The Freeman

Airstrike launched vs. Muslim rebels

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ZAMBOANGA —The Philippine military launched a helicopter assault yesterday at Muslim rebels occupying parts of a major southern city, stepping up efforts to end an eight-day standoff that has left dozens dead.

Two air force helicopter­s fired rocket rounds towards Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) rebels held up in coastal villages in Zamboanga city, an AFP reporter witnessed, as the military confirmed the attacks.

“This is a precision close air support directed by ground troops to suppress the enemy,” military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Ramon Zagala told AFP.

The helicopter assault was the first air strikes since troops began their offensive on Friday to defeat the MNLF forces, who have been using civilians as human shields.

Asked about the potential for the civilians to be caught up in the helicopter assaults, Zagala emphasised they were “precision” strikes.

Zagala said earlier Monday up to 100 MNLF rebels were still engaged in ground battles with troops around the two coastal villages, a week after the guerrillas invaded Zamboanga to stake an independen­ce claim.

Zagala said the rebels were defiant in the face of the military advance.

“They still have ammunition and they continue to fire at us,” he said, but insisted the military was very close to victory after taking some rebel positions at the weekend.

“We know for a fact that the end is near and they are trying to flee. Some of them may be trying to disguise as civilians, so it’s very critical that the village elders help us identify those who are not from their neighborho­ods.”

Heavily armed MNLF forces entered the port city’s coastal neighborho­ods on Monday last week in a bid to sabotage talks between a rival rebel group and the government that are aimed at ending decades of conflict.

Muslim rebels have been fighting since the 1970s for an independen­t or autonomous homeland in the south of the mainly Catholic Philippine­s. An estimated 150,000 people have died in the fighting.

The latest violence in Zamboanga has left 51 MNLF fighters, six security forces and four civilians dead, according to Zagala.

The rebels initially took dozens of hostages and burned hundreds of homes, forcing a shut down of Zamboanga, a city of about one million that is a key commercial hub in the region.

Zagala said MNLF rebels on Monday torched a section of Santa Barbara, one of the neighbourh­oods they had occupied, to slow down the military advance.

Volleys of gunfire were heard ringing out across Santa Barbara before the helicopter assault, while sniper fire from the rebels prevented firemen from approachin­g the burning community, an AFP reporter said.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ?? A Philippine soldier fires a 60mm mortar toward Muslim rebels in the eight- day standoff in Zamboanga City.
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE A Philippine soldier fires a 60mm mortar toward Muslim rebels in the eight- day standoff in Zamboanga City.

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