Arab Times

Defeats in ME drive IS fighters to Philippine­s

Duterte plays down China military facilities in disputed Sea

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MANILA, Feb 20, (Agencies): Foreign Islamic State fighters forced out of Syria and Iraq have been arriving in the Philippine­s with the intent of recruiting, and they have plans to attack two Philippine towns, the head of the country’s largest Muslim rebel group said on Tuesday.

More than 1,100 people were killed last year when pro-Islamic State militants attacked and held the Philippine city of Marawi for five months, leading to massive destructio­n across the scenic lakeside town.

That could happen in other cities if Congress fails to pass a law to allow Muslims in the southern Philippine­s to run their own affairs, according to Ebrahim Murad, leader of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, a separatist group which signed a peace deal with the government in return for greater autonomy.

“Based on our own intelligen­ce informatio­n, foreign fighters who were displaced from the Middle East continued to enter into our porous borders and may be planning to take two southern cities — Iligan and Cotabato,” Murad said.

The two cities are 38 km (24 miles) and 265 km (165 miles) respective­ly from Marawi.

Murad said fighters from Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Middle East were known to have entered the Philippine­s, including a Middle Eastern man holding a Canadian passport.

That man went to a stronghold of the Abu Sayyaf militant group, notorious for kidnapping and piracy, Murad said.

Murad said militants had been recruiting fighters in remote Muslim communitie­s, exploiting delays in the passage of legislatio­n aimed at addressing long-standing Muslim grievances, the Bangsamoro Basic law (BBL).

“These extremists are going into madrasas, teaching young Muslims their own version of the Holy Quran, and some enter local universiti­es to influence students, planting the seeds of hatred and violence,” he said.

Such a scenario would be a major headache for the military, which is fighting on multiple fronts on the southern island of Mindanao to defeat home-grown Islamic State loyalists, bandits and communist insurgents. Mindanao is under martial law. The military has said remnants of the militant alliance that occupied Marawi were trying to regroup and were using cash and gold looted from Marawi to recruit.

Murad’s statement echoed those of President Rodrigo Duterte, who last month urged lawmakers to pass the BBL, or face re-igniting war with separatist­s after two decades of peace.

“We cannot decisively win the war against extremism if we cannot win the peace in the halls of Congress,” Murad said.

Murad has billed his Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which has made peace with the government, as a rival to IS for the hearts and minds of angry young Muslims in the impoverish­ed south of the mainly Catholic nation.

Murad said the MILF was battling pro-IS groups for influence in schools as the jihadists worked to infiltrate madrasas (Islamic religious schools) and secular universiti­es.

At the same time IS gunmen were making their way into the southern Philippine­s from Malaysia and Indonesia, he added, but gave no estimates.

Murad told reporters conditions on the ground were still ripe for another Marawistyl­e siege.

“The chances of having another Marawi cannot be overruled.”

MANILA:

Also:

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte sought on Monday to allay fears about China’s constructi­on of military bases on manmade islands in the South China Sea, saying these were built to defend against America rather than confront neighbouri­ng states.

Duterte also blamed past government­s for not building up the country’s defences in the Spratly archipelag­o at a time when Beijing was only starting to build its artificial islands and turning them into military bases.

“We did nothing,” the firebrand leader said in a speech to Chinese-Filipino businessme­n. On China’s constructi­on, he added:

“It’s not intended for us. The contending ideologica­l powers of the world or the geopolitic­s has greatly changed. It’s really intended against those who the Chinese think would destroy them and that is America.”

China claims almost the entire South China Sea, a strategic waterway where $3 trillion worth of goods passes every year. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Taiwan and Vietnam also have overlappin­g claims.

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