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Friday, 2 September 2016
Death toll rises to 18 after Phillipines night market explosion
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A blast ripped through a night market packed with customers in the city of Davao in southern Philippines, killing at least 12 people and wounding 60 others.
A presidential spokesman said on Friday that the blast took place at the open-air market in Davao City, 960km south of the capital, Manila.
The explosion occurred close to the high-end Marco Polo hotel that is popular with tourists and business people, city spokeswoman Catherine de la Rey told AFP news agency.
Regional police chief Manuel Guerlan told Reuters news agency that a ring of checkpoints had been thrown around the city's exit points.
A thorough investigation is being conducted to determine the cause of the explosion
Student John Rhyl L Sialmo told Al Jazeera that the explosion happened around 10:30pm local time (4:30GMT).
"We were inside one of the university buildings when we heard the loud explosion," Sialmo, a student at Ateneo de Davao University, said.
"There were so many people, because it was a night market and also because it's a Friday," Sialmo said, adding that "the rescuers had to use improvised bandages on the victims".
"One woman rushed to the university to ask for help and she said she saw bodies and body parts laying around," he said. "She looked very traumatised."
The Philippine president was in Davao, but was safe and at a police station after the explosion, his son Paolo Duterte, who is vice mayor of the city, told Reuters news agency.
Duterte is hugely popular in Davao, having served as its mayor for more than 22 years before his stunning national election win in May, garnered from the popularity of a promised war on drugs.
His election has prompted a spike in drug-related killings, with more than 2,000 people killed since he took office on June 30, nearly half of them in police operations.
Davao is located in Mindanao, a large southern island beset by decades of armed rebellion by Muslim groups. The region is also home to Abu Sayyaf, a rebel group loosely linked to Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL also known as ISIS) and notorious for making tens of millions of dollars from kidnappings.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
Source: Al Jazeera And Agencies
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