A driver plowed into a group of partygoers attending a Filipino street festival in the Canadian city of Vancouver on Saturday evening, killing “a number of people,” according to the local authorities.
Vancouver Police said they were investigating a “mass casualty incident” at a Lapu Lapu Day Festival after “several people were killed and multiple others injured.” The police said they had taken the driver, a 30-year-old Vancouver man.
“At approximately 8:14 p.m. on April 26, a man drove into a large crowd of people attending the Lapu Lapu Day Festival near East 43rd Avenue and Fraser Street,” the Vancouver Police said in a post on social media. The festival celebrates Datu Lapu-Lapu, a national hero in The Philippines.
Vancouver Police said in an email Sunday that investigators had ruled out terrorism as a motive, but did not offer further details.
In a news conference, Steve Rai, the interim police chief, did not specify the number of people killed and injured, saying only that there were a number of casualties. A spokeswoman for the Vancouver General Hospital said they had received multiple patients who were injured at the festival.
Mr. Rai did not address a possible motive for the incident, but said the driver had been known to the police. Members of the crowd had subdued the man before the police got to the scene, the police said.
The fatal incident occurred less than 48 hours before federal elections are set to take place in Canada. When asked by reporters whether the incident was related to the election, Mr. Rai said: “I don’t know anything about that.”
Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada said in a social media post that he was “devastated to hear about the horrific events at the Lapu Lapu festival in Vancouver earlier this evening.”
“I offer my deepest condolences to the loved ones of those killed and injured, to the Filipino Canadian community, and to everyone in Vancouver,” he said. “We are all mourning with you.”
Vancouver’s mayor, Ken Sim, said he was “shocked and deeply saddened by the horrific incident.”
Vancouver prides itself on being a diverse, multicultural city, with more than half of its residents identifying themselves as a “visible minority,” according to 2021 census data.
Lapu-Lapu Day is an annual celebration in the Philippines, marking the memory of Datu Lapu-Lapu, who stood up against Spanish colonization. The festival was officially set up in Vancouver in 2023.