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30 Filipino police commandos killed in clash with rebels

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30 Filipino police commandos killed in clash with rebels

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — More than 30 police commandos were killed in a clash with Muslim insurgents Sunday in the southern Philippines in the biggest single-day combat loss for Filipino forces in many years, officials said.

Dozens of commandos had entered the far-flung village of Tukanalipao at dawn looking for a top terror suspect, but had a "misencounter" with members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, Mayor Tahirudin Benzar Ampatuan of Mamasapano town told The Associated Press by telephone.

Other insurgents in the area later joined in fighting the outnumbered police forces, the mayor said.

The 11,000-strong Moro group signed a peace deal with the government last year and forged a cease-fire, which has been safeguarded by a Malaysia-led team of foreign truce monitors and has halted major conflicts between the two sides for years.

Ampatuan, the Moro group and military officials said the police commandos did not coordinate their plan to enter the Muslim rebel village before sunrise, apparently resulting in the fierce fighting.

The fighting in the marshy village of cornfields and coconut plantations subsided after several hours when members of a cease-fire committee and foreign truce monitors intervened, Ampatuan said, adding he deployed a team of village leaders and guards, who saw more than 30 of the slain commandos scattered in the battle scene.

"What they described to me was gruesome," Ampatuan said.

At least two villagers were wounded in the gunbattle. A few thousand villagers fled from their homes near the scene of the fighting, he said.

At least two Philippine security officials told The AP that the target of the police commandos was Zulkifli bin Hir, a Malaysian terror suspect known also as Marwan, who has been blamed by U.S. and Philippine authorities for several deadly bombings in the south. Marwan, who allegedly has provided bomb-making training and funds to local al-Qaida-linked militants, is believed to have been hiding in the country's south since 2003.

The two officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters about operations to capture Marwan, who they said may have been wounded or killed in Sunday's fighting.

Aside from Moro rebels, hardline insurgents who broke off from the main Moro group a few years ago because they opposed peace talks with the government also inhabit Tukanalipao and outlying villages. Some of the Moro rebels and breakaway insurgents are relatives and co-exist in the same villages.

Ampatuan said his village leaders managed to extricate only five of the policemen's bodies by nightfall because they were afraid for their safety amid sporadic gunfire and the darkness in the village, which is 2 to 3 kilometers (1.2 to 1.9 miles) from the nearest road.

It remains unclear how many police commandos entered the village, he said, adding the death toll would likely increase.

An initial police report seen by AP said at least 37 police commandos perished in the fighting while 6 insurgents were killed and 11 others wounded.

Military spokesman Col. Restituto Padilla said government troops were helping the police retrieve the dead from the scene of the clash. "No military units were involved the fighting," he said.

While the tragic fighting underscored the difficulty of forging peace in the long-volatile southern region, homeland of minority Muslims in the predominantly Roman Catholic country, it also showed how the cease-fire and the foreign truce monitors, troops and rebels who jointly enforce it have effectively prevented occasional flareups from degenerating into a full-blown fighting that could endanger the peace deal.

The pact, which was signed in March, aims to establish a more powerful and better-funded autonomous region for minority Muslims in the south and end a decades-long rebellion. The conflict has left 150,000 people dead and helped stunt development in the country's poorest region.

At least four smaller armed groups, including the al-Qaida-linked Abu Sayyaf group, have continued fighting government forces and staging attacks in the south.
 
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PNP-SAF casualties in encounter now 50 - ARMM police chief

PNP-SAF casualties in encounter now 50 - ARMM police chief
By: Dennis Arcon, InterAksyon.com
January 26, 2015 6:52 AM

PNP-SAF members were killed in an encounter in Maguindanao, 25 January 2015. SAM OMAR/InterAksyon.com Tweet InterAksyon.com
The online news portal of TV5
COTABATO CITY – The number of casualties from the Philippine National Police-Special Action Force (PNP-SAF) in the encounter between the police and members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) in Tukalinapao, Mamasapano, Maguindanao has now reached 50.
This was confirmed by Senior Superintendent Noel Armilla, PNP director for the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM), Monday morning.
The number of casualties is expected to rise as monitoring continues in the area, said Armilla.
It is said that six of the 50 are officials.
Maguindanao remains on alert.
The PNP-SAF was aiming to arrest Zulkifli Bin Hir alias Marwan and Basit Usman, each with a bounty of 5 million US dollars on their head.
The entire Central Mindanao has been enveloped in sadness due to what people are now calling a new Maguindanao massacre.
 
