South East Asia Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Oct 1, 2017
Sep 1, 2017

and
Hostages, IEDs slow down push to end war in Marawi October 13, 2017
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while
Gov’t fatalities in Marawi rise to 160
October 13, 2017
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The number of government troops killed in the war here has risen to 160, as state security forces make a hard push against remaining Islamic State-inspired terrorists holed up in a small pocket of the city to end the conflict by Oct. 15.

Col. Romeo Brawner Jr., deputy commander of Joint Task Force Ranao, did not specify the circumstances surrounding the latest military losses but said the number of slain terrorists had also risen—to 811 from 774 on Monday.

Brawner said soldiers cleared more recaptured areas in the main battle zone, the size of which was now just three or four hectares.

Deadline

On Wednesday, troops recovered the bodies of 27 terrorists killed in the fighting and in airstrikes on the positions of the remaining gunmen in the city center.

“The military remains confident to end the Marawi crisis by Oct. 15, which will be followed by a second clearing operation before the rehabilitation starts,” Brawner said.

Lt. Gen. Carlito Galvez, chief of the military’s Western Mindanao Command, said the number of terrorists who continued to put up resistance could still be 100, more than double the initial military estimate of 38 to 48 gunmen.

Galvez said that among those still fighting alongside Omar Maute of the Maute terror group and Isnilon Hapilon of the Abu Sayyaf bandit group in the main battle zone were nine foreigners. He did not specify their nationalities.

At the start of the war here, Galvez said there were about 50 foreign terrorists who fought alongside the Maute and Abu Sayyaf gunmen.

Some were from Middle Eastern countries and the majority were from Malaysia and Indonesia.

Among those confirmed killed was Malaysian Muhammad Joraimee Awang Raimee, Galvez said.

Joraimee, also known as Abu Nur and the right-hand man of university-professor-turned-militant Mahmud Ahmad, was slain in fighting on Sept. 28.

Omar Maute still alive

“We still have some information that Omar, Dr. Mahmud, Amin Baku and six to nine foreign terrorists are still alive. They are considered very dangerous because they are aggressive and very desperate,” Galvez added.

Mahmud and Joraimee were among the alleged key planners of the May 23 Marawi siege, along with Hapilon and Maute siblings Abdullah, Omar and Madie.

Galvez said the part of the city that remained to be cleared, which included Barangay Dansalan, was assigned to Task Force Musang.

“One sector remaining to be cleared and we are confident to clear it not later than Oct. 15, which is our deadline,” he added.

Galvez said troops were inching forward cautiously because of the presence of the hostages, including 12 children and three women.


Escaped hostages

Three hostages managed to escape from the main battle area earlier this week.

Galvez said the escaped hostages, who were later rescued, had told authorities that the other women and children inside the main battle area were family members of the Maute gunmen and their allies.

Brawner earlier said the military had expected the fight to become more difficult as the terrorists were being pushed into smaller areas.

“It’s difficult in the sense that the structures there were closely built. Also, there are a lot of small houses, structures that they can easily hide in,” he said.

Galvez said the military was determined to finish the job before its self-imposed deadline.
... self-imposed deadline October 15 ... that's this weekend
 
Friday at 8:51 PM
Oct 1, 2017

while
Gov’t fatalities in Marawi rise to 160
October 13, 2017
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... self-imposed deadline October 15 ... that's this weekend
so
Anticipation high on Marawi war's end
Updated 19:41 PM PHT Sat, October 14, 2017
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It was an unusual sight in war-torn Marawi – women sweeping by the roadside to clean up their community.

Residents are hoping to return to the city soon, even if their homes may have been reduced to rubble.

"Hindi kami nawawalan ng pag-asa, at sana matapos nang mas maaga, para makauwi na rin kung may uuwian pa," one of the residents, Saifa Lumampa, told CNN Philippines.

[Translation: We won't lose hope. We wish it would end sooner so we can go home.]

More than 300,000 residents have been forced to evacuate their homes since May 23, when government troops and terrorists began fighting in Marawi, the provincial capital of Lanao del Sur over 1,400 kilometers south of Manila.

It prompted President Rodrigo Duterte to declare martial law throughout the Mindanao region.

Authorities and residents look forward to Sunday, October 15, the military's self-imposed target to retake Marawi from ISIS-inspired Maute terrorists.

