San Diego Union-Tribune

SERBIA’S EDUCATION CHIEF RESIGNS AFTER SHOOTINGS

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Serbia’s education minister submitted his resignatio­n Sunday following two mass shootings, one of them at a primary school, that left 17 people dead, and the country’s government urged citizens to turn in all their unregister­ed weapons or run the risk of a prison sentence.

Education Minister Branko Ruzic was the first Serbian official to resign over the shootings despite widespread calls for more senior officials to step down in the wake of the back-toback bloodshed. Ruzic cited the “catastroph­ic tragedy that has engulfed our country” in explaining his decision.

Weekend funerals were held for the nine victims of the shootings at the school in Belgrade, Serbia’s capital, on Wednesday and the eight people killed in a rural area south of the capital on Thursday night. The violence, which also wounded 21 people, has stunned and anguished the Balkan nation, which tops the European list of registered arms per capita but had its last mass shooting a decade ago.

Soon after the first attack, Ruzic was quick to blame “the cancerous, pernicious influence of the Internet, video games, socalled Western values.” Such criticism is common in Serbia, which has refused to fully face its role in the wars of the 1990s that accompanie­d the breakup of Yugoslavia.

Serbia’s last mass shooting was in 2013, when a war veteran killed 13 people. The assailant in Wednesday’s violence, the country’s first mass school shooting, was a 13-year-old boy who opened fire on his fellow students, killing seven girls, a boy and a school guard.

The next day, a 20-yearold man fired randomly in two villages in central Serbia, killing eight people. Both he and the boy in the primary school attack were apprehende­d.

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