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Texas school shooting: 10 killed & 10 injured as gunman opens fire at Santa Fe school in Houston

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A shooting has been reported at a high school in the southeastern Texas city of Santa Fe, officials said Friday.

A gunman walked into an art class at Santa Fe High School and began firing what looked like a shotgun, a witness told CNN affiliate KTRK.

The witness told KTRK she saw a girl shot in the leg.

Details about whether anyone was in custody or what led to the shooting weren't immediately available.
Aerial video from the scene showed several police officers outside the school. Some were searching students and their backpacks.

Angelica Martinez, a 14-year-old student, told CNN she and her schoolmates were being evacuated at one point "like it's a fire drill."

"We were all standing (outside), but not even five minutes later, we started hearing gunshots," she said.

"I didn't see anybody shooting, but like (the gunshots) were kind of spaced," she said, adding she heard about four shots.

The entire school district is on lockdown, district officials said.

Santa Fe is a city of about 13,000 people roughly 30 miles southeast of Houston and 20 miles northwest of Galveston.

https://edition.cnn.com/2018/05/18/us/texas-school-shooting/index.html
 
When are we going to actually do something about this?

Congress needs to be proactive and needs to get out of the pockets of the NRA.

Australia set a good example in regards to gun control, and I think we are long overdue an overhaul process here in the US as well.
 
Texas school shooting: 'eight killed' as gunman opens fire at Santa Fe school in Houston

At least eight people died when a gunman opened fire inside a school in Texas, according to local authorities.

Police were called to Santa Fe High School just before 8am (2pm BST) after receiving reports of an "active shooter".

Texas TV channel KHOU and the Houston Chronicle said police officials confirmed multiple victims following the shooting at the school about 30 miles south east of Houston.

The sheriff's office for nearby Harris County said its deputies were assisting with a "multiple-casualty incident."

"This is no longer an active shooting situation and the injured are being treated," the sheriff's department said on Twitter.

The school district in Santa Fe, said the situation was "active, but has been contained."

U.S. President Donald Trump wrote of the shooting on Twitter: "Early reports not looking good. God bless all!"

The school district authority confirmed that the school had been placed on lockdown while officers investigated, with pupils led out onto the grass and searched for weapons.

One student told Houston television station KTRK that a gunman came into her first-period art class and started shooting.

She said she saw a girl with blood on her leg as the class evacuated the room.

Santa Fe school district said on Facebook: “This morning an incident occurred at the high school involving an active shooter."

“The district has initiated a lockdown at the high school. We will send out additional information as soon as it is available.”

A suspect was later taken into custody, according to the school's assistant principal Chris Richardson.

Authorities have not yet confirmed the number of injuries.

Another student, Leila Butler, told ABC that fire alarms went off at about 7.45am and students left their classrooms.

She said some students believe they heard shots fired, and that she was sheltering with other students and teachers near campus.

Neighbouring Dickinson district said it had also placed its schools on “protect mode” following the reports.

“Doors are locked & personnel are stationed at outer doors to let people in and out. No students allowed outside of building.”

Santa Fe High School, located about 30 miles from Houston, has more than 1,400 students in grades 9-12.

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/wor...-amid-reports-of-active-shooter-a3843026.html
 
ABC13 (local Houston News channels) has reported that at least 10 killed and 10 are injured. Someone on twitter has mentioned that a Pakistani exchange student is one of 10 killed in Santa Fe High School.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A Pakistani Student Sabika Sheikh died in today’s school shooting in <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SantaFe?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SantaFe</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Texas?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Texas</a> a few hours ago<br>She was on her Exchange Year In US and was due to come back to Pakistan on Eid <br>Do remember her in your prayers.<br>Our thoughts go with her family and friends.. <a href="https://t.co/GrXMrGSkYV">pic.twitter.com/GrXMrGSkYV</a></p>— Irum Azeem Farooque (@Irumf) <a href="https://twitter.com/Irumf/status/997574523569561600?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 18, 2018</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">School shooting in Texas. Early reports not looking good. God bless all!</p>— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) <a href="https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/997493407097524224?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 18, 2018</a></blockquote>
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Unfortunate,the conservatives are putting the dumbest argument as to "put God back into Schools" and avoid slaughter ,some of them are so cringe worthy i sometimes think its Russian bots commenting.
 
