Home News Islamist jihadis attack Mindanao town but are driven out

Islamist jihadis attack Mindanao town but are driven out

A group of militants reportedly inspired by the so-called Islamic State attacked a town in the southern Philippine region of Mindanao on Dec. 3.

Militants from the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters (BIFF) attacked the town of Datu Piang late in the evening.

“Notre Dame of Dulawan is under attack and fighting is going on …. Prayers for the safety of civilians and school,” read a social media post by Oblates missionary priest Eliseo Mercado.




A few hours later, the priest again posted on his social media account the “positive news” that the fighting has stopped, and the gunmen already left.

No casualties were reported.

Online news site Mindanews quoted Lt. Col. Anhouvic Atilano, spokesman of the Army’s 6th Infantry Division, describing the BIFF attack as a “harassment”.

The military spokesman said reports that the town’s Catholic church and school were burned by the gunmen were not true.

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On morning of Dec. 4, the Philippine National Police said the situation was under control.

“Our troops are in place. For now, the [situation] is under control,” said police spokesman Brigadier General Ildebrandi Usana.

He said only a police vehicle was set on fire by the attackers.

“No other damage in properties. No casualties,” he said, adding that after 45 minutes, the town was cleared “from any further intrusion.”

The BIFF is a breakaway group of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front founded that has aligned with the so-called Islamic State.

BIFF fighters reportedly participated in the attack of the city of Marawi in 2017 that lasted for five months. The Philippine Defense Department said at least 40 BIFF fighters took part in the fighting.

Destroyed buildings in the southern Philippine city of Marawi await reconstruction more than two years after fighters of the so-called Islamic State attacked the city in 2017. (Photo by Divina Suson)

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