Gulf Today

Russia mourns victims of school shooting

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KAZAN: Mourners gathered on Wednesday for the funerals of students and staff killed by a teenage gunman at a Russian school, a tragedy that spurred calls for tighter controls on guns and the internet.

Ater Tuesday’s atack let seven students and two staff dead at the school in the central city of Kazan, President Vladimir Putin called on lawmakers to toughen gun control laws and other senior officials demanded stricter regulation of the internet.

Flags were flaying at half-mast throughout Kazan, the capital of the majority Muslim Russian republic of Tatarstan.

Family members wearing black and students of Elvira Ignatieva -- a 26-year-old English teacher who reportedly died while shielding pupils from the gunman -- laid flowers and read the Holy Quran at her grave during a funeral ceremony.

“My niece was like a shining star: she took off, lit up and faded away,” her 62-year-old aunt Anna Ignatieva said, crying and wearing a black scarf.

The 19-year-old gunman opened fire on Tuesday at School No.175 in Kazan, armed with a shotgun and at least one improvised explosive device.

He was identified as Ilnaz Galyaviev, a former student at the school.

Panic spread throughout the building, with some students jumping from windows to escape, and the gunman was detained within about an hour.

Galyaviev, who was recently dismissed from a local technical college for poor grades, was shown in interrogat­ion footage leaked online claiming he was God and that he had “a monster” inside him.

He was due to make a first court appearance on Wednesday. All the children killed were in Ignatieva’s eighth-grade class, so between the ages of 13 and 14. The second staff member killed was a teaching assistant for younger students.

At least 18 children were also wounded in the atack, including some who sustained injuries while atempting to escape the school building, the RIA Novosti news agency reported on Wednesday, citing health officials.

The agency said that eight students were being treated for gunshot wounds and that two were in a critical condition, with a total of 21 people in hospital. Dozens of mourners carrying flowers and sot toys congregate­d outside the school on Wednesday to commemorat­e the dead.

“This is a huge and unexpected loss,” Irina Krasnikova, 42, said.

“We live in such a nice city. It’s hard to believe this happened to us. It didn’t happen to my children, but it is so painful, it’s hard to speak.”

The speaker of the lower house of parliament, Vyacheslav Volodin, called on lawmakers to discuss the possibilit­y of removing internet-anonymity, requiring users to identify themselves to be allowed online.

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