• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Massacre triggers world criticism of U.S. gun laws

LONDON
Tue Apr 17, 2007 2:58pm EDT
A police officer guards the perimeter of the Virginia Tech campus after a gunman shot dozens of people on the university campus in Blacksburg, Virginia, April 16, 2007. REUTERS/Brendan Bush

LONDON (Reuters) - World leaders and media commentators criticized what many called the gun culture in the United States on Tuesday after 33 people were killed in the country's worst shooting rampage.

U.S.  |  World

The world, including U.S. arch-foe Iran, united in sympathy.

European newspapers saw a grim inevitability about the killings because the U.S. constitution enshrined the right to bear arms, and Australian Prime Minister John Howard pointed to the tough laws on gun ownership in his country as a solution.

South Korea said it was worried about a possible racial backlash in the United States after U.S. police identified the gunman who killed 32 people then himself at the Virginia Tech university on Monday as a South Korean student.

Media commentators in Europe were quick to blame permissive U.S. gun laws for the massacre.

Italy's leftist Il Manifesto newspaper said the shooting was "as American as apple pie". France's Le Monde newspaper said such episodes frequently disfigured the "American dream".

"It would be vain to hope that even so destructive a crime as this will cool the American ardor for guns," Britain's Independent newspaper said in a commentary.

Howard, a close U.S. ally over Iraq and Afghanistan, was a leading voice suggesting Washington should tighten its gun controls. Australia banned almost all types of semi-automatic weapons after a mass shooting in Tasmania in 1996.

"We showed a national resolve that the gun culture that is such a negative in the United States would never become a negative in our country," Howard told reporters.

More than 30,000 people die from gunshot wounds in the United States annually and there are more guns in private hands than in any other country. But a powerful gun lobby has largely thwarted efforts to tighten controls.

PRECAUTIONS

South Korea said it was taking precautions against any possible backlash in the United States but that it regarded the shooting rampage by 23-year-old Cho Seung-Hui as an "extremely isolated incident".

"We are working closely with our diplomatic missions and local Korean residents' associations in anticipation of any situation that may arise," said a South Korean Foreign Ministry official, without elaborating.

Iran, at loggerheads with Washington over its nuclear program, joined other countries round the world in expressing sympathy. "Iran condemns (the killings) and expresses its condolences to the families of victims and the American nation," said Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini.

Britain's Queen Elizabeth, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and Pope Benedict were among those who sent condolences.

"I feel very much sorry and troubled, and any such rampant killing of innocent citizens and children is totally not acceptable," Ban told reporters.

The Pope called the killings a "senseless tragedy" and said he was praying for the victims and their families.

In Romania, people mourned Romanian-born Virginia Tech professor Liviu Librescu, who was among the 32 people killed by the gunman. Flowers and a photograph of the professor were placed at the entrance to his old school.

Anti-gun campaigners in other countries where ownership is common expressed fears of a similar massacre.

Nandy Pacheco, head of the Philippines anti-gun lobby Gunless Society, said: "Not a day passes without a gun-related incident happening (in the Philippines). You hear it on radio, see it on TV and read it in newspapers."

Shootings in the Philippines over trivial incidents are common. A few years ago several fatal karaoke bar shootouts were sparked by poor renditions of Frank Sinatra's "My Way".



More from Reuters

Photo

Pay czar caps more salaries at bailed out firms

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. pay czar on Friday expanded a crackdown on pay packages at four companies rescued with taxpayer money, limiting most cash salaries at $500,000 for a second tier of top earners.

A model gets prepared backstage ahead of a wedding dress show at China Fashion Week in Beijing
Fashion & Style:

Flowers, church, liposuction?

Brides and grooms are opting for cosmetic surgery and other procedures, supplementing veils and cummerbunds with Botox and liposuction. Women say they want to look good for photos, but men are a different story.  Full Article 

Sam Worthington and Zoe Saldana as her digital character Neytiri in a scene from "Avatar". Credit: REUTERS/Twentieth Century Fox/Handout

Will Cameron change Hollywood again?

Beyond the hype and buzz, James Cameron's $400 million "Avatar," one of the most expensive films ever made, is being closely watched for its impact on the future of movies.  Full Article