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30 Filipino police commandos killed in clash with rebels

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — More than 30 police commandos were killed in a clash with Muslim insurgents Sunday in the southern Philippines in the biggest single-day combat loss for Filipino forces in many years, officials said.

Dozens of commandos had entered the far-flung village of Tukanalipao at dawn looking for a top terror suspect, but had a "misencounter" with members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, Mayor Tahirudin Benzar Ampatuan of Mamasapano town told The Associated Press by telephone.

Other insurgents in the area later joined in fighting the outnumbered police forces, the mayor said.

The 11,000-strong Moro group signed a peace deal with the government last year and forged a cease-fire, which has been safeguarded by a Malaysia-led team of foreign truce monitors and has halted major conflicts between the two sides for years.

Ampatuan, the Moro group and military officials said the police commandos did not coordinate their plan to enter the Muslim rebel village before sunrise, apparently resulting in the fierce fighting.

The fighting in the marshy village of cornfields and coconut plantations subsided after several hours when members of a cease-fire committee and foreign truce monitors intervened, Ampatuan said, adding he deployed a team of village leaders and guards, who saw more than 30 of the slain commandos scattered in the battle scene.

"What they described to me was gruesome," Ampatuan said.

At least two villagers were wounded in the gunbattle. A few thousand villagers fled from their homes near the scene of the fighting, he said.

At least two Philippine security officials told The AP that the target of the police commandos was Zulkifli bin Hir, a Malaysian terror suspect known also as Marwan, who has been blamed by U.S. and Philippine authorities for several deadly bombings in the south. Marwan, who allegedly has provided bomb-making training and funds to local al-Qaida-linked militants, is believed to have been hiding in the country's south since 2003.

The two officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters about operations to capture Marwan, who they said may have been wounded or killed in Sunday's fighting.

Aside from Moro rebels, hardline insurgents who broke off from the main Moro group a few years ago because they opposed peace talks with the government also inhabit Tukanalipao and outlying villages. Some of the Moro rebels and breakaway insurgents are relatives and co-exist in the same villages.

Ampatuan said his village leaders managed to extricate only five of the policemen's bodies by nightfall because they were afraid for their safety amid sporadic gunfire and the darkness in the village, which is 2 to 3 kilometers (1.2 to 1.9 miles) from the nearest road.

It remains unclear how many police commandos entered the village, he said, adding the death toll would likely increase.

An initial police report seen by AP said at least 37 police commandos perished in the fighting while 6 insurgents were killed and 11 others wounded.

Military spokesman Col. Restituto Padilla said government troops were helping the police retrieve the dead from the scene of the clash. "No military units were involved the fighting," he said.

While the tragic fighting underscored the difficulty of forging peace in the long-volatile southern region, homeland of minority Muslims in the predominantly Roman Catholic country, it also showed how the cease-fire and the foreign truce monitors, troops and rebels who jointly enforce it have effectively prevented occasional flareups from degenerating into a full-blown fighting that could endanger the peace deal.

The pact, which was signed in March, aims to establish a more powerful and better-funded autonomous region for minority Muslims in the south and end a decades-long rebellion. The conflict has left 150,000 people dead and helped stunt development in the country's poorest region.

At least four smaller armed groups, including the al-Qaida-linked Abu Sayyaf group, have continued fighting government forces and staging attacks in the south.

Malaysia is a God damned terrorist country supporting insurgencies all over SE Asia. These Islamofascist terrorist never bomb Malaysia but go on to bomb her neighbors.
 
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TAPS to the fallen and Prayers for their families.

After violent PNP-MILF clash, Bongbong suspends BBL hearings

Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., chair of the Senate committee on local government, on Monday suspended the discussions and hearings related to the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law as he condemned the use of violence by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front against forces of the Philippine National Police on Sunday.

On Sunday, at least 30 members of the PNP Special Action Force (SAF) were killed in an ambush by members of the MILF in Mamasapano town in Maguindanao. The PNP personnel were on the trail of suspected international terrorists believed to be hiding inside one of the camps of the Moro rebel group.

As of Monday morning, the number of SAF fatalies had risen to 50, according to Senior Superintendent Noel Armilla, director of the Philippine National Police (PNP) in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

In suspending the hearings, Marcos said: “I decided to suspend indefinitely all discussions and hearings related to the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law until this is clarified."
"We cannot, in conscience, proceed with these hearings while a cloud of serious doubt hangs over the security situation in the south. A peace agreement cannot be legislated under the threat of such extreme violence. Violence has no room in a civilized society," he added.