In the first hours after the Texas school shooting that left at least ten dead Friday, online hoaxers moved quickly to spread a viral lie, creating fake Facebook accounts with the suspected shooter's name and a doctored photo showing him wearing a "Hillary 2016" hat.

Several were swiftly flagged by users and deleted by the social network.

But others rose rapidly in their place: Chris Sampson, a disinformation analyst for a counter-terrorism think tank, said he could see new fakes as they were being created and filled out with false information, including images linking the suspect to the liberal group Antifa.

It has become a familiar pattern in the all-too-common aftermath of American school shootings: A barrage of online misinformation, seemingly designed to cloud the truth or win political points.

But some social-media watchers said they were still surprised at the speed with which the Santa Fe shooting descended into information warfare. Sampson said he watched the clock after the suspect was first named by police to see how long it would take for a fake Facebook account to be created in his name: less than 20 minutes.

"It seemed this time like they were more ready for this," he said. "Like someone just couldn't wait to do it." The fakes again reveal a core vulnerability for the world's most popular websites, whose popularity as social platforms is routinely weaponised by hoaxers exploiting the fog of breaking news.

Two women pray outside the family reunification site following a shooting at Santa Fe High School on Friday, May 18, 2018, in Santa Fe, Texas.

Facebook officials said the company removed the suspect's real account and were working to remove impersonating accounts.

Facebook said this week it had disabled more than 500 million fake accounts on the social network in the first three months of the year, though it contended tens of millions more were probably still online.

Christopher Bouzy, whose site Bot Sentinel tracks more than 12,000 automated Twitter accounts often used to spread misinformation, said 4 of the top 10 phrases tweeted by bot or troll accounts over the past 24 hours were related to the Santa Fe shooting, reaching the top 10 within less than 3 hours. "That is significant activity for our platform," he said.

The fake accounts included the name of Dimitrios Pagourtzis, the 17-year-old student and suspect that police say is now in custody, and included a photo taken from his Facebook that had been changed to include a hat from Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign.

It's unclear who created the false accounts. In the past, similar accounts have been created as part of disinformation campaigns, including by Russian-linked trolls, or people just out to spread havoc. "For some people, they have no stake in the game, and life is just a big joke," Sampson said.

Conspiracy theories, hoaxes and unsubstantiated news reports by anonymous online posters have increasingly run rampant on message boards such as 4chan and other dark corners of the Web in the wake of school shootings. Alt-right news sites also quickly spread unsubstantiated allegations claiming the shooter was part of the Antifa movement.

But that wave of misinformation can also pierce into the mainstream: In February, after a school shooting in Parkland, Florida, a video labelling a shooting survivor as a "crisis actor" whose involvement was faked to boost gun control soared to the top of YouTube's "Trending" list. The site blamed algorithms that rewarded the video for gaining a rapid amount of viewership in a short amount of time.

Several of the fake Facebook accounts named for the shooter were disabled within a half hour on Facebook, but others could be seen popping up sporadically through Friday afternoon, including one fake profile that featured a banner from the campaign of President Donald Trump.

Facebook, which did not immediately respond to requests for comment, said it has 10,000 human moderators watching the site and intends to double that number by the end of the year. Some critics suggested the site should f0rce new accounts into a waiting period before they are publicly available, or that the company should more aggressively watch names in the news for potential fakes.

https://www.stuff.co.nz/world/ameri...-fe-shooting-fake-facebook-accounts-were-live
 
Normally bustling on a Friday lunchtime, Pook’s Crawfish Hole was closed. Where the giant roadside sign might usually promote the restaurant’s specials, it said: “Thoughts and Prayers With Santa Fe.”

In the deserted interior, a television mounted on the wall near dangling models of crustaceans was tuned to a local news channel’s coverage of the school shooting that had unfolded that morning just a couple of miles away.

Pook’s opens from January to June, when the crawfish from Louisiana, the next door state, are fresh. But on this day it was shut. “Out of respect,” said Gregg Vicknair, the owner. A sign on the door encouraged would-be patrons to attend the candlelight vigil planned for the evening to mourn the 10 dead.

Community gatherings are the most natural and common short-term response in the aftermath of such a tragedy; what felt different from the norm in Santa Fe after the latest American school massacre was the sense that despite theshock, such events happen often enough that it would be almost naive to experience disbelief. Even for some children, it seems, it has become a matter of not if, but when and where.

