Britain marks 20 years since Dunblane massacre

Blackleaf

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Britain is today marking the 20th anniversary of the Dunblane school massacre.

On 13 March 1996,
Dunblane Primary School teacher Gwen Mayor and 16 of her pupils were killed and 12 wounded when Thomas Hamilton opened fire on them before turning the gun onto himself in the Scottish town of Dunblane.

British No1 tennis player Andy Murray and his tennis star brother Jamie were both pupils of Dunblane Primary School and were both present at the school when the massacre took place.

Rev Colin Renwick, who will lead tributes at Dunblane Cathedral, said there had not been a day since when those lost had not been remembered.

Ch Insp Paul Rollo said people would also "celebrate the vibrant community which had overcome" the tragedy.

The killings in the town, which is near Stirling, shocked the nation and led to the UK enforcing some of the strictest firearms legislation in the world. Private ownership of handguns were made illegal.

Dunblane reflects 20 years after school shooting


13 March 2016
BBC News


Flowers outside Dunblane Primary School a day after the shooting in 1996. One of the biggest mass murders in British history, it led to the banning of privately owned handguns throughout the United Kingdom

Victims of the Dunblane school shooting will be remembered in church services in the town, 20 years after the attack.

Teacher Gwen Mayor and 16 of her pupils were killed when Thomas Hamilton opened fire on them on 13 March 1996.

Rev Colin Renwick, who will lead tributes at Dunblane Cathedral, said there had not been a day since when those lost had not been remembered.

Ch Insp Paul Rollo said people would also "celebrate the vibrant community which had overcome" the tragedy.

The killings in the town, which is near Stirling, shocked the nation and led to the UK enforcing some of the strictest firearms legislation in the world.


Lost generation: Teacher Gwen Mayor pictured with her class of five and six year old pupils from Dunblane Primary School


Queen Elizabeth II places a floral tribute at the scene of the Dunblane shooting in March 1996


The Queen talks to members of the emergency services who tended the scene of the tragic shooting at Dunblane Primary School, during her visit to the city's Cathedral


On March 13 1996, Thomas Hamilton walked into Dunblane Primary School and shot 16 children and their teacher dead before turning the gun on himself


Mass killer Thomas Hamilton, who shot dead 16 schoolchildren and their teacher at Dunblane


British tennis stars Andy and Jamie Murray were both pupils at the school during the massacre


Assistant Chief Constable Kate Thomson said: "Much has changed in 20 years but the shock and sadness is still felt by people throughout Scotland and further afield, including police officers who served in Central Scotland Police and elsewhere at the time, and those who have joined the service since.

"We wish to extend our sympathies to the families and friends of those who died, and those involved in the tragic events of 1996 in Dunblane, at this time of remembrance."

Rev Renwick said: "Since that day, people have appreciated the support and prayers of others throughout the world, but have also valued being allowed the space to grieve and rebuild with privacy and dignity, with as little media scrutiny as possible.

"During these various services, there will be an opportunity for those who gather to remember and to pray for continuing strength and peace."

Safer now



Monsignor Basil O'Sullivan will mark the anniversary in the Holy Family church in Dunblane.

He was parish priest at the time of the shooting and told the Scottish Catholic Observer: "As we have every year without fail, we're having an anniversary Mass.

"We pray for the injured, we pray for the bereaved and those who still suffer every day."

Survivors and relatives have also been reflecting on the impact of the shooting on their lives and on the country as a whole.

Mick North, whose five-year-old daughter Sophie was killed, said the positive legacy should not be forgotten - that people are safer from gun crime than they were 20 years ago.

He said: "In many respects, the day of the forthcoming anniversary won't be especially different - any day from the last 20 years was one for memories.

"The importance of the 20th anniversary is as an occasion when others can recall and reflect on a horrific event, and also a time when those too young to remember might learn about what happened and consider its significance."

Alison Ross, sister of five-year-old victim Joanna Ross, wants people to see the positive life in Dunblane today.

