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File: Former South African president Thabo Mbeki. AFP/Gianluigi Guercia
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WINDER – A 14-year-old gunman killed at least four people, including two students, and wounded nine more when he opened fire at a high school in the US state of Georgia on Wednesday, law enforcement said.
The shooter — also a student at the school — was taken into custody. He will be charged with murder and tried as an adult, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said.
Two teachers were also among the dead.
After the latest chapter in America’s gun violence crisis — nearly 400 mass shootings this year alone, by one tally — people gathered at a sports field outside Apalachee High School, some forming a circle with their arms linked.
“Our school resource officer engaged him,” county sheriff Jud Smith told reporters, referring to law enforcement officers employed to work at US schools.
“The shooter quickly realized that if he did not give up that it would end with an OIS — an officer-involved shooting. He gave up, got on the ground, and the deputy took him into custody.”
Late Wednesday, the FBI revealed that the suspect had been brought to its attention more than a year ago for threats to commit a school shooting.
At that time the county sheriff’s office interviewed the father and the then 13-year-old suspect, who denied the threats, before flagging the child to school officials for monitoring.
Smith said police did not yet know if the shooter singled out specific people as targets, and authorities have not yet identified the weapon.
Some in the school initially thought it was just another shooter drill, one student told AFP, referring to the exercises common in US schools.
“Everyone just thought it was a fake drill until my teacher said we didn’t get an email,” Alexsandra Romeo said.
“She got us all in a little corner and everyone was just hugging each other, I had some of my friends crying. Until two police officers came in with their guns and told us that this is not a drill and that we’re still not safe.”
Another student, 17-year-old Stephanie Folgar, described hearing “loud bangs” and panicking students hiding in the bathrooms and closet.
“It’s scary knowing that that could’ve been you,” she said.
One student told local media that he saw blood on the floor and a body as he was led out of the building by authorities.
The shooting occurred near the town of Winder, about 70 kilometres northeast of Atlanta, the state capital.
Earlier, school authorities were reported to have sent a message to parents saying they were enforcing a “hard lockdown after reports of gunfire.”
After the all-clear was given, parents were invited to the school to be reunited with their children, with long lines of vehicles visible outside.