Three dead in graduation shooting at top Philippine university

  • Former mayor of southern Philippines died, municipal police chief
  • President Marcos pledges to do justice

MANILA, July 24 (Reuters) – Three people were killed in a shooting at a university graduation ceremony in the Philippines’ capital region on Sunday, including a former mayor of the country’s volatile south, police said.

Quezon City local police chief Remus Medina said the shooting appeared to have been the assassination of the former mayor of the southern city of Lamitan, Rose Furigay.

The suspect, wounded in a shootout with a campus security officer and arrested after a car chase, was now in custody and being questioned, Medina told reporters.

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“He appeared to be a determined killer,” Medina said, adding that he was found with two guns.

Quezon is part of the Manila Capital Region, an urban sprawl of 16 cities home to more than 13 million people.

Police investigators carry the body of one of three people who died during a shooting at the Ateneo de Manila University in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines July 24, 2022. REUTERS/Adrian Portugal

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Furigay was shot when she was about to attend her daughter’s graduation from the Ateneo de Manila University law school, one of the most prestigious in the country, Medina said.

The suspect, who had no relatives at the graduation, was also originally from the town of Lamitan in Basilan province, a stronghold of Abu Sayyaf, a pro-Islamist extremist group known for banditry and kidnapping.

The other two dead were a campus security officer and an unidentified man, police said.

Ateneo canceled the graduation ceremony after the shooting.

In the Southeast Asian nation, shooting incidents are sporadic, and owners require a permit to carry guns in public. Private security officers in the Philippines carry pistols or shotguns, and firearms are common in shopping malls, offices, banks, restaurants and even schools.

“We pledge our law enforcement forces to thoroughly and quickly investigate these killings and bring all those involved to justice,” Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said in a statement.

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Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales; Editing by Christopher Cushing, Alexandra Hudson

Our standards: the Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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