But in an interview, MILF vice chairman for political affairs Ghadzali Jaafar said delaying the passage of the BBL would be "a disadvantage to all parties concerned."

"I don't think it will affect discussions of the BBL, I don't think this should delay the process.

"'Pag na-delay [nang] masyadong matagal ang pagiging batas ng BBL, ... made-delay ang establishment ng Bangsamoro government, which is a negotiated political solution to the conflict in Mindanao. So 'pag walang Bangsamoro government sapagkat na-delay ito, sapagkat walang batas ito, walang BBL, 'yung situation sa Mindanao remain(s) as it is," Jaafar said.

Bangsamoro Basic Law

The Bangsamoro Basic Law will embody the peace agreement signed by the Philippine goverment and the MILF last March, which aims to end the decades-old conflict in Mindanao.

The legislation seeks to create the Bangsamoro political entity, which will replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. It will also specify wealth- and power-sharing arrangements between the national government and the new political entity.

However, the hearing to be conducted by the Senate committee on constitutional amendments, headed by Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, pushed through as scheduled on Monday morning.

The hearing tackled the constitutional issues surrounding the proposed BBL.

Hunt vs. Zulkifli

Reports have it that the SAF members were sent to the area to serve warrants of arrest against Malaysian bomb maket Zulkifli bin Hir, known as “Marwan” in Barangay Tukanalipao, and Basit Usman, a Jemaah Islamiyah bomb-making expert.

Von Al Haq, vice chair for military affairs of the MILF, reportedly said the SAF team did not coordinate with the proper authorities before they entered the area. Al Haq defended the action of the MILF saying the action of the SAF was a clear violation of the peace agreement between the Philippine government and the MILF.

Marcos disagreed with Al Haq’s statement, saying the SAF was given a legitimate mission and even without coordination, the MILF could have easily arranged to talk with the SAF.

“I condemn the use of violence by the MILF. They signed a peace agreement with the government, and therefore, the MILF is already a partner of government," the senator said.

"Hence, even without coordination, they should have exercised great patience and caution. Those police officers were there to arrest a terrorist. They were just doing their jobs. The fact that they were not carrying loads of ammunition show that they are not there for a fight. It was not an attack on the MILF. Lethal force was clearly not necessary,” he added.

Marcos said he is anxious to hear from the MILF leadership as to how they move forward from the incident.

"This MILF attack on govt forces is a major obstacle to the long and lasting peace we have been working for in Muslim Mindanao," he said.

“I am greatly saddened by this terrible event. I pray we find a way forward.” Marcos said.

After violent PNP-MILF clash, Bongbong suspends BBL hearings | News | GMA News Online

_________________________________________________________________________________

Gazmin, Roxas, and police, military chiefs off to Maguindanao to avoid spillover of violence

MANILA, Philippines -- The country’s top security officials are flying to Maguindanao Monday in the wake of Sunday’s bloody “mis-encounter” that left at least 50 policemen dead and at least eight captured by fighters of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front in Mamasapano town.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, in an interview, said he, Armed Forces chief of staff General Gregorio Pio Catapang Jr., Interior Secretary Manuel Roxas II, and acting Philippine National Police chief Deputy Director General Leonardo Espina would head to Cotabato City to “do what we can to prevent” any spillover of the violence Tukalinapao in Mamasapano.

At the same time, Gazmin denied reports the PNP Special Action Force unit involved in the incident had failed to coordinate with the military before mounting what was supposedly a mission to arrest Malaysian bomb expert Zulkifli Bin Hir, alias “Marwan,” who has a $5 million bounty from the US, and Basit Usman, a Filipino trained in bomb-making by the Jemaah Islamiya, who has a $1 million reward.

He did say, however, that the coordination was only at the “tactical level,” to inform Army units the SAF met on their way about the operation.

Nag-coordinate naman (They did coordinate at the tactical level) at the tactical level … (but) because time is of the essence, nand’yan na ‘yung target … pero kulang na sa oras, pinagsabihan pa rin ‘yung Army na nadaanan nila (the target was there … but there was not enough time, still they informed the Army units they passed) … so there was coordination,” he said.

Gazmin also said the Armed Forces would help track down those responsible for the policemen’s deaths, but hinted that this might be limited only to members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, a splinter faction from the MILF that he said had joined Sunday’s fighting.

