Bangkok Post

Duterte to lift Mindanao martial law

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MANILA: President Rodrigo Duterte will lift martial law in the southern Philippine­s by year’s end, his spokesman said yesterday, more than two years after it was imposed in an attempt to stop the Islamic State group gaining a foothold there.

Mr Duterte put the Mindanao region under military rule in May 2017, hours after gunmen flying the black IS flag seized the mainly Muslim city of Marawi, sparking a five-month battle that left 1,200 people dead.

“The [presidenti­al] palace is confident on the capability of our security forces in maintainin­g the peace and security of Mindanao without extending martial law” beyond Dec 31, presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said in a statement.

Mr Duterte’s security advisers had apprised him of the “weakening of the terrorist and extremist rebellion, a result of the capture or neutralisa­tion of their leaders, as well as the decrease in the crime index,” Mr Panelo added.

Martial law had allowed the military to establish control with measures like curfews, checkpoint­s and gun controls in a nation where many civilians own firearms, either legally or illegally.

Suspects could also be detained for longer periods without criminal charges being filed in court.

However martial law is a contentiou­s issue in a country ruled for 20 years by the late deposed dictator Ferdinand Marcos, who Mr Duterte has hailed as the greatest leader the Asian nation ever had.

Congress allowed Mr Duterte to extend martial rule over the entire south after government forces recaptured Marawi, ignoring opposition warnings of a creep towards authoritar­ian rule.

Mindanao has however been hit by a number of deadly suicide bombings in a worrying escalation of militancy driven by the IS influence in Southeast Asia.

“The deterrence argument seems questionab­le in light of unpreceden­ted suicide attacks,” political analyst Richard Heydarian said.

“Even after several years of implementa­tion it did not bring any substantia­l defeat of any armed group in that area,” added Jose Antonio Custodio, a military historian and defence analyst.

The tourism fallout was also substantia­l, Custodio added.

Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana earlier told reporters he had advised Duterte against prolonging martial rule over the region. “It’s time to go back to normal,” he said.

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