Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Texas massacre: Police face scrutiny over ‘late’ response

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Agencies

UVALDE, TEXAS: As investigat­ors worked to track the massacre that lasted upwards of 40 minutes and ended only when Salvador Ramos, the 18-year-old shooter, was killed by a Border Patrol team, witnesses said on Wednesday that frustrated onlookers urged police officers to charge into the Texas elementary school.

“Go in there! Go in there!” nearby women shouted at the officers soon after the attack began, said Juan Carranza, 24, who saw the scene from outside his house, across the street from Robb Elementary School in the close-knit town of Uvalde. Carranza said the officers did not go in. Javier Cazares, whose fourthgrad­e daughter, Jacklyn Cazares, was killed in the attack, said he raced to the school when he heard about the shooting, arriving while police were still gathered outside the building. Upset that police were not moving in, he raised the idea of charging into the school with several other bystanders.

“Let’s just rush in because the cops aren’t doing anything like they are supposed to,” he said. “More could have been done.”

Local pastor Daniel Myers told AFP he saw parents growing frantic as police appeared to wait on reinforcem­ents before entering the school. “Parents were desperate. They were ready to go in. One family member, he says: ‘I was in the military, just give me a gun, I’ll go in. I’m not going to hesitate. I’ll go in’,” Myers said. Minutes earlier, Carranza had watched as Ramos, wearing a military-style vest, crashed his truck outside the school, grabbed his Ar-15-style semi-automatic rifle and shot at two people outside a nearby funeral home who ran away uninjured.

Ramos killed 19 children and two teachers in the deadliest US school shooting in nearly a decade.

Modi, when he spoke, praised Tamil language and culture and said his government is committed to popularisi­ng it. The PM, who was in Chennai for the first time since the DMK came to power, said: “Tamil language is eternal and Tamil culture is global... The government of India is fully committed to further popularisi­ng Tamil language and culture.”

Modi cited the setting up of the new campus of the Central Institute of Classical Tamil in Chennai and the decision to have a Subramania Bharati chair on Tamil studies at Banaras Hindu University (BHU) as efforts by his government to promote the language. “Since BHU is located in my constituen­cy, the joy was extra special,” Modi said.

Ramu Manivannan, professor of political science at University of Madras, said India can have more than one official language. “All languages in the 7th schedule can be integrated as official languages, which will set a precedent across the world because India is pluralisti­c,” he said. The Union government and the ruling BJP has been criticised by several parties in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka over what has been regarded as attempts to impose Hindi.

It stems from comments from BJP leaders, including Union home minister Amit Shah, that Hindi should be considered a nationwide alternativ­e to English, and a now-abandoned recommenda­tion in the National Education Policy (NEP) that called for mandatory teaching of Hindi in schools.

Manivannan said the BJP’S thrust on Hindi may be a conscious attempt to rally Hindi votes. “My view is that the BJP is fairly convinced that if they secure the Hindi belt, they can

TAMIL ETERNAL: PM

secure 2024 elections. They have already successful­ly played the religion formula and next is language.”

Stalin, who spoke predominan­tly in Tamil, often switched to English to translate to Modi a gist of what he wanted to convey. “I would request you to allot more funds and projects to our state Tamil Nadu, in the true spirit of co-operative federalism...we will extend a hand of friendship at the same time we will raise our voice for our rights,” he said.

Though Stalin didn’t touch on NEP, Modi said that policy allows for technical and medical courses that can be done in local languages. “Youngsters from Tamil Nadu will benefit from this,” the PM said.

The Tamil Nadu CM also pressed for the demand that the Katchathee­vu Island be retrieved from Sri Lanka, urged the NEET exemption bill be assented to, and called on the Union government to clear GST dues of ₹14,006 crore and extend the GST compensati­on cess by another two years — all of which Stalin had done so previously when he had met Modi in Delhi. The PM, who was in Chennai to inaugurate developmen­t projects, said the central government is focusing on road connectivi­ty since “it is directly linked to economic prosperity.”

“We aim to achieve Garib Kalyan. Our emphasis on social infrastruc­ture indicates our emphasis on the principle of ‘Sarv Jan Hitaya and Sarv Jan Sukhaya,’” he said, adding that the focus of the Union government was saturation-level coverage in key schemes.

“Take any sector — toilets, housing, financial inclusion... we are working towards complete coverage. When this is done, there is no scope for exclusion,” he added.

Stalin advocated for more developmen­t projects and funds to be allotted to Tamil Nadu as the state contribute­d to India’s developmen­t and the Union government’s fiscal resources. The chief minister said that Tamil Nadu’s share in India’s GDP was 9.22%, and 6% in the overall tax income at the central level.

“Therefore, Union government must increase its contributi­on to schemes and fund allocation, to do justice to the contributi­on lent by developed states like Tamil Nadu in the country’s developmen­t and economy. Only then will the true spirit of cooperativ­e federalism be upheld,” he said.

The CM said in schemes jointly implemente­d by the Union and state government­s, the latter contribute more. “Therefore, I demand that the contributi­on ratio mentioned in the beginning of such schemes shall continue till the end and when beneficiar­ies are not able to pay their share, the Union government must also step in along with the state government,” he added.

The Prime Minister spoke of the government’s assistance to Sri Lanka. “I am sure you are concerned with the developmen­ts there. As a close friend and neighbour, India is providing all possible support to Sri Lanka,” he said.

Political analyst Raveendran Duraisamy said both Stalin and Modi played their roles on stage. “As a regional leader, Stalin keeps sticking to the language issue. Modi wants to outdo the Congress on the Hindi issued and by bringing in sentiments of mother tongue, he is trying to also get a share of the political mileage with regional leaders like Stalin, Mamata and Naveen Patnaik,” said Duraisamy.

 ?? AP ?? Activists protest outside the Capitol to demand action on gun control legislatio­n in Washington, on Thursday.
AP Activists protest outside the Capitol to demand action on gun control legislatio­n in Washington, on Thursday.

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