The military, which has repeatedly revised deadlines to end the war, is hunting down at least 48 Maute fighters within a three-hectare area near Lake Lanao.

But the sound of explosions and gunshots cast doubts the crisis is nearing its end.

"Kung patapos na, bakit may nagpuputukan pa," resident Maimona Macapaar Regaro said.

[Translation: If it's about to end, why are there firefights still?]

The local crisis committee is assuring the residents they will immediately be informed when it is safe to return to their homes.

"They will inform us na tapos na, wala nang resistance diyan pero hanggang ngayon, meron pang pockets of resistance," said Lanao del Sur Crisis Management Committee spokesperson Zia Alonto-Adiong.

[Translation: They will inform us if there is no more resistance.]

Once the war is over, the government faces the challenge of rebuilding Marawi, which will cost more than ₱50 billion, according to Duterte and Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana.

A total of 160 government troops and 47 civilians were killed in the battle. A total of 817 Maute fighters have died.
 
Yesterday at 9:08 AM
Friday at 8:51 PM

so
Anticipation high on Marawi war's end
Updated 19:41 PM PHT Sat, October 14, 2017
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and
Marawi siege: Army kills Abu Sayyaf, Maute commanders

6 hours ago
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Two top Philippine commanders of an armed alliance that has declared loyalty to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (
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, also known as ISIS) group, have been killed, according to authorities, in a major blow to an ongoing armed rebellion in the country's south.

Isnilon Hapilon, the top commander of the Abu Sayyaf Group and Omarkhayam Maute of the Maute Group, as well as seven of their fighters, were killed on Monday, after military forces launched a major operation in the besieged city of Marawi, General Eduardo Ano, the top military commander, said in a press conference.

Ano said information provided by a female hostage, who escaped recently, led the government troops to the location of the armed fighters.

He added that the two commanders had never intended to give up arms, quoting them as telling the escaped hostage, "We will not surrender. We will die fighting".

Hapilon had a $5m bounty on his head issued by the US government. The government of the
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has also offered $200,000 for his capture, and a separate $100,000 for Omarkhayam.

Ano said dozens of fighters, including foreign nationals, remain holed up in one section of Marawi, and they are believed to be still holding hostages.

But with the deaths of Hapilon and Maute, "it is just a matter of time" before the siege will be over, Ano said, referring to the five-month battle that has left over 1,000 people dead, about 600,000 others displaced, and a historic city destroyed to the ground.

The siege of Marawi
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when military and police tried to serve an arrest warrant against Hapilon in May. Instead of giving up their arms, Hapilon formed an alliance with the Maute Group and launched a bloody rampage across the university town by the picturesque Lake Lanao. That prompted President Rodrigo Duterte to
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martial law in Mindanao.

Hapilon's notoriety has spanned almost two decades as one of Abu Sayyaf's top commanders in the islands of Basilan and Sulu, where the group has been involved in kidnappings and beheadings of hostages including several foreigners.

Multiple military operations have been conducted against the group, which previously aligned itself with
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. But Hapilon managed to evade the military dragnet several times.

Hapilon then switched his allegiance to ISIL, becoming its self-appointed Southeast Asian commander.

Earlier this year, he and his men moved to the province of Lanao del Sur to join forces with the ISIL-inspired Maute Group. The group was led by the brothers Omarkhayam and Abdullah. Abdullah and two other Maute brothers were reported killed by the military in September.

'Historical injustices'
Shidik Abantas, legal officer at Mindanao State University in Marawi, said the military operation on Monday was "very significant in a sense that the end of the siege is almost here".

"As to whether it will bring peace, it is complicated," Abantas told Al Jazeera.

"The rise of extremism in Mindanao, especially in our locality, is not really caused by the ISIS in the Middle East. It is mostly caused by the historical injustices that continue to this day."

As a local, he said he feels "depressed and annoyed" at the siege and destruction of Marawi, which he said were both preventable.

"The instant use of aerial bombings and the absolute abandonment of all forms of negotiation has led to the destruction of Marawi," he said.

"The destruction of the city has brought about mistrust between the locals and the government."

He also said that the "insistence of the government" to link locals to the armed fighters despite "zero or unsubstantial evidence" worsened the conflict.

