Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
International

Shooting At Black Church Reopens American History's Dark Part: Obama

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Jun, 2015 12:41 PM
    Shock and anger engulfed America as police nabbed a white young man who killed nine people at a historic black church in Charleston in South Carolina, saying he was there "to shoot black people".
     
    Mourning the nine deaths at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church late on Wednesday night, America's first African-American President Barack Obama said the shooting rekindles memories of a "dark part of our history".
     
    In a short and sombre statement from the White House on Thursday, Obama also restarted a debate over the nation's recent history with gun violence, saying, "I've had to make statements like this too many times".
     
    "At some point we as a country will have to reckon with the fact that this type of mass violence does not happen in other developed countries," he said.
     
    According to CBS, this was the 14th time Obama made a statement after a mass shooting.
     
    It was another example, he said, of innocent people being killed because someone who "wanted to inflict harm" had "no trouble getting their hands on a gun".
     
    Police on Thursday arrested the suspect identified as Dylann Roof, 21, of Lexington, South Carolina in Shelby, North Carolina, a town east of Charlotte and just north of the South Carolina state line after a massive manhunt.
     
    After Roof's arrest, South Carolina's Indian-American governor Nikki Haley said: "We woke up today and the heart and soul of South Carolina is broken."
     
    "So we have some grieving to do, and we have some pain we have to go through," said a choked-up Haley.
     
    "Parents are having to explain to their kids that they can go to church and feel safe, and that's not something we've had to deal with."
     
    Charleston officials said the FBI and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were helping with the investigation, which is being categorised as a "hate crime".
     
    The Justice Department is also opening a parallel hate crime review into the case.
     
    Roof spent an hour in a prayer meeting at the church on Wednesday night before he opened fire, CNN reported citing Charleston police chief Greg Mullen.
     
    Among those killed were Rev. Clementa Pinckney, the church's pastor and a state senator. Other victims in the Charleston church shooting were six women and two men.
     
    Three people survived, including a woman who received a chilling message from the shooter.
     
    "Her life was spared, and (she was) told, 'I'm not going to kill you, I'm going to spare you, so you can tell them what happened'," Dot Scott, president of the Charleston unit of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), told CNN.
     
    Scott said she heard this from the victims' family members.
     
    The NAACP is a civil rights organisation for ethnic minorities in the US.
     
    According to Atlantic weekly, the shooting spree in Charleston was the latest assault on black churches for generations.
     
    Black churches have suffered at the hands of thugs and terrorists throughout the Civil Rights era, as they had for a century before.
     
    On September 15, 1963, Klu Klux Klan terrorists bombed the 16th Street Church in Birmingham, Alabama, killing four girls, it recalled.
     
    As recently as the 1990s, a wave of fire-bombings hit black churches.
     
    The Atlantic identified at least eight black churches in South Carolina alone that suffered probable arson attacks.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Saudi Woman Searches For Her Indian Mother In UAE

    Saudi Woman Searches For Her Indian Mother In UAE
    A Saudi woman who was separated from her Indian mother after her parents divorced is trying frantically to locate her mother and the search has brought her to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), media reports said Wednesday.

    Saudi Woman Searches For Her Indian Mother In UAE

    Funds Raised To Send Indian's Body Back From New Zealand

    Funds Raised To Send Indian's Body Back From New Zealand
    The body of an Indian student who died here last week after being pulled out from the sea, will, after all, be sent back to India with public donations worth N$23,000 (nearly $17,500) having been raised, the Dominion Post reported on Wednesday.

    Funds Raised To Send Indian's Body Back From New Zealand

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed
    Police are working on locating two suspects in the killing of an Indian-origin store clerk in the US state of Connecticut.

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic
    WASHINGTON — The U.S. military is preparing to ask that new sensors be installed in the Canadian Arctic that would be able to track different types of incoming missiles.

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds
    The body of an Indian student who died here last week after being pulled out from the sea, has got stuck in New Zealand with his family unable to raise the money needed to transport the body home.

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers
    TORONTO — When research teams planning clinical trials of Ebola vaccines were divvying up West Africa last fall, no one wanted Guinea.

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers