Suspected militants caught sneaking into Philippine’s Marawi

Published July 29, 2017
Manila: Police escort men suspected to be en route to reinforce the Marawi militants as they arrive at the Department of Justice on Friday.—AP
Manila: Police escort men suspected to be en route to reinforce the Marawi militants as they arrive at the Department of Justice on Friday.—AP

MANILA: Philippine troops have seized 59 suspected militants trying to reinforce Islamist gunmen holed up in the southern city of Marawai who have been battling government forces for more than two months, military officials said on Friday.

The capture of the “suspicious persons” in the troubled Mindanao region has raised questions about how the IS-inspired fighters have been able to hold out in Marawi for almost 70 days.

Thirty-two suspected militants were arrested at a military checkpoint in Ipil town while 27 others were taken at a house in Zamboanga City on Tuesday, regional military spokeswoman Captain Jo-Ann Petinglay said.

A total 59 police and military uniforms were also seized from the suspects, a military statement added.

The group is suspected of planning to sneak into Marawi to help militants who have been on a rampage since May 23, battling government troops, holding numerous hostages and burning buildings while flying the black IS flag.

“They [the troops] have just prevented these individuals from potentially compounding the operational challenges in Marawi should they [have] succeeded in sneaking into the city,” a military statement quoted Lieutenant General Carlito Galvez, commander of the troops in Marawi, as saying.

He credited local governments and residents for reporting the suspects.

Although the government initially said there were only a few hundred militants in Marawi, the gunmen have held off the armed forces for weeks, resisting air strikes and artillery barrages.

The militants have surprised the military with their resilience and their continued supply of manpower, weapons and ammunition despite supposedly being surrounded.

Petinglay said those arrested were all Filipinos but their backgrounds were still being checked.

The fighting has so far claimed 630 lives, including 471 militants, 45 civilians and 114 government troops, military spokesman Brigadier General Restituto Padilla said in Manila on Friday.

He told reporters that there were only about 60 militants left, confined to less than one square kilometre of the city.

Published in Dawn, July 29th, 2017

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