Root of 'extremism'
Jay Batongbacal, lawyer and Southeast Asian Studies expert at the University of the Philippines, said Monday's operation was a "major blow" to Abu Sayyaf, setting it back "for a few years".

"But it does not mean that the Abu Sayyaf has been completely eliminated," he said, adding that the group has shown "resilience and adaptability" since it emerged in the 1990s.

"Experience has shown that it tends to lie low and then re-emerge as a threat after a while, with new leadership," Batongbacal told Al Jazeera.

"For as long as the social and economic conditions in Mindanao have not improved, the Abu Sayyaf will find fertile ground for a comeback."

Meanwhile, a retired senior military commander warned that a new generation of fighters could emerge from the Marawi conflict.

"The fighting and destruction in Marawi could inspire a generation of young Muslims to consider, or even adopt the fundamentalist ideology of ISIL," the retired officer, who asked not to be named to freely discuss the long-running rebellion, told Al Jazeera.

He said the extent of destruction of Marawi could "exacerbate" the situation.

"The Marawi conflict proved to be a serious challenge to the government and its security apparatus and has grave implications to the Philippines' war against terrorism," he said.

"The fact that the rebellion has practically held the nation and the military hostage for several months is a grave development.

"The terrorist group in Marawi was not a ragtag one, but a formidable force, well-organised, well-equipped, and highly motivated.

"The death of the duo and the end of Marawi hostilities may signal a temporary weakening of the movement. But the threat continues and may even evolve into a more serious and radicalised one."

'Beginning of bigger battle'
For Alia Fatma Macarambon, a student and resident of Marawi, the conflict is personal.

"This war broke my heart, every picture, every news regarding the war makes me cry, because it is not the Marawi that I know," she told Al Jazeera.

"It saddens me that there are so many innocent persons killed. I have close relatives and friends who have no home to go back to."

Ace Guro, an ethnic Maranao whose family hails from Marawi, said that while the latest development signals the war may be over soon, it is only "the beginning of a bigger battle" for her people.

"To be honest, some of us have considered not going back because the city is no longer the home it used to be. But those who do not have the privilege to leave will stay," she said.

Guro said the government should have a clear plan for rehabilitation that would give "incentives" for locals to work with the government.

"We need to build that kind of trust between each other to make things work. We want to make sure that what happened in Marawi will not go down in history as a mere crisis but as a success story of how we defeated terrorism despite being accused of such.

"Aside from the buildings that need to be fixed again, I think it's important to heal the wounds that we don't see, the spirit of the Maranaos that have been shaken by the crisis."
 
Yesterday at 8:53 PM
Yesterday at 9:08 AM

and
Marawi siege: Army kills Abu Sayyaf, Maute commanders

6 hours ago
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now
Philippine conflict: Duterte says Marawi is militant-free
9 hours ago
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Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has declared the city of Marawi "liberated" from militants, even as fighting continues.

The army said it was battling up to 30 militants left in the city, who were holding about 20 hostages.

Marawi has been partly held by fighters linked to so-called Islamic State (IS) since
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Troops have been trying to root them out in a conflict that has killed more than 1,000 people - mostly militants.

Mr Duterte made his announcement while addressing troops in Marawi on Tuesday, saying: "Ladies and gentlemen, I hereby declare Marawi liberated from the terrorists."

Gunfire could be heard in the city just moments before he made that statement, according to reports.

A military spokesman described the president's declaration as symbolic, but also as a signal to begin planning the reconstruction of Marawi, which has been largely destroyed by almost daily bombardment.

Separately, the military has said they were still conducting operations to flush out the remaining militants and rescue their hostages.

Mr Duterte's declaration came a day after the army said they had killed top militants
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and Omar Maute.

The two men led the Abu Sayyaf and Maute groups which formed part of the insurgency in Marawi. Both groups have pledged allegiance to, or have links to, IS.

More than 800 militants have been killed in the fighting, which has also killed more than 150 government troops.

Nearly 50 civilians have been killed, and thousands more have fled the fighting.

Observers say the occupation of Marawi stoked fears that militant Islamist ideology is more prevalent on the island of Mindanao than had previously been imagined.

The region is the only Muslim-majority part of the otherwise largely Catholic Philippines.

