9 suspected Moro rebels killed in battle with cops, soldiers
ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines — (UPDATE 2) Nine suspected Moro rebel members, including their leader, were killed in four hours of heavy fighting with government forces on an island village in Zamboanga Sibugay Thursday afternoon, the military said Friday.
A military commander said the slain men belonged to the so-called Special Operations Group of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, who could also have been behind Tuesday’s attack on a Rural Transit bus in Zamboanga Sibugay in which three people, including an Army major, were killed.
The claim about the attack on the bus was initially rejected by MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu as absurd.
“No MILF [member] will do that and there is no reason for the MILF to do that kind of crime. It may be a simple case of robbery hold-up and so with the kidnapping, but the MILF is not into this,” he said.
Colonel Santiago Baluyot, commander of the Army’s 102nd Infantry Brigade, identified one of the fatalities in Thursday’s clash as Kamsa Asdanal.
He said Asdanal’s group belonged to the so-called MILF-SOG.
Baluyot said Asdanal’s group was “known for extortion and kidnapping.”
Article continues after this advertisementAnother military official, Brigadier General Noel Coballes of the Army’s 1st Infantry Division, said Asdanal was “a very notorious pirate leader and commander of an extortionist group operating in Zamboanga peninsula areas.”
Article continues after this advertisementAmong the kidnapping cases blamed on the group, Baluyot said, was the December abduction of nurse Mary Chris Cuartocruz here. Cuartocrus was freed in February.
Zamboanga Sibugay police director Senior Superintendent Ruben Cariaga Sr. said Thursday’s clash on Kaliantana Island off the town of Naga started 2 p.m. and lasted until early evening.
He said policemen were trying to serve a court warrant for the arrest of Asdanal when they were greeted by heavy gunfire.
“Unfortunately, Asdanal’s group resisted and engaged the police [in a firefight] that led to the wounding of [Senior Inspector Filmore] Dumagat and PO1[Police Officer 1] Jesus Dumadaog,” he said.
Cariaga said he immediately sought the support of Baluyot’s unit, which is under Coballes’ command.
Coballes said the military did not have to use aerial strike. “Our troops cordoned off the area,” he said.
Baluyot said the police “had a hard time neutralizing Asdanal because his house is not a typical ordinary house.”
“It’s some kind of a fortress with an arsenal,” he added.
Coballes said some houses caught fire during the battle but the cause was unclear.
But Lieutenant Colonel Randolph Cabangbang, spokesman of the Western Mindanao Command, said that while the firefight was going on, “an electric power box was hit, causing a short circuit that eventually led to a conflagration.”
Baluyot said that according to a report he received from the field, the cadavers of nine men—including Asdanal’s—had been recovered along with high-powered firearms.
“The police are still conducting follow-up operations,” he said by text message.
Baluyot said aside from kidnapping, Asdanal’s group could also have been involved in recent bus attacks in the province, including Tuesday’s incident in Tungawan, Zamboanga Sibugay.
Western Mindanao Command chief Lieutenant General Raymundo Ferrer told reporters here that the military had already identified those behind the bus attack.
Cabangbang said the military has been able to establish the involvement of some members of the MILF in illegal activities in the Zamboanga peninsula “based on information from the victims.”
“We receive information on the identities of the perpetrators and some of them are MILF members, so this has been coordinated with the AHJAG (Adhoc Joint Action Group) so we can conduct law enforcement operations in the MILF declared areas,” Cabangbang said.