From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Jul 10): What Went Before: The Al-Barka MILF-military encounter
Despite a ceasefire, fighters of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF)
clashed with military troops on Oct. 18, 2011, in Al-Barka town in the province
of Basilan. The encounter, which lasted from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., left 19 soldiers
and six Moro insurgents dead.
The two sides blamed each other for the clash. MILF chief peace negotiator
Mohagher Iqbal said it was a deliberate attack by the military and the MILF
would protest it to the international monitoring team and the ceasefire
committee.
The MILF charged that the Special Forces troops intruded into its “area of
temporary stay.”
Lt. Col. Randolph Cabangbang, spokesman for the Western Mindanao Command at
the time, said the troops did not intrude into the MILF area and were about 4
kilometers from it when they were fired upon by the rebels, prompting them to
fight back.
The incident in Al-Barka was followed by an Oct. 21 clash between MILF forces
and the military in Zamboanga Sibugay province, where seven people were killed.
On Oct. 23, suspected MILF guerrillas attacked in Basilan and Lanao del Norte
provinces, killing five civilians and two soldiers.
Despite the attacks, President Aquino refused to declare an all-out war
against the MILF.
Aquino said the government would not be forced into making hasty and
irresponsible decisions while peace talks with the MILF were about to be
resumed.
On Nov. 3, the government and the MILF peace panels held informal talks in
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and agreed to continue the investigation of the clash in
Al-Barka.
Six months after the incident, a seven-man general court-martial was
appointed to arraign four senior Army officers for the deadly operation.
The officers, relieved of their posts and charged with the deaths of the 19
soldiers, were Col. Amikandra Undug, former commander of the Army Special Forces
Regiment; Col. Alexander Macario, former commander of the Special Operations
Task Force-Basilan; Lt. Col. Leonardo Peña, former commander of the 4th Special
Forces Battalion in charge of the troops deployed to Al-Barka; and Lt. Col.
Orlando Edralin, former commandant of the Special Forces Training School.
Macario and Edralin were cleared by a military court on Oct. 31, 2012,
because of “insufficient evidence,” while the general court-martial late last
year denied Undug’s motion to have the charges against him dropped.
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/441859/what-went-before-the-al-barka-milf-military-encounter
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