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A damaged red car with a bullet hole on its windscreen near the Shangri-La Hotel in Singapore is being towed away on Sunday.
AFP/Singapore
An Asia-Pacific security summit was briefly put on lockdown on Sunday after police shot dead a local motorist who tried to flee a checkpoint in a car later found to contain drugs, officials said.
The three-day Shangri-La Dialogue attended by US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter and counterparts from around the world along with top military officials ended at midday Sunday.
But before dawn, police opened fire at a car with three Singaporean men after they tried to crash through a barricade outside the annual summit's venue, the Shangri-La Hotel.
The 34-year-old driver was killed and one passenger was wounded and hospitalised. Both passengers are now under arrest.
"Substances believed to be controlled drugs and an item believed to be a drug-taking utensil were found on the men arrested," the police said in a statement.
"The driver and one of the passengers are wanted by authorities for various offences," the statement said, adding that no weapons or explosives were found in the vehicle.
Shootings are extremely rare in Singapore, which boasts one of the world's lowest crime rates, but the city-state considers itself a potential terrorist target.
"Preliminary investigations indicate that this is an isolated incident. Police investigations are ongoing," the statement added.
After the shooting, police officers initially told people attending the summit that the hotel was on complete lockdown, with no entry allowed. Roads and pathways leading up to the hotel, located in Singapore's leafy diplomatic quarter, were shut off with barricade tape.
But access to the venue was gradually eased on Sunday morning. The conference resumed at 9.00am with no signs of alarm in the main lobby.
An AFP photographer said a bullet hole could be seen on the front windscreen of the vehicle as it was towed away at noon.
Security had been heightened for the summit with roadblocks and checkpoints set up in the vicinity of the venue.
Some were manned by members of the Gurkha Contingent - elite Nepalese fighters who are part of the local police force.
There are no comments.
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