Kasi ang pagkaalam namin pumasok dito ‘yung BIFF (Because what we know is that the BIFF joined in), so we have to run after them,” he said.

The BIFF is not covered by the peace agreement between the government and the MILF.

At the same time, the Defense chief said they were “not worried” Sunday’s incident would affect the peace process with the MILF.

Gazmin, Roxas, and police, military chiefs off to Maguindanao to avoid spillover of violence


 
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philippino cops are no good, need to get trained by us
 
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There are rumors that MILF may be well-likely backed by Malaysian government considering that Malaysia is backing the Bangsamoro deal.

Remember that the Philippines and Malaysia has disputes over the Sabah claims which is apparently shot down by the first and second Aquino governments.

philippino cops are no good, need to get trained by us

White phosphorus and proper application of said weapon is needed in wiping out the terrorists.
 
. . .
Malaysias role with moro and pattani violence needs closer scrutiny. I know malaysians have developed very strong urges to become arabs, that often leads to violence in neighboring countries. We in india know very well.
 
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Huge dent by terrorist Filipinos avenge the death of your comrades
 
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Uh, actually, the casualties rise to around 50 according to recent news.
Well 50 Police deaths should ring alarm bells ...... i do feels that heads will roll within Police Force, entering the rebels den without proper planning, the Police Commando's are ill trained , ill equipped in either case, this will defiantly boost the moral of rebels & dent the moral of Police Force
 
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TAPS to the fallen and Prayers for their families.

After violent PNP-MILF clash, Bongbong suspends BBL hearings

Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., chair of the Senate committee on local government, on Monday suspended the discussions and hearings related to the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law as he condemned the use of violence by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front against forces of the Philippine National Police on Sunday.

On Sunday, at least 30 members of the PNP Special Action Force (SAF) were killed in an ambush by members of the MILF in Mamasapano town in Maguindanao. The PNP personnel were on the trail of suspected international terrorists believed to be hiding inside one of the camps of the Moro rebel group.

As of Monday morning, the number of SAF fatalies had risen to 50, according to Senior Superintendent Noel Armilla, director of the Philippine National Police (PNP) in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

In suspending the hearings, Marcos said: “I decided to suspend indefinitely all discussions and hearings related to the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law until this is clarified."
"We cannot, in conscience, proceed with these hearings while a cloud of serious doubt hangs over the security situation in the south. A peace agreement cannot be legislated under the threat of such extreme violence. Violence has no room in a civilized society," he added.

But in an interview, MILF vice chairman for political affairs Ghadzali Jaafar said delaying the passage of the BBL would be "a disadvantage to all parties concerned."

"I don't think it will affect discussions of the BBL, I don't think this should delay the process.

"'Pag na-delay [nang] masyadong matagal ang pagiging batas ng BBL, ... made-delay ang establishment ng Bangsamoro government, which is a negotiated political solution to the conflict in Mindanao. So 'pag walang Bangsamoro government sapagkat na-delay ito, sapagkat walang batas ito, walang BBL, 'yung situation sa Mindanao remain(s) as it is," Jaafar said.

Bangsamoro Basic Law

The Bangsamoro Basic Law will embody the peace agreement signed by the Philippine goverment and the MILF last March, which aims to end the decades-old conflict in Mindanao.

The legislation seeks to create the Bangsamoro political entity, which will replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. It will also specify wealth- and power-sharing arrangements between the national government and the new political entity.

However, the hearing to be conducted by the Senate committee on constitutional amendments, headed by Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, pushed through as scheduled on Monday morning.

The hearing tackled the constitutional issues surrounding the proposed BBL.

Hunt vs. Zulkifli

Reports have it that the SAF members were sent to the area to serve warrants of arrest against Malaysian bomb maket Zulkifli bin Hir, known as “Marwan” in Barangay Tukanalipao, and Basit Usman, a Jemaah Islamiyah bomb-making expert.

Von Al Haq, vice chair for military affairs of the MILF, reportedly said the SAF team did not coordinate with the proper authorities before they entered the area. Al Haq defended the action of the MILF saying the action of the SAF was a clear violation of the peace agreement between the Philippine government and the MILF.

Marcos disagreed with Al Haq’s statement, saying the SAF was given a legitimate mission and even without coordination, the MILF could have easily arranged to talk with the SAF.

“I condemn the use of violence by the MILF. They signed a peace agreement with the government, and therefore, the MILF is already a partner of government," the senator said.