The tenacious resistance of the militants, an alliance of two groups pledging allegiance to so-called Islamic State, caught the government by surprise, the BBC's Jonathan Head reports.

Armed groups have fought intermittently for more autonomy on the island of Mindanao for decades, but rarely as fiercely as those who held Marawi over the past five months.

The growing radicalisation of parts of Muslim society in the Philippines has been attributed by some observers to the slow pace of the long-running peace talks with the government.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Indonesian Navy commissions two AS 565 MBe helicopters, VIP transport Aircraft

The Indonesian Navy (Tentara Nasional Indonesia-Angkatan Laut: TNI-AL) has commissioned its first two new AS565 MBe Panther helicopters and a Beechcraft King Air 350i transport aircraft.

The assets were inducted on 13 October at an airbase in Juanda, Surabaya in a commissioning ceremony presided over by TNI-AL chief Admiral Ade Supandi.

The King Air 350i twin turboprop aircraft will be operated by the TNI-AL’s 600 Skadron Udara as a VIP transport, while the helicopters will be deployed for anti-submarine warfare (ASW) duties, said Adm Supandi in his address at the commissioning ceremony.

Indonesia has ordered 11 AS565 MBe Panther helicopters to bolster the TNI-AL’s embarked aviation and ASW capabilities. The first three airframes were delivered to Indonesian state-owned aircraft manufacturer PT Dirgantara Indonesia (PTDI) in November 2016.

Airbus Helicopters will deliver the basic AS565 MBe air vehicles at Marignane for delivery to PTDI, with the Indonesian firm to reassemble and outfit the airframes with an ASW suite. This suite includes the L-3 Ocean Systems DS-100 HELRAS dipping sonar, a lightweight torpedo launching system, and a lightweight operator console.

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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
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Indonesia delays decommissioning of Ahmad Yani-class frigates amid South China Sea obligations

The Indonesian Navy (Tentara Nasional Indonesia – Angkatan Laut) has decided to postpone the retirement of its Ahmad Yani-class frigates amid operational requirements that necessitate continued service of the platforms for about one more year, the service has confirmed with Jane’s .

Citing a TNI-AL source from the service’s Western Fleet (KOARMABAR), Jane’s reported in February 2016 that the country will start to retire the first of its six Ahmad Yani-class frigates in 2017. This decision was made at the 2016 iteration of an annual naval technical and logistics work plan meeting, and the intention then was to retire the class at a rate of one ship a year from 2017 to 2022.

However, given current progress of the Martadinata (SIGMA 10514)-class’ induction, and ongoing service obligations, this schedule has since been delayed by about one more year to ensure that there are no operational gaps in the fleet’s deployment capacity especially in the Natuna Sea where there is now an increasing number of unregulated fishing cases, said the TNI-AL.

Indonesia commissioned its first Martadinata-class frigate, KRI Raden Eddy Martadinata (331), in April 2017. The second-of-class, which will be known as KRI IGusti Ngurah Rai with pennant number 332 once it is in service, was launched by state-owned shipbuilder PT PAL in September 2016. The country is expected to acquire follow-on ships in this class, but a formal procurement process for this has yet to begin.

The TNI-AL’s Ahmad Yani-class ships were formerly in service with the Royal Netherlands Navy (RNLN) as the Van Speijk class. After being in service

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Jan 26, 2017
Sep 14, 2016
and now
Indonesia takes delivery of first SIGMA 10514 frigate

... the rest of the article is behind paywall at Jane's
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it seems they'll soon get the second copy:
Akhir Bulan Ini TNI AL Akan Terima Kapal Perang Perusak Kawal Rudal
19 Oktober 2017
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google translation of the title is
"The End of the Month The Navy Will Receive The Missile Defender War Vessel"
and apparently they talk #332

I now commented on their armament 10 minutes ago
 
until now I thought it was over after
Tuesday at 8:28 PM
Yesterday at 8:53 PM

now
Philippine conflict: Duterte says Marawi is militant-free
9 hours ago
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but
Filipino troops battling final 30 IS-linked gunmen in Marawi
Oct 22, 2017
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Philippine troops on Sunday were battling a final group of about 30 pro-Islamic State group militants who were surrounded in one building with all their hostages gone as a nearly five-month siege neared its end in southern Marawi city, a military official said.

