Three soldiers were killed and 11 wounded when the forces seized the
bastion of an affiliate of Jemaah Islamiah, a Southeast Asian network
of Islamist militants, in the province of Lanao del Sur.
Philippine security
forces killed as many as 42 Muslim rebels claiming links with Islamic
State and captured their stronghold during five days of fighting in the
mountains of a southern island, an army spokesman said on Friday.
Three soldiers were killed and 11 wounded when the forces seized the bastion of an affiliate of Jemaah Islamiah, a Southeast Asian network of Islamist militants, in the province of Lanao del Sur.
"Our troops were able to seize a stronghold of the terrorists on Thursday night," the
spokesman, Major Filemon Tan, told reporters by telephone from the
southern island of Mindanao, estimating that about 42 militants had been
killed.
"We are still pursuing the rebels, using armoured assets."
Tan
said the army was shelling rebel positions with 105-mm howitzers on
Friday, while air force planes dropped bombs and helicopters fired
rockets near the town of Butig, a base of the country's largest Muslim
rebel group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).
But
the MILF stayed away from the skirmishes and helped about 8,000 people
displaced from their homes when the fighting began on Feb. 20, the
military said.
The Philippines signed a peace deal
with the MILF in March 2014, ending 45 years of conflict that killed
more than 120,000 people, displaced 2 million and stunted growth in the
poor but resource-rich south.
Army and police
officials believe some Muslim rebel factions, including the small but
violent Abu Sayyaf group, have pledged allegiance to Islamic State
militants in Iraq and Syria, but say they have found no evidence to
support this.
Elsewhere in Mindanao, soldiers were
also chasing the Abu Sayyaf group, which is holding captive several
foreigners, including a Japanese, a Dutch national, two Canadians and a
Norwegian.
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World
Members
of the British Army pack their belongings after an operation to
extinguish fire on the Chogoria side of the slopes of Mount Kenya in
central Kenya, in this March 20, 2012 file photo. Kenya and Britain
signed a deal on December 9, 2015 to allow British troops to continue
military training in the East African nation for five more years, ending
half a decade of protracted negotiations which tested their relations.
REUTERS/Peter Imbote/Files