Nelson Mail

Students drive gun law action

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UNITED STATES: The mass shooting at a Florida high school that left 17 people dead has sparked calls for walkouts, sit-ins and other actions on school campuses across the United States aimed at pushing lawmakers to pass tougher gun laws.

Organisers behind the Women’s March, an anti-Trump and female empowermen­t protest, called for a 17-minute walkout on March 14 to ``protest Congress’ inaction to do more than tweet thoughts and prayers in response to the gun violence plaguing our schools and neighbourh­oods.’'

The Network for Public Education, an advocacy organisati­on for public schools, meanwhile, announced a ``national day of action’' on April 20, the anniver- sary of the 1999 shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado, in which two students opened fire on their classmates, killing 12 students and one teacher.

The organisati­on is encouragin­g teachers and students to organise sit-ins, walkouts, marches and any other events to protest gun violence in schools.

``The politician­s sit on their hands as our children and their teachers are murdered in their schools,’' Diane Ravitch, the group’s president, and Carol Burris, its executive director, said in a post online.

The protest plans circulated widely on social media yesterday, signalling that the outcry for new gun legislatio­n may not fade away as it has after other recent mass shootings. Many of those shootings, including the deaths of 20 first-graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticu­t in 2012, led to a push for new gun laws, but those efforts stalled in Congress.

``We need to make this moment a movement and to actually make changes that need to happen in this country so that these kinds of weapons, AR-15s, are not in the hands of people who shouldn’t have them,’' said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, a union representi­ng teachers.

Weingarten said she was part of the discussion­s about the April 20 protest. What gives the Florida shooting more potential to spark change, she said, is that the students themselves got angry really quickly and demanded it.

Teenage survivors of Thursday’s shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School have become advocates for gun control, sparring with gun-rights activists on social media and calling for safer gun laws at vigils and in television interviews.

Thousands of angry students, parents and residents demanded stricter gun control laws on Saturday at a rally in Fort Lauderdale, which is about 30km from the site of the shooting in Parkland.

Some people in online posts called for a Civil Rights-era style boycott of schools until gun laws are changed. David Berliner, a professor of education at Arizona State University who also participat­ed in the plans for the April 20 protest, said he would support such a boycott. He recalled watching a television news report about Thursday’s shooting at an airport.

``I’m crying, and I’m watching all the people all around me crying, and I just said, `This has got to stop,’'’ he said.

Clare Schexnyder, a mother of a middle-school student in Decatur, Georgia, said she wants mums to take their kids out of school for a day to make a statement. A Facebook page she launched announcing a meeting of her Stop School Shootings group after the shooting attracted more than 7,000 followers overnight. Her protest is planned for March 2. - AP

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Marylene Dinliana, 18, holds a placard during a protest against guns on the steps of the Broward County Federal courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
PHOTO: AP Marylene Dinliana, 18, holds a placard during a protest against guns on the steps of the Broward County Federal courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

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