Windsor Star

CARNAGE ON CRIMEAN CAMPUS.

- Matthew Bodner

MOSCOW •Atleast 19 people were killed and scores more injured at a college in Crimea Wednesday when a student detonated an explosive device before opening fire with a hunting rifle.

The attacker was caught on security cameras entering Kerch Polytechni­c College in the Black Sea city of Kerch and firing at students. It identified him as Vladislav Roslyakov.

Sergey Aksyonov, the Kremlin–appointed head of Crimea, said the suspect was an 18-year-old student at the college. He was identified in the Russian press as Vladislav Roslyakov, and had reportedly obtained a hunting licence — allowing him to purchase rifles and shotguns — last month.

A photo of Roslyakov with a rifle on a campus stairwell was widely circulated on social media after the attack. Reports suggest that as well as detonating the explosive device, Roslyakov opened fire on fellow students and teachers. He then killed himself in the library. Videos from the scene circulated on Russian social media. One featured an unidentifi­ed woman who said: “The college was blown up. We ran and kids just laid there. My friend was killed right before my eyes. I saw her fall and she didn’t move any more. I saw how the boys just fell.” Another eyewitness said: “They ran across the second floor with machine guns — well I don’t know what they had — opening rooms and killing everyone that they could find, everyone they came across.” Russian television said Roslyakov’s mother, a nurse at a local hospital, was helping the wounded, unaware that her son was the suspected attacker. It quoted those who knew Roslyakov as saying he was not very sociable and often put gloomy posts on his social media page. A video published by local news outlet Kerch.com. ru showed the head of the school describing the events as another Beslan, referring to the 2004 terrorist siege on a school in North Ossetia that resulted in the death of over 300 people, many of them children.

School shootings are relatively rare in Russia, where access to firearms is tightly restricted, but attacks are not unheard of using other weapons. President Vladimir Putin held a brief press conference Wednesday to call for a moment of silence for the victims and said investigat­ors were working to understand Roslyakov’s motives. An unidentifi­ed student told the RBC news agency that the shooter, “very much hated the school because of its evil teachers.” Roslyakov had hinted he planned to “take revenge on them,” said the source, who claimed to be the shooter’s friend. Crimea, formally recognized by the internatio­nal community as part of Ukraine, has been under Russian control since 2014 following Moscow’s annexation of the Black Sea peninsula.

 ?? CCTV FOOTAGE ?? A CCTV image appears to show student Vladislav Roslyakov, 18, stalking the halls of Kerch Polytechni­c College.
CCTV FOOTAGE A CCTV image appears to show student Vladislav Roslyakov, 18, stalking the halls of Kerch Polytechni­c College.

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