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After deadly crash, Vancouver Filipinos say they're leaning on 'kapwa,' or togetherness

After deadly crash, Vancouver Filipinos say they're leaning on 'kapwa,' or togetherness

NBC News28-04-2025

Thirty minutes after Diana Silva, a vendor at the Filipino festival in Vancouver, left the party Saturday night, she heard that a car had plowed into the crowd at the event. Silva said she immediately began thinking of how to help.
It's one example of how Filipino Canadians in the area's tight-knit community have been participating in vigils, planning fundraisers for victims and providing meals to locals immediately after the attack.
TJ Conwi, a Filipino Canadian chef who has lived in the area for about 30 years, said the immediate acts of communal care reflect the concept of 'kapwa,' a Tagalog word that means the interconnectedness and togetherness in the Filipino community.
'When you say 'we're kapwa,' you're talking about a whole community. You're talking about how we all fall together and all rise together, whatever it is that we go through. And it's just so powerful to see that at the vigil yesterday,' said Conwi, 48, who attended the festival with family members the morning of the tragedy. 'It's automatic, it's given, it's not even earned.'
The attack killed 11 people and injured more than two dozen others. The victims were 5 to 65 years old, officials said at a news conference Sunday, adding that the death toll could rise. So far, law enforcement has sidestepped discussing a m otive, but it has ruled out terrorism as a possibility.
Officials said the suspect, Kai-Ji Adam Lo, 30, who has been charged with eight counts of second-degree murder, had a history of mental illness and was known to police.
Filipino Canadians in the area say they are shaken. The ethnic group is the third-largest Asian immigrant population in the country, behind Indians and Chinese, at roughly 957,355 people as of the 2021 census. While the largest community is in the greater Toronto area, Vancouver is also home to a significant population, with roughly 141,230 people of Filipino descent, making up 5.4% of the metro area.
Filipinos began sustained immigration to Canada in the 1960s as a deteriorating economy in the Philippines coincided with a Canadian labor shortage. Many went to the country for jobs in nursing and patient services, as well as to fill other gaps in the country's labor market. By 2016, Filipinos held just under a third of those roles. And for decades, the community has flourished to include small-business owners, leaders and other prominent figures.
Locals said the festival that was attacked is one of the largest Filipino celebrations of the year, honoring the 16th century Filipino chieftain Datu Lapu-Lapu, who defeated Spanish forces and remains a symbol of resistance against colonialism. The event was a rare chance for Filipinos across the lower mainland to gather in one place, many said.
Conwi, who leads a group of Filipino chefs who provide meals to charities in the area, said that though Filipino Canadian locals are still in shock, the crash hasn't stopped them from pitching in to uplift one another. Conwi said the weekend was filled with Zoom calls and coordination from community organizations to ensure that counseling, food and other resources were taken care of. He and other chefs in his collective have been cooking and distributing meals to families and grieving residents, as well.
'In less than five, 10 hours, people woke up with purpose like you wouldn't believe. People didn't even have time to process this, but people are already coming together,' Conwi said. 'It just all came about organically. It's so quick.'
Silva, owner of the Filipino bakery Cake It Easy Desserts, said she has been selling cupcakes, with 100% of the proceeds going to fundraisers for the victims. She said it has been difficult to come to terms with the tragedy.
'It's such a different feeling knowing that you were there just before it happened,' Silva, 41, said of the chilling experience. 'I have a 7-year-old and a 5-year-old, and they were running around two blocks away from where it actually happened.'
Silva said that during a vigil for the victims, community members didn't hesitate to start brainstorming ideas to help. It's almost reflective of the occasion they were supposed to celebrate, she said.
'Lapu-Lapu is all about resilience, and he stood up for the Philippines,' Silva said. 'I think that's what our community is doing now.'
Celine Bacani, a Filipino Canadian who owns Lee's Donuts in the city, said it has also been heartening to see those outside the community support Filipinos on what was supposed to be a joyous weekend. Leaders from across Canada spoke out, Bacani said, which 'spoke volumes.'
Filipinos abroad also offered their solidarity with the local Vancouver community.
Bacani, 42, who was born and raised in Vancouver, said the community has a long road of healing ahead.
'Filipinos, by nature, are really caring and nurturing people. We are here to always help others,' she said.

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Son of boxing great who was arrested on gun charges and robbed by party girls is fighting Jake Paul
Son of boxing great who was arrested on gun charges and robbed by party girls is fighting Jake Paul

Scottish Sun

time18 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Son of boxing great who was arrested on gun charges and robbed by party girls is fighting Jake Paul

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‘We feel extreme fear': How Northern Ireland's riots are haunting migrants
‘We feel extreme fear': How Northern Ireland's riots are haunting migrants

