Officers
claim to have killed Zulkifli, a bombmaker for Jemaah Islamiyah that staged
2002 Bali bombings
Jakarta Globe – AFP, Jan 26, 2015
Manila. More than 40 Philippine police commandos were killed in an 11-hour firefight with Muslim rebels which erupted while they were chasing one of the region’s most wanted militants, police said on Monday.
Manila. More than 40 Philippine police commandos were killed in an 11-hour firefight with Muslim rebels which erupted while they were chasing one of the region’s most wanted militants, police said on Monday.
The clash —
which broke out despite a peace pact with the main rebel group — was “the
single largest loss of life in recent memory by our security forces”, said
interior secretary Manuel Roxas.
A total of
43 commandos were killed Sunday in the remote town of Mamasapano, a known rebel
stronghold, on Mindanao island in the south, the national police chief Leonardo
Espina told a news conference.
Regional
police spokeswoman Judith Ambong told AFP separately the bodies of 49 policemen
were recovered.
Eleven
police were injured but there was no information on any Muslim rebel
casualties.
Almost 400
police commandos swooped before dawn on the hideout of the Bangsamoro Islamic
Freedom Fighters (BIFF), a splinter group which rejects the peace pact, in
search of Zulkifli bin Hir.
Roxas said
police claimed to have killed Zulkifli, a bombmaker for the Jemaah Islamiyah
(JI) group which staged the 2002 Bali bombings and other deadly attacks.
He is among
the United States’ most wanted militants, with a $5 million bounty for his
capture.
But as the
commandos were leaving they encountered the Moro Islamic Liberation Front
(MILF), sparking a “misencounter”, he said.
The
10,000-strong MILF, the main Muslim rebel group in the south, signed a peace
treaty with the government in March last year.
The BIFF, a
breakaway faction of several hundred Muslim gunmen, was not part of the deal.
President
Benigno Aquino ordered an investigation into the incident, a major test of the
accord intended to end a 40-year insurgency that has claimed tens of thousands
of lives.
The MILF
said police did not coordinate the operation as required under the ceasefire
accord.
“There will
be an impact but we are hopeful and confident that this will not derail the
peace talks,” Roxas said.
He said
Zulkifli was believed killed based on pictures from the encounter site, but his
body had not been recovered or positively identified.
The
Malaysian is the most prominent of the 10 to 12 foreign JI members believed
hiding in the Philippines. He slipped into the southern region in 2003 and has
since been training local militants, according to the military.
‘Big
problem’
Roxas said
the leader of the BIFF, Basit Usman, escaped. He had been blamed for recent
bomb attacks in the south.
“This is
going to be a big problem,” the MILF’s chief peace negotiator Mohagher Iqbal
told AFP when asked how the fighting would affect the peace process, adding
that it still stood.
The MILF
had agreed to end its revolt in the mainly Catholic nation in exchange for a
proposed law now being debated in parliament that would give minority Muslims
self-rule in several southern provinces.
The rebels
were scheduled to start disarming at the start of this year.
“This is
the first encounter between the MILF and [government forces] this year.
Hopefully, this will be the last,” Iqbal said.
“We are
committed [to the peace process]. For the MILF, the ceasefire still holds,” he
said.
The rebel
group’s vice chairman, Ghazali Jaafar, said the peace treaty signed last March
was the only solution to the conflict.
Sunday’s
bloodbath highlighted “security challenges” but nonetheless strengthened the
resolve of negotiators, government peace panel chairperson Miriam
Coronel-Ferrer said in a statement.
Over 1,000
people displaced by the violence have begun returning to their homes after the
fighting stopped Sunday afternoon, Mamasapano town mayor Tahirodin Benzar
Ampatuan said.
The
firefight was only the second since the ceasefire. Two soldiers and 18 Muslim
gunmen were killed in a clash on the southern island of Basilan in April 2014.
Since the
peace accord was signed, authorities have been hot on the trail of the BIFF.
The group pledged allegiance to Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria last
year.
Agence France-Presse
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