Multiple people killed and several others injured after car drives into busy street festival in Vancouver, Canada
WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT-Multiple people have died and several others injured after a car ploughed through a busy street festival in Vancouver, Canada.
Multiple people have been killed and several others injured after a car rammed into a popular street festival in Vancouver, Canada.
The incident occurred near East 41st Avenue and Fraser Street shortly after 8pm on Saturday evening.
Crowds were celebrating "Lapu Lapu Day"- a celebration of the Filipino community, when the tragedy unfolded.
According to police, a 30-year-old suspect who is a Vancouver man, was arrested at the scene.
He currently remains in custody.
Vancouver Sun reported the event was coming to an end, when a car suddenly drove into a pedestrian-only area past food trucks and struck festival-goers.
A woman who attended the festival told the media outlet she saw a scene of "carnage" after hearing two loud bangs and screaming.
'There were bodies on the street. They were run over. Some were already dead on the spot,' she told Vancouver Sun.
Footage from the incident shared on social media showed multiple people laying motionless on the ground while emergency crews rushed to assist.
Another image posted to X showed the front of an SUV completely destroyed, with the user claiming the vehicle was used to hit the crowd. — Kirk Lubimov (@KirkLubimov) April 27, 2025
Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim wrote on social media he was "shocked and deeply saddened by the horrific incident".
"Our thoughts are with all those affected and with Vancouver's Filipino community during this incredibly difficult time," he said.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney also said he was "devastated" by the tragedy.
Vancouver Police described the violence as a "mass casualty incident" and confirmed more information will become available as the investigation unfolds.

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Northern Ireland's Communities Minister Gordon Lyons had earlier posted on Facebook that a number of people had been temporarily moved to the leisure centre following the disturbances in Ballymena, before then being moved out of Larne. The comments drew sharp criticism from other political parties for identifying a location used to shelter families seeking refuge from anti-immigrant violence. Lyons condemned the attacks on the centre. Police said youths also set fires at a roundabout in the town of Newtownabbey, a flashpoint for sectarian violence that sporadically flares up in the British-run region 27 years after a peace deal largely ended three decades of bloodshed. Debris was also set alight at a barricade in Coleraine, the Belfast Telegraph reported. The British and Irish governments as well as local politicians have condemned the violence. 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Northern Ireland's Communities Minister Gordon Lyons had earlier posted on Facebook that a number of people had been temporarily moved to the leisure centre following the disturbances in Ballymena, before then being moved out of Larne. The comments drew sharp criticism from other political parties for identifying a location used to shelter families seeking refuge from anti-immigrant violence. Lyons condemned the attacks on the centre. Police said youths also set fires at a roundabout in the town of Newtownabbey, a flashpoint for sectarian violence that sporadically flares up in the British-run region 27 years after a peace deal largely ended three decades of bloodshed. Debris was also set alight at a barricade in Coleraine, the Belfast Telegraph reported. The British and Irish governments as well as local politicians have condemned the violence. 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Northern Ireland's Communities Minister Gordon Lyons had earlier posted on Facebook that a number of people had been temporarily moved to the leisure centre following the disturbances in Ballymena, before then being moved out of Larne. The comments drew sharp criticism from other political parties for identifying a location used to shelter families seeking refuge from anti-immigrant violence. Lyons condemned the attacks on the centre. Police said youths also set fires at a roundabout in the town of Newtownabbey, a flashpoint for sectarian violence that sporadically flares up in the British-run region 27 years after a peace deal largely ended three decades of bloodshed. Debris was also set alight at a barricade in Coleraine, the Belfast Telegraph reported. The British and Irish governments as well as local politicians have condemned the violence.


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Violence has erupted in different parts of Northern Ireland for the third successive night, with masked youths starting a fire in a leisure centre but unrest in the primary flashpoint of Ballymena was notably smaller in scale. Hundreds of masked rioters attacked police and set homes and cars on fire in Ballymena, a town of 30,000 people located 45km from Belfast, on Tuesday night in what police condemned as "racist thuggery". The violence flared on Monday after two 14-year-old boys were arrested and appeared in court earlier that day, accused of a serious sexual assault on a teenage girl in the town. The charges were read via a Romanian interpreter to the boys, whose lawyer told the court that they denied the charge, the BBC reported. Police are investigating the damaging of properties on Monday and Tuesday in Ballymena, which has a relatively large migrant population, as racially motivated hate crimes. Two Filipino families told Reuters they fled their home in Ballymena on Tuesday night after fearing for their safety when their car was set on fire outside the house. A few dozen masked youths threw some rocks, fireworks and petrol bombs at police after officers in riot gear and armoured vans blocked roads in the town on Wednesday evening. Police deployed water cannon against the crowd for the second successive night but the clashes were nothing like the previous night that left 17 officers injured and led to five arrests. Much of the crowd had left the streets before midnight. A small number of riot police were also in the town of Larne 30km west where masked youths smashed the windows of a leisure centre before starting fires in the lobby, BBC footage showed. Swimming classes were taking place when bricks were thrown through the windows and staff had to barricade themselves in before running out the back door, a local Alliance Party MPs, Danny Donnelly, told the BBC. Northern Ireland's Communities Minister Gordon Lyons had earlier posted on Facebook that a number of people had been temporarily moved to the leisure centre following the disturbances in Ballymena, before then being moved out of Larne. The comments drew sharp criticism from other political parties for identifying a location used to shelter families seeking refuge from anti-immigrant violence. Lyons condemned the attacks on the centre. Police said youths also set fires at a roundabout in the town of Newtownabbey, a flashpoint for sectarian violence that sporadically flares up in the British-run region 27 years after a peace deal largely ended three decades of bloodshed. Debris was also set alight at a barricade in Coleraine, the Belfast Telegraph reported. The British and Irish governments as well as local politicians have condemned the violence.