their name, wanted to trade a Catholic priest hostage for his parents arrested earlier this month.

The military said on Saturday Abdullah Maute had fled.

 ??  ?? Smoke billows past minarets after an aerial bombing by the Philippine Air Force on militant Islamist positions in Marawi, on the southern island of Mindanao on Tuesday.
Smoke billows past minarets after an aerial bombing by the Philippine Air Force on militant Islamist positions in Marawi, on the southern island of Mindanao on Tuesday.

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