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Pakistanis mourn teen shot dead at Texas school

MY DAUGHTER WAS EXTREMELY TALENTED. SHE WANTED TO DEVOTE HER LIFE TO PAKISTAN, DEVASTATED FATHER SAYS

- BY SANA JAMAL Correspond­ent

When the parents of 17-yearold Sabika Shaikh bade their daughter farewell as she left for an exchange programme in the United States, they had little to worry about.

Ten months later, their hopes of celebratin­g Eid with their daughter were dashed when they received the tragic news that she had been killed on Friday.

The young Pakistani student was one of 10 people gunned down by a teenage assailant armed with a shotgun and revolver at Santa Fe High School in Texas on Friday. Sabika had been participat­ing in the KennedyLug­ar Youth Exchange and Study (YES) programme in the US.

The teen, the eldest of three children, had been slated to return to Pakistan on June 9.

“We found out about the shooting from a local TV channel and tried but failed to contact Sabika and her friends,” her grief-stricken father Abdul Aziz Shaikh said.

According to him, news of her death was later confirmed by the YES programme coordinato­r and the Pakistan consulate in Houston “after a four- to five-hour delay”.

Equally devastated mourners and relatives swarmed Sabika’s home in Karachi on Saturday.

Her brother said the family had been preparing to throw her a grand homecoming party, while her tearful father described her as a brilliant student.

“My daughter was extremely talented and she wanted to devote her life to Pakistan,” he told journalist­s.

Ansar Shaikh, Sabika’s uncle, described the Texas shooting as an act of terrorism and implored the US government to take action.

“I ask the American government to make sure weapons will not be easily available in your country to anybody. Please make sure this doesn’t happen again. It really hurts.”

George Lapadat, an exchange student from Romania who claimed to have been among Sabika’s friends, took to Facebook to express his grief at her death.

Sabika “came to the US to learn, to experience, to share and to bring back to her country all the knowledge she acquired during her exchange,” he said.

“She was young, vibrant, happy and super-excited to go back to her country. When she left for this trip, she was supposed to be gone for 10 months... but now she is gone forever,” he said.

Criticisin­g America’s gun culture, Lapdat added: “If this [the shooting] is not enough to prove that something is wrong and something needs to change, I don’t know what else would.”

US Ambassador David Hale expressed regret at Sabika’s death and personally called he family to offer condolence­s.

“As an exchange student, Sabika was a youth ambassador, a bridge between our peoples and cultures. All of us at the US Mission in Pakistan are devastated by and mourn her loss. We will honour her memory,” Hale said.

The Embassy of Pakistan in Washington confirmed the news on social media saying, “Our thoughts and prayers are with Sabika’s family and friends.”

Aizaz Chaudhry, Pakistan’s ambassador to the US, spoke to Abdul Aziz and expressed his heartfelt condolence­s over the tragic death of his daughter.

Aisha Farooqui, the consulgene­ral at the Pakistani consulate in Houston, also expressed her grief over the tragic incident and said that the consul general in Houston had been in touch with Sabika’s family in Pakistan.

Earlier, Megan Lysaght, manager of the YES programme, had sent a letter to students in the programme confirming that Sabika had been killed in the shooting.

“Please know that the YES programme is devastated by this loss and we will remember Sabika and her families in our thoughts and prayers,” Lysaght wrote.

Condolence­s offered

Pakistani politician­s also expressed their condolence­s alongside thousands of Pakistanis who took to social media to share their grief and anger.

Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman and former cricketer Imran Khan expressed his shock and grief at her death.

“Shocked and saddened by the tragic death of Sabika Shaikh, 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,” Khan tweeted.

Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif also extended his sympathies to the family.

“Grieved to learn about the killing of students including a Pakistani exchange student, Sabika Shaikh, in an incident of shooting at a US school. My heart-felt sympathies to bereaved families,” he said on Twitter.

Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, noted that the growing trend of violence in American education institutio­ns was alarming, adding that intoleranc­e and violence were poisons for any society.

The Texas student charged in the shooting at Santa Fe High School described planning the attack in private journals, including a plan to kill himself, posted an image on Facebook of a ‘Born to Kill’ shirt and used his father’s shotgun and pistol in the rampage that left 10 dead and 10 wounded, authoritie­s said Friday.

A motive wasn’t immediatel­y clear, but Governor Greg Abbott said Dimitrios Pagourtzis, 17, wrote about planning the attack in journals on his computer and in his cell phone that police obtained.

That was inconsiste­nt with the portrait painted by his friends — a reserved young man, an athlete who had discussed wanting to own guns but didn’t talk of killing people.

It may have been what Pagourtzis hoped would happen, as according to an affidavit filed Friday when he was charged with capital murder, he told investigat­ors that he didn’t shoot students he liked “so he could have his story told”.

“Not only did he want to commit the shooting but he wanted to commit suicide after the shooting,” Abbott said, adding that Pagourtzis told authoritie­s he “didn’t have the courage” to take his own life.

Pagourtzis was held without bond in the Galveston County jail on the capital murder charges, said the county sheriff, Henry Trochesset. Abbott said the two guns used in the attack were owned legally by his father. It was not clear whether the father knew his son had taken them.

The governor also said explosive devices including a Molotov cocktail had been found in the suspected shooter’s home and a vehicle as well as around the school and nearby. Abbott said that “unlike Parkland, unlike Sutherland Springs, there were not those types of warning signs”.

He was referring to the February 14 school shooting in Florida and one in November inside a church in a town near San Antonio. Abbott said the early investigat­ion showed no prior criminal history for Pagourtzis — no arrests and no confrontat­ionst.

That same Facebook profile that included pictures of the ‘Born to Kill’ shirt — which one classmate told The New York Times that Pagourtzis was wearing Friday — described him as planning to enter the US Marine Corps next year. But the Marine Corps said it has reviewed its records and found no one by that name as either a recruit or a person in their delayed entry pool.

Classmates described Pagourtzis as quiet, an avid video game player who routinely wore a black trench coat and black boots to class. Those who know him expressed shock he might be involved in the killings.

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 ?? Source: Pakistan Associatio­n of Greater Houston ?? Sabika Shaikh was one of ten people gunned down by an armed teenager at Santa Fe High School in Texas, US, on Friday.
Source: Pakistan Associatio­n of Greater Houston Sabika Shaikh was one of ten people gunned down by an armed teenager at Santa Fe High School in Texas, US, on Friday.
 ?? AP ?? Abdul Aziz comforts an elderly woman at his home in Karachi yesterday.
AP Abdul Aziz comforts an elderly woman at his home in Karachi yesterday.
 ?? AFP ?? Abdul Aziz (right), Sabika’s father, prays with other mourners in Karachi yesterday.
AFP Abdul Aziz (right), Sabika’s father, prays with other mourners in Karachi yesterday.
 ?? Reuters ?? Mourners bow their heads in prayer during a vigil held after a shooting left ten people dead in Santa Fe, Texas, on Friday.
Reuters Mourners bow their heads in prayer during a vigil held after a shooting left ten people dead in Santa Fe, Texas, on Friday.
 ?? AFP ?? Emergency crews gather in the parking lot of Santa Fe High School on Friday. Those who know the suspected shooter have expressed shock that he might be involved.
AFP Emergency crews gather in the parking lot of Santa Fe High School on Friday. Those who know the suspected shooter have expressed shock that he might be involved.
 ?? AP ?? Mourners gather during a prayer vigil following a shooting at Santa Fe High School in Santa Fe, Texas, on Friday.
AP Mourners gather during a prayer vigil following a shooting at Santa Fe High School in Santa Fe, Texas, on Friday.

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