Philippine soldiers and Muslim rebels traded fire
in the restive south as the death toll rose to 53 in the most serious security
crisis President Benigno Aquino's administration has faced
Four civilians, six soldiers and police officers and 43 Moro
National Liberation Front rebels had died since fighting began on September 9,
military spokesman Major Angelo Guzman said on Saturday. About 69,000 residents
had fled homes in Zamboanga City, said Adriano Fuego of the Office of Civil
Defence.
The rising death toll increases the pressure on Mr Aquino to
end the standoff in Mindanao, a resource-rich region where four decades of
insurgency have killed about 200,000 people and stifled development.
Prolonged violence in Zamboanga, parts of which were occupied
by rebel forces on September 9, would give the rebels a ''strategic advantage''
and highlight Mr Aquino's difficulty in bringing peace to the area, said Rommel
Banlaoi, executive director of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and
Terrorism Research.
''We will end this at the soonest possible time,'' Mr Aquino
said in a speech in Zamboanga on Saturday, after warning on Friday that he
would use the ''full force of the state'' if needed against the fighters loyal
to Moro National Liberation Front founder Nur Misuari.
The clashes coincide with the resumption of peace
negotiation with a separate rebel group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front,
which signed a wealth-sharing agreement with the government in July.
About 70 people had been wounded since September 9, and 19
rebels had either been captured or had surrendered, Major Guzman said.
In Lamitan, 40 kilometres from Zamboanga, about 10,000
people fled after a gunfight between soldiers and about 100 members of another
guerilla group who tried to enter the city on Friday, said Ramon Santos,
director at the Office of Civil Defence.
Fighting in Zamboanga continued even after Vice-President
Jejomar Binay's efforts to broker a ceasefire on Friday, Defence Secretary
Voltaire Gazmin told DZBB radio on Saturday. ''We all want peace and to avoid
further bloodshed. There's a firefight now, so there can't be a ceasefire,'' Mr
Gazmin said.
Military operations were continuing in five towns,
Lieutenant Colonel Ramon Zagala said. Moro National Liberation Front fighters
were holding as many as 100 hostages.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/world/ceasefire-fails-in-philippines-20130914-2treg.html#ixzz2f0A4bfU2
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