AFP claims killing 54 Moro rebels in Lanao del Sur
BUTIG, Lanao del Sur—At least 54 alleged members of a little-known criminal group were killed after several days of intense military air and artillery strikes here, authorities said on Monday.
Maj. Filemon Tan, spokesperson of the Armed Forces’ Western Mindanao Command, said the massive military operations were launched on Thursday against the “local terrorist Maute group,” which was reportedly involved in extortion and kidnapping activities.
The group, led by two brothers surnamed Maute, has claimed it was behind the recent bombings of transmission towers of National Grip Corp. of the Philippines and the abduction of six sawmill workers from Iligan City, according to Col. Roseller Murillo, commander of the Army’s 103rd Infantry Brigade.
Two of the workers were beheaded on April 10, while the rest were freed after their employers negotiated with the captors.
Fighting between government forces and the criminal group has intensified, forcing at least 1,200 people to leave their villages in Butig, one of the poorest municipalities in Lanao del Sur province, according to the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao’s Humanitarian Emergency Action and Response Team.
Article continues after this advertisementThe evacuees came from Barangays Ragayan, Poktan, Bayabao, Sandab, Coloyan and Samer, and they are now staying with relatives in the towns of Masiu and Lumbayanague and in Marawi City.
Article continues after this advertisementCiting intelligence reports, Tan said at least 54 suspected members of the group had so far been killed in the fighting.
The death toll could not be independently confirmed. Troops have not retrieved the bodies, but based the number on intelligence reports and on sightings of bodies being carried away by their comrades, Tan said.
‘Get the criminals’
Two soldiers were killed and nine were wounded, he said. The fatalities were identified as Pfc. Danilo Allaga and Pfc. Mark Fernand Ortaliza.
On Sunday, Murillo said bombs were dropped by OV-10 planes on the Maute group’s lair in Ragayan, followed by strikes from fighter jets. Ground troops also fired 81-mm mortars.
“An armored vehicle was hit by an improvised explosive device while it entered and assaulted an enemy position in the morning of the same day, but it did not damage the armored tank,” Murillo said.
The military offensives “to get the criminals” continued on Monday, Tan said. “The troops continue to advance toward the enemy stronghold and defeat the local terrorist groups in the area.”
“We will finish these military operations against extremists as part of the law enforcement to prevent recruitment of more members in Mindanao,” Murillo said.
Fact-finding mission
Jerome Aba, spokesperson of the Suara Bangsamoro, expressed concern over the ongoing military strikes and the dislocation of thousands of villagers.
“This is a continuing attack on the Moro people,” Aba said in a phone interview on Monday.
Suara Bangsamoro is set to conduct a fact-finding mission in Butig to determine what happened before the clashes.
“We will be there to help our Moro brothers and sisters,” Aba said, adding that his group would join others to persuade the government to pull out its troops in the area.
Drieza Lininding, vice chair of the Bangsamoro National Movement for Peace and Development, said on his Facebook page: “I don’t believe in military solutions, only a negotiated political settlement can address the problem here in Mindanao.”
Needs of IDPs
Lininding said he was hoping that “the needs of the IDPs (internally displaced persons) are being taken care of. We know how difficult it is to leave one’s house and livelihood.”
“Let us hope for a peaceful resolution, personally I don’t believe in military solutions as these only breed more hatred and conflicts,” he added. With reports from Jigger J. Jerusalem, Inquirer Mindanao; Julie M. Aurelio in Manila and AP