
Shooter kills nine people at Austrian school
An attack on a school in southeastern Austria by a former student has left nine people dead, authorities said Tuesday, in a rare case of deadly gun violence in the Alpine country.
Heavily armed police, a helicopter and paramedics descended upon the school in Graz, where 10 people including the alleged lone shooter were killed, regional police said.
Six of the victims were female and three male, authorities later confirmed without specifying their ages. Twelve people suffered severe injuries.
Police said the situation was "secure" and support was being provided to witnesses and those affected.
The suspect acted alone and took his own life in the school toilet, police said, adding his motive remained unknown.
Later on Tuesday, Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker declared three days of national mourning to remember the victims, saying the country had witnessed "an act of unimaginable violence".
According to the police, the alleged perpetrator is a 21-year-old Austrian from the wider Graz region. The perpetrator used two weapons he had owned legally to carry out the attack.
The suspected shooter was a former student at the school, but had not finished his studies, Interior Minister Gerhard Karnert told reporters.
"It's a disaster, simply terrible. After all, it's about children," Hasan Darsel, a restaurant owner in the area, told the newspaper Kronen Zeitung.
- 'Deeply shocked' -
After arriving in Graz, Stocker described the shooting as "a national tragedy", adding that it was "a dark day" for Austria.
AFP | Alex HALADA
Condolences poured in from across Europe.
The European Union's top diplomat Kaja Kallas said she was "deeply shocked" when she heard about the shooting.
"Every child should feel safe at school and be able to learn free from fear and violence," Kallas posted on X.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said "our thoughts are with our Austrian friends and neighbours and we mourn with them" after the school shooting he called "horrific".
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban offered his "deepest condolences to Chancellor @_CStocker and the people of Austria" via social media.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said "the news from Graz touches my heart" while Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed her sympathies to the families of the victims following the "tragic news".
Attacks in public are rare in Austria, which is home to almost 9.2 million people and ranks among the 10 safest countries in the world, according to the Global Peace Index.
School shootings are also much more uncommon in Europe than in the United States but in recent years Europe has been shaken by attacks at schools and universities, that were not connected to terrorism.
In France on Tuesday, a teaching assistant was killed at a school in Nogent in the east following a knife attack.
In January 2025, an 18-year-old man fatally stabbed a high school student and a teacher at a school in northeastern Slovakia.
In December 2024, a 19-year-old man stabbed a seven-year-old student to death and injured several others at a primary school in Zagreb, Croatia.
In December 2023, an attack by a student at a university in central Prague left 14 people dead and 25 injured.
A few months earlier that year, a 13-year-old gunned down nine fellow classmates and a security guard at an elementary school in downtown Belgrade.
By Julia Zappei With Kiyoko Metzler In Vienna
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

IOL News
42 minutes ago
- IOL News
Trump says he could forgive Musk
The US president had a public feud with the Tesla CEO that devolved to personal insults Image: Brandon Bell / Getty Images via AFP US President Donald Trump says he could forgive Elon Musk after a public falling-out that saw the Tesla CEO lash out over one of the administration's flagship policy initiatives. The dispute between the two men, who were once close allies, turned ugly last week over what Trump called his 'Big Beautiful' tax and spending bill. Musk, who recently stepped down as head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), repeatedly criticized the bill, arguing it undermined his efforts to cut waste from the federal budget. Musk accused Trump of 'ingratitude,' while backing calls for his impeachment and threatening to hamstring the US space program by grounding the Dragon spacecraft. Trump fired back, saying Musk had 'gone crazy,' blaming the spat on the end of the 'EV mandate' – a reference to federal incentives that had benefited Tesla. Musk responded with a now-deleted post that linked Trump to deceased convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. In an interview published by The New York Post on Wednesday, Trump said 'I have no hard feelings. But I was really surprised that that happened.' He called the bill 'phenomenal' and said he was disappointed by Musk's response. 'When he did that, I was not a happy camper.' Asked if he could forgive Musk, Trump replied: 'I guess I could,' adding that he was now focused on how to 'straighten out the country.' Hours before the interview aired, Musk appeared to say he was sorry about attacking the president. He wrote on X that he regrets 'some of my posts about President @realDonaldTrump last week,' adding that 'They went too far.' Musk did not clarify which of his posts he was referring to. Media reports have suggested that his associates and the White House are engaged in backchannel communications aimed at easing tensions. Asked about the apology in a follow-up call with the Post on Wednesday morning, Trump said: 'I thought it was very nice that he (Musk) did that.' RT News


eNCA
an hour ago
- eNCA
Germany, France back expanding joint TV channel
BERLIN - Berlin and Paris want to expand the TV channel Arte into a major European platform amid concerns about rival powers spreading disinformation, Germany's culture minister said. The publicly funded French and German language channel is known for covering cultural events and producing highbrow dramas. The long-term goal is to expand it into a streaming service in numerous languages that reaches new audiences, with offerings ranging from news to films and series, according to Arte executives. Russian and Chinese efforts to spread disinformation, combined with the US administration's moves to gut government-funded international media, meant that Europe must "make its voice of freedom heard more loudly in the world," German Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer said. During discussions at a meeting of European culture ministers in Paris on Wednesday, French Culture Minister Rachida Dati said the platform could contribute to countering foreign influence and populist tendencies. The idea of expanding the channel has been mooted for some time, and French President Emmanuel Macron backed the idea during a state visit to Germany last year.


eNCA
an hour ago
- eNCA
Austria mourns 10 victims of 'abominable' school shooting
GRAZ - Grieving Austrians held tearful memorials for the 10 people shot dead at a high school by a former pupil, an unprecedented attack in the Alpine nation. Mourners cried, hugged and left flowers, candles and letters to the victims in churches and outside the school in Austria's second-largest city of Graz. The government declared three days of mourning for the victims of Tuesday's shooting at the Dreierschuetzengasse secondary school, including a national moment of silence on Wednesday morning. Church bells rang out across Austria as people stopped in the streets, radio and TV programmes were interrupted and public transport was halted. A teacher and nine teenagers, including a Franco-Austrian and a Polish national, aged between 14 and 17, were among the victims, Austrian press agency APA reported. Of the eleven people wounded, nine were still in intensive care but in a stable condition on Wednesday, according to hospital officials. Hundreds of people also rushed to donate blood, responding to a call from the Red Cross. At a memorial event on Wednesday, one student recalled the moment the children realised there was a shooter. She said students were "running for their lives" as older children tried to protect the younger ones. Police said the alleged perpetrator was an Austrian from the Graz region who used two legally owned weapons -- a shotgun and a pistol.