Sunday, 12 June 2016

50 killed in Orlando Gay Nightclub Shooting, Omar Mateen Suspected

According to reports Fifty people have been confirmed dead in a shooting in a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida.
The gunman, named by officials as Omar Mateen, was killed after taking hostages.
A state of emergency has been declared, the city's mayor Buddy Dyer
has said another 53 people were injured in the shooting at the Pulse club.
It is the worst mass shooting in recent US history. Florida governor Rick Scott said itwas "clearly an act of terror".
Officials said the killings were likely to be ideologically motivated, though there was no information that the gunman was associated with a particular group.
However, US Congressman Alan Grayson said it was "no coincidence" the attack
happened in a gay club.
"It may be we've seen the commission of an awful hate crime," he added.
Mateen's father Mir Seddique told NBC News that the incident had nothing to do with
religion, but may have been triggered by the sight of a gay couple kissing in Miami.
French President Francois Hollande condemned the mass killing "with horror" and
expressed the "full support of France and the French with America's authorities and its
people in this difficult time", a statement by his office said.
It is believed that the suspect, who was a US citizen from the Florida town of Port St Lucie and was of Afghan descent, was not on a terrorism watch list, although he was being investigated for an unrelated criminal act.
Relatives have been gathering at local hospitals desperate for news of their loved ones.
Many had received calls and texts from loved ones inside the club as the siege began,
and some have heard nothing since.
The death toll given by Mayor Dyer means that the Orlando attack surpasses the 2007
massacre at Virginia Tech which left 32 people dead.
"Today we're dealing with something that we never imagined and is unimaginable," he
said, adding that there was "an enormous amount of havoc" and "blood everywhere".
"Because of the scale of the crime I've asked the [Florida] governor to declare a state
of emergency," he said.
"We're also issuing a state of emergency for the city of Orlando so that we can bring
additional resources to bear to deal with the aftermath."



BBC news.

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