Philippines says Islamists keep up
week-long fight with prisoners, looted guns
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[May 31, 2017]
By Tom Allard
MARAWI, Philippines (Reuters) - A week-long
assault by Islamist rebels in a southern Philippine city is being
fuelled with stolen weapons and ammunition and fighters broken out of
jails, the military said on Wednesday, as troops battled militants
resisting ground and air attacks.
The pro-Islamic State Maute group has proven to be a fierce enemy,
clinging on to the heart of Marawi City through days of air strikes on
what the military called known rebel targets, defying expectations of a
swift end to their occupation.
The military deployed for the first time SF-260 close air support planes
to back attack helicopters and ground troops looking to box rebels into
a downtown area. The army said the rebels hold about a tenth of the
city.
The hardline Maute had kept up the fight with rifles and ammunition
stolen from a police station, a prison, and an armoured police vehicle,
and were using them to hold off the troops, said military spokesman
Restituto Padilla.
The militants had freed jailed comrades to join the battle and opted to
engage in urban warfare because the city had stocks of arms and ample
supplies of food.
"Yes indeed, there was planning involved," Padilla said.
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is alarmed by the strength of the
Maute and intelligence reports suggesting it has teamed up with other
extremist groups and has recruited foreign fighters.
He last week declared martial law on Mindanao island where Marawi is
located, in a move to quell movements he said he had long warned would
mushroom into what is now an Islamic State invasion.
"I specifically warned everybody there is more dark cloud ahead of us. I
was referring specifically to the contamination of ISIS slowly creeping
towards our shores," Duterte told navy personnel in Davao City.
"In Marawi now, I have to tell you we have suffered tremendous losses
because we are the invading force and they have been waiting for a long
time for the forces of the republic to come."
Eighty-nine militants, 21 security forces and 19 civilians have so far
been killed during clashes.
For graphic on battle of Marawi, click: http://tmsnrt.rs/2qBkSPk
For graphic on Islamic State-linked groups in Philippine south, click:
http://tmsnrt.rs/2rYIHTj
SLOW PROGRESS
The slow pace of the military's efforts to retake Marawi - with air
support and far superior firepower than the rebels - has prompted
questions about its strategy.
That has been compounded by social media images of smiling fighters with
assault rifles posing on an armoured, U.S.-made police combat vehicle,
dressed in black and wearing headbands typical of Islamic State.
Another picture showed a bearded man at the wheel of a police van flying
an Islamic State flag. The authenticity of the images has not been
independently verified and the military has urged the public not to
spread "propaganda".
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Policemen stand on guard while guarding a main street in Sarimanok
village, in Marawi city, Philippines May 31, 2017. REUTERS/Romeo
Ranoco
The military believe the Maute group staged the Marawi takeover to
prove itself to Islamic State and try to win its endorsement as its
affiliate in Southeast Asia.
Duterte said he would not allow Islamic State to gain traction in
the Philippines and inflict murder on the scale of Syria and Iraq.
He changed his mind on last week's offer of dialogue with Maute and
said he "will not talk to the terrorists".
"They are trying to correct the way of living for everybody. They do
it by killing people, invoking the name of God and that is a very
terrible ideology," he said of Islamic State.
"It does not know anything except to waste human lives."
Security experts believe extremists in the southern Philippines have
quietly become better organised and funded, pointing to the Maute's
rapid rise from obscurity.
The government on Wednesday said another rebel group, the Moro
Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) had agreed to help get civilians,
dead or alive, out of Marawi and had accepted Duterte's
unconventional offer for communists, separatists and the military to
unite against radical Islam.
Congress held a special hearing on Wednesday on martial law, which
minority bloc lawmakers said was an overreaction by Duterte and a
unilateral decision he made while overseas.
But most legislators back the measure as being needed to meet the
security threat.
"We have a serious problem," said congressman Harry Roque, who filed
a resolution supporting martial law.
"ISIS is not a small problem, it is a very big problem."
(Additional reporting by Neil Jerome Morales, Karen Lema and Manuel
Mogato in MANILA; Writing and additional reporting by Martin Petty;
Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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