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July 11, 2007, Agence France Presse, Militants kill 14 Philippine marines, behead 10: military,

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July 11, 2007, Agence France Presse, Militants kill 14 Philippine marines, behead 10: military

Islamic Militants kill 14 Philippine marines, behead 10: military 

BASILAN, Philippines (AFP) - Islamic militants killed 14 Philippine marines searching for a kidnapped Italian priest during a major gunbattle, and later beheaded 10 of them, the military said Wednesday. 

The troops were ambushed on southern Basilan island by a joint force from the Philippines' main Islamic rebel group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, and the Al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf, a marine spokesman said.

Lieutenant Colonel Ariel Caculitan said 14 marines were killed in the eight-hour clash, increasing an earlier death toll after more bodies were recovered. Ten had been discovered beheaded, he said in Manila.

"All 10 marines earlier reported missing have been found dead," Caculitan told reporters. "All were beheaded," he added.

Another nine were injured in the gunbattle with about 300 militants near Tipo-Tipo town on Tuesday, he said.

Intelligence reports said Italian priest Giancarlo Bossi, 57, was being kept in an area where MILF forces were known to operate and the troops had been sent in to investigate, said regional marine commander Ramiro Alivio.

About 80 marines clashed with the MILF militants backed by Abu Sayyaf fighters, after arriving there early Tuesday, said Colonel Alivio.

"We can confirm 14 were killed and nine were wounded," Alivio told AFP.

"All of our men have (now) been accounted for," he said.

Some of the beheaded had been found by provincial authorities in Basilan and been turned over to the military, other marines said.

Bossi, of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions (PIME), was seized by unknown heavily armed men near his parish church in southern Zamboanga peninsula on June 10.

MILF spokesman Eid Kabalu acknowledged the group's fighters clashed with the military on Tuesday, but he denied Abu Sayyaf militants were involved, and accused the troops of violating a ceasefire by entering an MILF area.

The MILF claimed on its website that its forces killed 23 marines, including 10 "who were beheaded by unknown groups after the fighting." It said the group has launched a probe "because Islam prohibits mutilation or commission of any atrocity against a fallen enemy."

Four MILF fighters were killed in the battle and seven were injured, it added, updating the rebel toll.

The rebels destroyed two military trucks and seized 27 guns during the ambush, it added.

The 12,000-strong MILF is the country's main separatist rebel group and is currently engaged in peace talks with the government in Manila.

The Abu Sayyaf is an Al Qaeda-linked group of self-styled Islamic fighters blamed for the country's worst terrorist attacks and many kidnappings.

The United States has offered five million dollars for the capture of its top leaders. 

The government had earlier said Bossi's kidnappers could either be Abu Sayyaf men or renegade members of the MILF, which has denied any involvement in the a**uction and initially helped in the hunt for his captors. 

MILF spokesman Kabalu stressed that his group had long cut links to Abu Sayyaf militants, who are known for mutilating their victims. 

"The firefight was touched off because they entered our area without first coordinating with the MILF leadership as agreed upon in the peace talks," Kabalu told AFP by phone from his base in the south. 

The provocation, he said, clearly violated a 2003 truce and would be brought up at a joint monitoring committee. 

"The MILF is not involved in the Bossi kidnapping," Kabalu said. 

President Gloria Arroyo's chief peace adviser, Jesus Dureza told AFP an international monitoring team that oversees the ceasefire, was "on the ground to address the situation." 

The team, led by Malaysia, is composed of representatives of Islamic countries who are monitoring the truce between the government and the MILF. 

The Roman Catholic news agency Asianews said Tuesday it doubted that the Abu Sayyaf was involved in the kidnapping. It said it was more likely he was being held by a criminal gang.

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on Jan 13, 13