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| Marawi City |
Snipers in high-rise buildings are the main problem
facing Philippine forces battling to crush pro-Islamic State fighters who have
occupied a southern city for more than a month, a military spokesman said
Saturday.
Lieutenant Colonel Jo-ar Herrera said this was the
reason the government was using air strikes against the militants despite the
massive damage it may cause in the city of Marawi.
"If we do not use air strikes, we will incur
more casualties of our troops," he told reporters in Marawi, which was
overrun by hundreds of militants on May 23.
Despite more than a month of fighting with hundreds
of government troops, militants flying the black flag of the Islamic State
group are still entrenched in parts of the city.
The military has used jet fighters, attack planes
and helicopter gunships, armed with bombs and rockets, to attack areas where
the gunmen are hiding.
"We have identified key defensive positions.
These are being subjected to surgical air strikes now. They are still occupying
high-rise buildings. We need to take them down so we can facilitate a swift
offensive of our troops," Herrera said.
"One reason we are using air assets... is this
is the advantage we need to neutralise the snipers' positions," the
regional military spokesman added.
"They occupy high-rise buildings so we have to
be higher. So we use air strikes."
While hundreds of fighters rampaged through much of
Marawi in the early days of the siege, Herrera said there were now around 80
gunmen still active in the "main battle area" comprising around 800
buildings.
"These are the tall buildings. This was the
centre of commerce of Marawi City," he explained.
However the buildings also needed to be cleared of
improvised bombs and other booby-traps as the troops advance, he said.
There are also about 300 civilians trapped in the
area, Herrera said, adding that some were being used as hostages, bearers of
supplies and even being forced to help in looting the city.
President Rodrigo Duterte last month vowed to
"crush" the militants, but several deadlines have already been missed
to end a conflict that has forced almost 400,000 people from their homes.
The fighting has reduced Marawi, considered the
Muslim capital of the largely Catholic Philippines, to a ruined ghost town. It
also prompted Duterte to declare martial law over the entire southern
Philippines.
Herrera said 366 enemy
fighters, 39 civilians and 87 government troops had been killed in the fighting
so far.

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