U.S. students walk out again to protest
gun violence
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[April 21, 2018]
By Keith Coffman
LITTLETON, Colo. (Reuters) - Demanding an
end to gun violence and tougher restrictions on firearm sales, thousands
of students again walked out of classes across the United States on
Friday in hopes of putting pressure on politicians ahead of November's
midterm elections.
Timed to coincide with the 19th anniversary of the Columbine High School
massacre, students left classes at midmorning, many waving placards with
slogans including "I should be worried about grades, not guns," and
"Enough is enough."
Organizers said students from more than 2,600 schools and institutions
were scheduled to take part, but that was fewer than participated in a
similar walkout last month. In some places, demonstrators even met with
resistance from school administrators.
"Today is about being proactive and being empowered and really funneling
all that energy and anger we have as young people into some productive
change," one of the student organizers, Lane Murdock of Connecticut,
told Reuters.
Olivia Pfeil, a 16-year-old sophomore from a high school in Oconomowoc,
Wisconsin, held a sign bearing the names of mass shooting victims.
"We're expecting change or come next election cycle we will support
politicians who are listening to the voices of the youth," she said.
It was the second student walkout since the Feb. 14 massacre of 17
people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, and
the emergence of a national student movement to end gun violence and
toughen restrictions on firearms sales.
Many of the demonstrators wore orange, a color that has come to
represent the movement against gun violence. A 13-second silence was
observed in honor of the 13 killed at Columbine.
At the Texas statehouse in Austin, about 1,000 students, many waving
signs and chanting anti-NRA slogans, demanded stricter gun control
measures.
“Because we can’t vote, this is the only way we can make our voices
heard,” said Graeclyn Garza, a second-year student at McCallum High
School in Austin, who waved a sign reading “Enough.”
Outside the White House, protesters sat in silence while they listened
to the names of gun violence victims read aloud.
"It happened like 20 years ago," said Ayanna Rhodes, 14, a student at
Washington International School, referring to Columbine, "And we are
still getting mass shootings in schools."
Two gunman went on a shooting rampage at Columbine High School in
Colorado in 1999, leaving 12 students and a teacher dead before killing
themselves in a massacre that stunned the nation. But since then, school
shootings have become commonplace.
Even as students prepared for their protest on Friday morning, news
broke that a 17-year-old student had been wounded in a shooting at a
high school near Ocala, Florida. A suspect was arrested soon afterward,
police said.
The latest gun violence unfolded about 225 miles (360 km)northwest of
the Parkland high school, where two months ago a former student killed
17 people in the deadliest high school shooting in U.S. history.
Despite widespread revulsion over the school shootings, the issue of gun
control remains sensitive in Colorado and across the country, where the
Second Amendment of the Constitution guarantees the right to bear arms.
'OPPOSE THEM AT EVERY STEP'
Dudley Brown, president of the Colorado-based National Association for
Gun Rights, said the gun-control movement seeks to have the government
take away constitutional rights.
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Students from schools across Los Angeles attend a nationwide protest
on the 19th anniversary of the Columbine school shooting in Los
Angeles, California, U.S. April 20, 2018. REUTERS/Andrew Cullen
"The main objective of these students is to ban firearms completely,
and confiscate the firearms of law-abiding Americans," Brown said.
"We will oppose them at every step."
In some conservative school districts, administrators told students
they could face disciplinary steps if they walked out.
In suburban Dallas, a dozen students dressed in orange chanted "End
gun violence!" as they huddled in a parking lot across the street
from North Garland High School.
Freshman Victoria Fierro, 14, said school administrators blocked the
doors when about 50 students tried to leave, so a small group exited
through a side door.
"They told us we would get in trouble if we walk out, and we told
them it was a peaceful protest, we're not causing any damage,"
Fierro said. "This is over a serious topic that people are pushing
aside."
The principal declined to answer questions from Reuters.
It was not immediately clear whether Friday's turnout matched those
of earlier protests. More than a month ago, tens of thousands of
students from some 3,000 schools participated in the #ENOUGH
National School Walkout to demand tighter gun control regulations.
On March 24, "March For Our Lives" rallies in cities across the
United States were some of the biggest U.S. youth demonstrations in
decades, with hundreds of thousands of young Americans and their
supporters taking to the streets.
On the evening before the walk-outs, Colorado gun control activists
rallied near Columbine High School.
Carlos Rodriguez, a 17-year-old junior from Marjory Stoneman,
traveled to Columbine for the anniversary and said he found a sense
of solidarity in the outpouring of support.
"That's the only thing that's keeping us Douglas students alive
right now: the distraction of fighting for our rights and advocating
for our lives," Rodriguez told Reuters.
There was no walkout on Friday at Columbine, which has not held
classes on April 20 since the massacre. Students were encouraged to
take part in community service instead.
(Additional reporting by Lacey Johnson and Ian Simpson in
Washington, Zach Fagenson in Miami, Lisa Maria Garza in Garland,
Texas, Jon Herskovitz in Austin, Texas, and Edgar Mendez in
Oconomowoc, Wisconsin; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Dan Grebler)
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