A television journalist’s interview with one Santa Fe student, Paige Curry, went viral on social media. “Was there a part of you that was like, ‘This isn’t real, this would not happen in my school?’” the reporter asked her.

Curry gave a rueful semi-laugh. “No, there wasn’t,” she replied. “It’s been happening everywhere, I’ve always kind of felt like eventually it was going to happen here too.”

Interviewer: “Was there a part of you that was like, ‘This could not happen at my school?’”

Santa Fe High School student: “No. It’s been happening everywhere. I’ve always felt it would eventually happen here, too.”

Vicknair had a similar reply to a similar question: you never think it’ll happen here, right? “People say that, but I always … ” He paused. “Yes. I think that kind of stuff can happen anywhere.”

The father of three added: “It makes you wonder. Like I hear people say all the time, [school is] supposed to be a safe place. But I guess nowadays it’s just not.”

Santa Fe high school had been placed on lockdown in response to a potential threat as recently as 28 February, when police were called after reports of popping sounds.

The deaths and injuries in Santa Fe happened three months after 17 students and staff were shot dead at a high school in Parkland, Florida, generating an immense amount of activism and attention, but has not so far translated into meaningful political action.

On Friday night, several hundred people, many wearing the green colours of the high school’s sports teams, attended a vigil for the victims in the town. The event featured prayers led by local pastors and speeches by Ted Cruz, the US senator from Texas, and the governor, Greg Abbott, who told the crowd that Texas politicians would work to find solutions that return “normalcy” and “safety” to schools.

This was the 16th shooting this year at a school during school hours that caused injury or death. Combined, the tally of the previous fifteen incidents is 21 deaths and 46 injuries.

“It’s just a shame and hopefully there will be changes nationwide to secure these schools. I’ll leave that up to the professionals,” Vicknair, 39, said. “I think we’ve got officials and stuff that can make those decisions.”

Not yet swallowed by Houston’s ever-expanding suburbia, Santa Fe is a spread-out place of about 13,000 people with quiet streets lined with single-storey ranch-style houses, some with front lawns as big as basketball courts.

Less racially diverse than other parts of Texas – a large majority of residents are white – and with a slightly higher average household income than the state as a whole, it has a semi-rural character. Still, with the busy Highway 6 running through the centre of town (and past the scene of the slaughter) it is easy enough for residents to commute to Houston, the Gulf coast seaside resort of Galveston or the oil refineries and chemical plants of Texas City.

Until now, it was perhaps best known for a case in 2000 in which the US supreme court ruled that the school district’s policy of allowing student-led prayers before football games was unconstitutional.

As images from rolling news reports flickered on the computer monitor on his desk, he confronted what he fears is a modern reality with no easy solution. “You have to look at it that it could happen anywhere. You just hope that it doesn’t. I don’t know how to stop it and I don’t think gun control’s the answer,” the 56-year-old said in his small office, around the corner from a preparation room where trays of spicy beef jerky were stacked high.

“We grew up having guns, hunting, none of that ever happened when we had guns. We went to school, used to have guns in the back of our pickups, on the racks. Long as you didn’t take them inside, you know? Nothing like that ever happened.”

Outside the front entrance, at a flagpole next to a life-sized model of a cow, a man lowered the Stars and Stripes to half-staff.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/may/18/santa-fe-texas-high-school-shooting-saddened
 
As if American Schooling already wasn't hard,the kids have to go through this as well,where they are expecting shooting to happen :facepalm:
 
A signifcant percentage of America's next generation are either going to be dead or too traumatised to live normal, happy lives. And the people to blame are their lawmakers and their parents, those who are meant to be protecting them.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Shocked & saddened by the tragic death of Sabika Sheikh our Pakistani Honour Roll exchange student in the Santa Fe school shooting in USA. My prayers go to the family - May Allah give them the strength to cope with such an irreparable loss. <a href="https://t.co/dqgO8lLSAW">pic.twitter.com/dqgO8lLSAW</a></p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/997746377781317632?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 19, 2018</a></blockquote>
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American and Canadian schooling hard? It’s a joke

Then you don't understand American schooling. It's probably the only system which allows you some degree of freedom. You can take university courses (i.e., Calculus III, Linear Algebra, Real Analysis, etc.) or stick to a traditional curriculum, based on your preference and strengths.

