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Philippine SWAT Team storm bus with hostages in Manila

N

Nu Wa

Guest

Sacked policeman holds Hong Kong tourists hostage on Manila coach


A former policeman armed with an automatic rifle has taken hostage 25 people, including tourists from Hong Kong, on a coach in Manila.

Published: 10:59AM BST 23 Aug 2010

Mr Mendoza's brother, senior police officer Gregorio Mendoza, was heard by reporters urging the gunman to extend the deadline by another 30 minutes. Mendoza, armed with an M-16 rifle and small arms, has released nine hostages: six Hong Kong nationals and two Filipinos, mainly women and children, police said. He asked for food for those remaining on the bus, which was delivered, and fuel to keep the air-conditioning going.

A handwritten note, signed by Mr Mendoza, saying "BIG DEAL WILL START AFTER 3 PM TODAY" was stuck to the door of the bus. A sign stuck to a window said "3PM TODAY DEAD LOCK".


Also stuck to the bus door was a piece of paper with the handwritten message: "BIG MISTAKE TO CORRECT A BIG WRONG DECISION". A larger piece of paper on the front windshield was headed "RELEASE FINAL DECISION" and then what appeared to be details of his case.


A Philippines police spokesman said the use of force would be a last resort. Mr Mendoza's brother, Gregorio, earlier told a local TV station that his brother was upset by his treatment and dismissal from the force. "His problem was he was unjustly removed from service. There was no due process, no hearing, no complaint," he said.


Police had established a landline connection with the bus, which was stopped across the eight-lane park road in front of the Quirino grandstand, where President Benigno Aquino III took his oath of office on June 30. The road was cordoned off, with the bus isolated inside the park. Nearby, construction work was halted. A sizeable crowd has gathered. Several ambulances and a fire engine were on standby about 500 yards away, behind the police line.
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N

Nu Wa

Guest

Published August 23 2010


8 killed on hijacked Philippine tourist bus


MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A 12-hour hostage drama aboard a Philippine bus ended in bloodshed Monday, with at least seven Chinese tourists dead along with the disgruntled ex-policeman who hijacked the vehicle and demanded his job back, officials said.

By: Jim Gomez, The Associated Press
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MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A 12-hour hostage drama aboard a Philippine bus ended in bloodshed Monday, with at least seven Chinese tourists dead along with the disgruntled ex-policeman who hijacked the vehicle and demanded his job back, officials said.

At least six captives survived, four of whom were seen crawling out the back door of the bus after Philippine police stormed it Monday evening when the hostage-taker started shooting at the 15 Chinese tourists inside, said police Senior Superintendent Nelson Yabut. He said the hostage-taker was killed with a sniper shot to the head after he wounded a police sharpshooter.

Police and ambulances were lined up next to the vehicle in the pouring rain after the standoff ended. Local hospitals reported seven bodies of hostages were brought in. One other hostage was hospitalized in critical condition, and five others were unharmed. Officials have yet to disclose the fate of the remaining two hostages. The crisis began when the dismissed policeman, Rolando Mendoza, 55, armed with a M16 rifle seized the busload of Hong Kong tourists to demand his reinstatement in the force.

According to newspaper reports from 2008, he was among five 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 released nine hostages during the afternoon — leaving 15 inside. Those freed included two women, three children, a diabetic man and three Filipinos — including a tour guide and a photographer, police said.

Despite hopes that negotiations could bring the stand-off to a peaceful conclusion, tensions escalated as night closed in. Police said they stormed the bus after they saw Mendoza open fire on hostages. Crouching outside the vehicle, commandos in flak jackets, used a hammer to bash in side windows, the door and windscreen, although it was some time before they eventually gained entry.

Moments before the commandos moved in, the Filipino bus driver fled. Police officer Roderick Mariano cited him as saying Mendoza had opened fire at the tourists. The Hong Kong tourists had been on a visit to Manila and had been due to fly back to the Chinese territory on Monday, according to tour operator Hong Thai Travel Services Ltd.

Mendoza seized the bus after hitching a ride as it traveled with the tourists from the historic walled city of Intramuros. Police said he then "declared he is taking the passengers hostage" when the bus reached Jose Rizal Park alongside Manila Bay — a downtown area of the sprawling Philippine capital where the U.S. Embassy and a number of hotels are located.

