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Thursday, 30 January 2014
Philippine troops kill 40 rebels in offensive
Thursday, 30 January 2014 by Unknown
British Foreign Secretary William Hague, who is visiting Manila,
called on all Filipinos to rally behind the peace talks and help
foster peace in the south.
Philippine troops have killed at least 40 Islamic fighters and
captured a rebel stronghold with a bomb—making facility in a
three—day offensive against insurgents opposed to a new peace
deal, military officials said Thursday.
President Benigno Aquino III said the military launched the assault
to protect villages after Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement
fighters, including snipers, staged attacks in southern
Maguindanao province.
The rebels involved in the fighting have opposed peace talks
between the government and the larger Moro Islamic Liberation
Front which were concluded over the weekend in Malaysia.
They have promised to continue their uprising, saying the
Malaysian—brokered talks would not lead to a separate homeland
for minority Muslims in the south.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague, who is visiting Manila,
called on all Filipinos to rally behind the peace talks because they
would bring massive benefits and help foster peace in the south.
“That is the quickest way, of course, to bring to an end any
fighting that remains,” Hague told reporters.
Regional military spokesman Col. Dickson Hermoso said 12 of the
slain rebels have been identified with the help of village leaders,
while others were found buried in graves in and near Ganta village
in Maguindanao.
The fighting left one soldier dead and 12 others wounded by bombs
hidden around a mosque and by rebel mortar fire, Hermoso said.
After two days of attacks, army troops captured a key rebel
stronghold Wednesday that spanned two villages in a swampy
mountain foothill in Maguindanao where the insurgents made
bombs and carried out combat training. Several bombs and
materials for making explosives were seized by troops, Hermoso
said.
“It’s like a bomb factory,” Hermoso said. “We don’t negotiate with
groups like this who threaten innocent civilians. We run after them
to enforce the law.”
The offensive, which was supposed to end Wednesday, will be
extended to Saturday as troops pursue the retreating rebels, who
have split into smaller groups, he said.
Rebel spokesman Abu Misry said part of their stronghold had been
taken by government forces but denied any of their fighters had
been killed or captured. He said seven insurgents had been
wounded by army shelling and helicopter rocket fire.
“They can take our camps but if they don’t capture us, they cannot
stop our jihad,” Misry said by telephone, referring to the term for
holy war.
About 10,000 villagers have fled the fighting, which underscores
the difficulty of ending violence in the country’s south.
Aside from the main Moro rebel group that concluded negotiations
Saturday with the government on a new Muslim autonomy deal in
the south, at least four other smaller insurgent groups threaten
peace in the region.
Those groups include the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Movement
and the smaller but more brutal Abu Sayyaf, which is notorious for
bombings, kidnappings for ransom and beheadings.
Aquino said the new peace deal would bring the government and
the 11,000—strong main Moro rebel group together to pursue
outlaws who have long thrived in the conflict.

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