Philippine security
forces have killed 89 extremist militants during more than a week of
fighting in a southern city but the gunmen are still offering strong
resistance and holding hostages, the military says.
Attack
helicopters fired rockets repeatedly on Wednesday morning into the
pockets of Marawi city where the militants were hiding among trapped
residents, according to an AFP reporter who was following troops
searching houses.
The clashes erupted on Tuesday last week when
gunmen waving black flags of Daesh rampaged through the mostly
Muslim-populated city in response to an effort by security forces to
arrest a Filipino on the US government’s list of most-wanted terrorists.
That
militant leader, Isnilon Hapilon, escaped but he was still believed to
be in Marawi, military spokesman Brigadier-General Restituto Padilla
said Wednesday.
Eighty nine militants had been killed in the efforts to reclaim the city and find Hapilon, Padilla told reporters.
He
said the military was making “very positive” progress towards ending
the crisis, which had also seen 21 security forces and 19 civilians
killed.
A
Philippine military truck speeds away as black smoke billows from
burning houses after military helicopters fired rockets at militant
positions in Marawi, on the southern island of Mindanao, May 30, 2017.
(Photo by AFP)
However, Padilla acknowledged
there were many residents still trapped in the 10 percent of the city
that the gunmen were controlling, and that troops would likely meet
increasingly strong resistance there.
“That 10 percent is most
likely the area that is heavily guarded and defended by any armed men if
they are protecting any individual of high value,” Padilla said.
Padilla said he did not know how many militants remained.
He
said they had been reinforced by prisoners who escaped from two jails
during the initial rampage, and “sympathizers” of the militants.
There
were more than 2,000 residents still trapped in areas of Marawi held by
the militants, Zia Alonto Adiong, spokesman for the provincial crisis
management committee, told AFP.
The militants also took a priest and up to 14 other people hostage at the start of the crisis.
A
video of the priest appeared on social media on Tuesday in which he
repeated the militants’ demands to withdraw, and said the militants were
holding 240 people hostage.
“The video may seem to be authentic,” Padilla said, although he cautioned military technology experts were still verifying it.
Padilla
also emphasized the video was being used for propaganda, that the
priest was speaking under duress and he did not know if the figure about
the number of hostages was correct.
President Rodrigo Duterte
declared martial law across the entire southern region of Mindanao, home
to roughly 20 million people, in response to the crisis. He said the
Marawi violence showed that local militant groups were uniting behind
Daesh and becoming a major security threat across Mindanao.
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