A Vietnamese national died while his Filipino driver was hurt in a shooting incident in Puerto Princesa City. /PDI
PUERTO PRINCESA CITY, Palawan — A Vietnamese national died while his Filipino driver was hurt in a shooting incident on Monday night in this city.
Initial investigation by the Puerto Princesa City police revealed on Tuesday, May 9, that businessman Kim Vu Dang, 39, who was engaged in lobster buy-and-sell, was inside the stockroom at the back of his house in Purok El Rancho, Barangay Sta. Monica when the unidentified gunman, who was posing as a lobster seller, arrived around 7:30 p.m. and shot Dang several times.His driver Mark Nephi Ramos, who was also in the stockroom, suffered a gunshot wound in his right palm.
Philippines Latest News, Philippines Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
LPA off Palawan to dissipate, another likely to enter PHWHILE the low pressure area (LPA) off Palawan is likely to dissipate, another weather disturbance may enter the Philippine Area of Responsibility (PAR) within the day, the state-run weather agency said on Sunday.
Read more »
How 17-year-old Filipino W Series racer Bianca Bustamante trains her body for the trackSitting for hours in a high-power racecar still requires top-notch physical conditioning—just ask Bianca Bustamante
Read more »
Mindanawon journalist is lone Filipino among 10 Dart Centre fellowsDAVAO CITY (MindaNews / 07 May) – A former reporter of ABS-CBN in Davao City who now heads the news division of the state-run People’s Television Network- Mindanao has been named as one of ten fell…
Read more »
Filipino families who rate themselves as ‘poor’ steady at 51% —SWSHalf of all Filipino families described themselves as poor in March 2023—a finding barely changed from December 2022, according to a Social Weather Stations survey.
Read more »
Half of Filipino families still rate themselves as ‘poor’ — surveyA Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey made public on Sunday, May 7 revealed that 51 percent of Filipino families consider themselves as “mahirap” or “poor,” 30 percent rate themselves as “borderline” or in-between poor and non-poor, and 19 percent consider themselves as “hindi mahirap” or “not poor.”
Read more »