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Philippines kills 11 Abu Sayyaf militants

The Philippine troops killed 11 Abu Sayyaf militants, including an influential commander, in an assault on the extremists on Friday, following their beheading a captive, whose family was too poor to pay ransom, the military said.

Regional military commander Maj Filemon Tan said 17 soldiers were wounded when hundreds of army troops surrounded a vast jungle area in Sulu province's mountainous Patikul town and clashed with scattered groups of 100 militants. Among the 11 dead militants was Amah Maas, commander of the group, who had severed arms and was implicated in ransom kidnappings, including of European tourists.

President Rodrigo Duterte ordered the troops to destroy the militants in their jungle bases, after extremists on Wednesday beheaded a Filipino teenager, Patrick James Aldovar, who was abducted near a police camp in Sulu's main Jolo town last month. "The order of the president is to search and destroy the Abu Sayyaf, so that's what we are doing," Tan said, adding that over 1,200 troops, including special forces commandos, were involved in the assaults in Patikul and other Sulu hinterlands.

Thousands of reinforcement troops have been flown by C130 cargo planes to Sulu and nearby Basilan island to help in the ongoing offensive. Many of the troops were freed up from other combat zones in the country after Duterte declared an indefinite ceasefire with communist rebels, who are engaged in peace talks brokered by Norway with the government.

The Abu Sayyaf has been blacklisted as a terrorist organisation by the US and the Philippines for deadly bombings, kidnappings and beheadings.

The militants are still holding several foreign and local hostages in their jungle bases, including Norwegian Kjartan Sekkingstad, who was kidnapped along with two Canadian men and a Filipino woman from a southern marina in September last year.

The Canadians were beheaded after huge ransom demands were not met and the woman was freed before Duterte assumed the presidency on June 30.
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