Business World

Duterte says no deal to militants for hostages

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PRESIDENT Rodrigo R. Duterte on Saturday ruled out the possibilit­y of allowing Islamic State (IS)-linked militants to flee a southern city in exchange for the release of dozens of hostages.

The militants seized large parts of Marawi City on the island of Mindanao on May 23, and a hardcore of fighters has held out through more than 100 days of air strikes and ground attacks by troops.

“No way,” Mr. Duterte told reporters when asked about a rumor that one rebel leader, Omarkhayam Maute, had proposed releasing hostages in exchange for the safe exit of the militants.

In July, the President also brushed off claims by a prominent Muslim leader that he was working to negotiate with the Maute terror group.

“I’d never talk to terrorists — that’s one. I would never talk to criminals and to terrorists,” Mr. Duterte told reporters then.

Pockets of fighters remain in the ruins of the heart of a city devastated by artillery and bombings, in an occupation that has alarmed the region about the possibilit­y of IS, on the back foot in Iraq and Syria, making a new home in the southern Philippine­s.

The military has launched its final push to retake Marawi, and is coming under heavy fire from gunmen as troops try to secure buildings and navigate through mines and booby-traps.

The military estimates about 20 to 30 hostages are being held, some of whom it says were forced to take up arms against government troops.

“If I can save one life there, I am willing to wait one year ( to retake the city),” Mr. Duterte said of the hostages, after visiting wounded soldiers in Cagayan de Oro City, located a few hours away from Marawi.

Martial law has been imposed in Mindanao, an island of 22 million people, until the end of the year, to allow the military to break up an alliance of pro-IS militant groups.

On another front, the military is also fighting communist rebels of the New People’s Army following a breakdown in peace talks with the government. Mr. Duterte on Saturday threatened to expand martial law to other areas of the Philippine­s to crack down on the insurgents.

Some 655 militants, 45 civilians and 145 soldiers and policemen have been killed in Marawi, according to the military, which says it has rescued 1,728 civilians. Close to 400,000 have been displaced.

Army spokesman Colonal Edgard A. Arevalo said saving hostages was the priority of the military’s mission. “We are still very mindful of the presence of civilians — guns against their heads — who were made human shields or ordered to wield firearms and ammunition, were converted to become fighters and shoot at our troops,” he said in a statement.

The US has provided technical support to the Philippine­s military in Marawi. Visiting Manila on Friday, Australian Defence Minister Marise Payne offered a small detachment of soldiers to provide training to Philippine forces.—

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