"Hence, even without coordination, they should have exercised great patience and caution. Those police officers were there to arrest a terrorist. They were just doing their jobs. The fact that they were not carrying loads of ammunition show that they are not there for a fight. It was not an attack on the MILF. Lethal force was clearly not necessary,” he added.

Marcos said he is anxious to hear from the MILF leadership as to how they move forward from the incident.

"This MILF attack on govt forces is a major obstacle to the long and lasting peace we have been working for in Muslim Mindanao," he said.

“I am greatly saddened by this terrible event. I pray we find a way forward.” Marcos said.

After violent PNP-MILF clash, Bongbong suspends BBL hearings | News | GMA News Online

_________________________________________________________________________________

Gazmin, Roxas, and police, military chiefs off to Maguindanao to avoid spillover of violence


MANILA, Philippines -- The country’s top security officials are flying to Maguindanao Monday in the wake of Sunday’s bloody “mis-encounter” that left at least 50 policemen dead and at least eight captured by fighters of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front in Mamasapano town.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, in an interview, said he, Armed Forces chief of staff General Gregorio Pio Catapang Jr., Interior Secretary Manuel Roxas II, and acting Philippine National Police chief Deputy Director General Leonardo Espina would head to Cotabato City to “do what we can to prevent” any spillover of the violence Tukalinapao in Mamasapano.

At the same time, Gazmin denied reports the PNP Special Action Force unit involved in the incident had failed to coordinate with the military before mounting what was supposedly a mission to arrest Malaysian bomb expert Zulkifli Bin Hir, alias “Marwan,” who has a $5 million bounty from the US, and Basit Usman, a Filipino trained in bomb-making by the Jemaah Islamiya, who has a $1 million reward.

He did say, however, that the coordination was only at the “tactical level,” to inform Army units the SAF met on their way about the operation.

Nag-coordinate naman (They did coordinate at the tactical level) at the tactical level … (but) because time is of the essence, nand’yan na ‘yung target … pero kulang na sa oras, pinagsabihan pa rin ‘yung Army na nadaanan nila (the target was there … but there was not enough time, still they informed the Army units they passed) … so there was coordination,” he said.

Gazmin also said the Armed Forces would help track down those responsible for the policemen’s deaths, but hinted that this might be limited only to members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, a splinter faction from the MILF that he said had joined Sunday’s fighting.

Kasi ang pagkaalam namin pumasok dito ‘yung BIFF (Because what we know is that the BIFF joined in), so we have to run after them,” he said.

The BIFF is not covered by the peace agreement between the government and the MILF.

At the same time, the Defense chief said they were “not worried” Sunday’s incident would affect the peace process with the MILF.

Gazmin, Roxas, and police, military chiefs off to Maguindanao to avoid spillover of violence

TAPS to the fallen and Prayers for their families.

After violent PNP-MILF clash, Bongbong suspends BBL hearings

Senator Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., chair of the Senate committee on local government, on Monday suspended the discussions and hearings related to the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law as he condemned the use of violence by the Moro Islamic Liberation Front against forces of the Philippine National Police on Sunday.

On Sunday, at least 30 members of the PNP Special Action Force (SAF) were killed in an ambush by members of the MILF in Mamasapano town in Maguindanao. The PNP personnel were on the trail of suspected international terrorists believed to be hiding inside one of the camps of the Moro rebel group.

As of Monday morning, the number of SAF fatalies had risen to 50, according to Senior Superintendent Noel Armilla, director of the Philippine National Police (PNP) in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM).

In suspending the hearings, Marcos said: “I decided to suspend indefinitely all discussions and hearings related to the passage of the Bangsamoro Basic Law until this is clarified."
"We cannot, in conscience, proceed with these hearings while a cloud of serious doubt hangs over the security situation in the south. A peace agreement cannot be legislated under the threat of such extreme violence. Violence has no room in a civilized society," he added.

But in an interview, MILF vice chairman for political affairs Ghadzali Jaafar said delaying the passage of the BBL would be "a disadvantage to all parties concerned."

"I don't think it will affect discussions of the BBL, I don't think this should delay the process.

"'Pag na-delay [nang] masyadong matagal ang pagiging batas ng BBL, ... made-delay ang establishment ng Bangsamoro government, which is a negotiated political solution to the conflict in Mindanao. So 'pag walang Bangsamoro government sapagkat na-delay ito, sapagkat walang batas ito, walang BBL, 'yung situation sa Mindanao remain(s) as it is," Jaafar said.

