http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/asiapcf/01/29/philippines.killings.ap/index.html
Ten die in billiard hall shooting
COTABATO, Philippines (AP) -- A man opened fire with an assault rifle on a packed billiard hall in the Philippines, killing at least 10 people in an attack apparently meant to avenge the recent slaying of his son, police said Monday.
Five other people were wounded in the attack Sunday in Lanao del Sur province's Balabagan town, said police Chief Superintendent Akmad Mamalinta.
The attacker's family apparently had a lingering feud with another family, which the man suspected was behind his son's death last month, Mamalinta said.
The assailant rode past in a van and fired into the billiard hall crowd, which he believed included some of his rivals, Mamalinta said.
Eight people were killed instantly and two others died in a hospital, he said.
Mamalinta said witnesses had identified the attacker and police were searching for him.
Deadly family feuds, locally called "redo," are common in many parts of the Philippines' volatile south, where a large number of unlicensed guns and weak law enforcement often lead to violent confrontations between rival groups.
Ten die in billiard hall shooting
COTABATO, Philippines (AP) -- A man opened fire with an assault rifle on a packed billiard hall in the Philippines, killing at least 10 people in an attack apparently meant to avenge the recent slaying of his son, police said Monday.
Five other people were wounded in the attack Sunday in Lanao del Sur province's Balabagan town, said police Chief Superintendent Akmad Mamalinta.
The attacker's family apparently had a lingering feud with another family, which the man suspected was behind his son's death last month, Mamalinta said.
The assailant rode past in a van and fired into the billiard hall crowd, which he believed included some of his rivals, Mamalinta said.
Eight people were killed instantly and two others died in a hospital, he said.
Mamalinta said witnesses had identified the attacker and police were searching for him.
Deadly family feuds, locally called "redo," are common in many parts of the Philippines' volatile south, where a large number of unlicensed guns and weak law enforcement often lead to violent confrontations between rival groups.
