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At least 10 dead in Austrian school shooting

At least 10 dead in Austrian school shooting

The suspected perpetrator also died, the city's mayor said.
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.
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.
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'.
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.
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'.
'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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Classroom killer's final photos: Cat-obsessed gunman posted photograph of his FEET inside school bathroom cubicle moments before killing ten - and also took pictures of weapons he used
Classroom killer's final photos: Cat-obsessed gunman posted photograph of his FEET inside school bathroom cubicle moments before killing ten - and also took pictures of weapons he used

Daily Mail​

time8 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Classroom killer's final photos: Cat-obsessed gunman posted photograph of his FEET inside school bathroom cubicle moments before killing ten - and also took pictures of weapons he used

The Austrian shooter who killed 10 people at his former school before turning the gun on himself earlier this week shared pictures of his preparation and the weapons he used in the assault to social media, it has emerged. Arthur A., a 21-year-old avid gamer and cat lover, launched his attack at the BORG Dreierschutzengasse high school in Graz, a city in the southern state of Styria, on Tuesday. The shooter shared an image of his own feet clad in black leather combat boots while sitting in a toilet cubicle on the third floor of the school. There he strapped on a gun belt with a hunting knife, shooting glasses and a headset, loaded his weapons and stormed into the hallways to carry out the massacre that was later confirmed as Austria's worst mass shooting. In two other posts, the young killer snapped a selfie and showed off a shotgun and a pistol he had bought along with the caption: 'Veeeeeerrry early birthday present for myself', according to Austrian media. He went on to use both weapons in the course of his rampage. The images of the killer were brought to light after it emerged the social recluse had sent his mother a farewell video moments before he carried out his attack, pleading for forgiveness for 'what I'm about to do now'. Investigators said his mother opened the video 24 minutes after receiving it and immediately notified police, but her son had already slaughtered 10 students and shot himself before armed cops descended on the scene. Arthur A. also requested that his cat be looked after following his demise and said that bullying at school had caused him to drop out early and led him to commit the heinous crime. The young killer showed off a shotgun and a pistol he had bought along with the caption: 'Veeeeeerrry early birthday present for myself'. Both were used in the shooting 'A farewell letter in analogue and digital form was found,' Franz Ruf, the public security director at Austria's interior ministry, told ORF public television following the shooting. 'He says goodbye to his parents. But no motive can be inferred from the farewell letter, and that is a matter for further investigations.' Asked whether the assailant had attacked victims randomly or targeted them specifically, Ruf said that is also under investigation and he didn't want to speculate. He said that wounded people were found on various levels of the school and, in one case, in front of the building. The student victims were aged between 14 and 17. A teacher was also killed. In new details, investigators said the gunman, who would have turned 22 in less than two weeks, had maintained contact with only one friend in the days leading up to the attack. Mayor of Karlsdorf, a small town near Graz where the killer lived, told reporters the evidence suggested that Arthur A. 'was a very inconspicuous young man'. 'It felt like he wasn't even noticed. Nobody really knew him. This is exactly the profile that we unfortunately see too often - silent, socially isolated recluses.' Austrian outlet Kronen Zeitung said the killer had an interest in the 1999 US Columbine school massacre in Colorado carried out by two teenage shooters and that he apparently used a photo of one of the pair on a profile linked to his online gaming pseudonym. Police are continuing to scour the shooter's electronic devices but said yesterday they had not discovered any video of the high school shooting on his mobile phone. Criminal police head Michael Lohnegger described the shooter as a 'very introverted person'. 'We discovered that his great passion was participating in so-called online first-person shooting games,' Lohnegger said, adding the killer had carefully planned the attack, according to a handwritten note found at his home. This note 'showed that the entire course of events had been planned by the perpetrator down to the most minute detail', Lohnegger said. Austrian media published photos that showed the killer being lauded for his exploits as a competitive gamer. Arthur A. was seen wearing a yellow and black team jersey at an Austrian gaming tournament called VulkanLAN2024 last year. He was also pictured clutching what appeared to be a winning plaque. People light candles on the main square in the city center after a deadly shooting at a school in Graz, Austria, Tuesday, June 10, 2025 Nine students were killed in Tuesday's attack - six girls and three boys aged between 14 and 17, one of whom had Polish citizenship - as well as a teacher, police said. Another 11 people were wounded before the attacker took his own life. A 15-year-old Kosovan girl named Lea Ilir Bajrami was the first of his victims to be pictured. Mourning the teen in a Facebook post, her heartbroken aunt wrote: 'Today, my niece Lea tragically lost her life in the attack in Graz. 'We pray for her soul and express our gratitude to all those who share our pain during these difficult times.' Her grandfather Muhabi Bajrami wrote on Facebook: 'With a broken heart and great pain, we inform family, friends and relatives that our granddaughter tragically lost her life in the attack that occurred in Graz, Austria. 'We pray for her soul and express our gratitude to all those who share our pain in these difficult moments.' Shots and screams rang out as the shooter stormed into his old classroom blasting a shotgun and a pistol. Terror-stricken pupils pretended to be dead as they cowered in corridors and two classrooms or ran for their lives. Chilling video captured the sound of shots followed by screams as the gunman picked off his victims. One student fleeing from the shooter called her mother during the attack saying: 'Mama, mama, I'm running for my life!' The mother described the situation to reporters as unbearable, saying: 'It was so terrible, you can't even imagine it.' Another student reportedly witnessed three classmates being shot. His father said: 'He was terrified and lay down on the floor so the shooter would think he was dead.' In the country's worst mass school shooting, terror-stricken pupils pretended to be dead as they cowered in corridors and two classrooms or ran for their lives. Pictured: Special forces descended on the high school shortly before 10am local time after reports of gunshots A 15-year-old Kosovan girl named Lea was the first victim to be pictured Pictured: Two female students cling on to each other as they escape the school building People embrace as they gather on the main square following a deadly school shooting in Graz, Austria, June 10, 2025 Family members reunite following the deadly school shooting in Graz, Austria The school's religious studies teacher Paul Nitsche told how he saw the gunman blasting out locks with a shotgun before entering and spraying staff and students with handgun bullets. 'It was hard to take in,' he said. 'This is something I had never even imagined before. That's what the situation was like as I was running down the stairwell - I thought to myself, this isn't real.' Another teacher, who asked not to be named, said: 'The whole community is in a state of shock. Schools should be places of safety and learning. But on this day it became more like something from a nightmare. 'Everyone was in a state of sheer terror.' On Tuesday, Cchurch bells rang across the city of Graz, all local radio and TV broadcasts were interrupted and more than 900 public transport vehicles, including trams and buses, ground to a halt for 10am mark of remembrance. Two other schools in the city, including a nursery school, were evacuated today after they received 'copycat' threats shortly before the planned minute's silence, though no further attacks occurred. Six female and three male victims died quickly after being shot, with one adult said to be among them.

