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Returning IS fighters to regroup in Philippines — experts

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Returning IS fighters to regroup in Philippines � experts
Members of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), made up of an alliance of Arab and Kurdish fighters, stand under an Islamic State (IS) group banner in the recently recaptured town of Al-Karamah, 26 kms from the IS bastion of Raqa, as they advance to encircle the jihadists, on March 26, 2017. US-backed fighters pressed their offensive near the Islamic State group's main Syrian bastion Raqa, a day after seizing a military airport that brings them closer to besieging the jihadists.
Delil Souleiman / AFP
SINGAPORE (Agence France-Presse) — Battle-hardened Southeast Asian Islamic State (IS) fighters returning from the Middle East following the group's setbacks are expected to rebase in Mindanao, a security conference heard Tuesday.
 
Instability and the easy flow of weapons have made Mindanao and nearby Philippine islands attractive to extremist groups, said speakers at the Milipol conference on homeland security in Singapore.
 
"Currently, IS is moving towards creating a territory in southern Philippines. The most recent communication issued by IS has announced that they have formally declared an East Asia division of IS in the southern Philippines," counterterrorism analyst Rohan Gunaratna told the conference.
 
"Our forecast for 2017 is that the threat in this region will grow because of the creation of an IS nucleus in the southern Philippines," added Gunaratna.
 
"The instability in the southern Philippines and the availability of weapons, internal displacement, refugee flows... create the ripe conditions for foreign terrorists to come," he told AFP after his speech.
 
 
Singapore's Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam also told the conference that Mindanao "is becoming an area that is difficult to control despite the best efforts of the Philippine government."
 
"So that is an area that can serve as a sanctuary for returning fighters from the Middle East. It can be a place where would-be terrorists can go... they can train, arms seem to move fairly easily into that area," Shanmugam added.
 
 
Parts of Southeast Asia have long struggled with Islamic militancy. Hundreds of radicals from the region, including from Indonesia and Malaysia, have flocked to join IS in Iraq and Syria.
 
 
But as IS suffers battlefield setbacks, officials and analysts fear these fighters would return to their home region.
 
Southeast Asia suffered its first IS-linked attack in January last year when extremists launched a deadly suicide bombing and gun attack in Jakarta.
 
In Mindanao, which has long battled a Muslim insurgency, a handful of groups have sworn allegiance to IS.
 

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