IS-inspired militants on offensive in southern Philippines

Militants fighting in the name of the Islamic State group are escalating attacks in the southern Philippines, analysts said, deepening fears for the volatile region after its main Muslim rebel group failed to seal a peace pact. Gunmen who have pledged allegiance to the jihadists controlling vast swathes of Iraq and Syria have instigated a series of deadly battles with the army since the nation's parliament blocked the peace push last month.

An assassination attempt this week on a visiting Saudi Arabian preacher who was on an IS hit list has raised the alarm further, although police emphasised they were yet to determine the gunman's motives.

"Their influence is growing stronger and it is expanding," Rodolfo Mendoza, a senior analyst at the Manila-based Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research told journalists, referring to IS. He said the various local groups that had pledged allegiance to IS were "planning big operations, like bombings, attacks or assassinations."

Such violence has plagued large areas of the southern Philippines for decades, as Muslim rebels have fought a separatist insurgency that has claimed 120,000 lives. The violence has left the region one of the poorest in the Philippines, while allowing warlords and extortion gangs to flourish. Many of the predominantly Catholic Philippines' Muslim minority live in the south.

The biggest rebel group, the 10,000-strong Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), had been working hard with President Benigno Aquino's administration for nearly six years to broker an end to the rebellion. But when congress failed to pass a bill last month that would have granted autonomy to the region, the peace process was frozen.

The MILF has pledged to honour a ceasefire while it waits for Aquino's successor to be elected mid-year. But hard-line groups opposed to compromise with the government have started to take advantage of the vacuum, as they sense an opportunity to raise their profile and prove their credentials to IS, according to analysts.

"There is an incentive if they show that they are a fighting force," Zachary Abuza, a professor at the National War College in Washington, who specialises in Southeast Asian security issues, told journalists.

In the most spectacular attack, a previously obscure group discounted by the military as a small-time extortion gang launched an assault on a remote army outpost on Mindanao, the largest southern island. The attack triggered a week of fighting that the military said left six soldiers and at least 12 militants dead and forced more than 30,000 people to flee their homes. The gunmen flew IS flags during the fighting and bandanas with the group's insignia were found when soldiers overran their base, a two-storey concrete building, according to the military.

At the same time about 100 kilometres (60 miles) away, soldiers were battling a bigger and much better known group that had previously declared allegiance to IS, the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF). That fighting, which began about a week after parliament missed its deadline to pass the autonomy legislation, has claimed the life of one soldier, according to the military. The clashes are continuing. News footage on Tuesday showed rockets being fired from an army helicopter, as well as troops in a cornfield firing mortars and carrying a wounded solider on an improvised stretcher.

The BIFF split from the MILF in 2008 after the previous peace process collapsed, then carried out attacks on Christian communities that left more than 400 people dead and 600,000 displaced.

"We all know what happened in 2008. We don't want that to happen again," MILF spokesman Von al-Haq told journalists. "If the government keeps dragging its feet on the peace process, this fighting will continue and more groups will be enticed to follow ISIS," he said, using another name for the Islamic State group.

Abuza also said more attacks could be expected from other groups that have publicly pledged allegiance to IS in Internet videos over recent years. These include the Abu Sayyaf, a group notorious for kidnapping foreigners.

The violence has over the decades mainly been restricted to the south, many hundreds of kilometres from the Philippine capital. But the Abu Sayyaf bombed a ferry in Manila Bay in 2004, killing more than 100 people.

Philippine authorities have regularly said fears of growing IS influence on Filipino militants are misplaced. They argue the militants are just criminals interested in money and not radical Islamist jihadists.

But Abuza said the ability of IS to provide money and other forms of support were key to its rising influence in the south and not its violent brand of Islam.

"It really has nothing to do with ideology," Abuza said. "This is all about resources."    (AFP)

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