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    Texas primary school shooting leaves 21 dead

    David GreatBy David GreatMay 25, 2022No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Relatives of children at the school gathered at a nearby civic centre to wait for news in Texas
    Relatives of children at the school gathered at a nearby civic centre to wait for news
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    Nineteen young children and two adults have died in a shooting at a primary school in south Texas.

    The gunman opened fire at Robb Elementary School – which teaches children aged seven to 10 – in the city of Uvalde before he was killed by law enforcement, officials said.

    The 18-year-old suspect had a handgun, an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle and high-capacity magazines, Texas investigators say.

    The teenager is suspected of shooting his grandmother before the rampage.

    Local media report in Texas say he may have been a high school student in the area.

    Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Chief of Police Pete Arredondo said the shooting began at 11:32 local time on Tuesday, and that investigators believe the attacker “did act alone during this heinous crime”.

    Texas Governor Greg Abbott said the shooter, whom he named as Salvador Ramos, abandoned a vehicle before entering the school to “horrifically, incomprehensibly” open fire.

    One of the adults killed was a teacher, who has been named in US media as Eva Mireles. Her page on the Texas school district’s website said she has a daughter in college and loved running and hiking.

    Nearly 500 pupils are enrolled in the predominantly Hispanic school around 85 miles (135km) west of the city of San Antonio.

    The Associated Press news agency reports that a US Border Patrol official who was nearby when the shooting began rushed into the school and shot and killed the gunman, who was behind a barricade.

    Border Patrol is a federal agency that guards US ports of entry. Uvalde, which is fewer than 80 miles from the border with Mexico, is home to a Border Patrol station.

    Two Texas border agents were reportedly shot in an exchange with the gunman. One agent was shot in the head, officials say, adding that both were now in a stable condition in hospital.

    • Hostages released at Texas synagogue, gunman dead after standoff

    According to CBS News, the attacker was wearing body armour as he carried out the attack. Another 18-year-old who is suspected of attacking a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on 14 May was also wearing body armour and carrying a semi-automatic rifle – both of which are commercially available in the US.

    The Uvalde Memorial Hospital posted on Facebook earlier that 13 children had been taken to hospital “via ambulances or buses”.

    A 66-year-old woman and a 10-year-old girl were in a critical condition at a hospital in San Antonio, University Health hospital officials said.

    As evening fell police remained outside the community centre in Uvalde braving a violent rainstorm.

    Earlier, cries and sobs could be heard from outside as family members who gathered there received the devastating news that their children had been killed.

    Others were asked to give DNA samples to help identify some of the young victims in the Texas shooting.

    Just a few blocks from the Robb Elementary school, a small vigil was held for the victims and survivors of the attack.

    Karla Bohman’s voice cracked as she told the group about a family friend whose young daughter, a student at the school, was among those still unaccounted for.

    “They don’t know if she’s in surgery or one of the fatalities, but they know she’s a victim of some sort because she’s missing,” Bohman cried. “I can’t believe this.”

    Cheryl Juhasz, a lifelong resident of Uvalde, quietly wept during the prayer.

    “You can’t comprehend evil like this. No matter where it happens, but it’s harder when it happens at home.”

    School district superintendent Hal Harrell said the school year had been ended early in the wake of the shooting.

    The vigil

    In a speech from the White House, US President Joe Biden said he was “sick and tired” of responding to mass shootings, as he called for gun control.

    “How many scores of little children who witnessed what happened – see their friends die, as if they’re in a battlefield, for God’s sake,” he said. “They’ll live with it the rest of their lives.”

    He ordered that flags at the White House and other US federal buildings be flown at half-mast in honour of the victims in Uvalde.

    Community members wept at an impromptu vigil on Tuesday night
    Community members wept at a vigil on Tuesday night
    School shootings have become recurring emergencies in the US, with 26 recorded last year, according to EdWeek, an education trade publication.

    Active shooter lockdown drills are a common part of the school curriculum, from primary to high school.

    The 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut was the deadliest such attack. Twenty of the 26 victims were between the ages of five and six.

    Speaking on the floor of the US Senate in Washington DC on Tuesday, Connecticut Democratic Senator Chris Murphy begged his colleagues to pass gun control legislation.

    “These kids weren’t unlucky,” he said. “This only happens in this country. Nowhere else, nowhere else do little kids go to school thinking that they might be shot that day.”

    But Texas Senator Ted Cruz, a Republican, rejected the calls for gun control. He said restricting the rights of “law-abiding citizens… doesn’t work. It’s not effective. It doesn’t prevent crime.”

    Guns overtook car crashes to become the leading cause of death for US children and teenagers in 2020, according to data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) last month.

    On Monday, an FBI report found that “active shooter” rampage attacks have doubled since the coronavirus began in 2020.

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    Retired Nigeria Police Force men and their families blocked a gate at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on Monday to protest their continued inclusion in the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). The demonstrators, led by the Police Retired Officers Forum of Nigeria (PROF), branded the program as "fraudulent, illegal, inhumane, and obnoxious" and urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign the Police Exit Bill. According to the retirees, if signed into law, the bill, which was passed by the National Assembly on December 4, 2025, and transmitted to the president on March 16, 2026, would remove police personnel from the CPS. The National Coordinator of PROF, CSP Raphael Irowainu (retd.), led the protest and stated that the goal was to get the president to act on the legislation. “Our major aim here is to prevail on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign our bill—the bill exiting the police from the Contributory Pension Scheme—passed by the National Assembly on 4th December 2025 and transmitted to him on 16th March 2026 into law, nothing more than that,” he said. Ads by Irowainu bemoaned that while other security agencies have been removed from the scheme, police personnel remain included. “The soldiers have been exited, the SSS has been exited, the Air Force has been exited, the Navy has been exited, and the National Intelligence Agency has been exited. The police, who are the father of them all, are trapped in this obnoxious Contributory Pension Scheme,” he added. The pensioners maintained that the CPS had a negative impact on their wellbeing, calling it a "slavery and untimely death-inducing pension scheme." Monday's demonstration is not the first time retired police officers have raised the issue. In July 2025, retirees held a similar demonstration at the National Assembly, seeking their expulsion from the plan. Some demonstrators, many of whom were elderly, also protested at the Force Headquarters in Abuja, expressing their dissatisfaction with the CPS's pension arrangements. The latest protest reflects rising frustration among retired police officers with pension reforms and their exclusion from benefits provided to other security organizations.

    Retired police officers block Presidential Villa, protest over pension scheme

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    ADC youths protest at INEC office, demand Amupitan’s resignation

    ADC youths protest at INEC office, demand Amupitan’s resignation

    April 20, 2026
    Marco Rose

    Bournemouth appoint Marco Rose as Iraola successor

    April 20, 2026
    Peter Okoye and NASRE dispute over alleged threat to journalist Bayo Adetu at Ikoyi High Court

    NASRE warns Peter Okoye over alleged threat to journalist

    April 20, 2026
    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police nab 42 miners over abduction of Kwara monarch

    April 20, 2026
    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police confirm kidnap of UTME candidates, others by pirates in Calabar

    April 20, 2026
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