My brother, for example, was enrolled in university courses and was able to earn a Math minor in high school.
 
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American and Canadian schooling hard? It’s a joke

A lot of high schoolers take AP/IB and college level courses that are harder than whatever they teach in the subcontinent. Also liberal arts in America is a lot harder than in Pakistan, there are strict rules against plagiarism, you have to do your own research, cite your sources/references, format your paper correctly in either APA or MLA, with the right page margins, line spacing and the content has to be good. I've read papers written by students in Pakistan and India and they're usually poorly written and not in the correct format, missing a lot of references as well.
 
Then you don't understand American schooling. It's probably the only system which allows you some degree of freedom. You can take university courses (i.e., Calculus III, Linear Algebra, Real Analysis, etc.) or stick to a traditional curriculum, based on your preference and strengths.

My brother, for example, was enrolled in university courses and was able to earn a Math minor in high school.

Yeah and schools in America emphasise more on extracurriculars like sports and being involved in the community. School isn't just about getting an education.
 
I had become immune after seeing the headlines about another mass school shooting in America but i forget that these were someones sons, daughters, mothers and fathers. Every life is precious.
 
A lot of high schoolers take AP/IB and college level courses that are harder than whatever they teach in the subcontinent. Also liberal arts in America is a lot harder than in Pakistan, there are strict rules against plagiarism, you have to do your own research, cite your sources/references, format your paper correctly in either APA or MLA, with the right page margins, line spacing and the content has to be good. I've read papers written by students in Pakistan and India and they're usually poorly written and not in the correct format, missing a lot of references as well.

none of the above is hard.
.
have you ever told to memorize a book and spit out when asked a question? now, that is hard.
 
A lot of high schoolers take AP/IB and college level courses that are harder than whatever they teach in the subcontinent. Also liberal arts in America is a lot harder than in Pakistan, there are strict rules against plagiarism, you have to do your own research, cite your sources/references, format your paper correctly in either APA or MLA, with the right page margins, line spacing and the content has to be good. I've read papers written by students in Pakistan and India and they're usually poorly written and not in the correct format, missing a lot of references as well.

Are you seriously comparing USA to Pakistan? In comparison to developed first world countries it languishes in the bottom rung. Not to mention the huge fees one has to pay(and be in debt for most of ones working life) to get into the top/private universities/schools/colleges unlike most of the other top countries where it is free.
 
Are you seriously comparing USA to Pakistan? In comparison to developed first world countries it languishes in the bottom rung. Not to mention the huge fees one has to pay(and be in debt for most of ones working life) to get into the top/private universities/schools/colleges unlike most of the other top countries where it is free.

Do you see what comment I was replying to?!? The guys a Pakistani student studying in north America so it'd make sense to compare the two. Also lol @ your ignorant comparison.

America is very large and diverse country, public schooling here is free. It's only college you have to pay for and there are many grants, loans, and scholarships students have access although it can definitely be better but we do have some of the best colleges in the world and the college experience in America is unparalleled.

Public schooling in America also varies across school districts, some public schools here are among the best in the world and others are the worst among the 1st world. It's the discprancy and inequality here that is the main issue with the school system since the quality of school depends largely on what neighborhood you live.
 
A lot of high schoolers take AP/IB and college level courses that are harder than whatever they teach in the subcontinent. Also liberal arts in America is a lot harder than in Pakistan, there are strict rules against plagiarism, you have to do your own research, cite your sources/references, format your paper correctly in either APA or MLA, with the right page margins, line spacing and the content has to be good. I've read papers written by students in Pakistan and India and they're usually poorly written and not in the correct format, missing a lot of references as well.

School education in Asia is much much more difficult than in the USA. I have relatives/friends who moved to the USA mid high school or middle school and they agree with me. Your confirmation bias is probably what made you think those papers were poorly written. Either that or it was specifically chosen poorly written papers or just coincidences. I’ve met so many international students here in Toronto who find courses in first year Uni to be a joke simply because their base is so strong. My own younger brother is doing his high school in Toronto and while I used to study hours a day for my O levels he’s getting 90+ without touching a textbook at home. My cousins moved to America at different stages of high school. They have the same opinion.

