Hostage-taker shot dead in Philippines; six killed


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AP
Bellevision Media Network

Manila, 23 August 2010: At least six Chinese hostages on Monday survived the hijacking of a tourist bus in the Philippines that ended after the hostage—taker was shot dead by police. Police officers and medical workers rushed to the bus after the hostage taker, dismissed police officer Rolando Del Rosario Mendoza, was killed in an exchange of gunfire with police.

 

At least four hostages were moved out on stretchers, but their condition was not clear. One Chinese woman was seen crying as she was helped out of the bus at a seaside park in Manila City. Interior Secretary Jessie Robredo said authorities were still verifying the conditions of the 15 Chinese hostages from Hong Kong who were still on the bus when the violence erupted.

 

“Of the 15, about half are alive,” he said. “The others were found dead, and some were wounded. We are saddened by this event.” Mendoza seized the bus more than 10 hours earlier and demanded that authorities review his dismissal from the force in February 2009 due to extortion and harassment.

 

He has denied any wrongdoing and filed an appeal. There were 25 people inside the bus when it was seized, including 20 Chinese tourists and a travel guide from Hong Kong and four Filipinos. Six Chinese tourists, including three children, and three Filipinos were freed earlier. The Filipino bus driver escaped when Mendoza opened fire inside the bus.

 

 

AP Report covering events till the shooting of the hostage taker: Philippine police in hemlets and flak jackets have crouched beside the bus after firing shots at the tires in a bid to end a daylong hostage standoff involving 15 Chinese tourists. There was no immediate word on casualties.

 

Police say they fired at the tires to immobilize the vehicle. Moments later, a Filipino driver has been seen during live TV footage late Monday running away from the bus. Police commandos then surrounded it and were seen breaking the door and windows with a hammer.

 

They still did not enter the vehicle. A dismissed policeman armed with an automatic rifle seized the bus in the Philippines capital with 24 passengers, most of them Hong Kong tourists, in a bid to demand his reinstatement, earlier reports said.

 

Seven hostages, including three children, were subsequently released unharmed. A senior Chinese diplomat who was monitoring the negotiations to free the remaining 17 hostages said they were “calm and peaceful.”

 

“We want everything taken to secure the safety and security of our Chinese nationals,” Bai Tian, deputy mission chief at the Chinese Embassy, told reporters.

 

Police sharpshooters took positions around the white—blue—red bus, which was parked near a downtown Manila park, as the talks progressed.

 

“He has released children, the elderly and the sick. He is showing signs of kindness and I think this will be resolved peacefully,” said Fidel Posadas, police deputy director for operations.

 

The hostage—taker, identified as former Senior Inspector Rolando Mendoza, 55, was armed with an M16 rifle. He demanded that he be given back his job on the police force a year after he was fired, Manila police chief Rodolfo Magtibay said.

 

Two of the Hong Kong tourists, both women, were the first to be released, followed by a girl, two boys and their mother as well as their Hong Kong guide, Mr. Magtibay said. A seventh hostage freed was suffering from diabetes, police said.

 

Hong Thai Travel Services Ltd. General Manager Susanna Lau told Hong Kong’s Cable TV that the bus was carrying a Hong Kong tour guide and 20 tourists, three children and 17 adults, and a local tour guide.

 

She said the group left the Chinese territory of Hong Kong on August 20 for a visit to Manila and was scheduled to fly back to Hong Kong on Monday. Mr. Magtibay said that three Filipinos, a driver, a guide and a photographer, also were on the bus.

 

Police brought in food for the hostages and prepared to provide fuel so that the air conditioning unit can keep running as the outside temperature reached about 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 degrees Celsius).

 

Mendoza hitched a ride on the bus from the historic walled city of Intramuros and then “declared he is taking the passengers hostage” when the bus reached Jose Rizal Park alongside Manila Bay, Mr. Magtibay said.

 

The area also includes the seaside U.S. Embassy and a number of hotels. The curtains on the bus windows were drawn and live TV footage showed two police negotiators walking to and from the bus and communicating with Mendoza from the window near the driver’s seat.

 

Mr. Magtibay said they were also using the driver’s cell phone to talk to Mendoza. A brother of Mendoza was helping police in the negotiations, Mr. Magtibay said. “We should really resolve this quickly so that it will not have a wider effect,” Tourism Secretary Alberto Lim said.

 

According to newspapers reports from 2008, Mendoza was among five police officers who had been charged with robbery, extortion and grave threats after a Manila hotel chef filed a complaint alleging the policemen falsely accused him of using drugs to extort money.

 

Mendoza’s younger brother, Gregorio, also a policeman, said that his brother felt that “injustice was done to him.” “He was disappointed that he did well in police service but was dismissed for a crime he did not do,” he said.

 

In March 2007, not far from Monday’s hostage taking, a man took a busload of children and teachers hostage from his day—care centre in Manila to denounce corruption. They were freed after a 10—hour standoff.

 

 

Comments on this Article
jayson, bukidnon Fri, August-27-2010, 7:59
It was really an example of injustice in pilipinas....Mendoza was a nice person acccording to anyone that knows him so well...He maybe so desperate on what happened to his cared name..
arnel, marikina Thu, August-26-2010, 1:08
the man was so very generously because of evrey hostage are scared to kill them.....!
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