The Mercury News

ISIS rises in Philippine­s as it dwindles in Middle East

- By Hannah Beech and Jason Gutierrez

BASILAN, THE PHILIPPINE­S >> Across the islands of the southern Philippine­s, the black flag of Islamic State is flying over what the group considers its East Asian province.

Men in the jungle, two oceans away from the arid birthplace of Islamic State, are taking the terrorist brand name into new battles.

As worshipper­s gathered in January for Sunday Mass at a Catholic cathedral, two bombs ripped through the church compound, killing 23 people. Islamic State claimed a pair of its suicide bombers had caused the carnage.

An illustrati­on circulated days later on Islamic State chat groups, showing President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippine­s kneeling on a pile of skulls and a militant standing over him with a dagger. The caption on the picture sounded a warning: “The fighting has just begun.”

Islamic State’s territory in Iraq and Syria, once the size of Britain, has shriveled after four years of U.S.-backed bombing and ground combat by Kurdish and Shiite militia fighters. What is left is a tiny village in southeast Syria that could fall any day.

But far from defeated, the movement has sprouted elsewhere. And here in the Mindanao island group of the southern Philippine­s, long a haven for insurgents because of dense wilderness and weak policing, Islamic State has attracted a range of militant jihadis.

“ISIS has a lot of power,” said Motondan Indama, a former child fighter on the island of Basilan and cousin of Furuji Indama, a militant leader who has pledged fealty to the group. “I don’t know why my cousin joined, but it’s happening all over.”

The group first made a big push for southern Philippine­s recruitmen­t in 2016, circulatin­g videos online beckoning militants who could not travel to its selfprocla­imed caliphate in Iraq and Syria. Hundreds of fighters poured in from as far away as Chechnya, Somalia and Yemen, intelligen­ce officials said.

The next year, militants who had pledged allegiance to Islamic State took over the city of Marawi in Mindanao. By the time the army prevailed five months later, the largest Muslim-majority city in the country lay in ruins. At least 900 insurgents were killed, including foreign

fighters and Isnilon Hapilon, Islamic State’s East Asia emir.

Duterte declared victory over Islamic State. But his triumphali­sm apparently has not deterred its loyalists from regrouping.

“ISIS has money coming into the Philippine­s, and they are recruiting fighters,” said Rommel Banlaoi, chairman of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research. “ISIS is the most complicate­d, evolving problem for the Philippine­s today, and we should not pretend that it doesn’t exist because we don’t want it to exist.”

Since the Jan. 27 cathedral bombing on the island of Jolo, the Philippine military has responded with airstrikes and 10,000 soldiers in Jolo, according to Col. Gerry Besana, spokesman for the regional military command in the city of Zamboanga.

U.S. surveillan­ce drones monitor the southern Philippine archipelag­o, where the nation’s Muslim minority is concentrat­ed and local insurgenci­es long have battled the Christian-majority state.

But even as the military offensive intensifie­s, the government avoids conceding that the Philippine­s is in the global slipstream of Islamic extremism. Top officials have played down incidents in which Islamic State has sent foreign fighters and financing to the Philippine­s for deadly attacks. The violence, they often say, is squabbling between Muslim clans, or common banditry.

Within a week of the Jolo cathedral bombing, police declared the case solved, blaming a local militant group, Abu Sayyaf, with scant acknowledg­ment of how many of its insurgents have partnered with Islamic State. Visiting the Jolo cathedral, Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Duterte and his entourage trampled over evidence, church officials said. Forensic investigat­ors were kept from the crime scene for days. Dogs gnawed on body parts.

“We are asking for an independen­t investigat­ion because it was too quick, too soon to say it’s a closed case,” said Jefferson Nadua, a parish priest. “This is a serious matter that needs to be looked at more deeply because the threat is not just local. It’s maybe coming from outside, from ISIS.”

For decades, local insurgenci­es like Abu Sayyaf, which launched a campaign of bombings and beheadings, have thrived in the lawless wilderness and seas stretching toward Malaysia and Indonesia.

In the 1990s, after Filipinos returned from the mujahedeen battlefiel­ds in Afghanista­n and hard-line madrassas in Yemen and Saudi Arabia, local grievances fused with global calls for jihad. In a crescentsh­aped swath of Southeast Asia, militants dreamed of a caliphate free of secular governance. Jemaah Islamiyah, the Qaida offshoot that killed more than 200 people in a Bali nightclub in 2002, trained recruits in Philippine jungles.

Later, as Islamic State constructe­d its caliphate in the Middle East, it connected disparate militants in the Philippine­s under one ideologica­l banner, said Sidney Jones, the director of the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict in Jakarta, Indonesia.

“The government didn’t recognize its strength in attracting everyone from university-educated students to Abu Sayyaf kids in the jungle,” Jones said. “Whatever happens to the pro-ISIS coalition in Mindanao, it has left behind the idea of an Islamic state as a desirable alternativ­e to corrupt democracy.”

 ?? JES AZNAR — THE NEW YORK TIMES) ?? Soldiers carry the coffin of Cpl. Nemesis Salviejo after he died in an encounter with the Abu Sayyaf on Feb. 14.
JES AZNAR — THE NEW YORK TIMES) Soldiers carry the coffin of Cpl. Nemesis Salviejo after he died in an encounter with the Abu Sayyaf on Feb. 14.

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