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| Hundreds of students from the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia staged walkouts and gathered in front of the Capitol in support of gun control (AFP Photo/ Olivier Douliery) |
Tallahassee
(United States) (AFP) - Student survivors of the Florida school shooting that
saw 17 people killed in a hail of bullets last week descended on the state
capital Wednesday to ramp up the pressure on lawmakers to enact tougher gun
control measures.
Holding
signs reading "Never Again" and "Be The Adults, Do
Something," students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School rallied
with thousands of supporters outside the imposing white stone-columned capitol
building in Tallahassee.
"I am
here to demand change from my government," student Lorenzo Prado told the
crowd. "To let these victims lives be taken without any change in return
is an act of treason to our great country."
"To
let our fellow countrymen fall beside us without fighting back is to me equal
to leaving a soldier to die in the battlefield."
Rallying in
solidarity, students staged walkouts from other high schools in Florida and
elsewhere vowing to make the tragedy a turning point in America's deadlocked
debate on gun control.
In
Washington, hundreds of local high school students gathered outside the White
House chanting slogans against the National Rifle Association (NRA), the
powerful gun lobby, and demanding action from President Donald Trump.
Faced with
the massive outpouring of grief and outrage over the Parkland, Florida
shooting, Trump was to meet with parents, students and teachers at the White
House on Wednesday to discuss school safety.
Trump --
who received strong backing from the NRA during his White House run -- is also
showing a new-found willingness to take at least some steps on gun control.
The
president threw his support on Tuesday behind moves to ban "bump
stocks" -- an accessory that can turn a semi-automatic weapon into an
automatic one.
Calls to ban bump stocks have been mounting since Stephen Paddock, a retired accountant, used them on several of his weapons to kill 58 concertgoers in Las Vegas in October 2017 in the deadliest mass shooting in recent US history.
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Students
from Montgomery Blair High School in Maryland march in support of gun
reform
legislation (AFP Photo/WIN MCNAMEE)
|
Calls to ban bump stocks have been mounting since Stephen Paddock, a retired accountant, used them on several of his weapons to kill 58 concertgoers in Las Vegas in October 2017 in the deadliest mass shooting in recent US history.
Although
the former student who shot dead 17 people in Florida last week did not have
bump stocks on his gun, there has been a renewed focus on the devices because
outlawing them is a rare point of agreement between Democrats, some Republicans
and the NRA.
In Florida,
more than 100 students from Stoneman Douglas travelled eight hours in buses on
Tuesday to meet with state legislators and demand they action on gun laws.
'Things
are going to change'
"My
classmates and I are probably the most determined group of people you will ever
meet," said student Sofie Whitney.
"People
are talking about how we aren't serious because we're children, but... we're
serious."
The
students' push for change hit a hurdle Tuesday when the Republican-dominated
Florida House of Representatives declined to take up a debate on legislation that
would have banned assault weapons and large-capacity magazines.
The US
Congress is also deadlocked on the gun debate, accomplishing nothing since the
shooting in Las Vegas.
"We
must actually make a difference," Trump said Tuesday.
"We
must move past cliches and tired debates and focus on evidence-based solutions
and security measures that actually work," he said. "We must do more
to protect our children."
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A memorial
for victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in
Parkland, Florida (AFP Photo/RHONA WISE)
|
"This
includes implementing common sense security measures and addressing mental
health issues," he said, "including better coordination between
federal and state law enforcement to take swift action when there are warning
signs."
Florida
school shooter Nikolas Cruz, 19, had a history of troubling behavior and a
person close to him warned the FBI five weeks before the shooting that he was a
threat -- but no action was taken.
Cruz
legally bought the gun he used in the attack -- an AR-15-style semi-automatic
rifle -- and the White House said Tuesday it would consider raising the age for
such purchases.
"I
think that's certainly something that's on the table," spokeswoman Sarah
Sanders said.
Students
are planning a march on Washington next month and on Tuesday, they earned two
million dollars in pledges from Hollywood A-listers George Clooney and his human
rights lawyer wife Amal, Oprah Winfrey, director Steven Spielberg and film
producer Jeffrey Katzenberg.
The
"March for Our Lives" is scheduled to take place on March 24, with
sister rallies planned across the country.
Americans
support stricter gun laws by a 66 to 31 percent margin, according to a poll
released on Tuesday by Quinnipiac University.
It
described the margin as "the highest level of support" for stricter
gun control since it began surveys on the question in 2008.
Florida students turn up heat on lawmakers for gun action https://t.co/h7ANFLfAxa pic.twitter.com/JTopHWvYt0— AFP news agency (@AFP) February 21, 2018



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