MANILA, Nov. 13 (Xinhua) -- A blast occurred near an
entrance lobby of the Philippine House of Representatives complex on Tuesday
night soon after a Congress session, killing two people, including a lawmaker,
while wounding nearly a dozen others, police investigators said.
The police said the blast occurred at about 8:15 p.m. at the southern wing of Batasan Pambansa, the Congress complex, in Quezon City of the Philippine capital region. The ceiling of the lobby was partially destroyed while a vehicle parked outside the building was engulfed by blaze. The explosion also left a three-foot crater, giving rise to suspicion that it was a bomb attack.
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Philippine congressman Wahab Akbar, seen here in 2001, has been killed in a blast near an entrance lobby of the Philippine House of Representatives complex on Tuesday night soon after a Congress session. (Xinhua/AFP File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
The police revealed late Tuesday night that lawmaker
Wahab Akbar, who was injured in the blast, had passed away in the hospital.
Akbar was the second fatality in the blast. National
Capital Region Police Office chief Geary Barias said the driver of lawmaker
Luzviminda Ilagan earlier had died in the blast scene. Ilagan, Negros Oriental
Rep. Henry Teves and more than half a dozen Congress staff were injured.
Local television network ABS-CBN News said Akbar will
be flown to his hometown, southern Philippine region of Basilan Wednesday
morning, and will be buried within 24 hours.
Reports said Negros Oriental Rep. Henry Teves is still in critical condition after sustaining severe blast injuries and burns. He has been transferred to a major hospital where his relatives were with him, according to ABS-CBN.
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The scene of a powerful explosion in the Philippine House of Representatives complex in Quezon city, suburban Manila, November 13, 2007. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Ilagan, the injured congresswoman, however, was out
of danger after treatment in the hospital.
Barias said the blast could be meant to hurt
congressmen as it occurred barely after the adjournment of a session.
Police investigators are still probing the cause of
the blast but suspect an improvised explosive device could be hidden in a
motorcycle that parked near the Congress complex lobby and was remotely
detonated.
The police chief said Akbar, a former governor of Basilan province in Mindanao, the stronghold of the violent rebel group Abu Sayyaf, could be the most likely target of the bombing, as the explosive went off near Akbar's Fortuner car which parked near the lobby of Congress building's south wing.
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Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (R) consoles Isabela City Mayor Cherrie Akbar, wife of Congressman Wahab Akbar who died after the explosion in the House of Representatives, during her visit at the hospital in Quezon City Metro Manila November 14, 2007. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Akbar once confided to a Xinhua stringer that so many
people wanted to kill him, including his rival politicians in Basilan and the
Abu Sayyaf group, some of whose members who surrendered to him and the
government security forces had already been slain by their former comrades.
Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo Tuesday
night promptly ordered National Police chief Director General Avelino Razon to
personally supervise the investigation on the incident. Razon was asked to
"submit periodic reports as warranted," according to Press Secretary Ignacio
Bunye.
Metro Manila has been placed on full alert following
the blast. Security around the Senate has particularly been upgraded. On late
Tuesday, police also put central and southern Luzon island, where the capital
region was based, in high alert as the region is likely entry and exit point for
the perpetrators.