I agree school isn’t just about an education but some of the good private schools in Pakistan have excellent extracurricular activities as well. You also have to look at other factors related to the state of the two countries to see why purely education is given so much more importance in most Pakistani schools.

Basically the literacy rate in Pakistan is much lower due to other factors howevever the students who do manage to go to a decent school and get a decent education will be much better off purely from an academic standpoint compared to the USA. Look at it this way. Pakistani school education is a garden in which you spray the highest quality fertilizer only on a small proportion of plants. This way most of the garden is dead except for some really good plants. The U.S schooling system is basically spraying an average cheap fertilizer on to most of the garden.
 
School education in Asia is much much more difficult than in the USA. I have relatives/friends who moved to the USA mid high school or middle school and they agree with me. Your confirmation bias is probably what made you think those papers were poorly written. Either that or it was specifically chosen poorly written papers or just coincidences. I’ve met so many international students here in Toronto who find courses in first year Uni to be a joke simply because their base is so strong. My own younger brother is doing his high school in Toronto and while I used to study hours a day for my O levels he’s getting 90+ without touching a textbook at home. My cousins moved to America at different stages of high school. They have the same opinion.

I agree school isn’t just about an education but some of the good private schools in Pakistan have excellent extracurricular activities as well. You also have to look at other factors related to the state of the two countries to see why purely education is given so much more importance in most Pakistani schools.

Basically the literacy rate in Pakistan is much lower due to other factors howevever the students who do manage to go to a decent school and get a decent education will be much better off purely from an academic standpoint compared to the USA. Look at it this way. Pakistani school education is a garden in which you spray the highest quality fertilizer only on a small proportion of plants. This way most of the garden is dead except for some really good plants. The U.S schooling system is basically spraying an average cheap fertilizer on to most of the garden.

Dude you went to an elite private school in Pakistan. Try comparing that to an elite private school in America where the Washington elite and the rich send their kids, then there's no comparison.

Pakistan barely has a public school system, why not compare that? It's like rich Pakistanis are unaware of their privilege. Comparing US public schools that give every kid a chance vs some private schools in Pakistan where the wealthy and powerful send their kids is laughable.
 
Sabika Sheikh's funeral prayers offered at Karachi's Hakeem Saeed ground

The funeral prayers for Sabika Sheikh, a 17-year-old Pakistani exchange student who was killed in a Texas school shooting last week, were offered at Karach's Hakeem Saeed Ground at 9am on Wednesday.

She will be laid to rest at the Azimpura graveyard in Shah Faisal Colony.

Security arrangements were tight at Hakeem Saeed Ground, where a number of government officials and political leaders, including Sindh Chief Minister Murad Shah, Sindh Governer Muhammad Zubair, Sindh Home Minister Sohail Anwar Siyal, Pak Sarzameen Party chief Mustafa Kamal, Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf's (PTI) Halim Adil Sheikh and others attended her funeral prayers.

About 100 police officers were deployed at the ground, where a bomb disposal squad had conducted a sweep to ensure security for attendees.

Sabika, a Karachi teenager whose family lives in the Gulshan-i-Iqbal area, was studying at Santa Fe High School in Texas on a US State Department scholarship under the Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study (YES) programme.

She was among 10 students gunned down on Friday inside the school by another teenager with white supremacist tendencies.

According to her father, Sabika — the eldest among three sisters but younger than her brother — was due to return home on June 9. Her family had been counting the days till her return.

Her body arrived from the US at 4am today after a Turkish Airlines flight carrying it was delayed due to bad weather. Her body was earlier scheduled to arrive at 9am on Tuesday.

Her father, Aziz Sheikh, received her body at the airport. US Consul General John Warner, and PSP, PTI, PPP, and Muttahida Qaumi Movement leaders were also present at the airport alongside her family members.

Airport Security Officials at Karachi's Jinnah International Airport presented a guard of honour to the slain teenager.

Sabika's body was transported from the airport to her residence, where relatives, loved ones and neighbours converged to pay their final respects to her.

Sabika was described as a brilliant student by her father. She had completed her matriculation from Karachi Public School and had been an honour roll student at Santa Fe High School.

Even though she was still a teenager, her uncle said earlier, he was often amazed at how mature her thoughts were. "She often spoke about issues such as women’s rights and women empowerment. She would speak to her cousins and friends about these things, too, trying to open up their minds to issues and good causes," he said.

