Philippine Daily Inquirer

Maute regrouping in Lanao del Sur

Top aide of slain terror leader on recruitmen­t drive, says Army officer

- —STORY BY RICHEL UMELANDEDW­IN FERNANDEZ

MARAWI CITY— Despite the deaths of their leaders in a fierce battle last month, remnants of the Islamic State-inspired Maute group have reportedly been recruiting fighters in at least seven towns in Lanao del Sur, the military said. Leading the recruitmen­t drive is Abu Dar, a top aide to slain leader Omarkhayya­m Maute. Dar has a P3-million bounty on his head.

MARAWI CITY— The top aide of slain terror leader Omarkhayam Maute has reportedly been recruiting residents, especially young men, in Lanao del Sur province as the Maute terror group tries to rebuild its forces after its defeat following a five-month battle in this provincial capital, a military official said.

Col. Romeo Brawner Jr., deputy commander of the military’s Joint Task Force Ranao, said one Abu Dar was among the Maute group’s “second line” leaders who escaped the war and was now trying to reorganize the Islamic State (IS)inspired group that laid siege to Marawi on May 23.

“The [reported] recruitmen­t efforts for training of new fighters of IS-Maute terrorist group were monitored in the towns of Piagapo, Lumbacauna­yan and Sultan Domalondon­g,” said Brawner, noting that he received the informatio­n from locals.

He said Abu Dar, who carried a P3-million bounty on his head, had been using images of Marawi’s devastatio­n to win recruits.

“Despite being defeated, the [IS-inspired group] did not learn its lesson,” said Lt. Gen. Carlito Galvez Jr., commander of the Western Mindanao Command.

Supt. Ebra Moxsir, Marawi City police chief, said informatio­n reaching his office showed that Dar’s group was constantly moving and was not staying long in a single area. He said the group was also monitored in the towns of Butig, Marantao, Tugaya and Tubaran in Lanao del Sur.

He said most of the new fighters whom Dar had recruited were relatives of Maute gunmen, who were killed in the fighting here from May to October.

Omarkhayam and Abdullah Maute were two of the seven Maute brothers who led the fighting and tried to foil the arrest of Abu Sayyaf leader Isnilon Hapilon, reported to be the emir of IS in Southeast Asia. The brothers were killed separately in the course of the fivemonth war.

In October, Omarkhayam was killed with Hapilon in one of the fiercest battles the government waged to retake Marawi. The deaths of both leaders signaled the end of the war, which killed more than a thousand people, 164 of them, policemen and soldiers. The military said 822 alleged terrorists and 47 civilians were also killed.

Vice Gov. Haroun Al-Rashid Lucman of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao said he received reports that Abu Dar was accompanie­d by about 40 men.

“The military should check on the reported recruitmen­t activities and not let the terrorists regroup,” said Marawi Mayor Majul Gandamra.

In General Santos City, authoritie­s arrested in a drug bust on Monday a Pakistani national and his Filipino wife who were suspected of financing the activities of another IS-inspired group, Anzar Al-Khilafa Philippine­s (AKP).

Gil Cesario Castro, director of the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency in Central Mindanao, said Shahzad Khan, 35, and his wife, Anjelie Mawani Osama, 30, were members of the El Patron drug group, which allegedly funded the AKP.

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 ?? —JEOFFREY MAITEM ?? The five-month war between government troops and terrorists led by the Maute group has left Marawi City’s business district in ruins.
—JEOFFREY MAITEM The five-month war between government troops and terrorists led by the Maute group has left Marawi City’s business district in ruins.

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