The Manila Times

Obama reads roll of death at vigil for school dead

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NEWTOWN, Connecticu­t: Like a teacher reading the roster before class, US President Barack Obama on Sunday sketched in haunting, human terms, the horror of the Connecticu­t school massacre.

“Charlotte, Daniel, Olivia, Josephine, Ana, Dylan, Madeline, Catherine, Chase, Jesse, James, Grace, Emilie, Jack, Noah, Caroline, Jessica, Benjamin, Avielle [and] Allison—God has called them all home.”

Deep, heartrendi­ng sobs broke the silence at a harrowing vigil service, as Obama voiced the names of 20 children—aged six and seven—shot multiple times in their classrooms on Friday by a crazed gunman.

Six-year-old Noah Pozner will be buried at the B’Nai Israel Cemetery, while Jack Pinto, also six, is to be buried in the Newtown Village Cemetery.

Obama, called for the fourth time in his presidency to eulogize

second guessed himself over his failure to do more to stiffen federal gun laws.

“This is our first task, caring for our children. It’s our first job. If we don’t get that right, we don’t get anything right. That’s how, as a society, we will be judged,” Obama said.

“And by that measure, can we truly say, as a nation, that we’re meeting our obligation­s?

“Can we honestly say that we’re doing enough to keep our children, all of them, safe from harm?” Obama asked in stark, powerful language.

Obama appeared to commit himself to a genuine effort to reform firearms laws, perhaps by leading a push to restore a ban on assault weapons like the one used by Lanza, which expired in 2004.

In his speech at the high school in picturesqu­e Newtown, close to the cursed elementary school, Obama did not mention gun control directly, though his intent appeared clear.

He did not cast the fight against the entrenched gun lobby, which wields substantia­l power in Congress, as an effort to confiscate weapons— a desire his most vehement conservati­ve opponents often say he harbors.

But he suggested that the argument should be built more on the need to protect, innocent, defenseles­s children.

Obama’s vow may herald a push for laws governing and restrictin­g, ownership and use of powerful guns and rapid- fire ammunition.

Any such legislatio­n would need to avoid falling foul of the right to bear arms enshrined in the US constituti­on. But the newly reelected president questioned whether the freedom to have a gun could be allowed to constrain the right of others to live in “happiness and with purpose.”

“Are we really prepared to say that we’re powerless in the face of such carnage, that the politics are too hard?

“Are we prepared to say that such violence visited on our children year after year after year is somehow the price of our freedom?”

To effect change, Obama will have to conquer what critics see as one of the flaws of his first term: he has often proven more adept at defining a problem rhetorical­ly than in building a political coalition to fix it. AFP

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