Telegraph

time5 days ago

  • Telegraph

‘We feel extreme fear': How Northern Ireland's riots are haunting migrants

On the second night of the riots in Ballymena last week, Michael Asuro's Ford Focus hatchback was rolled out into the middle of his street and set alight. Crouching inside his bedroom in the small Northern Irish town just north of Belfast, Asuro kept the lights off to deter the attackers, having heard the sound of the rioters breaking down his neighbours' front door. Then he watched from the window as they smashed the glass of his car and set it on fire. Asuro, a Filipino migrant, arrived in Northern Ireland on a skilled worker visa in September 2023 at the age of 23. He now lives in Ballymena with his partner and works as a mechanic, working on coaches – one of the 4,000 or so Filipinos in Northern Ireland's 1.9 million population. 'I don't feel safe living in Northern Ireland now,' he tells The Telegraph after the experience last week, adding: 'We feel extreme fear. We are not here to destroy the community. We are here legally. We are here to raise our family. We are far away from the Philippines.' The violence began last Monday at a vigil in support of a schoolgirl who had allegedly been sexually assaulted by two Romanian-speaking teenagers. The boys, both aged 14, were charged in court with attempted rape and required a Romanian interpreter. The alleged assault ignited years of simmering unrest between the migrant community and the locals of the town. Rioters sought out houses believed to belong to migrants and set them alight with fireworks and petrol bombs thrown through doors. Footage showed flames engulfing a glass-fronted leisure centre, where migrants displaced by the riots had been sheltering. 'It's pure racism – there is no other way to dress it up,' said Michelle O'Neill, the first minister of Northern Ireland, of the violence. Non-Roma immigrants resorted to putting up signs displaying their nationality, such as 'Filipino lives here', or displaying the King's coronation memorabilia and crockery featuring Elizabeth II, in a bid to deter thugs. A week later, the streets of Ballymena are quiet again; days of rain helped disperse the mobs. 'I've never thanked the Lord for the rain in all my life, but now I have been so grateful for the rain,' says one Filipino migrant who has lived in Belfast since 2002. But a sense of fear persists for those in the migrant community, who now feel they are walking targets. The migrant says that her daughter is so scared to walk through the street that she now wants to dye her hair blonde 'so she won't be targeted'. 'I love Ballymena, we have integrated into the community, we pay our taxes, we have created friends. We are not bad people, we are just living quietly,' she reflects. Simona Lazar, speaking on behalf of the charity Union Romani Voice, told The Telegraph that more than 300 Romanians have now left Ballymena for their own safety. 'We are in contact with Romanian families on the ground: mothers, fathers and young people who say they feel petrified and unsafe where they live now,' she says. 'There are families simply asking to live without fear, they are asking for their children to go to school without being targeted, to walk through their neighbourhoods without intimidation. 'The community feels discriminated against and unsafe. They fear that they will be killed,' she adds. 'Our culture is rich, our history is deep and our contribution to British society is real. We are not asking for special treatment, we are asking for safety, for justice, for equality and for a society where no child grows up afraid.' Northern Ireland has seen significant demographic change this century, experiencing a fourfold increase in minority ethnic residents in two decades – from just 0.8 per cent in 2001 to 3.4 per cent in 2021. Between January 2010 and December 2020, according to medical card registrations, Romanians constituted the third highest inflow to the province. Inward migration from Europe has fallen sharply since Brexit, however, with India, Ireland and Nigeria now the top three countries of origin. Ballymena, where unemployment is above average, was 94 per cent white at the time of the latest census, with just 6 per cent of the population from another ethnic background. There, the Roma community has long been accused, by some, of failing to integrate. 'These problems have been around for a very long time and very systematically in Northern Ireland,' says Nina Briggs, a 30-year-old who lives in Belfast as a migrant from Boston in the United States. 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Third night of Ballymena riots erupt after 'shelter' set alight by 'thugs'
Third night of Ballymena riots erupt after 'shelter' set alight by 'thugs'

Metro

time13-06-2025

  • Metro

Third night of Ballymena riots erupt after 'shelter' set alight by 'thugs'

