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Second City Comes Under Assault From Islamic Rebels

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Three days after hundreds of Islamic rebels attacked Zamboagna City, Lamitan City was attacked by about 100 fighters.  No fatalities has been reported but there is widespread gunfire.
 
Anything west of Cagayan de Oro on Mindanao should be avoiding for any of you, no matter how hot the DIA girl is.  A full fledged insurrection in the region is underway.
 
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2 wounded, 5 missing as Moro gunmen attack Basilan
 
MANILA/ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines—About 100 Moro gunmen attacked Lamitan, Basilan Thursday morning, wounding at least two soldiers, the Military said.
 
Radyo Inquirer 990AM, quoting Lamitan City Vice Mayor Roderick Furigay, reported that at least five others were missing.
 
Military spokesman Brigadier General Domingo Tutaan Jr. said the gunmen were members of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) and the Abu Sayyaf group.
 
Authorities were still checking if the clash that started at around 8:30 a.m. near the police headquarters in Colonia village was related to the standoff in Zamboanga City, Tutaan said.
 
Government Mujiv Hataman of the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao said
“more or less 100″ Abu Sayyaf gunmen were on their way to Campo Uno, the police headquarters, when they clashed with Scout Rangers.
 
He denied that the gunmen were MNLF members, and that the planned attack was related to the standoff in Zamboanga City.
 
The clash lasted for 30 minutes, Hataman said, with the Abu Sayyaf extremists withdrawing and being pursued by government troops.
 
“Umatras na (They retreated),” Hataman told the Philippine Daily Inquirer by phone.
A military source said the ongoing firefight was led by Abu Sayyaf commander Isnilon Hapsilon.
 
Authorities were starting to evacuate affected families to a temporary shelter, Johnny Maquinad, operations officer of the Office of Civil Defense in Basilan, Sulu and Tawi-Tawi, told Radyo Inquirer.
 
Meanwhile, suspected Abu Sayyaf and MNLF gunmen stormed a military detachment in Magcawa village in Tipo-Tipo town at about 7 p.m., Army’s First Infantry Division spokesman Captain Jefferson Somera said.
 
Basilan island province is a boat ride away from Zamboanga city, where MNLF fighters have been holding their hostage since Monday, when government troops repulsed their attempt to erect a rebel flag at city hall.
 
The three-day crisis has virtually paralyzed Zamboanga, a lively trading city of nearly a million people, with most flights and ferry services suspended. Communities near the clashes resembled a war zone, with armored troop carriers lining streets, troops massing at a school and snipers taking positions atop buildings. A mosque and its minaret were pockmarked with bullet holes.
 
Nearly 15,000 villagers have fled from the fighting and took shelter at a grandstand in a seaside sports complex and schools. Troops were under orders to prevent the rebels from straying beyond the communities they have seized or getting reinforcements, Interior Secretary Mar Roxas said.
 
The rebels signed a peace deal in 1996, but their faction leader accuses the government of reneging on a promise to develop the impoverished, restive region. The rebel leader, Nur Misuari, has isolated himself and set out on a collision course with the government when he voiced opposition to the ongoing peace talks between the Philippines and the currently-dominant rebel movement, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.
 
The talks have steadily progressed toward a new and potentially larger Muslim autonomy deal, but Misuari felt left out. Last month, his group issued new threats to secede by establishing its own republic.
 
At least nine combatants and villagers have been killed since the standoff in Zamboanga began, officials said. President Benigno Aquino III has sent top Cabinet officials and his military chief of staff to oversee the security crisis in the country’s restive south, the scene of decades-long Muslim unrest in this predominantly Roman Catholic nation.
 
Misuari has not appeared in public or issued any statement since his followers barged into Zamboanga city’s coast early Monday and clashed with soldiers and police.
 
A gunbattle erupted at rebel-held Santa Catalina village on Wednesday, where an AP photographer saw from a distance about 30 villagers, believed to be hostages, who waved white cloths in front of a house and yelled, “Don’t fire, don’t fire.”
 
Zamboanga City Mayor Maria Isabelle Climaco said the rebels were demanding international mediation, adding that the rebels have so far refused to talk with provincial officials.
 
“They say that it’s an international problem, and no less than the international community, the U.N., should come in,” she told ABS-CBN TV network.
 
 
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