Baltimore Sun

Shotgun-toting student kills 19, self in Crimea

53 injured in worst school violence in Russia since 2004

- By Vladimir Isachenkov and Nataliya Vasilyeva

MOSCOW — An 18-yearold student strode into his vocational school in Crimea, a hoodie covering his blond hair, then pulled out a shotgun and opened fire Wednesday, killing 19 students and wounding more than 50 others before killing himself.

It wasn’t clear what prompted Vladislav Roslyakov, described as a loner, to go on the rampage. A security camera image carried by Russian media showed him calmly walking down the stairs of the school in the Black Sea city of Kerch, the shotgun in his gloved hand.

“He was walking around and shooting students and teachers in cold blood,” said Sergei Aksyonov, the regional leader in Crimea.

Officials said the fourthyear student killed himself in the library of the Kerch Polytechni­c College after the attack. His mother, a nurse, was helping to treat victims at a local hospital after the shootings, unaware yet that her son was accused of the rampage and was already dead.

Such school shootings are rare, and Wednesday’s attack was by far the worst by a disgruntle­d student in Russia, which annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in 2014. The bloodbath raised questions about school security in the country; the Kerch Polytechni­c College had only a front desk with no security guards.

By the end of the day, Crimean authoritie­s said the death toll stood at 19, apparently not including the shooter. Fifty-three people were wounded, including 12 in serious condition.

It was the greatest loss of life in school violence in Russia since the Beslan terrorist attack by Chechen separatist­s in 2004, in which 333 people were killed during a three-day siege, many of them children, and hundreds were wounded.

The announceme­nt that the shooter in Wednesday’s attack was a student who acted alone came after hours of rapidly shifting explanatio­ns as to what happened at the school.

Officials at first reported a gas explosion, then said an explosive device had ripped through the cafeteria during lunchtime in a suspected terrorist attack.

Witnesses, however, reported that victims were being killed by gunfire. The Investigat­ive Committee, Russia’s top crime investigat­ion agency, eventually said all the victims died of gunshot wounds.

Reflecting the daylong confusion, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the victims were killed by an explosion just as the Investigat­ive Committee was announcing they were fatally shot.

A somber-faced Putin deplored the attack as a “tragic event” and offered his condolence­s to the victims’ families at a news conference in the southern city of Sochi, where he was meeting with Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi.

The Investigat­ive Committee said the explosive device rigged with shrapnel went off in the school lunchroom and Sergei Melikov, a deputy chief of the Russian National Guard, said it was homemade. Offi- Mourners in Crimea leave flowers Wednesday in Simferopol after a student gunman killed 19 people and injured 53 others at a technical college in the eastern city of Kerch. cials later found a second explosive device and destroyed it.

It was not clear what the explosive was, if the attacker detonated it, or how many people it wounded.

Guns are tightly restricted in Russia. Civilians can own only hunting rifles and smooth-bore shotguns and must undergo significan­t background checks. Roslyakov had only recently received a permit to own a shotgun and bought 150 shells a few days ago, according to local officials.

Aksyonov, the regional leader in Crimea, said the gunman had been described as a shy boy who had no conflicts.

“He wasn’t aggressive, he was rather timid,” Aksyonov said.

Some Russian news reports said the shooter had left his backpack containing the explosive device in the cafeteria and remotely detonated it before he started shooting.

“I heard an explosion and saw glass shards and window frames falling down,” student Roman Voitenko said in remarks broadcast on Russian state television.

Another student, Se- myon Gavrilov, said he had fallen asleep during a lecture and was awakened by the shooting. He looked around and saw a young man shooting at people, he said. “I locked the door, hoping he wouldn’t hear me,” Gavrilov told the Komsomolsk­aya Pravda newspaper.

Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea triggered Western sanctions. Russia has also supported separatist­s fighting the Ukrainian government in eastern Ukraine, a conflict that has left at least 10,000 people dead since 2014.

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GETTY-AFP

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