Yuma Sun

3 shot and 5 in custody after gunfire disrupts Philadelph­ia Eid event

- BY CLAUDIA LAUER

PHILADELPH­IA – A joyful celebratio­n of the end of Ramadan devolved into panic Wednesday in Philadelph­ia after rival groups exchanged gunfire, leaving at least three people injured and hundreds of parents and children to flee in search of safety.

The annual Eid al-fitr event, held outside a large mosque in the city’s Parkside neighborho­od, came to a sudden end when some 30 shots rang out at about 2:30 p.m., Philadelph­ia police said. Five people were later taken into custody, including a 15-year-old boy who sustained leg and shoulder wounds when he was shot by police and was taken to the hospital by an officer, authoritie­s said. Police said he was carrying a gun.

Additional­ly, one man was shot in the stomach and a juvenile victim had a wound to the hand, police said.

Philadelph­ia Police Commission­er

Kevin Bethel confirmed at a news conference that a police vehicle responding to the 911 calls for help struck a 15-year-old girl who was fleeing the park. He said the child suffered a leg injury.

Witnesses described running to tents set up near the park, hiding behind trees and dropping to the pavement to avoid the gunfire, trying to shield children. Other attendees ran inside the nearby school and mosque and began franticall­y searching for their children and loved ones.

Authoritie­s said nearly 1,000 people attended the event. Several witnesses said they came back to the park hours after the shooting to try to find their shoes or cellphones after running several streets away to safety.

“Ninety-nine percent of the people attending this event were good people who wanted to have a good time,” Bethel said, noting that city officials were offering their support to the Islamic

community.

Police investigat­ed the aftermath late Wednesday afternoon at Clara Muhammad Square, which was strewn with debris including blankets, strollers, coolers and a number of shoes, left behind by celebrants. A doll with a plastic wrapper nearby lay abandoned in the grass near a playground surrounded by police tape and guarded by officers. A few tables with aluminum containers of food to break the fast of Ramadan sat in the middle of the park, surrounded by yellow crime scene tape.

Around 4 p.m., members of the Masjid began pushing large brooms to clean up the debris left in the street and on the sidewalk. A handful of young women dressed in bright colors picked up valuables – a bag, a cellphone, shoes – and set them aside for people to claim. Others waited for police to allow them to gather their purses or lawn chairs from the park.

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