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At least eight dead in Philippines as siege ends with police storming bus

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An embittered policeman was shot dead by police marksmen in Manila yesterday after killing at least eight tourists he had taken hostage in a fatally ill-conceived plot to get his job back.

Furious about being sacked for misconduct two years ago, Rolando Mendoza, 55, began his mission yesterday morning at the historic walled city of Intramuros. Armed with an M16 automatic rifle, he hitched a lift on a bus carrying visitors from Hong Kong who were on the final day of their tour of the country. When the vehicle reached José Rizal park, near Manila Bay, he announced that he was taking the 24 passengers hostage until he was guaranteed the return to his job.

On the door of the bus, he stuck a note saying: "Big mistake to correct a big wrong decision." A larger piece of paper on the windscreen stated: "Release final decision" and outlined the details of the miscarriage of justice, as he saw it, that had led to his sacking.

According to local media reports, Mendoza had once been a model policeman who was named as one of the 10 best officers in the Philippines. He fell from grace in 2008 when a hotel manager accused him and four other officers of planting drugs in his property as part of a blackmail plot, shortly before he was due to retire. Manila's police chief, Rodolfo Magtibay, confirmed that Mendoza had been lobbying for reinstatement.

Initial prospects for a peaceful resolution looked good. Early images from the standoff showed Mendoza wearing a khaki jacket and standing in a relatively relaxed pose in the door of the bus, as passengers gazed out from behind the curtains.

At this stage the two sides were negotiating and Mendoza appeared ready to make concessions. In full view of TV crews who had been scrambled to the scene, he freed nine hostages, including children and a passenger with diabetes. He requested food for the remaining 15 passengers and fuel for the air-conditioning. His brother, Gregorio, also a senior police officer, was involved in the dialogue and the deputy mayor promised to lobby the police ombudsman on his behalf.

Fidel Posadas, the force's deputy director of operations, told reporters that Mendoza had released children, the elderly and the sick. "He is showing signs of kindness and I think this will be resolved peacefully," he said.

But the scene grew more tense after his brother delivered a reply from the ombudsman regarding his request for reinstatement. Soon after, sounds of gunfire were heard from inside the coach. The driver escaped through a window and shouted that everyone was dead. According to the police, he claimed that Mendoza had opened fire on his hostages.

Viewers around the world, including millions in China, watched a bloodbath unfold live on television as a heavily armed team of at least nine officers, wearing helmets and bulletproof vests, surrounded the vehicle and stormed in through the rear emergency exit after smashing the windows with a sledgehammer.

More shots rang out and then, following a period of silence, police began evacuating survivors to ambulances waiting in the rain nearby.

One middle-aged woman was sobbing. At least two bodies had to be passed through shattered windows. Mendoza's body was lifeless near the door.

In addition to the eight hostages killed, the Chinese embassy said four people were injured, two seriously.

Viewers on the Chinese mainland were able to watch CNN footage broadcast live or nearly live by the state-run CCTV9 channel. As reporters on the scene counted the survivors, the London-born anchor James Chau asked: "Has this damaged the international reputation of the Philippines?"

Mendoza's brother said his sibling felt he had been the victim of injustice.

"He was disappointed that he did well in police service but was dismissed for a crime he did not do," he said shortly before the final showdown.

After the deadly denouement, police colonel Nelson Yabut told reporters his men had to kill Mendoza after 30 commandos had used teargas and flash bombs in an attempt to end the standoff without further bloodshed.

"We did everything to negotiate and end this peacefully, but he gave us no choice," he said.

The president of the Philippines, Benigno Aquino, told a midnight news conference that negotiators had thought the situation would be resolved peacefully, and the hostage-taker did not appear set on hurting others or himself.

"Unfortunately that changed, and it changed quite rapidly," he said, adding there would be an investigation into what caused the situation to deteriorate, including the role of the media.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Russia
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Posted

I've always wondered how one man could take so many hostages, especially while standing in the doorway talking to folks.

Русский форум член.

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If the government is going to force me to exercise my "right" to health care, then they better start requiring people to exercise their Right to Bear Arms. - "Where's my public option rifle?"

Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Ukraine
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Posted

They should have capped him off when he was standing, relaxed, in the door of the bus. Political correctness will eventually kill all of us. A bullet in the right place at the right time would have saved 8 innocent lives. If a person takes hostages, he can be assumed to be threatening others lives and should be KILLED at the first opportunity. No questions need to be asked.

VERMONT! I Reject Your Reality...and Substitute My Own!

Gary And Alla

 

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