
At least nine dead in Austrian school shooting
At least nine people have been killed and 12 others were injured in a shooting at a school in the Austrian city of Graz.
The suspected perpetrator also died, the city's mayor said.
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Special forces were among those sent to the BORG Dreierschutzengasse high school, just under a mile from Graz's historic centre, after a call at 10am local time (9am BST).
At 11.30am (10.30am BST), police wrote on social network X that the school had been evacuated and everyone had been taken to a safe meeting point.
Nine people were killed (Servus TV via AP)
Authorities say the assailant was a 21-year-old Austrian man who had two weapons, which he appeared to have owned legally.
Police said they did not immediately have information on the man's motive, but said that he killed himself in a toilet after fatally shooting nine people.
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Austrian interior minister Gerhard Karner said at a press conference in Graz that the gunman was a former student at the school who did not finish his studies.
Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker said there would be three days of national mourning, with the Austrian flag lowered to half-staff and a national minute of mourning at 10am on Wednesday (9am BST).
He said that it was 'a dark day in the history of our country'.
Austrian Interior Minister Gerhard Karner, left, and Chancellor Christian Stocker, took part in a news conference (AP)
Police deployed in large numbers, with police and other emergency vehicles guarding the area around the school and with at least one police helicopter flying above the area, according to photos published by the regional newspaper Kleine Zeitung.
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Graz, Austria's second-biggest city, is located in the south-east of the country and has about 300,000 inhabitants.
Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker, who is going to Graz, said the shooting 'is a national tragedy that deeply shocks our whole country'.
'There are no words for the pain and grief that all of us — the whole of Austria — feel now,' he wrote in a statement posted on X.
Die Nachrichten aus Graz treffen ins Mark.
Meine Gedanken sind bei den Opfern, ihren Familien und Freunden.
Schulen sind Symbole für Jugend, Hoffnung, und Zukunft. Es ist schwer zu ertragen, wenn Schulen zu Orten von Tod und Gewalt werden.
Mein Dank gilt den Einsatzkräften…
— Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen)
June 10, 2025
President Alexander Van der Bellen said that 'this horror cannot be captured in words'.
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'These were young people who had their whole lives ahead of them. A teacher who accompanied them on their way,' he said.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen wrote on X: 'Schools are symbols for youth, hope and the future.
'It is hard to bear when schools become places of death and violence.'
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Laura said she had known of the attacker, who had been in the same class as a friend for a year before leaving without taking exams. The friend could not recall him being bullied, as has been cited in some local media articles as a potential motive. People in Graz had queued into the night to donate blood that could be used to treat 11 wounded people, aged 15 to 26, eight of whom were said by authorities to be Austrian, two Romanian, and one Iranian. On Wednesday, two of the injured remained in intensive care, although all were said to be in a stable condition. One who had been shot in the face was undergoing a second emergency operation, authorities said. Among the quiet residential community in Kalsdorf, the southern Graz district where Arthur A lived with his mother, neighbours spoke of their shock at finding out that he had lived among them. Thomas Gasser, 38, a supermarket manager who lived directly opposite Arthur A, had been sitting on his garden terrace when armed police arrived at about 11.30am on Tuesday to raid the home he shared with his mother. 'It was eerie. They quietly crept up on the house, around 15 to 20 officers, fully clad with weapons. Nothing, literally nothing happens in this neighbourhood. The idea that this man with murderous intentions and a pipe bomb was living opposite us is hard to fathom, and very unsettling,' he said. Arthur A, he said, 'had lived here for five years, but was very reserved. He always had his headphones in, dressed in dark clothes and wore a cap pulled down over his eyes'. Walking past the flat where the gunman lived, Natalia Chalakova, 19, originally from Bulgaria, expressed her shock that the attacker was from the neighbourhood. 'No one could stop talking about it when we met at school this morning for our exams, and no one could really concentrate,' she said. 'The most upset of any kind that usually happens here are disputes on the playground with kids fighting over their toys. To have a mass murderer in our midst – this is an American story, not an Austrian one.'