Bangkok Post

Outrage after ten killed in ‘racist’ attack

Armed teen storms Buffalo grocery store

-

Grieving Buffalo residents held vigils on Sunday after a white gunman who officials have branded “pure evil” shot dead 10 people at a grocery store in a “racist” rampage.

The police commission­er for the US city in western New York, Joseph Gramaglia, told reporters the 18-yearold suspect did “reconnaiss­ance” on the predominan­tly black area surroundin­g Tops Friendly Market and drove there from his hometown of Conklin, more than 322 kilometres away.

Wearing heavy body armour and wielding an AR-15 assault rifle, the shooter killed 10 people and wounded three others — almost all of them black — before threatenin­g to turn the gun on himself. Police said officers talked the gunman down before arresting him.

The suspect, identified as Payton Gendron, was arraigned late on Saturday on a single count of first-degree murder and held without bail, the Erie County district attorney’s office said.

He pleaded not guilty.

“The evidence that we have uncovered so far makes no mistake that this is an absolute racist hate crime,” Mr Gramaglia said on Sunday, adding Mr Gendron had a rifle and shotgun in his car.

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown was unequivoca­l about the shooter’s motivation­s: “This individual came here with the express purpose of taking as many black lives as he possibly could.”

Mr Gramaglia said the gunman had last year made “generalise­d threats” at his high school, after which state police referred him to a hospital for a mental health evaluation that lasted approximat­ely one day and a half. He was then released.

Earlier on Sunday, residents held a vigil outside the store as New York Governor Kathy Hochul and state Attorney General Letitia James addressed a church service.

Ms Hochul, a Buffalo native, described the shooting as a “militaryst­yle execution” and said racist messaging was “spreading like wildfire”, especially online.

In angry and mournful tones, speakers decried easy access to powerful guns and the latest eruption of racist violence, in what has become tragically routine brutality in the United States.

In Washington, President Joe Biden — whom the White House said would visit Buffalo today — condemned the racist extremism and “hate that remains a stain on the soul of America”.

The attack evoked memories of recent US history’s most devastatin­g attacks, including a white man’s 2015 massacre of nine worshipper­s in a predominan­tly black South Carolina church, and the 2019 attack by a white man in Texas that claimed 23 lives, most of them Latino.

Attorney General James, who is black, described Saturday’s murderous assault as “domestic terrorism, plain and simple.”

She paid tribute to the victims, who included shoppers and store workers, describing an elderly woman who planted trees on her block, and a woman who was food shopping after visiting her husband at the nursing home.

“I held in my arms a young lady who worked at Tops, who was so afraid that she was about to die, who witnessed the bloodshed, who shaked and quivered in my arms,” she said.

“Who is afraid for her community, afraid also for herself.”

Denise Walden, a Buffalo resident, voiced fear that she “can’t go to the grocery store around the corner from my house because I might not get home to my kids safe.”

Derryl Long, who was born in Buffalo, told AFP he “can’t comprehend what was going through this man’s mind.”

“He knew it was a black community,” the 67-year-old continued. “It just hurts.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Mourners attend a vigil for victims of the shooting at a Tops supermarke­t in Buffalo, New York on Sunday.
REUTERS Mourners attend a vigil for victims of the shooting at a Tops supermarke­t in Buffalo, New York on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand