Arab News

Surrender or die: Filipino troops battling final 30 Daesh-linked gunmen

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MANILA: Philippine troops on Sunday were battling a final group of about 30 pro-Daesh group militants who were surrounded in one building with all their hostages gone as a nearly five-month siege neared its end in southern Marawi city, a military official said.

Army Col. Romeo Brawner said troops were aiming to end the crisis before midnight Sunday. He said the remaining gunmen, who include some Indonesian and Malaysian fighters, have the option of surrenderi­ng, or they can either be captured or killed.

“Our government forces will try to do everything to finish the firefight today,” Brawner said in a news conference in Marawi. He said the battle area centered in a two-story building near Lake Lanao where the firefight continued to rage at noon.

“It’s either they all get killed, because they’re determined to die inside, or we capture them or they surrender,” he said.

A gradual withdrawal of military forces was underway with the easing of the fighting, which has left at least 1,131 people dead, including 919 militants and 165 soldiers and policemen. Troops continued to ask the gunmen, who are leaderless and running low on ammunition, to surrender by using loudspeake­rs, Brawner said.

Military chief of staff Gen. Eduardo Año said some of the remaining militants were “suicidal.”

Hundreds of militants, many waving Daesh group-style black flags, launched the siege on May 23 in Marawi, a bastion of Islamic faith in the south of the largely Roman Catholic Philippine­s, by seizing the lakeside city’s central business district and said. Final results may not be tallied until Monday.

Abe said the results indicate that voters support his policies and want to see his political leadership continue.

“I think the results reflected the voters’ preference for a solid political outlying communitie­s. They ransacked banks and shops, including gun stores, looted houses and smashed statues in a foundation and their expectatio­ns for us to push polices forward and achieve results,” Abe told NHK.

Abe’s support ratings had fallen to around 30 percent in the summer after accusation­s of government favoritism to people connected to him, sparking talk that he might be Roman Catholic cathedral, according to the military.

At least 1,780 of the hostages seized by vulnerable as leader of his party and prime minister.

“I will humbly face the victory and continue to work humbly and sincerely,” he told NHK, noting lingering public distrust over the scandals.

Abe dissolved the lower house less than a month ago, forcing the snap the militants, including a Roman Catholic priest, were rescued, and a final group of 20 captives were freed overnight, Brawner said. That left the gunmen with none of the hostages they had used as human shields to slow the military advance for months.

The disastrous uprising, which has displaced hundreds of thousands of Marawi residents, erupted as the Philippine­s was hosting annual summit meetings of Southeast Asian nations and their Asian and Western counterpar­ts, including the US and Australia. The two government­s have deployed surveillan­ce aircraft and drones to help Filipino troops rout the Marawi militants.

The siege has sparked fears that the Daesh group may gain a foothold in Southeast Asia by influencin­g and providing funds to local militants as it suffers battle defeats in Syria and Iraq.

Last Monday, troops killed the final two surviving leaders of the siege, including Isnilon Hapilon, who is listed among the FBI’s most-wanted terror suspects in the world, and Omarkhayam Maute. Following their deaths, President Rodrigo Duterte traveled near the main scene of battle and declared Marawi had been essentiall­y liberated from terrorist influence, although skirmishes with a few dozen gunmen continued.

DNA tests done in the US requested by the Philippine military have confirmed the death of Hapilon, according to the US Embassy in Manila. Washington has offered a bounty of up to $5 million for Hapilon, who had been blamed for kidnapping­s for ransom of American nationals and other terrorist attacks.

Among the foreign militants believed to be with the remaining gunmen in Marawi were Malaysian militant Amin Baco and an Indonesian known only as Qayyim. Both have plotted attacks and provided combat training to local militants for years but have eluded capture in the south.

 ??  ?? Gen. Gatot Nurmantyo Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, leader of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), looks on as he puts a rosette on the name of a candidate who is expected to win the lower house election, at the LDP headquarte­rs in Tokyo, Sunday....
Gen. Gatot Nurmantyo Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, leader of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), looks on as he puts a rosette on the name of a candidate who is expected to win the lower house election, at the LDP headquarte­rs in Tokyo, Sunday....
 ??  ?? Soldiers stand on guard and look at damaged buildings and houses after government troops cleared the area from pro-Daesh militant groups inside the war-torn area in Saduc proper, Marawi city, southern Philippine­s Sunday. (Reuters)
Soldiers stand on guard and look at damaged buildings and houses after government troops cleared the area from pro-Daesh militant groups inside the war-torn area in Saduc proper, Marawi city, southern Philippine­s Sunday. (Reuters)

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