Deadly school shooting in Moscow
A 10th-grade student with two rifles burst into his Moscow school on Monday, killing his geography teacher and a policeman in front of about 20 students, investigators said. His father played a key role in freeing those students before police stormed the classroom and took his son into custody, the city police chief said.
A 10th-grade student with two rifles burst into his Moscow school on Monday, killing his geography teacher and a policeman in front of about 20 students, investigators said. His father played a key role in freeing those students before police stormed the classroom and took his son into custody, the city police chief said.
The student
gunman also seriously wounded a second police officer who had responded
to an alarm from the school, investigators said.
None
of the approximately 400 children in School No. 263 at the time were
hurt, said Karina Sabitova, a police spokeswoman. But students were so
fearful that some ran from the building with their teachers without
stopping to put on coats in below-freezing temperatures. The school in
northeast Moscow is for children in grades one through 11.
Such shootings in Russian schools
are extremely rare. Any attack on a school, however, unavoidably brings
back memories of the Beslan school siege in 2004, when Islamic
militants from Russia's North Caucasus took about 1,000 people hostage,
most of them children. More than 300 hostages were killed when Russian
security forces stormed that school.
Russia
is also now on alert for terrorist attacks, especially after Islamic
militants asserted responsibility for twin suicide bombings in the city
of Volgograd in December and threatened to strike during the Sochi
Winter Olympics, which begin Friday in the Black Sea resort.
Monday's attack, however, raised no suspicions of any link to terrorism.
The ethnic Russian teenager
entered the school after threatening its security guard, who managed to
hit an alarm before following the student to his classroom, said
Vladimir Markin, spokesman for Russia's Investigative Committee, its
main investigative agency.
"Without saying a word, he fired several shots at the geography teacher," Markin said.
Markin
identified the teenager as Sergei Gordeyev and said he was an excellent
student who apparently had an emotional breakdown. Gordeyev fired at
least 11 times from a small-caliber rifle, also killing one police
officer and wounding a second, Markin said.
The
youth's father was immediately called to the school. He spoke to his
son on the phone for 15 minutes to try to persuade him to let the 20 or
so students in the classroom leave, but the boy refused, Moscow police
chief Anatoly Yakunin said in televised remarks.
The father, wearing a
bullet-proof vest provided by police, then went into the classroom.
About 30 minutes later, the trapped students walked out, leaving the
father and son alone in the classroom, and police special forces stormed
in, Yakunin said.
Investigators
were questioning Gordeyev, his classmates, school staff and the
security guard to try to determine why he shot the teacher, Markin said.
He
identified the teacher as Andrei Kirillov, aged 29 or 30, correcting an
earlier statement that a 76-year-old teacher with the same last name
had been killed. Kirillov's wife is a teacher at the same school and
they have a young son.
In
addition to the small-caliber rifle, Gordeyev was also carrying a
carbine, a short-barreled rifle, the police chief said, adding that both
rifles belonged to his father and were legally registered. Ownership of
hunting rifles is permitted in Russia if they are properly registered.
President
Vladimir Putin responded to the shooting by saying that Russia should
do a better job at providing a cultural education for its children.
"We
have to raise a new generation of theatergoers with good artistic taste
who can understand and value theatrical, dramatic and musical art," he
said at a televised gathering of cultural figures. "If we had done this
in a proper way, then perhaps there would not have been a tragedy like
today's in Moscow."
Putin said culture should teach children to believe in the strength of goodness.
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