Philippine envoys talk with Islamist militant leader during brief Eid truce
Marawi City(Philippines): Philippine emissaries met on Sunday with a
leader of a militant group loyal to Islamic State, officials said, taking
advantage of a short truce in a battle over a southern city occupied by rebels
for more than a month.
The eight Muslim leaders entered the conflict zone
in the heart of Marawi City alongside rescue teams. It was not immediately
clear what was discussed with Abdullah Maute, one of two brothers in charge of
the Islamist group named after them.
Retired General Dickson Hermoso, who coordinates
efforts to free trapped civilians, said a unilateral eight-hour truce by the
army to mark the Eid al-Fitr Islamic holiday was extended to enable the talks,
details of which he withheld to avoid jeopardising chances for dialogue.
"We need to balance this because this is very
precarious," Hermoso told reporters.
He said the Maute group released some women and
children on Sunday and the emissaries had come under fire briefly from rebel
snipers.
"We have only established a foothold with the
Maute," he said.
"We hope both sides will again grant us the
respite."
The military had on Saturday said Abdullah Maute
had fled from the town and was no longer in the fight. Though they have no
solid evidence, the authorities believe his brother, Omarkhayam, was among
three of the seven Maute brothers killed.
A source familiar with the meeting said the
emissaries were from Marawi and were only granted access to Maute because they
were of the same "Maranao" clan.
The seizure of Marawi has caused the biggest
internal security crisis in decades for the Philippines, and a realisation that
the long-feared arrival of Islamic State could be a reality.
Images of black-clad fighters and Islamic State
flags flying in Marawi has caused alarm in the mainly Roman Catholic nation,
and the protracted occupation and presence of foreign fighters suggests the
militants may have bigger designs on the southern Philippines than previously
imagined.
The daily air strikes were halted on Sunday but
small skirmishes took place as rebel snipers fired intermittently on positions
held by troops.
Rescue teams tried to reach trapped civilians and
recover bodies of dead residents killed in the heart of a city battered for
weeks by clashes, air strikes and artillery shelling.
Rescue at ground zero
Military spokesman Jo-Ar Herrera said
troops had not resumed operations after the truce and were holding defensive
positions.
"We have reports there were around five people who came out from ground zero," Herrera told news channel ANC.
"We have reports there were around five people who came out from ground zero," Herrera told news channel ANC.
"We're very confident we can rescue
more."
Muslims attended prayers at a Marawi mosque in an
emotional gathering.
The violence has displaced some 246,000 people, and
killed more than 350, most of them rebels, and about 69 members of the security
forces. Twenty-six civilians have been killed but officials believe many more
could be dead.
"This is supposed to a day of happiness,"
said Imam Aleem Ansari Abdul Malik, who led the prayers.
"Families should be together but they were
torn apart."
He reminded Muslims to shun the advances of radical
groups.
"This is just a small fire, do not allow the
flames to go bigger by joining extremists," he said.
Conditions for those trapped in Marawi have been
dire, with witnesses reporting bodies on streets, limited food and water and a
constant threat of being killed by either the militants, or air strikes.
The threat of Islamic State gaining a foothold in
the Philippines has been raised by their losses in Syria and Iraq, and
intelligence reports that the militants are seeking new bases from which to
project their agenda.
Though the military is confident it can retake
Marawi soon, the level of the militants' preparations, combat capability and
resilience has created some trepidation about whether their assault could be
the beginning of a wider campaign.
Lieutenant Colonel Emmanuel Garcia, head of the
Western Mindanao civil-military operations, on Saturday said intelligence
indicated that Malaysian operative and extremist fundraiser Mahmud Ahmad had
been killed, while Isnilon Hapilon, the Islamic State anointed "emir"
of Southeast Asia, had fled.

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