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| Thousands of students sat for 17 minutes outside the White House in honor of the victims of last month's high school shooting in Florida (AFP Photo/SAUL LOEB) |
Washington (AFP) - Students across the United States walked out of classes on Wednesday in a nationwide call for action against gun violence following the shooting deaths last month at a Florida high school.
Hundreds of
students from Washington area schools gathered outside the White House chanting
"Never again!" and "Enough is enough!" and holding signs
reading "Protect People Not Guns."
At 10:00 am
(1400 GMT), students in numerous cities held a moment of silence to honor the
14 students and three adult staff killed on Valentine's Day at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
The
"National School Walkout" was intended to last for 17 minutes, one
for each victim.
But it
quickly became apparent that many students at schools on the East Coast decided
not to go to classes at all and to demonstrate instead.
The
nationwide protest is being held one month to the day after Nikolas Cruz, a
troubled 19-year-old former student at Stoneman Douglas, unleashed a hail of
gunfire on his former classmates.
The event
to honor those slain at Stoneman Douglas is also an act of protest against the
firearms violence plaguing the United States, which has more than 30,000
gun-related deaths annually.
Organizers
come from the same group behind the Women's March, which saw millions of
demonstrators take to the streets in cities across the country in January 2017
to protest Donald Trump's White House inauguration.
Trump had
momentarily signaled support for increasing restrictions on guns, but now
stands accused of bowing to the powerful US gun lobby.
'Never again!': US students stage walkout against gun violence https://t.co/9fl1hZNqog pic.twitter.com/QPq7iMWU9k— AFP news agency (@AFP) March 14, 2018

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