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Van blast in southern Philippines kills 10

Ten people, including troops and civilians, were killed when an explosion tore through a van at an army checkpoint in the southern Philippines Tuesday, as authorities warned the blast could be linked to a wider plot by Islamic militants.

A destroyed structure is seen at the site of an explosion at Barangay Maganda on the outskirts of Lamitan city on the southern island of Mindanao on July 31, 2018. Ten people, including troops and civilians, were killed when an explosion tore through a van at an army checkpoint in the southern Philippines on July 31, as authorities warned the blast could be linked to a wider plot by Islamic militants. / AFP PHOTO / Richard FALCATAN

Ten people, including troops and civilians, were killed when an explosion tore through a van at an army checkpoint in the southern Philippines Tuesday, as authorities warned the blast could be linked to a wider plot by Islamic militants.

The powerful explosion happened after soldiers and pro-government militia troops stopped the vehicle and tried to search it just after dawn on the outskirts of the mainly Christian city of Lamitan, which is on the predominantly Muslim island of Basilan.

One soldier, five militia troops and four civilians were killed.

The van driver, a suspected member of the Abu Sayyaf militant group also died, Philippine military spokesman Colonel Edgard Arevalo told reporters in Manila.

He added that government forces had been on heightened alert after receiving reports that extremists planned to plant improvised explosives in areas around the island.

“We can just imagine the tragedy that this would bring to the people of Basilan had we not stopped them at the checkpoint,” he said.

Authorities earlier said at least five people died in the blast.

Basilan is a stronghold of the notorious Abu Sayyaf kidnap-for-ransom group.

It is one of several armed groups fighting government forces in the southern Philippines, where a decades-long rebellion has claimed more than 100,000 lives by government count.

Roderick Furigay, the Lamitan vice mayor, speculated that the explosives could have been intended for a parade on Tuesday morning by 4,000 children in the centre of the town to mark the country’s “nutrition month”.

“That could have been (the target),” he said on ABS-CBN television. “It’s a good thing they were stopped at the checkpoint.”

President Rodrigo Duterte recently signed a law to create greater autonomy in the south which is hoped to help end the conflict.

Duterte put the southern Philippines including Basilan under martial rule until the end of this year after Abu Sayyaf members based on the island joined pro-Islamic State group militants who seized the southern city of Marawi last year.

The five-month siege killed 1,200 people and destroyed much of the centra of the city, which Duterte said the militants planned to turn into the capital of a southeast Asian caliphate.

Duterte spokesman Harry Roque condemned the Basilan attack, describing it a “war crime” apparently intended against civilians.

“We condemn in the strongest possible terms the latest terrorist attack in Basilan perpetrated in violation of our laws,” Roque said in a statement.

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