She told a BBC Scotland documentary: "It needs to be remembered so that everyone's aware that we are still here, we are still getting on with our lives and we didn't just fade into the background either.

"We still had to power on and push on with our lives, and it's important that everyone knows we're doing it, and doing it well."


Dunblane reflects 20 years after school shooting - BBC News
 
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Blackleaf

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Who put the psyco up to it

There had been several complaints to police regarding Hamilton's behaviour towards the young boys who attended the youth clubs he directed. Claims had been made of his having taken photographs of semi-naked boys without parental consent.[7]

Hamilton had briefly been a Scout leader – initially, in July 1973, he was appointed assistant leader with the 4th/6th Stirling of the Scout Association. Later that year, he was seconded as leader to the 24th Stirlingshire troop, which was being revived. Several complaints were made about his leadership, including two occasions when Scouts were forced to sleep with Hamilton in his van during hill-walking expeditions. Within months, on 13 May 1974, Hamilton's Scout Warrant was withdrawn, with the County Commissioner stating that he was "suspicious of his moral intentions towards boys". He was blacklisted by the Association and thwarted in a later attempt he made to become a Scout leader in Clackmannanshire.[8]

He claimed in letters that rumours about him led to the failure of his shop business in 1993, and in the last months of his life he complained again that his attempts to organise a boys' club were subject to persecution by local police and the scout movement. Among those he complained to were the Queen and the local Member of Parliament, Michael Forsyth. In the 1980s, another MP, George Robertson, who lived in Dunblane, had complained to Forsyth about Hamilton's local boys' club, which his son had attended. On the day following the massacre, Robertson spoke of having argued with Hamilton "in my own home".[9]

On 19 March 1996, six days after the massacre, the body of Thomas Hamilton was cremated "far away from Dunblane", according to the police spokesman.



and did it make the gun legislation a walk over?

The Cullen Inquiry into the massacre recommended that the government introduce tighter controls on handgun ownership[11] and consider whether an outright ban on private ownership would be in the public interest in the alternative (though club ownership would be maintained).[12] The report also recommended changes in school security[13] and vetting of people working with children under 18.[14] The Home Affairs Select Committee agreed with the need for restrictions on gun ownership but stated that a handgun ban was not appropriate.

A small group, known as the Gun Control Network, was founded in the aftermath of the shootings and was supported by some parents of victims at Dunblane and of the Hungerford Massacre (when 31 people were shot, 16 fatally, in Hungerford, Berkshire, by Michael Robert Ryan on 19 August 1987).[15] Bereaved families and their friends also initiated a campaign to ban private gun ownership, named the Snowdrop Petition (because March is snowdrop time in Scotland), which gained 705,000 signatures in support and was supported by some newspapers, including the Sunday Mail, a Scottish tabloid newspaper whose petition to ban handguns had raised 428,279 signatures within five weeks of the massacre.

In response to this public debate, the then-current Conservative government of John Major introduced the Firearms (Amendment) Act 1997, which banned all cartridge ammunition handguns with the exception of .22 calibre single-shot weapons in England, Scotland and Wales. Following the 1997 General Election, the Labour government of Tony Blair introduced the Firearms (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1997, banning the remaining .22 cartridge handguns in England, Scotland and Wales, and leaving only muzzle-loading and historic handguns legal, as well as certain sporting handguns (e.g. "Long-Arms") that fall outside the Home Office Definition of a "handgun" because of their dimensions. The ban does not affect Northern Ireland.

Security in schools, particularly primary schools, was improved in response to the Dunblane massacre and two other violent incidents in England around the same time: the murder of Philip Lawrence, a head teacher in London, and the wounding of six children and Lisa Potts, a nursery teacher, at a Wolverhampton nursery school. Many schools put up high perimeter fences and door entry systems which exist to this day. This practice eventually spread around the world.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunblane_school_massacre#Perpetrator
 

MHz

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If you guys celebrated every one that has happened in just the last 1,000 years you would have time for nothing else.