Marawi crisis may end soon with extremists’ logistics ‘paralyzed’ – Army

June 8, 2017 - 2:53 PM
4968
Government security personnel kick open a door during a house to house search in Marawi City. (Reuters)

MARAWI CITY, Philippines — The siege of Marawi City could be over soon because the logistics of the extremists holed up there have been disrupted and they have been reduced to a “small resistance,” the military said.

Government troops had entered three neighborhoods from which the pro-Islamic State fighters who seized the town on May 23 had pulled back, said Major General Carlito Galvez, Western Mindanao Command chief said.

“We saw food, IEDs (improvised explosive devices), mobility assets. Considering we have paralyzed logistics capability, we are looking at the possibility that the end will be near,” he told a news conference in Marawi.

The military believed “more or less 100” civilians were still being held hostage by the militants, he said.

Task force head Brigadier General Rolly Bautista told reporters that a Catholic priest who was taken hostage with about a dozen of his parishioners on the first day of the siege was still alive. He said this was information passed back through emissaries.

The battle for Marawi has raised concern that Islamic State, on a back foot in Syria and Iraq, is building a regional base on Mindanao that could pose a threat to neighboring Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore too.

Officials have said that, among the several hundred militants who seized the town, there were about 40 foreigners from Indonesia and Malaysia but also fighters from India, Saudi Arabia, Morocco and Chechnya.

The strike on Marawi City suggested to many that pro-Islamic State factions wanted to establish it as a Southeast Asian “wilayat” — or governorate — for the radical group, a view reinforced by video footage the military found last week showing the fighters plotting to cut the town off completely.

Click on this video clip below and watch a rough cut of some of the government firepower brought to bear in Marawi. Combat scenes captured by Erwin Mascariñas of News5 | InterAksyon: