President
Rodrigo Duterte has ordered his security forces to wipe out the Abu Sayyaf,
which has declared allegiance to the Islamic State group and recently beheaded
two Canadian hostages.
But an assault
that began last week on the heavily forested island of Jolo, one of the Abu Sayyaf’s
strongholds about 900km south of Manila, has met fierce resistance.
Fifteen troops
were killed and another 10 were injured in a single encounter with the Abu
Sayyaf on Monday.
An additional
2,500 troops were on Tuesday deployed to Jolo and nearby islands.
The extra troops
would join two brigades already involved in the fighting and here are at least
1,000 soldiers in a brigade.
“Go out and destroy them. Kill whoever they
are,” Duterte said last week, in reference to the Abu Sayyaf.
The Abu Sayyaf is
a loose network of a militants formed in the 1990s with seed money from Osama
bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network. It is based in remote Muslim populated southern
islands of the mainly Catholic Philippines, and has earned millions of dollars
from kidnappings-for-ransom.
While its leaders
have in recent years pledged allegiance to Islamic State, analysts say the
group is mainly focused on a lucrative kidnapping business rather than
religious ideology.
This year the militants
beheaded two Canadians after their demands for millions of dollars in ransoms
were rejected. The group is currently believed to be holding a Norwegian, a
Dutchman and five Indonesian sailors, according to the military.
Previous
Philippine leaders made similar vows as Duterte to wipe out the Abu Sayyaf and
failed, even with help from military ally the US.
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