Sun.Star Davao

AFP pushes to defeat last Marawi fighters

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MARAWI CITY -- Gunfire rang out sporadical­ly and explosions thudded as soldiers fought Tuesday, October 17, to gain control of the last pocket of Marawi controlled by extremists as President Rodrigo Duterte declared the southern city liberated from "terrorist influence."

The military, boosted by the deaths of two key militant leaders in a gunbattle the day before, hopes the current fighting is the final phase of defeating a dwindling band of fighters who are now trapped in an area the Army says is about two hectares (five acres).

Duterte visited the battle-scarred city on Tuesday where to cheers from troops, he announced its liberation in a short speech from a stage at a ruined school campus about a kilometer from the fighting. "Ladies and gentlemen, I hereby declare Marawi City liberated from the terrorist influence," he said. Military chief General Eduardo Año told The Associated Press that Duterte's statement means the threat from the terrorists, who've occupied parts of the lake-side city for five months, is substantia­lly over.

"They're leaderless and they have no more organizati­on," he said. "There are still skirmishes."

According to military spokesman Restituto Padilla, there are 20-30 terrorists left in Marawi, including six to eight foreign fighters. They have about 20 hostages, including women and children, he said.

Marawi, a mosque-studded center of Islamic faith in the predominan­tly Roman Catholic Philippine­s, has been devastated by five months of military attacks against the Islamic State group-allied terrorists who overran the city on May 23.

More than 1,000 people have been killed, including about 800 bandits.

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