How Israel decapitated Iran's military & nuke programme in just ONE NIGHT as years of planning revealed by IDF insiders
How Israel decapitated Iran's military & nuke programme in just ONE NIGHT as years of planning revealed by IDF insiders

Scottish Sun

time11 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

How Israel decapitated Iran's military & nuke programme in just ONE NIGHT as years of planning revealed by IDF insiders

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) ISRAEL'S audacious blitz of Iran that killed top generals and targeted its nuclear sites took years of planning, IDF sources have revealed. Intelligence agents spent months tracking senior commanders before taking them down in pinpoint strikes in the dead of night. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 10 Smoke rises above Tehran after an attack by Israel Credit: AP 10 Incredible images appear to show Mossad commandos inside Iran 10 Smoke billows from a building in Tehran after the Israeli air strike Credit: AFP 10 Israel dealt a major blow to Iran's chain of command - with Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri, the second-highest commander after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei among those eliminated. Revolutionary Guard chief Hossein Salami and Gen. Gholamali Rashid, deputy commander in chief of the armed forces were also wiped out. 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The UN watchdog this week confirmed the country is breaking its obligations for the first time in 20 years. Israel's attack overnight - aimed at diminishing the regime's nuclear threat - was spearheaded by Mossad commandos who smuggled kamikaze drones and precision weapons into Iran. Their daring mission paved the way for Israeli forces to hammer 100 targets using 200 war jets - eliminating military chiefs and scientists and striking atom sites. Which Iranian military chiefs and scientists have been killed? ISRAEL has dealt a major blow to Iran's command chain - wiping out several of its top brass. Key nuclear scientists have also been eliminated in Israel's overnight strikes. Those killed include: Generals Maj. Gen. Mohammad Bagheri , chief of staff of the armed forces and the second-highest commander after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , chief of staff of the armed forces and the second-highest commander after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Gen. Hossein Salami , commander in chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps , commander in chief of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps Gen. Gholamali Rashid , deputy commander in chief of the armed forces , deputy commander in chief of the armed forces Ali Shamkhan , key adviser and confidant of Khamenei , key adviser and confidant of Khamenei Amir Ali Hajizadeh, commander of the IRGC Aerospace Forces Nuclear scientists Fereydoun Abbasi , the former head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran , the former head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Dr Mohammad Mehdi Tehranchi, theoretical physicist and president of the Islamic Azad University in Tehran Eisin, who served in the IDF for 20 years and has a background in military intelligence, said a combination of different security and intelligence capabilities would have spent months tracking senior commanders. Speaking from Tel Aviv, she said: "You have to find them and you're attacking them all at the exact same time. 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EU's nuclear energy plans require 241 billion euro investment, draft shows
EU's nuclear energy plans require 241 billion euro investment, draft shows

Reuters

time17 hours ago

  • Reuters

EU's nuclear energy plans require 241 billion euro investment, draft shows

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