MANILA
(Reuters) - Philippine lawmakers on Saturday voted to retain martial law on the
southern island of Mindanao until the end of the year, giving President Rodrigo
Duterte more time to tackle armed extremists allied with the Islamic State group.
Duterte more time to tackle armed extremists allied with the Islamic State group.
Some 261
legislators agreed to extend military rule in a seven hour-long joint special
session of the House of Representatives and the Senate, more than the required
two-thirds of the house.
Security
officials had told lawmakers that martial law was needed to stabilize a region
where Islamic State was gaining influence, and supporters could be inspired to
stage uprisings in other areas of Mindanao, joined by foreign jihadists.
Defence
Secretary Delfin Lorenzana warned of more serious problems if the government
did not have the powers to act swiftly.
"We
need martial law because we haven't addressed yet the existence of other
Daesh-inspired groups," he said, referring to another name for Islamic
State.
Duterte
placed Mindanao under martial law on May 23 when heavily-armed militants
belonging to the Maute and Abu Sayyaf groups along with foreign fighters
stormed Marawi City, sparking the biggest security crisis of his presidency.
The battle
to liberate Marawi continues two months after, with more than 420 militants,
100 soldiers and 45 civilians killed. Some of those were executed by the
rebels, according to the military.
Government troops
pulverized and retook some of the Maute strongholds after weeks of artillery
attacks and airstrikes, but an estimated 70 militants remained holed up in the
downtown area.
"The
rebellion in Marawi continues to persist and we want to stop the spread of the
evil ideology of terrorism and free the people of Mindanao from the tyranny of
lawlessness and violent extremism," Presidential Spokesman Ernesto Abella
said in a statement.
But martial
law remains a sensitive issue in the Philippines as it brings back memories of
human rights abuses that occurred in the 1970s under the late dictator
Ferdinand Marcos.
He was
ousted in a "people power" revolt in 1986. Saturday's vote paves the
way for the first ever extension of a period of martial law since the Marcos
era.
Opponents
expressed fears Duterte might eventually place the entire country under martial
law, but the authorities have dismissed that.
Senator
Franklin Drilon said the extension until end of the year was too long and
Senator Risa Hontiveros, a staunch critic of Duterte, said martial law has
"no strategic contribution to the military's anti-terrorism
operations".
Congressman
Edcel Lagman said there was "no factual basis" for martial law and
that the siege in Marawi was terrorism, not rebellion.
Rebellion is
one of the pre-conditions for declaring martial law under a 1987 constitution
that was drafted to prevent a repeat of the Marcos era abuses.
Military
chief General Eduardo General Año said retaking Marawi has proven difficult
because it was the first time troops had engaged in a "Mosul-type, hybrid
urban warfare", referring to the fighting in the Iraqi city until recently
held by Islamic State.
Reuters
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