Monday, March 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Lapu Lapu festival set for April 19, a year after deadly attack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Mar, 2026 10:34 AM
  • Vancouver Lapu Lapu festival set for April 19, a year after deadly attack

Filipino BC has announced that it will host its annual Lapu Lapu Day festival in Vancouver on April 19 to "reflect on shared healing" a year after a vehicle ramming attack at the last festival killed 11 people. 

The Italian Cultural Centre is donating space for the festival, instead of holding the event on community streets, in a move organizers say is about prioritizing safety. 

On April 26 last year, a vehicle plowed down a crowded street of festival goers, resulting in Adam Kai-Ji Lo being charged with 11 counts of second-degree murder and 31 counts of attempted murder.

Filipino BC calls this year's festival the Lapu Lapu Day of Togetherness, with a focus on "reflection and communal healing," and those attending are encouraged to take part in ways that "feel meaningful to them and supportive of their individual healing needs." 

The group says the festival will feature a comprehensive safety plan, including controlled access, defined entry points, trained security and co-ordination with emergency services.

Filipino BC board member Céline Loriot says in a statement that the event isn't about moving on from what happened, but about "moving forward together, with survivors, families, and the broader community, to reclaim space for healing, cultural pride, and collective care."

"We want people to know that however they choose to engage, or even if they choose not to, that choice is respected.”

It says detailed schedules on programming for the festival will be released later. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Tanouye

MORE National ARTICLES

Killer had no specific target in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., school, but was 'hunting': RCMP

Killer had no specific target in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., school, but was 'hunting': RCMP
RCMP in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., say they don't know where the primary gun used in a mass school shooting earlier this week came from.

Killer had no specific target in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., school, but was 'hunting': RCMP

Parliamentarians meet American envoy, welcome new India-US trade pact

Parliamentarians meet American envoy, welcome new India-US trade pact
Several parliamentarians on Thursday welcomed US Ambassador to India Sergio Gor and congratulated him on the recently announced India-US interim trade agreement, describing it as a significant step in strengthening bilateral ties. 

Parliamentarians meet American envoy, welcome new India-US trade pact

Tumbler Ridge 'one big family,' mayor tells vigil as community reels from shootings

Tumbler Ridge 'one big family,' mayor tells vigil as community reels from shootings
A memorial of flowers, lights and stuffed animals grows in Tumbler Ridge, B.C., as the community grapples with the fallout of a mass shooting that killed nine people, mostly children, along with the 18-year-old shooter who police say took her own life.

Tumbler Ridge 'one big family,' mayor tells vigil as community reels from shootings

Police identify B.C. mass shooter as 18-year-old, say five students and teacher dead

Police identify B.C. mass shooter as 18-year-old, say five students and teacher dead
The person behind one of British Columbia's worst mass killings has been identified as an 18-year-old who killed family members at home, then gunned down students randomly at a school before firing at police and killing herself as officers closed in.

Police identify B.C. mass shooter as 18-year-old, say five students and teacher dead

What we know about the victims in the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting

What we know about the victims in the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting
Details are beginning to emerge about the people killed and injured in the mass shooting at a high school and a home in Tumbler Ridge, B.C. Here's what is known so far:

What we know about the victims in the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting

History of Tumbler Ridge, a mining boom town with a wounded heart

History of Tumbler Ridge, a mining boom town with a wounded heart
Tumbler Ridge in the remote Peace region of northeast British Columbia was once best known as a coal mining boom town that was built from scratch in the 1980s, then faced challenges from shifts in its economic fortunes.

History of Tumbler Ridge, a mining boom town with a wounded heart