The Daily Telegraph

Turn off the lights and lock the doors: email warning of campus shooter

Moment of terror as pupils forced to hide on university grounds during Prague gun rampage

- By James Rothwell

FOR many of the students in Prague’s Charles University who were finishing up their final days of term, the news that a gun rampage was under way on campus came just before 3pm over email.

“Stay in place, don’t go anywhere,” said the alert rushed out to students and teachers. “If you are in offices, lock them and place furniture in front of the doors. Turn off the lights, the shooter is probably on the fourth floor of the building on Jan Palach Square.”

Prague’s medieval Old Town, with its biscuit-coloured buildings and clock tower, is a major attraction for tourists who would have been relaxing at Christmas markets nearby as the tragedy unfolded.

Inside the arts faculty, where the shooter David Kozák, 24, studied Polish history, Jakob Weizman dashed across his classroom and piled chairs, desks and anything else he could find in front of the door.

He was very lucky: right after locking the door, someone on the other side had tried to open it – presumably the attacker.

“Praying to make it out alive,” the Danish-colombian student posted on

X, formerly Twitter, at 2.55pm local time as the attack was still unfolding.

Another unnamed man inside the building told Blesk, a Czech newspaper: “Good luck to everyone in the building. We hear him shooting on the fourth floor.”

By that point, grainy photograph­s were circulatin­g online of a man clad in black clothing wielding an assault rifle on the walkway of the faculty building. A huge number of police and ambulances were dispatched to the scene as the Czech prime minister was informed of the crisis and urgently returned to Prague.

In another part of the faculty, eight terrified students clambered out of a window and lined themselves up on a ledge, keeping their heads down in the hopes that Kozák would not spot them.

The appalling scene was visible from the streets below, where someone took a photograph of the students clinging onto the building for dear life.

At that point, Kozák was moving through the university and shooting at dozens if not hundreds of students, killing at least 14 and seriously wounding nine others.

Amid the chaos there was a stampede, captured by mobile phone footage which saw dozens of students fleeing the university.

“It was terribly scary, there were a lot of policemen everywhere, who were shouting at us with submachine guns, telling us to run outside,” Klara, a student who managed to escape the attack, later told Czech news site Dnes.

Across the River Vltava that runs through Prague, a British newlywed couple enjoying some drinks in the Slivovitz Museum were interrupte­d by a policeman who started yelling for everyone to take cover.

“A policeman came in and started shouting loudly in what I assume was Czech. I asked for it in English and he said there was an active shooter and to stay inside and stay down,” said Tom Leese, 34, a video producer.

He added: “The staff were very calm, turned all the lights off very quickly and urged us to stay calm, the restaurant was relatively quiet. The policeman left urgently and we stood in the corner of the restaurant.”

Joe Hyland, 18, was also on holiday and near the scene of the attack. “We heard gunshots and ran for cover in the metro after police shouted at everyone to run. It was very frightenin­g,” said Mr Hyland, from Cornwall. “All of a sudden people started running. We didn’t know what was going on. We saw police going past us. They were shouting ‘run’.”

Meanwhile, at the nearby Rudolfinum Gallery, its director Petr Nedoma had a clear view towards Charles University and noticed something terrible was happening on top of the Arts building.

“Upstairs on the walkway of the Faculty of Arts, I saw a man standing with a gun in his hand and shooting towards the Mánes bridge,” he said.

By 3.20pm local time, just 20 minutes after the onslaught began, police and ambulances had arrived on the scene and the attacker was dead.

Police said the killer had murdered his father in their village near Prague and immediatel­y travelled to Charles University, where he was a student of philosophy, to carry out the massacre.

It was not immediatel­y clear how exactly the killer was “eliminated,” as Czech police said. According to local news reports he was found dead after an exchange of gunfire with police.

Police officials later revealed that around 12.20pm they had received reports of a man wanting to take his own life, and that the man’s father had been found dead in a village 13 miles from Prague.

Katerina Vodvarkova, a TV journalist, was near the site of the attack and in an interview with the BBC said that “everyone is in shock”.

“Personally I never experience­d anything like this in Prague. I watched students being evacuated and I had tears in my eyes that they had to witness this,” she said.

“This is the busiest season for Prague, where we have our most famous Christmas market. It breaks my heart that visitors have to witness this.”

Petr Pavel, the Czech president, said he was deeply shocked by the attack.

“I would like to express my deep regret and sincere condolence­s to the families and relatives of the victims that the shooting claimed. I want to thank the citizens for respecting the instructio­ns of the security forces and providing maximum cooperatio­n,” he said.

Bohuslav Svoboda, the mayor of Prague, lamented that his city was not safe from Us-style mass shootings.

“The thing is, of course, a tragedy, it is a tragedy that occurs in the modern world. We know very well that for a number of years we have been hearing from the United States that there has been an excess of some shooter shooting in a school or on the street or somewhere,” he said.

“We have always thought that this is a matter that does not concern Europe and us, that this is a matter that is also a given in the United States due to the fact that everyone there is armed... now unfortunat­ely, it turns out that our world is also changing and we have the problem of the individual shooter whose reasons for what he does are not entirely clear.”

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 ?? ?? David Kozák fires from a campus balcony, right; Students run for cover as the deadly attack unfolds, below
David Kozák fires from a campus balcony, right; Students run for cover as the deadly attack unfolds, below

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