Police sharpshooters took positions around the white-blue-red bus, and the road was sealed off, with ambulances and fire trucks positioned nearby. Police brought in food for the hostages as well as fuel so that the air conditioning unit can keep running as the outside temperature reached about 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 degrees Celsius).

The standoff was covered live on television. The curtains on the bus windows were drawn and two police negotiators could be seen walking to and from the bus and communicating with Mendoza from the window near the driver's seat. A Chinese diplomat had appealed for restraint on the part of the Philippine authorities and not to jeopardize the hostages safety.

Bai Tian, deputy mission chief at the Chinese Embassy who was monitoring the negotiations, said the hostages were "calm and peaceful." Speaking to reporters in the afternoon, he said they wanted every step taken "to secure the safety and security of our Chinese nationals." Mendoza's younger brother, Gregorio, also a policeman, said that his brother felt that "injustice was done on him" when he had been fired from his job.

"He was disappointed that he did well in police service but was dismissed for a crime he did not do," he said. Apart from demanding his reinstatement, Mendoza had also wanted to talk to the Philippine media and asked that his son — also a policeman — be brought to him. He scribbled some of his demands on paper and plastered it on the bus windows and a windshield.

A representative from the ombudsman's office talked to Mendoza on the phone and had promised to look into his case again, Mendoza's brother, Florencio, told reporters. Another brother of Mendoza also helped police in the negotiations, Manila police chief Rodolfo Magtibay said. Law enforcement is weak in the Philippines, and hostage-takings for ransom are not uncommon.

In March 2007, not far from the scene of Monday's hostage-taking, a man took a busload of children and teachers hostage from his day-care center in Manila to denounce corruption. They were freed after a 10-hour standoff.
___

Associated Press writers Teresa Cerojano and Min Lee in Hong Kong contributed to this report.
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Devil Within

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
After watching how the Manila Police handle this hijack situation, I find that these police are really useless.

And who in their right mind would want to visit a crime ridden place like the Philippine for a holiday?
 

denzuko1

Alfrescian
Loyal
The tour bus let the man hitch a ride? This is really uncalled for and should not be allowed! The driver should be charged and dismissed!
 

KuanTi01

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Watching on TV last night, I realised how utterly incompetent the Filipino Swat team is, despite the grand-sounding name. They should just swat at houseflies! Even to the layman, it is obvious that they had botched up the rescue. 7 hostages killed ! Looking at their triumphant faces really makes me sick!Their negotiation tactics and skills are bullshit. The lone gunman is not even a religious extremist. He is just a disgruntled ex-policeman and yet they can't handle him. Imagine what will happen if the 7 killed are not Chinese from HK but Americans or West Europeans. I'm sure all hell will break loose!
Wtf! Shame on the bogus SWAT! Even our local SOF commandos or PTT can do much better.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Why any Chinaman would want to go anywhere near Manila is beyond me. China has its own slums to tour. :rolleyes:
 

eQuipment

Alfrescian
Loyal
the hi-jacker is an axed police chief, he probably knew the police protocol at his finger-tips. they should've sent a seductive negotiator/ undercover operative to board the hijacked bus, calm his nerves & put him down from close range (2 in the chest, 1 in the head)
 

theblackhole

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
this is tragic! innocent tourists killed!!! WTF!!!

i saw the whole thing on video and it makes me really SICK!!!

if you're disgruntled with your BOSS, settled your score with HIM...

why killed innocent tourists who came to support your economy???

and the whole operation you can see and tell is really......SICK!!!

pray for the innocent dead!!!
 

postnew

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
750x.jpg

Former police officer Rolando Mendoza, who took a tourist bus hostage, looks through the window of the vehicle in Manila August 23, 2010.​
 

postnew

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
x810.jpg

Rolando Mendoza (R), a disgruntled ex-policeman, hangs dead out the bus door after being shot by police in a hostage drama while a Philippine policemen (L-in foreground) stand their ground after Mendoza hijacked a bus full of Hong Kong tourists in Manila on August 23, 2010.​
 

saratogas

Alfrescian
Loyal
Why can't the president or current police chief agrees to his demand first? Get him to surrender and after the hostages are safe then arrest him? Not as if they never broken a promise before...
 

Velma

Alfrescian
Loyal
I suspect those commandos are greenhorns, they were cowering too much in fear. A veteran commando team can complete the operation in 5 minutes.
 
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