Cemetery workers placed white signs on top of the graves of the people who died in the 36 days of fighting in Marawi City. As of Oct. 5, the military said 765 ISIS-Maute fighters were believed to have died while 155 soldiers were killed. Around 47 civilians also killed in the crossfire. Photo by Froilan Gallardo
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MARAWI City — For seven years, excavating canals and constructing roads are what Jelbin Darantinao has done for a living. But these days his employer has taken him to a role that reminds him of how a war refuses to choose which innocent lives it would take.

And every time he begins his work, he does so with prayer.

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“I am only doing my job. I’m just following orders,” Darantinao would say in silence.

Aboard a backhoe truck on Thursday morning, he dug the earth to bury dead bodies of those killed in the war between troops and the Daesh-inspired Maute group.

Darantinao, one of Lanao del Sur province’s heavy equipment operator, buried an estimated 40 corpses.

“Please don’t scare me,” Darantinao recalled of what he said before he began the mass burial.

This is the third time Marawi City has done a mass burial of bodies since the war began in May 23. And another batch could be underway.

In June, eleven bodies, believed to be those of civilians killed by the militants, were buried in a public cemetery in the neighboring city of Iligan.

In the same month, four bodies of Maute members who were killed in an ambush at the boundaries in Pantar and Baloi, Lanao del Norte, were also buried in that same cemetery.

In all of these burials, Darantinao served as the backhoe truck operator.

“It’s an eerie feeling to bury a group of people you don’t even know. As a Christian, I believe that each person has a soul so I silently talk to them,” he said, explaining to why he says a prayer before the burials begin.

He has been assigned to join the clearing operations in Marawi, right in the heart of the war where he expects to see more dead bodies to be buried.

But despite how painful his work could get, Darantinao said he is willing to do all these. The only thing he hopes for, he said, is that after all the work has been done, he could still come home alive.

“I only wish that everything will be totally cleared when the military allows us to get inside and start our work…I have a family waiting for me to come home,” he said. (davaotoday.com)

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