Khaleej Times

Philippine troops kill 15 Daesh supporters

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manila — Philippine soldiers killed 15 militants and seriously wounded their leader, believed to be the Daesh’s representa­tive in the country, following air and artillery strikes in a southern province, a senior military official said on Sunday.

Isnilon Hapilon, also known as Abu Abdullah and a leader of the Philippine militant group Abu Sayyaf, might die as he needed immediate medical treatment, military chief General Eduardo Ano told reporters, citing intelligen­ce and communicat­ions intercepts.

“He needs blood transfusio­n. Without proper medical treatment, he may die,” Ano said.

Philippine forces on Thursday dropped bombs and fired shells at rebel positions in the mountains of Lanao del Sur in a bid to flush out Hapilon. The province is a stronghold of the Maute rebel group.

Hapilon is on the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion’s most wanted list for his role in the kidnapping of 17 Filipinos and three Americans in 2001 and carries a bounty of $5 million.

One of those killed is an Indonesian but Ano said they were still “digging and doing more investigat­ion” about the foreigner’s background. Hapilon was with two other foreigners whose nationalit­y was uncertain, he said.

President Rodrigo Duterte appealed on Friday to the country’s Muslim separatist groups to deny sanctuary to militants with links to Daesh, warning a war would ensue that would put civilians in danger.

A day before he made the appeal, the defence minister said foreign intelligen­ce reports showed Hapilon was getting instructio­ns from Daesh to expand in the Philippine­s, in the strongest sign yet of links to the Middle Eastern militants.

Duterte has said he could no longer contain the extremist “contaminat­ion” and urged two Muslim separatist rebels groups - the Moro Islamic Liberation Front and the Moro National Liberation Front - to rebuff Daesh’s advances.

Ano said a firefight could be expected between soldiers and Hapilon’s group following the strikes.

The ongoing offensive “is significan­t because it will derail their plan to expand the Daesh presence to mainland Mindanao,” said Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana, referring to the southern Philippine region, the scene of decadeslon­g uprisings by minority Muslims.

Duterte has repeatedly warned the emergence of Daesh-influenced militant groups is fast looming as a major national security threat. While pursuing peace talks with two large Muslim rebel groups in the predominan­tly Roman Catholic nation, he has ordered the military to destroy smaller but brutal extremist groups like the Abu Sayyaf, which is dreaded for crossborde­r kidnapping­s, beheadings and bombings.

Duterte has asked the two Muslim rebel groups in talks with the government not to help extremists under attack by troops, warning that may bring them in a new conflict with Manila.

The elusive Hapilon, an Arabicspea­king religious preacher known for his expertise on commando assaults, pledged allegiance to the Daesh group in 2014. —

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