海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Separatist clashes in Philippines could renew insurgency

Two separate incidents, both carried out by Muslim separatist groups, indicate that more than four decades of religious conflict are not over.

By Whitney Eulich, Staff writer

鈥 A daily summary of global reports on security issues.

Fighting between Muslim separatists and government troops spread to a second island in the southern Philippines today, while a hostage standoff entered its fourth day, raising fears that an insurgent threat is on the rise there.

Flames engulfed homes聽and periodic gunfire echoed across Zamboanga city on the island of Mindanao, where a breakaway faction of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) has held聽some 170 hostages since Monday, according to Reuters and Associated Press. 聽

At least 13,000 people have been evacuated from districts across Zamboanga, government sources told CNN.

"We don't want any civilian casualties," Army spokesman Domingo Tutaan said at a news conference. "[We] want that this incident in Zamboanga to be resolved immediately or as soon as possible."

The conflict began on Monday after the MNLF tried to raise a flag in Zamboanga鈥檚 city hall, declaring independence from the national government, police told The New York Times. Rebels say it was a peaceful march, but Steven Rood from the Asia Foundation said he鈥檚 skeptical.

鈥淛udging by the personnel in those boats, it is utterly unthinkable that this was meant as a peaceful rally,鈥 Mr. Rood told Time magazine.

The separatist MNLF movement was founded in 1971 with the aim of creating an independent Muslim state in the predominantly Catholic nation. The group signed a peace deal with the government in 1996, though there have been splinter groups, like the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which signed its own peace deal with the government last October. That 2012 deal raised high hopes, reported 海角大神. 聽More than 120,000 people have been killed and 2 million displaced over the four decades of conflict.

MNLF-leader Nur Misuari says his group is not behind the events this week, reports CNN, though the government disagrees.

鈥淣ur Misuari is denying his involvement, but all indications point to his running this operation in Zamboanga City from the very beginning,鈥 military spokesman Col. Rodrigo Gregorio told The New York Times.

Reuters reports that "Muslim Moro make up the largest non-海角大神 group in the Philippines, at around 10 percent of a total 97 million Filipinos.鈥

Zamboanga city mayor Maria Isabell Climaco said the rebels are calling for the United Nations to come in and broker and end to the fighting.

According to the AP:

Today鈥檚 attack on the nearby island of Basilan is believed to be led by a separate group, the Al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf, reports the AP.

According to Time, 鈥淸p]reviously, the MNLF has been involved in hostage crises from which they have been allowed to walk away. But the current standoff in Zamboanga, with at least four civilian casualties, is the most severe carried out by the group since 1996.聽鈥楾here will be demands for accountability,鈥 says Rood, 鈥渂ut the negotiations will be very tough.鈥欌