‘Too much fear, too much grief’: Biden to visit
Uvalde amid scrutiny of police response to shooting
Kamala Harris calls for ban on assault weapons after
attending last funeral of those killed in Buffalo attack
Gloria
Oladipo, Edward Helmore and agencies
Sat 28 May
2022 19.00 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/may/28/texas-school-shooting-biden-harris-gun-control
Joe Biden
lamented “too much violence, too much fear, too much grief” after the latest US
mass shooting as he prepared to visit Uvalde, where police face intensifying
scrutiny for waiting outside the classroom where a teenage gunman with an
assault rifle killed 19 children and two teachers.
The US
president and first lady, Jill Biden, plan to travel to the small southern
Texas city on Sunday.
And on
Saturday, the vice-president, Kamala Harris, called for a ban on such
military-style assault weapons for the general public, while she attended the
last funeral of the 10 people killed just two weeks ago in a racist attack on a
supermarket in Buffalo, New York, carried out with a similar gun.
The center
of Uvalde was busy but hushed on Saturday afternoon as a long line of people
lined up quietly in heat approaching 100F, waiting to place flowers and other
tributes at the hurriedly-created memorial of crosses set up for those killed
five days ago at nearby Robb elementary school.
An
ambulance was standing by and a state trooper assisted members of the public
who came to mourn.
But as well
as grief there was anger that has been simmering since Tuesday, when local
police waited at least an hour, while young children trapped with the gunman
repeatedly called 911 and parents outside pleaded with officers to go in,
before federal agents arrived and shot the 18-year-old local man dead.
The police
department specifically assigned to oversee school security in the area, led by
Pedro Arredondo, appeared not to have followed state protocols advising that an
“officer’s first priority is to move in and confront the attacker”.
Biden holds
up a finger while wearing graduation robes
Biden
speaks at the commencement ceremony at the University of Delaware in Newark on
Saturday. Photograph: Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP
The head of
the Texas department of public safety, Steve McCraw, admitted on Friday
afternoon that “of course it was the wrong decision” for local officers to wait
to enter the classroom.
And Texas’s
governor, Greg Abbott, said he felt “misled” and was livid after several days
of conflicting accounts about the law enforcement response.
Biden spoke
about the tragedy in Uvalde during a commencement speech he gave on Saturday
morning at the University of Delaware, his alma mater.
“As I
speak, those parents are literally preparing to bury their children. In the
United States of America. Too much violence, too much fear, too much grief,”
said Biden and called the Uvalde and Buffalo mass shootings acts of “evil”.
“In the
face of such destructive forces, we have to stand stronger. We cannot outlaw
tragedy, I know, but we can make America safer. We can finally do what we have
to do to protect the lives of our people, and of our children,” he said.
The US has
received increasing criticism from the international community and gun safety
advocates domestically over continual mass shootings and the failure of
lawmakers to pass gun control laws that could mitigate them.
Biden and
fellow Democrats have been repeatedly out-maneuvered in the last decade by
Senate Republicans, many of whom are backed by the powerful gun lobby.
Harris
called on the Congress to act, saying: “We are not sitting around, waiting to
figure out what the solution looks like. We know what works on this. It
includes – let’s have an assault weapons ban.”
In Uvalde,
Alfred Garza was among several parents who gathered outside the elementary
school after reports that a shooting was under way and witnessed officers
delaying a move to storm in. He tried not to get in the way. Other parents
begged officers to take action.
His
daughter Amerie Jo, 10, was among those shot dead before federal agents arrived
and killed the gunman, Salvador Ramos.
“It doesn’t
take a genius to figure out that it just took too long to get in there and, you
know, had they gotten there sooner, and someone would have taken immediate
action, we might have more of those children here today, including my
daughter,” he told CNN.
Warning
signs about Ramos had been evident prior to his attack, with reports of
threatening posts on social media and aggressive interactions with teenage
peers.
But he was
able legally to arm himself with assault rifles and hundreds of rounds of
ammunition shortly after he turned 18 this year.
His mother,
Adriana Martinez, gave a short television interview earlier in the week, saying
in Spanish: “I have no words to say. I don’t know what he was thinking,”
adding: “He had his reasons for doing what he did. Please don’t judge him. I
only want the innocent children who died to forgive me.”

.webp)
.jpg)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário