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Austria shooting: At least nine killed in Graz School shooting, suspect among dead

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At least nine people, including seven students and an adult, have been killed in a shooting at Dreierschützengasse high school in Graz, Austria. The suspected gunman—believed to be a student—is among the dead, with police suggesting he took his own life. The attack occurred around 10:00 local time, prompting a large-scale police response, including the elite Cobra tactical unit.

Wounded victims are being treated at a nearby concert hall, while authorities confirm the school has been secured. Graz Mayor Elke Kahr described the incident as a "terrible tragedy." Austria’s interior ministry has reported multiple fatalities, though official casualty figures remain unconfirmed. Chancellor Christian Stocker has cancelled appointments as the nation mourns the deadliest school shooting in recent years.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/live/ce3vxrz6rpnt
 

Gunshots heard and students evacuate in videos filmed at Austrian school​


Videos from social media show the moment loud gunshots were heard in a classroom, during a deadly school shooting in Graz, Austria.

Footage shows people panicking and looking outside through a window, as gunshots ring out in the background.

Other footage shows armed police officers inside school corridors as pupils run towards the exit.

Six females and three males were killed in the attack, according to Interior Minister Gerhard Karner.

Police said the 21-year-old gunman took his own life in a school bathroom shortly after.

 
Terrible news. Om Shanti to the victims.

Has the name and religion of the killer been revealed yet. Would be interesting to know if it’s the same trend.
 
Austrians hold vigil to mourn 10 victims of school shooting

Thousands of people in Austria have held a candlelight vigil for the victims of a school shooting in which 10 people were killed.

Police said the 21-year-old suspect, a former student, took his own life in a school bathroom shortly after the gun attack in Graz on Tuesday - the deadliest in the country's recent history.

The incident took place at Dreierschützengasse secondary school in the north-west of the city.

A further 12 people were injured, some seriously, and the gunman's motive remained under investigation, officials said.

Six females and three males were killed in the attack, and a fourth female died later in hospital. Austria's APA news agency has reported that seven of those killed were pupils.

At the vigil on Tuesday night, Graz residents said they wanted to turn the city's main square into a sea of candles, and that is what they did.

In the whispering silence, thousands of mostly young people gathered over the course of the evening, alone or clutching the arms or shoulders of their friends. They lit candles, cried, or stood for a while in prayer or contemplation.

Then they slowly came forward to hand candles to volunteers who arranged them carefully on the steps of the fountain.

The Archbishop Johann fountain is known as the heart of the old town of Graz, in front of the city hall. On Tuesday night it became a symbol of the grief, and solidarity, of the people of Austria.

"When you hear about it, you have so much sympathy for the people, maybe you could have known someone," Felix Platzer, a passerby at the vigil, told the Reuters news agency.

"This is an example of solidarity and you grieve together and together it is easier to cope," he added.

Three days of mourning have been declared in Austria, and a nationwide minute's silence will be held on Wednesday at 10:00 local time in memory of the victims.

Flags on the Hofburg Palace in Vienna, where the President Alexander Van der Bellen has his office, will fly at half mast.

The school where the attack took place will remain closed until further notice.

Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker said Tuesday was a "dark day in [the] history of our country" and declared the shooting a "national tragedy".

"A school is more than just a place to learn - it is a space for trust, for feeling comfortable and for having a future," he told the conference, adding this safe place had been "violated".

"In these difficult hours, being human is our strongest point," he said.

The attack "strikes our country right at its heart", Stocker said in the immediate aftermath.

"These were young people who had their whole lives ahead of them."

Gunman was former student

The gunman, who has not yet been named, was a former Dreierschützengasse student who didn't graduate from the school, Interior Minister Gerhard Karner told a news conference on Tuesday afternoon.

Karner added it was now the job of the criminal office to investigate.

Officers also confirmed the gunman was not known to police before the attack.

Current information suggests the shooter legally owned the two guns used in the attack and had a firearms licence, police added.

Local media outlets have reported the suspect used a pistol and a shotgun to carry out the shooting.

He was an Austrian man from the wider Graz region who acted alone, police said.

Police said they began an operation at 10:00 local time (09:00 BST) after gunshots were heard from inside the school.

A specialist Cobra tactical unit - which handles attacks and hostage situations - was deployed to the school, police said.

Authorities evacuated all pupils and teachers from the building. Police confirmed the school had been secured and there was no further danger posed to members of the public.

"Locally, we have seen people crying on the streets, talking to friends that have been at the school when the shooting happened, who have maybe lost a friend," said Fanny Gasser, a journalist for the Austrian daily newspaper Kronen Zeitung.

She told BBC News "everybody knows somebody" at the school because Graz - despite being the second-largest city in Austria - is "not that big".

She said the school was likely unprepared for the possibility of an attack. "We are not living in America, we are living in Austria, which seems like a very safe space."

Local mayor Elke Kahr called the incident a "terrible tragedy".

European Commission Vice-President Kaja Kallas said she was "deeply shocked" by the news. "Every child should feel safe at school and be able to learn free from fear and violence," she posted on X.

