Orlando rally marks second anniversary of
nightclub mass shooting
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[June 12, 2018]
By Joey Roulette
ORLANDO, Fla. (Reuters) - Hundreds of
protesters, including survivors from two of Florida's deadliest modern
mass shootings, staged a rally in Orlando on Monday to call for tougher
firearms restrictions two years after a gunman killed 49 people at the
Pulse nightclub.
The demonstration, held on the eve of the shooting anniversary, preceded
a day of events planned in Orlando commemorating the bloody rampage by a
South Florida security guard who professed allegiance to Islamic State
militants.
The assailant, 29-year-old Omar Mateen, a U.S. citizen of Afghan
descent, was killed when police stormed the Pulse, a popular gay
nightclub in Orlando, three hours after the gunman opened fire in the
venue with an AR-15-style assault rifle and a pistol.
The death toll from the siege ranks as the second-most lethal mass
shooting in the United States, surpassed only by the 59 lives lost when
a gunman opened fire in October 2017 on an outdoor country music
festival from a high-rise hotel window in Las Vegas and then killed
himself.
While authorities branded the Pulse shooting an act of Islamic
extremism, civil rights activists asserted that the massacre was also
hate crime that largely targeted gay men and Latinos frequenting the
club.
Advocates for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community have
accused Florida Governor Rick Scott and other Republican politicians of
contributing to anti-LGBT hostility by refusing to back measures
prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender
identity.
"We asked the governor to protect us, and sign an executive order,
saying that we would not be discriminated against in our workplace. We
were met with excuses," Orlando shooting survivor Brandon Wolf said at
Monday's rally, addressing the crowd of outside Orlando City Hall.
He and others urged supporters to express their views at the ballot box
by voting against politicians who refuse to back stronger gun control
measures or accept campaign financing from the gun lobby.
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Investigators work the scene following a mass shooting at the Pulse
gay nightclub in Orlando Florida, U.S. June 12, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo
Allegri/File Photo
Wolf was not the only Florida mass shooting survivor to address the
rally.
"Not even four months ago, I found myself on the floor huddled with
my classmates not knowing if we were going to die," said Aly Sheehy,
a recent graduate of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in
Parkland.
She was one of scores of students who cowered in terror as a
19-year-old former classmate who had been expelled the year before
for disciplinary problems sprayed gunfire from an assault rifle he
had legally purchased as an 18-year-old.
Fourteen students and three faculty members were killed in the Feb.
14 Parkland assault, which stands as the second-deadliest modern
public school shooting in the United States.
The Parkland shooting sparked an unprecedented lobbying campaign by
student survivors and victims' parents that led to swift enactment
of gun-safety measures signed into law by Scott, long regarded as a
strong National Rifle Association ally.
The package raised the legal minimum age for buying rifles and
imposed a three-day waiting period on all gun sales, but it also
authorized a controversial program to allow the arming of some
school employees.
(Writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Michael Perry)
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