IS harasses marsh fishermen

ARMY OFFENSIVE Soldiers navigate the 220,000-square-kilometer Liguasan Marsh during recent operations against terrorists. —PHOTO FROM 33RD INFANTRY BATTALION

CAMP SIONGCO, MAGUINDANAO—The military operation against Islamic State (IS) followers operating in Liguasan Marsh had freed fishing areas from the control of terrorists, including foreigners, according to the military.

The operation, which killed at least 23 of the gunmen, was prompted by pleas for help from fishermen who reported being driven away at gunpoint from the marsh by IS gunmen.

One of them was a fisherman who identified himself only as Jamadel, 40, who said he and his fellow fishermen were unable to fish for months in the SK Pendatun portion of the marsh because terrorists had been driving them away.

Different tormentor

“We’re like the Filipino fishermen turned away from the West Philippine Sea,” Jamadel said.

“This time, not by the Chinese but by Indonesians,” Jamadel told reporters here on Friday.

He said he and his sons tried to catch fish in an area in the marsh near their village of Midpandacan but “there were Indong-Indong (Indonesian) armed men who did not want us there.”

“Me and the other local fishermen are angry,” Jamadel said. “Our livelihood depended on catching fish,” he added.

Fishermen usually catch mudfish and catfish in Liguasan Marsh, which has an area of at least 220,000 square kilometers that straddles 29 towns in two provinces—Maguindanao and North Cotabato.

Suspicion confirmed

So what Jamadel and the other fishermen did was report to the military about the presence of the gunmen, some of whom were foreigners.

Lt. Col. Harold Cabunoc, head of the 33rd Infantry Battalion, said the fishermen’s and residents’ accounts confirmed military suspicion that the group, led by local terror leader Esmail Abdulmalik, had been harboring foreign terrorists.

Abdulmalik, also known as Abu Toraife, bolted Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) along with another local terror leader, Esmail Abubakar, alias Commander Bungos, to pledge allegiance to IS, the military said.

The BIFF is a group of Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) guerrillas who split from MILF over disagreements on peace talks with the government.

The BIFF had been insisting on a separate Islamic state, not just an autonomous region for Muslims, in Mindanao.

IS camp destroyed

Cabunoc said the military, prompted by the fishermen’s reports, launched massive operations starting on June 10 that saw an IS camp in Liguasan destroyed by aerial strikes and artillery fire.

Cabunoc said the destruction of the IS camp and bomb-making facility had elated fishermen like Jamadel.

“They are now free to do what they used to do—fish in the vast Liguasan,” Cabunoc said.

“The gunmen had been making life difficult for fishermen when they were prevented from fishing in the area,” Cabunoc said.

He said a soldier paid dearly with his life to make sure that fishermen in the Liguasan area were not harassed by terrorists.

Cabunoc said the military continued to hunt the remaining IS gunmen to prevent their return to the marsh and to protect fishermen.

“We have three enemies here—armed men, mosquitoes and man-eating crocodiles that abound in the area,” he said.

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