Army Col. Romeo Brawner said troops were aiming to end the crisis before midnight Sunday. He said the remaining gunmen, who include some Indonesian and Malaysian fighters, have the option of surrendering, or they can either be captured or killed.

"Our government forces will try to do everything to finish the firefight today," Brawner said in a news conference in Marawi. He said the battle area centered in a two-story building near Lake Lanao where the firefight continued to rage at noon.

"It's either they all get killed, because they're determined to die inside, or we capture them or they surrender," he said.

A gradual withdrawal of military forces was underway with the easing of the fighting, which has left at least 1,131 people dead, including 919 militants and 165 soldiers and policemen. Troops continued to ask the gunmen, who are leaderless and running low on ammunition, to surrender by using loudspeakers, Brawner said.

Military chief of staff Gen. Eduardo Ano said some of the remaining militants were "suicidal."

Hundreds of militants, many waving Islamic State group-style black flags, launched the siege on May 23 in Marawi, a bastion of Islamic faith in the south of the largely Roman Catholic
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, by seizing the lakeside city's central business district and outlying communities. They ransacked banks and shops, including gun stores, looted houses and smashed statues in a Roman Catholic cathedral, according to the military.

At least 1,780 of the hostages seized by the militants, including a Roman Catholic priest, were rescued, and a final group of 20 captives were freed overnight, Brawner said. That left the gunmen with none of the hostages they had used as human shields to slow the military advance for months.

The disastrous uprising, which has displaced hundreds of thousands of Marawi residents, erupted as the Philippines was hosting annual summit meetings of Southeast Asian nations and their Asian and Western counterparts, including the United States and Australia. The two governments have deployed surveillance aircraft and drones to help Filipino troops rout the Marawi militants.

The siege has sparked fears that the Islamic State group may gain a foothold in Southeast Asia by influencing and providing funds to local militants as it suffers battle defeats in
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and Iraq.

Last Monday, troops killed the final two surviving leaders of the siege, including Isnilon Hapilon, who is listed among the FBI's most-wanted terror suspects in the world, and Omarkhayam Maute. Following their deaths, President
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traveled near the main scene of battle and declared Marawi had been essentially liberated from terrorist influence, although skirmishes with a few dozen gunmen continued.

DNA tests done in the United States requested by the Philippine military have confirmed the death of Hapilon, according to the U.S. Embassy in Manila. Washington has offered a bounty of up to $5 million for Hapilon, who had been blamed for kidnappings for ransom of American nationals and other terrorist attacks.

Among the foreign militants believed to be with the remaining gunmen in Marawi were Malaysian militant Amin Baco and an Indonesian known only as Qayyim. Both have plotted attacks and provided combat training to local militants for years but have eluded capture in the south.
 
this is also quite interesting article:
Total victory declared in Marawi over ISIL
7 hours ago
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The Philippines' top military commanders on Saturday declared a total victory over the Maute fighters linked to
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(also known as ISIS) in Marawi City, as troops continued to push towards the few remaining positions still held by the fighters.

The declaration of victory was announced by General Danilo Pamonag, during a military ceremony in Marawi, where he said the operation began with clearing some 3,000 structures or buildings and "now, we have reached our objective."

“I would like to say it’s already done. It’s a complete and total victory for the troops," he said.

The Commission on Human Rights in the
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has said it has begun investigating complaints of
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violation during military operations in Marawi City.

According to the government since May 23, the ISIL liked fighters have lost 897 men while the military and police casualties have reached 165. Months of heavy government air raids have displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians. The government said rebuilding the area could cost at least 50 billion Philippine pesos ($971m).

Despite the military's declaration of victory, army commanders said they did Marawi City siege will be over until the coming days.

The military said the fighters, who are holding three to four male captives, are still resisting in a small area. Soldiers are also searching for the three sons of Isnilon Hapilon, the slain leader of ISIL in Southeast Asia. It is believed any one of them has the potential to assume the leadership of ISIL in the country and continue the fight.

The Philippine government claimed that the Marawi foreigners instigated and led the rebellion in Marawi. Amin Bacu, a Malaysian, and Ibno Kayin, an Indonesian, were named as the leaders of the last remaining fighters still resisting.
 
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