Kuwait Times

Victims of Orlando shooting honored at predawn ceremony

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ORLANDO, Florida: The names of the 49 people killed in a Florida nightclub last June were read aloud early on Monday in a pre-dawn remembranc­e marking the exact moment a year earlier when a gunman transforme­d a dance party into a massacre. The private gathering at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub at 2:02 am (0602 GMT) was the first in a series of events at which victims’ names will be memorializ­ed with performanc­es, prayers and candleligh­t vigils across the country on “Orlando United Day.”

On the first anniversar­y of the worst mass shooting in modern US history, officials asked Americans to join in acts of “love and kindness” to honor victims of the three-hour June 12 rampage at the now-shuttered gay club, including survivors still reeling from emotional and physical wounds. “Following the Pulse tragedy, we showed the world that Orlando would not be defined by the act of a hate-filled killer, but instead defined by our response of love, compassion and unity,” Mayor Buddy Dyer wrote in a blog post.

Hundreds gathered outside the club late Sunday and early Monday, including scores of people dressed in white with angels wings and carrying lanterns. The “angels” first appeared in the wake of the tragedy to protect and support family and friends of the victims. “We will make sure the world is a better place because of our 49 angels,” WKMG-TV quoted Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs as saying at the service before a performer sang “Over the Rainbow” to close the service as many on hand sobbed. “Everybody’s really come together,” Matt Heavey, of Orlando, told WKMG. “We kind of embraced difference­s,” he said. “We’ve embraced diversity that makes this city really go forward.”

Many who came to pay respects said they were there for the first time since the shooting, with the tragedy still too raw. The gunman, Omar Mateen, 29, opened fire shortly after the last call for drinks on the club’s popular Latin night. He gunned down patrons on the dance floor and sprayed bullets at others cowering in bathroom stalls. Holding hostages during his standoff with police, Mateen claimed allegiance to a leader of the Islamic State militant group before he was killed in an exchange of gunfire with authoritie­s.

 ?? —AFP ?? ORLANDO, Florida: John Hough visits the memorial setup outside the Pulse gay nightclub yesterday as he remembers the victims of a mass shooting at the club one year ago.
—AFP ORLANDO, Florida: John Hough visits the memorial setup outside the Pulse gay nightclub yesterday as he remembers the victims of a mass shooting at the club one year ago.

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