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Troops seize $1.6 m cash as fighting enters third week

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MARAWI CITY: Philippines troops found bundles of banknotes and cheques worth about $1.6 million abandoned by militants holed up in Marawi City, a discovery the military said on Tuesday was evidence that the fighters were pulling back.


Fighters linked to IS have been cornered in a built-up sliver of the southern lakeside town after two weeks of intense combat. The military said that over the past 24 hours it had taken several buildings that had been defended by snipers.


In one house they found a vault loaded with neat stacks of money worth 52.2 million pesos ($1.06 million) and cheques made out for cash worth 27 million pesos ($550,000).


“The recovery of those millions of cash indicates that they are running because the government troops are pressing in and focusing on destroying them,” Marines Operations Officer Rowan Rimas told a news conference in the town as helicopters on machinegun runs buzzed overhead.


Black smoke poured from an area near one of the town’s mosques and the lake after bombings by OV-10 attack aircraft and artillery fire from the ground.


The battle for Marawi has raised concerns that the ultra-radical IS, on a back foot in Syria and Iraq, is building a regional base on the Philippine island of Mindanao.


Officials said that, among the several hundred militants who seized the town on May 23, there were about 40 foreigners from neighbouring Indonesia and Malaysia but also from India, Saudi Arabia, Morocco and Chechnya.


Progress in the military campaign has been slow because hundreds of civilians are still trapped or being held hostage in the urban heart of the town, officials have said.


“In a few days, we will we will be able to get everything, we will be able to clear the entire Marawi City,” armed forces Chief of Staff General Eduaro Año said in a radio interview.


Fighting erupted in Marawi after a bungled raid aimed at capturing Isnilon Hapilon, whom IS proclaimed as its “emir” of Southeast Asia last year after he pledged allegiance to the group.


— Reuters


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