While little has been made public at this stage of the investigation, National Security Adviser Eduardo Ano told reporters on Friday there was “no way” the men could have left the city to conduct training.
“They would go out and come back after two or three hours, the longest was eight hours, but still ... that time window (would) not suffice for them to get out of Davao,” he said.
Police inquiries had also revealed that neither of the men had visited any of the city’s seven gun ranges, he said.
President Ferdinand Marcos has criticised media reports that he said misleadingly portrayed the Philippines “as a training hotspot for terrorism”.
“For years, we have acted decisively to dismantle terrorist networks, to secure communities, and to sustain our hard-earned peace,” he said in a speech celebrating the 90th anniversary of the country’s armed forces on Friday.
“To dismiss these gains with unfounded speculation is not acceptable.”
The Philippine military has said Mindanao’s remaining jihadists now number little more than 50, from a high of 1,257 in 2016.
- Agence France-Presse