From relaxed joker to pitiless killer:how hostage-taking turned deadly
Under the old stones of Fort Santiago, six families awaited their tour bus.
It wasn't yet 10am but it was already 30 degrees Celsius and climbing, the bright sun casting an energy-sapping glare. The 20 tourists were given 45 minutes to explore the old Spanish fort, but most returned early.
It was the final day of a whirlwind tour for which the group had arrived four days earlier from Hong Kong, couples and families enjoying a late-August hurrah before school and work kicked off anew. Despite spanning seven decades in age, they had grown close sightseeing together. 'We became friends,' said Li Fung-kwan, 66, who was travelling with her 72-year-old husband, Li Yick-biu.
The bus arrived and everyone clambered into the air-conditioned cocoon. Then a policeman in police-issue camouflage and green jacket boarded.
'I told the policeman, police are not allowed inside the bus, only the tourists,' recalled Danilo Nebril, a tour company photographer.
'I'll just join you,' the policeman said, according to Nebril.
As the bus moved off , the policeman announced they were his hostages and displayed an M16 assault rifle and a .45 calibre pistol. He ordered the driver to head for Quirino Grandstand, less than two kilometres away, and the men to the back of the bus.