"She would say herself that she was not interested in studying medicine or engineering. She wanted to fight for people’s rights. We were sure she would grow up to be a social activist," her maternal uncle said. "Who knew she had such a short life."

Sabika's maternal uncle earlier, Col Haider, said that the Muslim-American family she was staying with in Texas were the first to hear about the shooting, and rushed there immediately when they heard about the shooting.

"We were looking forward to seeing her back with us this Eid after she spent almost a year in the US," he had said.

Her funeral prayers were held in Houston on Sunday and were attended by the city's mayor, members of the Congress and a large number of citizens.

Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi who visited Sabika's home on Sunday to offer his condolences, said she had been a brilliant student.

"The entire nation is saddened by her death," he said, adding: "Extremism is not the problem of any single country or region, but the whole world is affected by it."

This is a developing story that is being updated as the situation evolves. Initial reports in the media can sometimes be inaccurate. We will strive to ensure timeliness and accuracy by relying on credible sources such as concerned, qualified authorities and our staff reporters.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1409489/s...ayers-offered-at-karachis-hakeem-saeed-ground
 
I think its time North American schools start making boundary walls.

Gun Control isn't the only problem. Anyone could enter a school building in North America.
 
A lot of high schoolers take AP/IB and college level courses that are harder than whatever they teach in the subcontinent. Also liberal arts in America is a lot harder than in Pakistan, there are strict rules against plagiarism, you have to do your own research, cite your sources/references, format your paper correctly in either APA or MLA, with the right page margins, line spacing and the content has to be good. I've read papers written by students in Pakistan and India and they're usually poorly written and not in the correct format, missing a lot of references as well.

Bro, i did my schooling from Canada and Pakistan(O/A level)

Canadian schooling is very easy and proper.

O/A level was very very difficult, because the whole grade was based on examination.

Canadian schooling was based on assignment/presentation/a small exam weightage(its small in comparison to O/ A level)


You make a good point on university/collage education. After i got into Bahria University, many students were asked to do assignments, presentations for the first time.
Because i had prior experience, i have aced the assignments easily. Many of my peers don't know how to make one. And as you have said they dont know about the lining or referencing.

Infact, in my class 1 guy does an assignment who sens it to 20 people to copy it. Some use online tools that change words automatically.

They make my assignment look great. I find it hilarious when my referencing is admired :))

So regarding the collage/university part you are absolutely right.

But for highschool, thats where you are at wrong bro.
 
Reading about Sabika just breaks my heart... Such an optimistic girl and her life taken away from her at the young age of 17.


Not one single politician even paid lip service for the poor girl, instead waste of skin like Nawaz Sharif are more concerned about hiding their stolen wealth.
 
Family creates nonprofit honouring Pakistani exchange student killed in shooting at US school

The family of a high school exchange student from Pakistan who was killed in a Texas school shooting have started a foundation to honour her memory through providing university scholarships to low-income Pakistani women.

Sabika Sheikh, 17, was killed in a May 2018 shooting at Santa Fe High School near Houston that left 10 people dead and at least 13 others wounded.

Her parents, Abdul Aziz Sheikh and Farah Naz, have created the Sabika for Peace Foundation to expand educational opportunities for those most in need.

“I’m always worried that we might forget (Sabika),” Farah Naz, the mother, told the Houston Chronicle during a Zoom interview with the family from their Karachi home. “But starting this foundation I know this is impossible. I know if I continue working with the foundation, she will always be with me.”

The foundation has partnered with several prominent nonprofit organisations, including the Everytown for Gun Safety Support Fund and the American Council for International Education.

ACIE, the American Institute for Foreign Study and the International Education and Resource Network are also contributing a $300,000 seed grant to initiate the foundation. The nonprofit organisation will help provide scholarships to fund university studies for low-income Pakistani women, particularly those with civic engagement aspirations.

“The Sabika for Peace Foundation will start by focusing on scholarships for universities in Pakistan, but it will expand to providing exchange opportunities for American schools so that the connection and ties with the US continues,” said Sania Sheikh, Sabika’s sister.

“I think my sister spent the best days of her life in America,” Sania Sheikh said.

The foundation will be run by a board of directors, which will comprise representatives from the Sheikh family and four independent members selected by the family in consultation with the partners.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1572156/f...hange-student-killed-in-shooting-at-us-school
 
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