At least 30 people, many of them members of the Philippine National Police (PNP), were feared killed in a gun battle that erupted between security forces and some 300 Muslim rebels in Maguindanao on Sunday.
Military sources said 37 members of the PNP Special Action Force who were out to arrest Malaysian terrorist Zulkifli bin Hir, alias Marwan, encountered Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, around 5 am in Pidsandawan village in Masasapano, Maguindanao.
Reports reaching the office of the Philippine Institute for Political Violence and Research headed by former police intelligence director Rodolfo Mendoza, said at least two police officers were also killed in the fighting that was still raging at press time.
Police and military officials refused to provide information while the fighting was going on, but military field reports indicated that the government side had suffered major casualties.
Several BIFF rebels were also reported killed in the clash but no official figures were given except for two fatalities who were identified through their aliases Sala and Kansa, all belonging to the group of Commander Resbak of the BIFF’s 105th Brigade.
Three high-powered firearms were also reportedly taken by Commander Visayas from the slain PNP-SAF contingent at the battle site.
The fighting started after the PNP-SAF contingent swooped down on the supposed hideout of Marwan and subsequently attacked it, but they met stiff resistance from some 300 heavily armed BIFF fighters.
It was reported that elements of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front from the 118th base command and 105th base command supported the fight against the security forces.
Eleven SAF policemen were pinned down and dozen others were wounded in the initial fighting, prompting them to call for reinforcement.
But the members of the Army’s 45th Infantry Battalion that reinforced the PNP-SAF and the soldiers were held back by the BIFF fighters.
There were no reports on what happened to Malaysian terrorist Marwan who was with the BIFF rebels when the security forces attacked them.
“Ceasefire monitors are now on the ground to separate the forces and remove the casualties,” regional military spokesman captain Joan Petinglay told MST.
Mohagher Iqbal, the lead MILF negotiator in a landmark peace deal signed in March last year, also confirmed the incident, but neither side would say how many fighters were wounded or killed, or to whom they belonged.
The 10,000-member MILF had agreed to end decades of rebellion in the mainly Catholic nation in exchange for a proposed law now being debated in parliament that would give the minority Muslims self-rule in several southern provinces.
“This is the first encounter between the MILF and [government forces] this year. Hopefully, this will be the last,” Iqbal said in a telephone interview with MST. (Details c/o MST, F. Tuyay)