Sorry, this video isn't available any more. 'Masked thugs' have smashed a leisure centre's windows and set it on fire in the third night of rioting in Northern Ireland. Footage on social media shows masked individuals attacking Larne Leisure Centre, which it is said was housing people displaced by the disorder. Rioting rages for a third night in a row in Ballymena, with petrol bombs being chucked at police and water canons being used against demonstrators. Six people have been arrested and 32 police officers were injured in the previous two nights of violence. On Tuesday rioters threw petrol bombs, bricks and fireworks at officers as tensions continued to rise in the Co Antrim town. Officers used rubber bullets and a water cannon to disperse crowds, but despite this, businesses and homes were attacked and damaged, and vehicles were set alight. Disorder started up again on Wednesday as Larne Leisure Centre was set on fire in the early evening. It is believed no one was inside the building at the time, but DUP politician Gordon Lyons said earlier today that 'a number of individuals were temporarily moved to Larne Leisure Centre… following disturbances in Ballymena'. Ulster Unionist Politician John Stewart called those who set fire to the centre 'despicable and disgraceful'. Crowds gathered for a third night in Ballymena as riot police line the streets in response. Officers have messages blaring from loud speakers, telling locals to 'disperse immediately' and warning force will be used against violent individuals'. The 'racially motivated violence' has led Ballymena residents to stick Union Jacks and other flags to their doors in hopes their properties won't be targeted. Doors have been spotted with 'Filipino Lives Here' signs, and entire rows of houses have been spotted displaying 'locals live here' signs. Other protests on Tuesday also took place in areas of Belfast, Lisburn, Coleraine and Newtownabbey earlier in the evening, some of which experienced disorder. Two bins were set alight and bottles and masonry were thrown at police in the Sunnylands area of Carrickfergus by a group of 20-30 young people. A man was arrested on suspicion of disorderly behaviour in Newtownabbey after bins were set alight. Chief Constable Jon Boutcher condemned the second night of violence and said: 'The mindless violence witnessed over the past two nights in Ballymena is deeply concerning and utterly unacceptable. 'These criminal acts not only endanger lives but also risk undermining the ongoing criminal justice process led by the PSNI in support of a victim who deserves truth, justice, and protection. 'Ironically, and frustratingly, this violence threatens to derail the very pursuit of justice it claims to challenge. 'Let me be clear: this behaviour must stop. I appeal to everyone involved to cease all further acts of criminality and disorder immediately. 'As with any serious offenders in Northern Ireland, we will pursue those responsible and bring them to justice. 'We will now begin our investigation of reviewing all evidence gathered, including video footage, and Images of the individuals involved will be released to identify offenders. 'Do not throw away your future and do not continue to endanger or intimidate the lives of others. 'To those who have been threatened or affected by this violence: we are with you. You deserve safety and justice, and we will find and prosecute those responsible. 'Hate-fuelled acts and mob rule do nothing but tear at the fabric of our society – they resolve nothing and serve no one.' The two nights of riots come after an earlier peaceful protest on Monday in support of the family of a girl who was the victim of an alleged sexual assault in the area. The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said 15 officers were injured on Monday night, some of whom needed hospital treatment, and two police vehicles were damaged. The rioting began after two 14-year-old boys, thought to be Romanian, appeared in court charged with attempted oral rape. It reportedly took place in the Clonavon Terrace area on Saturday evening. The boys appeared at Coleraine magistrates court on Monday via videolink from a juvenile justice centre, where they both pleaded not guilty. Ian Acheson is a senior advisor at the Counter Extremism Project. He told Metro: 'The violence in Ballymena is a grim illustration of what happens when xenophobia collides with legitimate fears across the island of Ireland about what uncontrolled and unresourced migration is doing to local communities. 'We need to be clear that racist thugs and those who cleave to no ideology except the gleeful opportunity to burn their own communities and attack police should be identified, prosecuted and locked up. 'But it is ironic that social media and some of the mainstream outlets is saturated with a requirement that commentators pass a condemnation purity test in ways never previously applied to the terrorism that has disfigured society in Northern Ireland. 'There can be no nuance applied to the nihilistic thugs that hijacked a peaceful protest following the charging of two foreign nationals with the rape of a local girl. 'At the same time, condemning everyone in Ballymena who either attended the protests or the vast majority who stayed home horrified by the violence as racist, does the work of extremists for them. 'Northern Ireland is the litmus test for the sectarian violence that I fear is to come across the rest of these islands if politicians fail to respond to valid and justifiable concerns about demographic changes causing social unrest across Ireland. 'It is significant that the tribal alliances of loyalism and republicanism that once polarised communities are now coming together in a common cause of anti-migrant extremism. 'People who ignore these new and dangerous alliances are leaving an open goal for violent extremism to regain its potency. That is something we must all fight against.' A Romanian interpreter was in court to read the charges to both defendants. Around 2,500 people gathered in the park on Monday before moving towards Clonavon Terrace. The men, women and children marched along Larne Street and Queen Street – but the situation erupted into violence as fires were lit, a boat was overturned and homes vandalised. Northern Ireland's First Minister has condemned the 'racist and sectarian attacks', saying the rioting must stop immediately. Michelle O'Neill said: 'Those responsible for this violence bring nothing to our communities but hatred, fear and division. 'No one, now or ever should feel the need to place a sticker on their door to identify their ethnicity just to avoid being targeted. 'We are a kind-hearted, caring and compassionate people. We stand united and strong, facing down those who seek to divide us through violence and intimidation. More Trending 'I have spoken with the PSNI Chief Constable and urged him to ensure those responsible for orchestrating and perpetuating these crimes are held fully to account. 'As First Minister, as a mother, as a grandmother, I will do everything in my power to protect and support everyone in our community, so that no one should ever have to live in fear in their own home.' And Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he 'utterly condemns' the attacks, adding: 'It's absolutely vital that the PSNI are given the time they need to investigate the incidents concerned rather than face mindless attacks as they seek to bring peace and order to keep people safe.' Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Ballymena riots: Nine police officers injured after third night of violence MORE: 'Everyone asks what fragrance I'm wearing – it's this little-known niche perfume' MORE: Does money seem to be the hardest word? How to talk about it with each of your loved ones

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