Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Student gunman kills 17, wounds 50 at Crimean High School

- The Washington Post

MOSCOW – At least 17 people, mostly teenagers, were killed and 50 more wounded when a student went on a shooting spree in his high school in Russia-annexed Crimea on Wednesday, Russian authoritie­s said.

Russian investigat­ors identified 18-year-old Vladislav Roslyakov as the attacker, saying he fatally shot himself after the rampage in Kerch, a city in the east of Crimea, which Russia seized from Ukraine four years ago.

Reports had initially described the attack as involving explosives with possibly terrorist motives.

Russian investigat­ors had initially opened a terrorism probe into the attack, but later changed it to murder. “A preliminar­y examinatio­n of the dead shows they suffered from gunshot wounds,” Russia's investigat­ive committee said in a statement. “The majority of them are teenagers,” it added.

But there were conflictin­g reports about what took place. Russia's antiterror­ism committee initially said an explosive device was to blame for the attack on the vocational high school, attended by adolescent­s between the ages of 15 and 19. It said the bomb had been planted in the cafeteria.

President Vladimir Putin expressed his condolence­s to the families of victims. “It is clear that a crime took place. The motives and scenarios of this tragedy are being studied,” he said at a meeting with his Egyptian counterpar­t Abdel-fattah el-sissi in the Black Sea city of Sochi. He then asked for a moment's silence.

Russian media released a photograph of Roslyakov. With his shorn blonde hair and combinatio­n of black pants and a white T-shirt, comparison­s were made to the Columbine High School massacre in 1999, when one of the two gunmen wore a Law enforcemen­t officers at the site of a bomb blast at a college in the Crimean city of Kerch on Wednesday. At least 17 people have been killed in the explosion, and more than fifty are reported injured.

similar outfit. Roslyakov is pictured holding an automatic rifle.

The Russian news service Mash described Roslyakov as an introverte­d loner with a fondness for “maniacs.” He purchased an automatic rifle and cartridges last week, his classmates are cited as saying.

As the wounded poured into a local clinic, the attacker's mother, a nurse called Galina Roslyakova, attended to them, Mash reported. She was later called away to meet with investigat­ors.

Russia has relatively strict gun laws, and such shooting massacres are rare. In recent years, there have been several incidents involving students launching attacks with axes, knives and air guns.

The attack is the first fatal attack on territory controlled by Russia since a suicide bomber killed 16 people on the St. Petersburg metro in April last year. No group claimed responsibi­lity for that attack, but Russian security forces said it was the work of an Islamist radical.

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