The Borneo Post

Philippine army says taking fire from women, children in Marawi

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MARAWI CITY, Philippine­s: Philippine troops fighting Islamic State-linked rebels in a southern city have encountere­d armed resistance from women and children, the military said yesterday, as troops make a final push to end a conflict that has raged for more than 100 days.

Ground forces were braced for higher casualties amid fierce fighting in Marawi City on the island of Mindanao, where the field of battle has shrank to a small area in a commercial heart infested with snipers, and littered with booby traps.

“We are now in the final phase of our operations and we are expecting more intense and bloody fighting. We may suffer heavier casualties as the enemy becomes more desperate,” Lieutenant General Carlito Galvez, who heads the military in Western Mindanao, told reporters.

He said the number of fighters was diminishin­g and a small number of women and children, most likely family members of the rebels, were now engaged in combat.

“Our troops in the field are seeing women and children shooting at our troops so that’s why it seems they are not running out of fighters.” More than 800 people have been killed in the battle, most of them insurgents, since May 23 when the militants occupied large parts of the predominan­tly Muslim town.

The battle is the biggest security challenge in years for the mostly Catholic Philippine­s, even though it has a long history of Muslim separatist rebellion in Mindanao, an island of 22 million people that has been placed under martial law until the end of the year.

The protracted clashes and resilience of the rebels has fanned fears that Philippine groups loyal to Islamic State, and with ties to Indonesian and Malaysian militants, have formed an alliance that is well- organised, funded and armed, and serious about carving out its own territory in Mindanao.

Citing informatio­n provided by four hostages who had escaped from the rebels, Galvez said there were some 56 Christian hostages — most of them women — and about 80 male residents may have been forced to take up arms and fight the military.

The fighting was concentrat­ed in an area around a mosque about a quarter of a square kilometre. He said soldiers were taking control of an average 35 buildings a day and at that rate, it could be three weeks before the city was under government control.

Fighting in Marawi was intense yesterday, with heavy gunfire and explosions ringing out across the picturesqu­e, lakeside town, the heart of which has been devastated by near- daily government air strikes.

Helicopter­s circled above to provide air cover for ground troops as fighting raged, with bursts of smoke rising above the skyline as bombs landed on rebel positions.

Galvez said intelligen­ce showed the rebels’ military commander, Abdullah Maute, may have been killed last month in an air strike.

Postings on Facebook and chatter over the past two days on Telegram, a messaging applicatio­n used by Islamic State and its sympathise­rs, had carried tributes to Abdullah, referring to him by one of his pseudonyms, he said.

“There is no 100 per cent confirmati­on until we see his cadaver but this is enough to presume he died already,” he said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Damaged buildings and houses are seen as government troops continue their assault against pro-IS militants who have seized control of large parts of Marawi city. — Reuters photo
Damaged buildings and houses are seen as government troops continue their assault against pro-IS militants who have seized control of large parts of Marawi city. — Reuters photo

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