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Philippine Muslim rebels launch bold raid on southern port

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Philippine Muslim rebels launch bold raid on southern port

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Residents gather behind a military truck after Muslim rebels members of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) occupied villages in Zamboanga city, southern Philippines September 9, 2013. REUTERS/Philippine Information Agency/Handout via Reuters

By Manuel Mogato

MANILA | Mon Sep 9, 2013 7:20am EDT

(Reuters) - Rogue Muslim rebels launched an audacious assault in the southern Philippines on Monday, taking control of several villages and shutting down a major port in the biggest challenge to a peace deal signed by the government last year.

The attack by hundreds of heavily armed guerrillas on Zamboanga City highlights the fragility of the deal agreed last October with a larger rebel group to end four decades of conflict.

Transport officials suspended commercial flights and ferry services to the city of around 800,000. Schools, public offices and businesses were closed as gunfire rang out from clashes between soldiers and the estimated 200-300 invaders.

Six people were killed and 24 wounded as the rebels tried to force their way to the city center, Mayor Isabelle Climaco-Salazar said in a statement. About 3,000 people had fled their homes, she said.

Army commanders said the rebels landed in two coastal villages early on Monday and were trying to reach the city center to raise their flag over the city hall.

"They want to hoist their flag. We will not allow that," Colonel Andrelino Colina told a radio station.

Army spokesman Brigadier General Domingo Tutaan said about 200-300 people were "stranded" in a village occupied by the rebels. Officials had earlier said that dozens of civilians had been taken hostage.

"We condemn the attack on Zamboanga City in the strongest possible terms," Edwin Lacierda, spokesman for President Benigno Aquino, said in a statement. "The ongoing attack of armed individuals in Zamboanga City, including initial reports of the possible use of civilians as human shields, is a cause for great concern."

Aquino sent his defense and interior secretaries to Zamboanga after holding a security meeting to discuss the violence, among the worst in more than a decade in the conflict-torn south.

Security officials said the rebels belonged to a rogue faction of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) separatist group, which entered into a peace agreement with government in 1996 and runs a Muslim autonomous region on southern Mindanao island.

Five years later, the faction led by former university professor Nur Misuari broke away, claiming the government had not fully implemented the deal. An army spokesman said that a known senior aide of Misuari, Ustadz Habier Malik, took part in Monday's attack.

Misuari opposed the deal signed last year by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in which the group agreed to a new autonomous region that would give the Muslim region greater political powers and more control over resources.

"They are trying to spoil the peace process," Mohagher Iqbal, MILF chief peace negotiator, told Reuters by telephone from the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, where the latest round of talks is taking place.

Four decades of conflict in the south killed 120,000 people, displaced 2 million and stunted growth in the poor but resource-rich area of the mainly Catholic state. Last year's deal spurred hopes of an economic revival.

The rebel faction has yet to make formal demands and its leaders could not be reached for comment.

Emmanuel Fontanilla, a spokesman for the MNLF, called for a third party, like Muslim-majority Indonesia, to intervene and help end the standoff. Indonesia also brokered the peace agreement between the Philippines and MNLF in 1996.

(Reporting By Manuel Mogato; Editing by Stuart Grudgings and Nick Macfie)

 

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Muslim rebels take hostages in raid on Philippine southern city

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Combat police forces take positions at a village in Zamboanga City in southern Philippines September 9, 2013, where security forces and members of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) rebels were fighting. REUTERS-Stringer

MANILA | Mon Sep 9, 2013 1:46am EDT

(Reuters) - Muslim rebels took 30 civilian hostages in the southern Philippines on Monday and held security forces in a standoff as part of a drive to derail peace talks, officials said.

Police commandos cordoned off parts of Zamboanga City on the island of Mindanao after a rogue faction of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) took hostages and tried to march to the city hall to raise their flag, an army commander said.

"They want to hoist their flag, we will not allow that," Colonel Andrelino Colina told a local radio station, saying dozens of armed MNLF landed in two coastal villages at dawn and clashed with security forces.

Three people were killed and 10 wounded as the rebels forced their way to the city centre.

"We condemned the attack on Zamboanga City in the strongest possible terms," Edwin Lacierda, the president's spokesman said in a statement. "The ongoing attack of armed individuals in Zamboanga City, including initial reports of the possible use of civilians as human shields is a cause for great concern."

The gunmen belong to a Muslim rebel group that entered into a peace agreement with government in 1996 and was allowed to run a Muslim autonomous region. Five years later, the group took up arms again, claiming the government did not fully implement the peace agreement.

In Kuala Lumpur, the government and the largest Muslim rebel group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), are preparing for peace talks to conclude a deal on power-sharing and the establishment of a larger autonomous Muslim region by 2015.

"They are trying to spoil the peace process," Mohagher Iqbal, MILF chief peace negotiator, told Reuters by phone.

An official from the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process, Joe Lorena, said the attack could have been triggered by rumors that talks in Kuala Lumpur might result in the termination of an earlier deal with the gunmen's group.

(Reporting By Manuel Mogato; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

 

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A combat police sniper (L) takes position during an encounter with rebels from the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)
in downtown Zamboanga City, southern Philippines September 9, 2013. REUTERS/STRINGER

 

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Combat police forces check their comrade who was hit by sniper fire of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)
during an encounter in downtown Zamboanga City, southern Philippines September 9, 2013. REUTERS/Stringer


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Residents flee from fighting between security forces and rebels from the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)
who raided several villages in Zamboanga city, southern Philippines September 9, 2013. REUTERS/STRINGER

 
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