At least 18 soldiers
were killed in fierce day-long fighting with Abu Sayyaf extremists in the
southern Philippines on Saturday in the largest single-day government
combat loss this year.
At least 52 other soldiers were wounded in the clashes with the Abu
Sayyaf and its allied gunmen in the hinterlands bordering Tipo Tipo and
Al-Barka towns on Basilan island, three military officials told AP. Four
militants were killed in the clashes.
The large combat casualties were reported as the country marked the Day
of Valor to remember Filipino veterans who perished in World War II.
Government forces were deployed to kill or capture Abu Sayyaf commander
Isnilon Hapilon, who has publicly pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group
and has been hunted for years for his alleged involvement in several terrorist
attacks.
The militants, however, apparently managed to reinforce their ranks
quickly and managed to muster between 100 and 150 fighters, allowing them to
inflict large casualties on troops, the officials said.
It’s the largest single-day government combat loss this year in the
south, where the military has been battling Muslim separatist rebels and
extremists, and Marxist guerrillas.
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