COTABATO:
Two roadside bombs exploded in the southern Philippines on Wednesday,
one of which wounded seven soldiers, police said, in the latest attack
to hit the restive region.
The bombs came just two
days after a powerful blast killed eight people in the mixed
Muslim-Christian city of Cotabato on Monday.
"The soldiers
had just left their detachment when they were hit by a roadside bomb,"
Senior Superintendent Rodelio Jocson, a local police chief said.
"They sustained minor injuries and were taken to a hospital," he said.
He
said the bomb was planted along the road in the remote town of Shariff
Saydona Mustapha, a mostly Muslim-populated area on the southern island
of Mindanao.
Hours earlier, just before dawn, another bomb exploded in the town of Midsayap, also in Mindanao, although no one was injured.
Regional
military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Dickson Hermoso said it was too
early to speculate whether Wednesday's bombs were linked.
However
the latest incidents happened just less than 45 kilometres (28 miles)
from the major trading town of Cotabato, where Monday's bomb attack
occurred.
Police have said the Cotabato bomb attack may
have been linked to local politics apparently targeting the sister of
the city mayor, who was among the wounded.
President
Benigno Aquino, however, said Tuesday that the attack may have been
carried out by groups opposed to his government's peace talks with
Mindanao's main rebel group, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF).