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Fort St. John Mayor offers condolences after 11 people killed in Vancouver Filipino festival attack

A member of the Vancouver Police forensics team collects evidence while investigating the scene where a vehicle drove into crowd at a street festival Saturday evening in Vancouver, Sunday, April 27, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Rich Lam (Rich Lam/The Canadian Press)

Charges have been laid against a man who’s accused of racing a vehicle through a crowded street at a Filipino community festival in Vancouver, killing 11 in an attack the interim police chief called the “darkest day” in the city’s history.

Vancouver Police said in a statement Sunday that Adam Kai-Ji Lo faces eight counts of second-degree murder and further charges are anticipated.

Fort St. John Mayor Lilia Hansen expressed condolences to the Filipino community, “On behalf of Council for the City of Fort St. John, I want to express our heartfelt condolences to the Filipino community and everyone affected by the tragedy at the Lapu Lapu festival in Vancouver. This devastating loss weighs heavily on us, especially in our town where many Filipino families are part of the fabric of our community. We stand with you in this time of sorrow.”

Some victims remained unidentified. They ranged in age from five to 65, and the death toll from the attack on the Lapu Lapu Day festival could grow, said Interim Vancouver Police Chief Steve Rai.

“It’s just a tragedy all around for many families,” Rai said.

A teacher-counsellor has been identified as one of the 11 people killed in a vehicle ramming at a Filipino festival in Vancouver on the weekend.

A statement from the superintended at New Westminster school district says Kira Salim was among those who died at the Lapu Lapu Day festival on Saturday night.

A Ministry of Health statement said 32 people were seen at several hospitals across the Lower Mainland. It said 17 patients remain in hospital, some of them in critical and serious condition, while others have non-life-threatening injuries.

Lo, 30, was arrested at the scene in South Vancouver after initially being apprehended by bystanders and he remains in custody.

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim said at the afternoon news conference that it appeared “mental health is the underlying issue” for the attack.

“The individual in question has a significant history of mental health issues,” Sim said, noting the suspect was known to police for a multitude of mental health interactions.

“I want to be clear, if anything is to come of this tragedy, it has to be change. I personally will not stop in calling on governments to make these changes now.”

Rai said police were confident terrorism was not involved, although the motive is unknown.

Witnesses said the attack sent victims flying as a black Audi SUV roared through the crowd at high speed around 8:14 p.m. on Saturday, leaving bodies and debris strewn across a long section of road lined with food trucks near Fraser Street and West 43rd Avenue.

“This is the darkest day in our city’s history,” Rai said, calling it a “senseless, heartbreaking act of violence.”

B.C. Premier David Eby held a news conference Sunday near the site of the attack, telling reporters in a shaky voice that he had attended the event with his daughter on Saturday afternoon before the attack. He paid tribute to the Filipino community.

“British Columbians are right to be angry. Here’s a community that has done nothing but give, has been overlooked in terms of their contributions to our province, to this city, to this country. It is finally having an event where their culture is upheld and celebrated and it’s destroyed by a single individual.”

The premier said B.C. residents will support the Filipino community “just like they support us every single day in this province.”

Hip-hop artist Jacob Bureros attended a South Vancouver church service Sunday where members of the Filipino community gathered.

He said he had just wrapped up his performance at the festival when he saw the vehicle racing through the crowd of people before it quickly come to a stop.

“He jumped out of the car and ran, and so, we chased him down,” Bureros said of the vehicle’s driver.

He said the scene was chaotic and horrifying.

“There was a young woman in the middle of the road, there was someone who was holding their loved ones screaming, people running up and down, looking for their kids,” said Bureros.

“I don’t even have words for it right now, it’s just really horrible.”

A statement on social media from Public Safety Canada said officials believe the attack was an isolated incident, “and that there is no active threat to Canadians.”

Mourners filled a gymnasium before a Sunday night vigil not far from the festival site. Sim, Eby and several other elected officials, including NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, attended.

Singh had also been at the festival on Saturday and said he left just minutes before the attack.

Many of those in attendance were in tears, while others clutched bouquets of flowers.

Eby told the crowd that they were devastated that such a thing could happen on their day of celebration.

“For those of you who are still waiting for news, waiting for names, worried about someone at the hospital, I can’t imagine what you’re feeling right now.”

“I want to share with you, people from across Canada, international leaders have spoken out to say that they are thinking of you right now,” Eby said.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said his “thoughts are with the Filipino community and all the victims targeted by this senseless attack.”

The attack made international headlines and Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. said he was “completely shattered” to hear the news and expressed “deepest sympathies to the families of the victims and to the strong and thriving Filipino community in Canada.”

“We are one with the families of the victims and the Filipino community in Vancouver during this difficult time,” he said in a statement posted to social media.

King Charles said he and his wife were “profoundly saddened” by the attack and “send our deepest possible sympathy at a most agonizing time for so many in Canada.”

“Stay strong, our friends in Canada and the Philippines,” wrote Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in his own statement of condolence.

Lapu Lapu Day is named after an Indigenous resistance fighter in the Philippines who fought against Spanish colonization in the 16th century.

— With files from The Canadian Press and The Associated Press