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Clash with the Maoists

October 7, 2011

Maoist guerrillas have threatened more attacks on foreign-operated mines in the southern Philippines. A clash has led to one soldier being killed and several being wounded.

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Philippine Marines arrive to take their positions near the Manila Peninsula Hotel at the financial district of Makati city east of Manila
The Philippine government is taking precautions to prevent Maoist attacksImage: AP

Troops clashed with communist rebels in the southern Philippines on Thursday amid a hunt for hundreds of guerrillas who attacked three nickel mining complexes, alarming the local mining industry.

Military spokesman Col. Arnulfo Marcelo Burgos said an army soldier was killed and three others wounded in the gun battle near Esperanza town in southern Agusan del Sur province. The troops captured a New People's Army encampment and 12 assault rifles and wounded several of the rebels.

It was not immediately clear if the guerrillas were among the more than 200 rebels who laid siege on three nickel mining complexes on Monday in Claver town in nearby Surigao del Sur province.

Western Mindanao military chief Marines Lt. Gen. Nelson Allaga pins a medal at a government hospital in Zamboanga city to one of 19 soldiers wounded in clashes with Abu Sayyaf extremists in the southern Philippine island of Sulu.
Civilians in Mindanao have come under several Maoist attacksImage: AP

Ongoing attacks of the Maoists

The attack on three mines on southern Mindanao Island on Monday, damaged about 50 percent of equipment at Taganito - the biggest of four mines operated by the country's largest nickel producer Nickel Asia Corporation. The corporation was forced to temporarily shut down operations after the attack.

Jorge Madlos, spokesman of the National Democratic Front (NDF), the political arm of the communist rebels in Mindanao, said in a statement that the attack on three mines in Surigao del Norte would serve as a warning to other companies violating rebel policies. He added that "The revolutionary movement will not hesitate to severely punish other mining companies if they continuously disregard these policies."

Nickel jewellries are popular in Germany. A shop in Hamburg.
Taganito Mining Corporation is the largest nickel producer in the PhilippinesImage: picture-alliance/dpa

"We are serious and determined to protect our patrimony, sovereignty and general welfare and interests of the people and the environment. We will use the full potential of the revolutionary movement to carry out these just policies," Madlos warned.

In the past, the rebels have attacked the $5.9 billion Tampakan project in South Cotabato province, considered Southeast Asia's largest undeveloped copper-gold prospect.

The Chamber of Mines of the Philippines accused the rebels of using environmental concern as an excuse to extort money from large-scale mining operations in the country.

Agencies: Reuters, AP (mj)
Editor: Grahame Lucas