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Nine people killed and three injured in feud between Philippine Muslim clans
Philippines-Manila bay/Pixabay

The Arab News reported, citing the AFP, police in Philippines said that nine people were killed and three injured in the southern Philippines Saturday when a convoy of SUVs was shot at in an ambush linked to a feud between rival Muslim clans.

The attack occurred in a region with a long history of violence, and a short drive from where 58 people — including 32 journalists — were murdered in the nation’s worst political massacre in 2009.

According to police, clan leader Peges Mamasainged and eight others were killed as they traveled down a farm-lined road in Maguindanao province.

Provincial police spokesman Fhaeyd Cana told AFP, both the victims and attackers were led by former commanders of a Muslim guerilla group that waged a bloody, decades-long insurgency in the region before a peace agreement was signed in 2014.

Authorities are looking for suspects led by Mamasainged’s rival, Cana said, adding the two families were involved in a long-running blood feud.

Manila city in Philippines/Pixabay
Manila city in Philippines/Pixabay

Well-armed Muslim families in the mainly Catholic country’s lawless south at times resort to clan warfare to settle disputes that can last for generations.

He added: “[Guindulungan town] police described this attack as a rido,” Cana said, using the local term for blood feud.

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The attack was the province’s bloodiest since the 2009 massacre.

Five clan members were among the gunmen found guilty of those killings. The family’s leaders were sentenced to 30-year prison terms in 2019.

Both the main suspect in Saturday’s attack and the slain Mamasainged were once commanders of the Bangsamoro Islamic Armed Forces, the military arm of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.

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The front signed a peace deal with Manila in March 2014, ending decades of rebellion that claimed tens of thousands of lives. Its leaders now head a self-ruled area in the former battlefields that includes Maguindanao.

However, the decommissioning of thousands of former guerrilla fighters and their weapons has been delayed by the coronavirus pandemic as well as technical issues.

Source: arabnews

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