Bangsamoro Basic Law

The Bangsamoro Basic Law will embody the peace agreement signed by the Philippine goverment and the MILF last March, which aims to end the decades-old conflict in Mindanao.

The legislation seeks to create the Bangsamoro political entity, which will replace the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. It will also specify wealth- and power-sharing arrangements between the national government and the new political entity.

However, the hearing to be conducted by the Senate committee on constitutional amendments, headed by Senator Miriam Defensor Santiago, pushed through as scheduled on Monday morning.

The hearing tackled the constitutional issues surrounding the proposed BBL.

Hunt vs. Zulkifli

Reports have it that the SAF members were sent to the area to serve warrants of arrest against Malaysian bomb maket Zulkifli bin Hir, known as “Marwan” in Barangay Tukanalipao, and Basit Usman, a Jemaah Islamiyah bomb-making expert.

Von Al Haq, vice chair for military affairs of the MILF, reportedly said the SAF team did not coordinate with the proper authorities before they entered the area. Al Haq defended the action of the MILF saying the action of the SAF was a clear violation of the peace agreement between the Philippine government and the MILF.

Marcos disagreed with Al Haq’s statement, saying the SAF was given a legitimate mission and even without coordination, the MILF could have easily arranged to talk with the SAF.

“I condemn the use of violence by the MILF. They signed a peace agreement with the government, and therefore, the MILF is already a partner of government," the senator said.

"Hence, even without coordination, they should have exercised great patience and caution. Those police officers were there to arrest a terrorist. They were just doing their jobs. The fact that they were not carrying loads of ammunition show that they are not there for a fight. It was not an attack on the MILF. Lethal force was clearly not necessary,” he added.

Marcos said he is anxious to hear from the MILF leadership as to how they move forward from the incident.

"This MILF attack on govt forces is a major obstacle to the long and lasting peace we have been working for in Muslim Mindanao," he said.

“I am greatly saddened by this terrible event. I pray we find a way forward.” Marcos said.

After violent PNP-MILF clash, Bongbong suspends BBL hearings | News | GMA News Online

_________________________________________________________________________________

Gazmin, Roxas, and police, military chiefs off to Maguindanao to avoid spillover of violence


MANILA, Philippines -- The country’s top security officials are flying to Maguindanao Monday in the wake of Sunday’s bloody “mis-encounter” that left at least 50 policemen dead and at least eight captured by fighters of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front in Mamasapano town.

Defense Secretary Voltaire Gazmin, in an interview, said he, Armed Forces chief of staff General Gregorio Pio Catapang Jr., Interior Secretary Manuel Roxas II, and acting Philippine National Police chief Deputy Director General Leonardo Espina would head to Cotabato City to “do what we can to prevent” any spillover of the violence Tukalinapao in Mamasapano.

At the same time, Gazmin denied reports the PNP Special Action Force unit involved in the incident had failed to coordinate with the military before mounting what was supposedly a mission to arrest Malaysian bomb expert Zulkifli Bin Hir, alias “Marwan,” who has a $5 million bounty from the US, and Basit Usman, a Filipino trained in bomb-making by the Jemaah Islamiya, who has a $1 million reward.

He did say, however, that the coordination was only at the “tactical level,” to inform Army units the SAF met on their way about the operation.

Nag-coordinate naman (They did coordinate at the tactical level) at the tactical level … (but) because time is of the essence, nand’yan na ‘yung target … pero kulang na sa oras, pinagsabihan pa rin ‘yung Army na nadaanan nila (the target was there … but there was not enough time, still they informed the Army units they passed) … so there was coordination,” he said.

Gazmin also said the Armed Forces would help track down those responsible for the policemen’s deaths, but hinted that this might be limited only to members of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, a splinter faction from the MILF that he said had joined Sunday’s fighting.

Kasi ang pagkaalam namin pumasok dito ‘yung BIFF (Because what we know is that the BIFF joined in), so we have to run after them,” he said.

The BIFF is not covered by the peace agreement between the government and the MILF.

At the same time, the Defense chief said they were “not worried” Sunday’s incident would affect the peace process with the MILF.

Gazmin, Roxas, and police, military chiefs off to Maguindanao to avoid spillover of violence


30 commandos in single day combat..!!! great loss for Philippines Army.. RIP..

they didn't get any air-support while they ambushed.. ?
 
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