Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CLASSMATES

call gunman intelligen­t but socially inept.

- CASSANDRA VINOGRAD Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Grant Peck,Thanyarat Doksone,Tais Vilela, Kristen Gelineau, Malcolm Foster, Mari Yamaguchi, Charles Hutzler, Sam Kim, Oliver Teves, Sameer N. Yacoub, Don Melvin, Jim Heintz, Frances D’Emil

LONDON — As the world joined Americans in mourning the school massacre in Connecticu­t, many urged U.S. politician­s to honor the victims, especially the children, by pushing for stronger guncontrol laws.

Twitter users and media personalit­ies in the United Kingdom immediatel­y invoked a 1996 shooting in the small Scottish town of Dunblane that killed 16 children. That massacre prompted a campaign that ultimately led to tighter gun controls, effectivel­y making it illegal to buy or possess a handgun in the U.K.

“This is America’s Dunblane,” British CNN host Piers Morgan wrote on Twitter. “We banned handguns in Britain after that appalling tragedy. What will the U.S. do? Inaction not an option.”

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard called Friday’s attack in Newtown, Conn., a “senseless and incomprehe­nsible act of evil.”

“Like President Obama and his fellow Americans, our hearts too are broken,” Gillard said in a statement.

Australia confronted a similar tragedy in 1996, when a man went on a shooting rampage in the southern state of Tasmania, killing 35 people. The mass killing sparked anger across the country and led the government to impose strict new gun laws, including a ban on semiautoma­tic rifles.

Rupert Murdoch recalled that case in a Twitter message calling the shootings “terrible news” and asking “when will politician­s find courage to ban automatic weapons? As in Oz after similar tragedy.”

The mass shooting in Connecticu­t left 28 people dead, including 20 children. The gunman, 20-year-old Adam Lanza, killed his mother at their home Friday before beginning his deadly rampage at the school in Newtown, then committed suicide, police said.

Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Union’s executive commission, said: “Young lives full of hope have been destroyed. On behalf of the European Commission and on my own behalf, I want to express my sincere condolence­s to the families of the victims of this terrible tragedy.”

British Prime Minister David Cameron said he was “deeply saddened” to learn of the “horrific shooting.”

“My thoughts are with the injured and those who have lost loved ones,” he said. “It is heartbreak­ing to think of those who have had their children robbed from them at such a young age, when they had so much life ahead of them.”

Queen Elizabeth II, Pope Benedict XVI and German Chancellor Angela Merkel were among other leaders from around the world who expressed their sympathy.

But amid the messages of condolence­s, much of the discussion after the Connecticu­t rampage centered on gun control — a baffling subject for many in Asia and Europe, where mass shootings also have occurred but where access to guns is much more heavily restricted.

The attack quickly dominated public discussion in China, rocketing to the top of topic lists on social media and becoming the top story on state television’s main noon newscast.

China has seen several rampage attacks at schools in recent years, though the attackers there usually use knives, not guns. The most recent attack in China also happened Friday, when a knife-wielding man injured 22 children and one adult outside a primary school in central China.

“Parents with children studying in the U.S. must be tense. School shootings happen often in the U.S. Can’t politician­s put away politics and prohibit gun sales?” Zhang Xin, a wealthy property developer, wrote on her feed on the Twitter-like Sina Weibo service, where she has 4.9 million followers.

More than 100,000 Chinese study in U.S. schools.

Some in South Korea, which does not allow people to possess guns privately, also blamed a lack of gun control in the United States for the high number of deaths in Connecticu­t.

Chosun Ilbo, South Korea’s top daily, speculated in an online report that it appears “inevitable” that the shooting will prompt the U.S. government to consider tighter gun control.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States