Witnesses heard gunshots

Astrid, a woman living with her husband Franz in the ground floor flat of the residential building next to the school, told the BBC she had just finished hanging out the washing when she heard gunfire.

She said: "I heard shots. Lots of them, one after the other. 'Poof... poof... poof…. poof… poof…' again and again. I went into the flat to my husband and I told him: 'Someone is shooting!'

"He thought it was maybe something else, but we heard I reckon 30 to 40 shots. Then my husband rang the police."

"We saw one pupil at the window - it looked like he was getting ready to jump out... but then he went back inside," Franz said, adding they also saw a teacher.

The pair later saw the students had "got out of the school on the ground floor, from the other side" where they "gathered on the street", Franz said.

Queues to give blood

By Tuesday afternoon, long queues had formed outside a blood donation centre in Graz.

"Today is a hard day for all of us in Graz. I'm here to [donate] my blood to help other people who need it," 25-year-old Stephanie Koenig told Reuters news agency.

"Today I'm here because I wanted to do something. I felt helpless with the news," Johanna, 30, said.

Another person standing in line told Reuters giving blood felt like the "only way possible to help".

The incident is the deadliest mass shooting in the country's recent history.

In 2020, jihadist gunman Kujtim Fejzulai shot four people dead and wounded 23 others on a rampage through Vienna's busy nightlife district.

Meanwhile, in 2016, a gunman opened fire at a concert in the town of Nenzing, killing two people before shooting himself dead. Eleven other people were injured in the attack.

BBC
 

Bomb attack plans found at Austria gunman's home​


Abandoned plans for a bomb attack have been found at the home of the suspected gunman in a school shooting in Austria, police have said.

Police in the south-eastern city of Graz also found a non-functional pipe bomb, and a "farewell" letter and video during the search, they said in a statement.

Ten people were killed in the attack at the secondary school on Tuesday - the deadliest in the country's recent history.

The suspect, a 21-year-old former student at the school, took his own life in a school bathroom shortly after the attack, according to police. Authorities have not yet drawn any conclusions on the gunman's possible motive.

The incident, which left a further 11 people injured, took place at Dreierschützengasse secondary school in the north-west of the city.

Six females and three males were killed in the attack, and a seventh female later died in hospital.

The victims were a teacher and nine students aged between 14 and 17, police said. All were Austrian citizens, except for one who was Polish.

Police said the suspect was born in Styria - the region in which Graz sits - and lived with his single mother, who was also Austrian, in the Graz-Umgebung District.

They added that his father, of Armenian origin, had not lived with them since his parents' separation.

Current information suggests the shooter legally owned the two guns used in the attack - a pistol and a shotgun - and had a firearms licence, police said. They added that the guns would be forensically examined.

The gunman, who has not yet been named, did not graduate from the school, Interior Minister Gerhard Karner told a news conference earlier. He was not known to the authorities prior to the attack, police also confirmed.

Map showing the location of the school
Analysis of evidence and data storage devices will continue over the coming weeks and hundreds of people will be interviewed, they said.

The incident would be reconstructed to shed light on how events unfolded, police added.

They said police first arrived at the school six minutes after the first emergency call was made at 10:00 on Tuesday, with a rapid response unit and specialist Cobra tactical unit - which handles attacks and hostage situations - arriving by 10:17.

Styrian police said this quick reaction "appears to have saved several lives".

Police have increased security measures around schools in the city since.

Three days of mourning were declared in Austria following the attack, and a nationwide minute's silence was held on Wednesday at 10:00 local time (08:00 GMT) in memory of the victims. The Austrian flag has been lowered to half-mast on all public buildings.

After the minute's silence in Graz's main square, one woman, Tores, told BBC News that she knew one of the boys who had died. He was 17.

"I've know this family for a long time, including the son of the family, and knew that he attended that school. I rang immediately, to ask if everything is OK. Then they let me know at midday, that the boy was one of those slaughtered," she said.

The incident is the deadliest mass shooting in Austria's recent history.

In 2020, jihadist gunman Kujtim Fejzulai shot four people dead and wounded 23 others on a rampage through Vienna's busy nightlife district.

Meanwhile, in 2016, a gunman opened fire at a concert in the town of Nenzing, killing two people before shooting himself dead. Eleven other people were injured in the attack.

Source: BBC
 
Terrible news. Om Shanti to the victims.

Has the name and religion of the killer been revealed yet. Would be interesting to know if it’s the same trend.
To disappoint you, the shooter wasn't a Muslim nor a Pakistani.
 
RIP to the deceased!

The world is getting rotten by the day.​
 
Terrible news. Om Shanti to the victims.

Has the name and religion of the killer been revealed yet. Would be interesting to know if it’s the same trend.
don’t know about tragedies like this but it seems like people of your own religion have gotten pretty good at crashing planes. Hope we don’t see a new trend there
 
Deport this low life evil sob to India ,where some patriots want to question his views. They can have him.
People like him only care or pretend to care about the victims of this sort of tragedy if the perpetrator happens to be a Muslim.
 
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