The Borneo Post

Philippine­s’ Duterte says IS battle in ‘final stages’

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MANILA: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said yesterday a three-month battle against Islamic State group supporters occupying parts of a southern city was in its ‘final stages’.

Duterte gave his assessment shortly after government troops secured a vital bridge in Marawi city, allowing them easier access into areas being held by the militants.

“We are in the final stages. So let us send immediatel­y, even air-lift, the police, to Marawi”, Duterte said in the capital Manila, about 800 kilometres to the north of the battle zone.

Pro-IS gunmen occupied parts of Marawi, the Islamic capital of the mainly Catholic Philippine­s on May 23, triggering a battle that the military says has left almost 800 people dead.

The fighting, which has included a US-backed air campaign against the militants, has destroyed large parts of Marawi.

Duterte and security analysts have said the militants carried out the assault in an effort to establish a Southeast Asian base for IS.

Duterte warned that, even with the Marawi battle over, the militants could still launch attacks elsewhere in the Philippine­s, particular­ly in the strife- torn south where the country’s Muslim minority is based.

The southern regions of the Philippine­s have long been troubled by armed Muslim bands including separatist guerrillas and outlaws, some of whom have gravitated towards IS.

Duterte said other southern cities with large Muslim population­s, including his hometown of Davao, were vulnerable.

He said Manila might also be a target.

Duterte imposed martial law across the southern third of the Philippine­s immediatel­y after the militants occupied parts of Marawi to combat the security threat.

Hours before Duterte spoke, soldiers in Marawi secured the Mapandi bridge, a vital supply route which had once been menaced by militant snipers and rocket-propelled grenades.

Soldiers marched across the bridge in large numbers, although gunfire could still be heard nearby.

We are in the final stages. So let us send immediatel­y, even air-lift, the police, to Marawi. Rodrigo Duterte, Philippine President

Military spokesman Brigadier General Restituto Padilla said there were only about 40 militants left in Marawi, confined to a space about half a square kilometre wide.

But Padilla warned there were many buildings in that space where they could be hiding, while a local commander said fierce fighting was still to be expected.

“Every inch of the buildings that we take, they resist,” Brigadier General Melquiades Ordiales told reporters who accompanie­d the soldiers across the bridge.

The militants have been able to withstand the military assault, which has included a relentless US-backed bombing campaign, by hiding in tunnels and bunkers.

They are also believed still to be holding hostages, including a Catholic priest. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows men watch from a rooftop during the Philippine­s army airstrike as government troops continue their assault against insurgents from the Maute group in Marawi city. (Inset) Rodrigo Duterte. — Reuters photo
File photo shows men watch from a rooftop during the Philippine­s army airstrike as government troops continue their assault against insurgents from the Maute group in Marawi city. (Inset) Rodrigo Duterte. — Reuters photo

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