Khaleej Times

Marawi liberated, declares Duterte

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manila — Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte declared the southern city of Marawi liberated from militants on Tuesday, although the military said 20-30 rebels were holding about 20 hostages and still fighting it out.

In a rousing address to soldiers a day after the killing of two commanders of the rebel alliance, Duterte said he would never again allow militants to stockpile so many weapons, but Marawi was now free and it was time to heal wounds and rebuild.

“I hereby declare Marawi City liberated from terrorist influence, that marks the beginning of rehabilita­tion,” Duterte, wearing a camouflage cap and dark sunglasses, said during his unannounce­d visit.

Isnilon Hapilon, who was wanted by the United States and was Daesh’s Southeast Asian ‘emir’, and Omarkhayam Maute, one of two brothers central to the alliance, were killed in a targeted operation on Monday. Their bodies were recovered and identified, authoritie­s said.

The 148-day occupation marked the Roman Catholic-majority Philippine­s’ biggest security crisis in years and triggered concerns that with its mountains, jungles and porous borders, the island of Mindanao could become a magnet for Daesh fighters driven out of Iraq and Syria.

More than 1,000 people, mostly rebels, were killed in the battle and the heart of the city of 200,000 has been levelled by air strikes.

Duterte said the liberation was not a cause for celebratio­n and later apologised to the people of Marawi for the destructio­n.

“We had to do it,” he said. “There was no alternativ­e.”

Armed forces chief Eduardo Ano said the remaining gunmen were now a “law enforcemen­t matter”, while military spokesman Restituto Padilla described them as “stragglers”.

“There is no way that they can get out anymore, there is no way for anyone to get in,” Padilla told news channel ANC.

Padilla said the military believed Malaysian operative Mahmud Ahmad was in Marawi, but it could not be certain. He said Mahmud was no threat.

“Dr. Mahmud is an academic, he’s not a fighter,” Padilla said. “We don’t feel he is a problem.”

But some security experts say otherwise and believe Mahmud, 39, a recruiter and fundraiser who trained at an Al Qaeda camp in Afghanista­n, could replace Hapilon as Daesh’s point-man in Southeast Asia.

Another leader, Abdullah Maute, has yet to be accounted for. Intelligen­ce indicated he died in an August air strike, though no body was found.

Defence officials say the core leadership was key to recruiting young fighters and arranging for extremists from Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and beyond to join the push to carve out an East Asian “Wilaya”, or province.

Hapilon had teamed up with the moneyed Maute clan in their stronghold of Lanao del Sur, one of the Philippine­s’ poorest provinces, and brought with him fighters from his radical faction of Abu Sayyaf, a group better known for banditry.

Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana, who estimated Marawi op- erations to have cost 5 billion pesos ($97.5 million), said reconstruc­tion could start in January.

“There are still stragglers and the structures are still unsafe because of unexploded ordnance and improvised explosive devices,” he said on radio.

The Marawi occupation set alarm bells ringing in the Philippine­s, with militants surprising security forces with their combat prowess, the volume of arms and ammunition they stockpiled and their ability to withstand intensive air strikes aided by US surveillan­ce drones and technical support. —

1000

people, mostly rebels, were killed in the battle

 ?? AFP ?? Philippine soldiers walk past destroyed buildings in Bangolo district in Marawi on Tuesday. —
AFP Philippine soldiers walk past destroyed buildings in Bangolo district in Marawi on Tuesday. —
 ?? AFP ?? Duterte (on stage in brown) raises a clenched fist, along with soldiers as he shouts declaring Marawi ‘liberated’ during a ceremony inside the battle area of Bangolo district in Marawi on Tuesday. —
AFP Duterte (on stage in brown) raises a clenched fist, along with soldiers as he shouts declaring Marawi ‘liberated’ during a ceremony inside the battle area of Bangolo district in Marawi on Tuesday. —

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