Police: ‘Sixth-grader Killed In Finnish School Shooting’

By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News

HELSINKI (Worthy News) – A child has died and two others have been seriously wounded in a shooting at a school in Finland carried out by a minor, police said.

The 12-year-old suspect was taken into custody after three other 12-year-olds were shot at the Viertola school in the city to the north of the capital, Helsinki, officials confirmed.

Education Minister Anna-Maja Henriksson broke into tears when speaking to the media hours after the attack in a country where gun violence among youths is rare.

The children had just returned from the Easter holiday when the bloodshed began early Tuesday. “One 12-year-old child will never again return home from school,” the minister explained.

Initially, reports said three were injured, but one of them soon died, according to police.

The suspect ran off as soon as police arrived and was eventually detained “in a calm manner” in the northern Siltamaki district of Helsinki at 09:58, according to investigators.

The arrest of the boy was made without further violence in the Helsinki suburb of Siltamaki, 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) south of the Viertola school in Vantaa district, police added.

PASSING CAR

A video taken from a passing car showed the suspect being pinned down beside a road in the area.

It wasn’t immediately clear what motivated the suspect to open fire in a classroom early Tuesday.

Children under the age of 15 are not criminally liable in Finland. The suspect has not been remanded in custody and will be placed in the care of social services after further questioning, according to sources familiar with the case.

The suspect reportedly used a gun licensed to a close relative. Gun ownership is widespread in Finland, and children over 15 can have licenses to use other people’s firearms.

The many firearms have been linked partly to a strong military tradition in the Nordic nation, which shares a 1,340-kilometer (830-mile) border with Russia.

Worried about a possible armed confrontation with Russia, Finland joined the NATO military alliance in April 2023, just over a year after Moscow invaded Ukraine.

Finland has long had one of the highest murder rates in Western Europe, but experts say those cases, often related to alcohol or domestic abuse, usually involve knives rather than guns.

Copyright 1999-2024 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.


Latest News from Worthy News

‘Days of Repentance’ Operation Destroyed Nuclear Facility in Iran
‘Days of Repentance’ Operation Destroyed Nuclear Facility in Iran

The ‘Days of Repentance’ operation launched by Israel against Iran in late October targeted and destroyed a highly secretive nuclear weapons research facility in Parchin, according to Axios.

UN To Push For Global Narrative Using AI and Media (Worthy News In-Depth)
UN To Push For Global Narrative Using AI and Media (Worthy News In-Depth)

A United Nations committee has agreed to tackle “hate speech” and “misinformation” globally through Artificial Intelligence (AI) and media, despite worries the approach may “stifle pluralistic debate.”

Myanmar Christians Face Further Acts of Repression by Military
Myanmar Christians Face Further Acts of Repression by Military

Christians in Myanmar’s Rakhine state face continued persecution by the country’s Buddhist military junta (Tatmadaw), which has proved itself violently hostile to believers and recently imposed new restrictions on church services, International Christian Concern (ICC) reports.

Scuffles At France-Israel Match After Amsterdam Pogrom
Scuffles At France-Israel Match After Amsterdam Pogrom

Brief scuffles broke out, and soccer fans whistled and booed as the Israeli anthem played at the start of the France-Israel match in Paris following a pogrom against Jews in the Netherlands, officials said Friday.

China Opens Controversial Port In Peru
China Opens Controversial Port In Peru

China’s President Xi Jinping has inaugurated a controversial massive port on the edge of Peru’s coastal desert that locals fear will leave many of them without a hopeful future.

Canada: Evangelicals Call on Parliament to Protect Children From Exploitation by Pornography Platforms
Canada: Evangelicals Call on Parliament to Protect Children From Exploitation by Pornography Platforms

With pornography increasingly and freely available to minors on the internet, the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada (EFC) has called on the Canadian parliament to support a bill that would hold pornography platforms accountable to “ensure child sexual abuse materials and intimate images shared without consent are not uploaded to their sites,” Christian Daily International (CDI) reports.

UN Atomic Chief Says Iranian Nuclear Sites Shouldn’t Be Attacked
UN Atomic Chief Says Iranian Nuclear Sites Shouldn’t Be Attacked

Tensions between Iran and Israel remain high as Tehran’s military pledged a strong response to Israel’s strikes last month. At the same time, the UN’s atomic watchdog is focused on preventing nuclear escalation, with IAEA chief Rafael Grossi urging that Iran’s nuclear facilities, including Fordow and Natanz, should not be targeted as he is scheduled to visit the country.