After the Violence in Graz: Why People Run Amok – and What Schools Do Today
11 Articles
11 Articles
The amok run in Graz also has an impact on schools in other federal states. Because the in-house crisis concept is now under review. The Ministry of Education wants to "intensify sensibly – but nothing rushes ... Because of any counterfeiters, the schools are also under special surveillance by the police. "Since 8 o'clock in the morning, increased readiness for action by the fast intervention groups and in Vienna the WEGA in the areas where scho…
The violence in Austria, in which one shooter killed eleven people, also raises questions about the safety of schools in Bonn and the Rhein-Sieg-Kreis. And it awakens dark memories of past acts like those in Sankt Augustin.
After the amok run there is a state of emergency in Graz schools. The affected Borg is closed until Monday, at other locations teachers are supposed to show "fein"
The amok run in Graz also awakens bad memories of similar incidents in Germany, for example in Erfurt 2002. What countries have been doing since then to protect students and what role language codes play.
On Tuesday, a 21-year-old former student shot nine young people and a teacher in a high school in Graz, Austria, and then committed suicide. On the same day, a 14-year-old woman killed a worker with a knife at the school entrance in Nogent-sur-Marne, France. Europe's press is discussing how and whether schools can be made safer.
After the deadly attack at a school in Graz, the weapons laws are targeted – and the question of how safe schools really are.
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