Filipino rebels free hostages seized in attack

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AP Manila
Last Updated : Sep 24 2013 | 8:05 AM IST
Muslim rebels opposed to peace talks with the Philippine government released nine teachers and four village officials today a day after taking hostages in an attack on a southern town that killed 10 people, including a civilian who was decapitated, officials said.
This week's violence came as government troops battled the last few dozen gunmen from another Muslim rebel group, the Moro National Liberation Front, which on September 9 took more than 100 civilians hostage and occupied areas of Zamboanga city.
About 40 Moro rebels holding around 20 hostages are still holed up in Zamboanga, military spokesman Lt. Col. Ramon Zagala said.
It was not known if the two attacks were related but the leaders of the two groups have met at least once and both oppose the peace talks involving the 11,000-strong Moro Islamic Liberation Front.
In the latest attack yesterday, fighters of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters assaulted an outpost of unarmed government militiamen in Midsayap town in North Cotabato province and seized more than a dozen hostages. As army troops closed in, clashes broke out and the rebels used their captives as human shields, said regional military spokesmen Col. Dickson Hermoso said.
Four soldiers and four rebels were killed, he said. Troops today recovered the bodies of two civilians, one of whom was decapitated and another shot in the head, said another military spokesman, Col. Dickson Hermoso.
Some hostages later escaped or were freed by the troops, while the remaining nine teachers and four officials were set free at 4:45 a.M. Today, the military said.
"The rebels suddenly arrived there. Some were not even wearing their uniforms and just changed into their uniforms there," Loreto Cabaya, a member of the North Cotabato provincial board, told GMA News TV network.
The Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters is a faction of the larger Moro Islamic Liberation Front, now the dominant Muslim rebel group engaged in peace talks for a new autonomy deal for minority Muslims in the south of the predominantly Roman Catholic nation.
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First Published: Sep 24 2013 | 8:05 AM IST

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