This photo provided by Slovakian Daily SME shows a man that
SME identified as the gunman who killed seven people and
wounded at least 15 in an attack in a neighbourhood of
Bratislava and then committed suicide. (AP Photo/DAILY SME)
A gunman has gone on a rampage in Slovakia's capital,
killing seven people and wounding 15, before committing
suicide, officials said.
Five of the people killed were members of a Roma family who
lived in an apartment where the man began his attack with a
machine gun and two pistols, said Interior Minister Daniel
Lipsic. Roma, also known as Gypsies, often face
discrimination in eastern Europe, but Lipsic and police chief
Jaroslav Spisiak said the unidentified gunman's motive was
not known.
Another man shot and killed outside the building was
"probably" also a member of the same family, Lipsic said.
"So far we don't know the motive ... so I will not speculate
whether it did or did not have (a) racial motive," he told
reporters. "I doubt it, but of course the investigation is
ongoing."
The shooting took place at midmorning in the rundown Devinska
Nova Ves neighborhood on the outskirts of the Slovak capital
that is surrounded by fields and industrial areas.
The five Roma who died in the apartment - four women and a
man - lived in a brown high-rise building, Spisiak said.
Police rushed to the scene as the attacker, about 50 years
old, was leaving the building, and he fired indiscriminately
at people in the area, wounding 15, including a policeman and
a 3-year-old boy who was shot in the ear, Lipsic said.
The seventh fatality was a woman who was shot in the area as
she walked to the balcony of her apartment when she heard the
gunfire, Lipsic said.
Afterward, SME, a daily newspaper in Slovakia, released a
photograph of a person it identified as the gunman. It shows
a middle-aged man standing on a sidewalk and pointing a
machine gun at an unidentified target overhead. The man
appears to have planned the shootout because he is wearing
device over his ears to protect his hearing.
Daniel Zitnan of Bratislava's Children's Hospital said the
3-year-old boy who was shot while riding in a car was only
slightly hurt and released after treatment.
Renata Vandriakova - who heads the emergency room at one of
Bratislava's hospitals and oversees the city's response to
health emergencies - said one of the 15 wounded had to be
operated on and was in critical condition.
Emergency crews blocked off the scene of the attack, which
also includes a kindergarten and a supermarket.
Hours after the attack, stunned residents milled about in
disbelief.
"I'm shocked," said 20-year-old Andre Smahovski, a student
whose friend was injured in the attack. "Normally this
doesn't happen here."
Christian Padour, 40, described how his sister-in-law was at
a doctor's office when a woman who had been shot by the
gunman entered - to the horror of those present.
"I feel safe here, but now it looks like the Wild West,"
Padour said.
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