Philippines: the Islamic State looks East

Peter Riddell  |  World
Date posted:  1 Jul 2017
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Philippines: the Islamic State looks East

War-torn Marawi City | photo: YouTube

Marawi City was virtually unknown outside the Philippines until 23 May 2016, when hundreds of jihad warriors stormed the sprawling urban metropolis of 200,000 residents and claimed large parts of it for the Islamic State. Since then the Philippines Armed Forces have struggled to regain control and the fight is ongoing .

The background to this crisis is multifaceted. There has been a long history of regional separatism and sectarian strife in the southern regions of the Philippines where the country’s 6 million-strong Muslim minority is centred.

When the Spanish first colonised the Philippines from the 16th century onwards, their most difficult enemies were the Muslim communities of the south. Had the Spanish not arrived in the region, the Philippines would probably have become a Muslim-majority nation like neighbouring Indonesia.

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