Wednesday, August 25, 2010

HONG KONG FAMILIES RECOUNTS ORDEAL WITH PI LONE GUNMAN

HONG KONG - Flags were flown at half mast in Hong Kong and authorities issued a travel warning to the Philippines. Many Hong Kong residents, including the city's leader Donald Tsang, criticised the slow and seemingly disorganised manner in which the commandos tried to storm the tour bus as the hostage taker, a disgruntled ex-police officer, was firing inside.
  • "Why didn't the Philippines government help us earlier?" murmured Ms. Leung, a vacant look in her eyes.
  • Several small protests were held outside Hong Kong's Philippines consulate.
  • A Hong Kong woman who survived a siege on a Manila bus recounts how her husband charged the lone gunman, only to be killed.
  • Another teenage survivor says she cowered for her life during the ordeal. The two were among 15 tourists still aboard the bus as Philippine commandos undertook what police now acknowledge was a botched rescue.
  • "I can't bear this reality," said the middle-aged woman, identified as Ms Leung, half-choking on her grief as she spoke to Hong Kong's cable television. "I wanted to embrace my husband and die with him. But then I thought of my children."
  • Ms Leung also lost her two daughters in the gunfire -- Jessie, 14, filmed peeking through the bus curtains, and Doris, 21, who had been studying in Canada.
  • The sole remaining member of her family, her teenage son Jason, was in intensive care after undergoing brain surgery.
  • There were seven families in the 21-member tour group, including a tour guide, local media reported.
Other survivors spoke of harrowing scenes inside the bus as commandos battled the gunman for more than an hour before he was shot in the head and killed.
"I hid under a chair," Tracey Wong, 15, told reporters from her hospital bed, her voice barely audible. "The police sprayed pepper spray and it was tough for us inside."
She later learned that both her parents had been killed.
They had been on a four-day package tour to the Philippines a popular Southeast Asian holiday destination.
Source:Reuters

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