BSS
  25 May 2022, 22:37
Update : 25 May 2022, 22:42

'Nightmare' as gunman murders 19 children, two teachers in Texas

UVALDE, United States, May  25, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - A tight-knit Latino
community in Texas was wracked with grief Wednesday after a teenager wearing
body armor marched into an elementary school and killed 19 children and two
teachers -- the latest spasm of America's gun violence crisis.

Details of the atrocity, the victims and the 18-year-old gunman -- who was
killed by police -- emerged as America grappled with its deadliest school
shooting since the Sandy Hook tragedy in Connecticut a decade ago.

"This town is heartbroken, devastated," said Adolfo Hernandez, whose nephew
was at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, a small mainly Hispanic town about an hour
from the Mexican border, during the Tuesday shooting.

"We feel like there's a black cloud above this town," he told AFP. "You
just want to pinch yourself and wake up from that horrible nightmare."

Grief-stricken and angry, President Joe Biden addressed the nation in the
hours after the attack, calling on lawmakers to take on America's powerful gun
lobby and enact tougher laws to curb gun violence.

"When in God's name will we do what we all know in our gut needs to be
done?" Biden asked, his voice slow and heavy with emotion.

In Uvalde, police blocked off the area around the school on Wednesday and
there was little traffic or pedestrian movement. The neighborhood is one of
modest single-story homes, with small yards and often a swing set and an
outdoor grill for barbecues.

Identified as Salvador Ramos, the gunman was a resident of the town and a
US citizen.

According to Texan officials, Ramos shot his grandmother before heading to
Robb Elementary School around noon where he abandoned his vehicle and entered
with a rifle.

Law enforcement officers at the school engaged Ramos with gunfire but he
managed to get into a classroom and lock it to barricade himself, then started
shooting kids and the two teachers, said Chris Olivarez of the Texas Department
of Public Safety.

All the fatalities occurred in the one classroom, until police managed to
shoot and killed Ramos.

"Just goes to show you complete evil from this shooter," Olivarez told CNN.

- Gunman's troubled past -

Details have emerged of the gunman as a deeply troubled teen -- he was
repeatedly bullied over a speech impediment that included a stutter and a lisp
and once cut up his own face "just for fun," a former friend of Ramos, Santos
Valdez, told The Washington Post.

Days after he turned 18 this month, Ramos legally purchased two assault
rifles and 375 rounds of ammunition, CNN said, quoting Texas state Senator John
Whitmore.

As shattered families shared the news on social media, the names of the
murdered children, most of them of Latino heritage, began coming out: they
included Ellie Garcia, Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, Uziyah Garcia.

"My little love is now flying high with the angels above," Angel Garza,
whose daughter Amerie Jo Garza had just celebrated her 10th birthday, posted on
Facebook.

"I love you Amerie jo," he wrote. "I will never be happy or complete again."
More than a dozen children were also wounded in the attack at the school,
attended by more than 500 students aged around seven to 10 years old, most of
them economically disadvantaged.

- 'Going to be missed' -

Fourth-grade teacher Eva Mireles was shot and killed while trying to
protect her students, her aunt Lydia Martinez Delgado told the New York Times.
She said Mireles was proud of teaching kids of Latino heritage.

A cousin of Mireles, Amber Ybarra, called her a hero.

"Her cooking was amazing. Her laughter was contagious, and she's going to
be missed," Ybarra told NBC's "Today" show. "She put her heart into everything
that she did."

There have been more mass shootings -- in which four or more people were
wounded or killed -- in 2022 than days so far this year, according to the
non-profit Gun Violence Archive which recorded 213 such incidents.

The Uvalde shooting was the deadliest such incident since the 2012 Sandy
Hook shooting in Connecticut, in which 20 elementary school children and six
staff were killed.

- 'Happens nowhere else' –

Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut, where the Sandy Hook
shooting took place, made an impassioned appeal for concrete action to prevent
further violence.

"This isn't inevitable, these kids weren't unlucky. This only happens in
this country and nowhere else," Murphy said on the Senate floor in Washington.

The deadly assault in Texas follows a series of deadly mass shootings in
the United States this month: most recently on May 14 when an 18-year-old
self-declared white supremacist shot 10 people dead at a grovery store in
Buffalo, New York.

Despite recurring mass-casualty shootings, multiple initiatives to reform
gun regulations have failed in the US Congress, leaving states and local
councils to strengthen -- or weaken -- their own restrictions.