Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
International

10 horrifying mass-scale attacks targeting students

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Dec, 2014 11:37 AM
    Following are the 10 most horrifying attacks by terrorists and gunmen targeting students:
     
    1. Beslan massacre (Sep 1, 2004): 386 killed, over 700 injured. Members of Chechen leader Shamil Basayev's Riyadhin al-Salihin group took more than 1,200 school children and adults hostage Sep 1, 2004, at School Number One (SNO) in the town of Beslan, North Ossetia. After a three-day standoff with Russian security forces, 386 people were killed, 186 of them children. 
     
    2. Bath School disaster (May 18, 1927): 45 killed, 58 injured. Former school board member Andrew Kehoe set off three bombs in Bath township in the US state of Michigan. Kehoe later killed himself and the superintendent by blowing up his own vehicle.
     
    3. Virginia Tech massacre (April 16, 2007): 32 killed, 17 injured. The Virginia Tech massacre was a school shooting comprising two separate attacks about two hours apart, on the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University campus in Blacksburg, Virginia, US. The perpetrator, Seung-Hui Cho, killed 32 people before committing suicide. It was the deadliest shooting massacre by a single gunman in US history.
     
    4. Ma’alot massacre (May 15, 1974): 26 killed, 60 injured. On the 26th anniversary of Israeli independence, members of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine took a group of 100 high school students hostage while they were on a class trip to Ma'alot in Israel.
     
    5. Erfurt massacre (April 26, 2002): 18 killed, seven injured. Robert Steinhauser, a 19-year-old expelled student of the Gutenburg Gymnasium School in the east German city of Erfurt, went on a shooting spree, killing 17, including a policeman, before killing himself. 
     
    6. Dunblane massacre (March 13, 1996): 17 killed. Thomas Hamilton, an unemployed former shopkeeper and Scout leader, walked into Dunblane Primary School near Stirling in Scotland, armed with two 9 mm pistols and two .357 Magnum revolvers. He killed 16 children and a teacher. This tragedy led to the banning of handguns in Britain. 
     
    7. University of Texas Clock Tower massacre (Aug 1, 1966): 17 killed, 31 injured. A day after killing his wife and mother, Charles Whitman, an engineering student and former US Marine, pointed a rifle from the observation deck of the University of Texas at Austin’s Tower and went on a 96-minute homicidal rampage before he was shot dead by police. 
     
    8. Columbine High School massacre (April 20, 1999): 15 killed, 24 injured. Two senior students, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, stormed Columbine High School at Littleton in the US state of Colorado, and murdered 12 other students aged 14 to 18 as well as a teacher. Both the perpetrators of the attack then committed suicide.
     
    9. The Ecole Polytechnique massacre (December 6, 1989): 15 killed, 14 injured. Claiming that he was “fighting feminism”, 25-year-old Marc Lepine, 25, separated men and women in a classroom of the École Polytechnique at the University of Montreal, Canada, and shot all nine women present, killing six of them. He then moved through the corridors, cafeteria and another classroom, killing in all 14 women. He then took his own life. 
     
    10. Cologne school massacre (June 11, 1964): 11 killed, 22 injured. Armed with a flame thrower, a lance and a homebuilt mace, Walter Seifert, 42, who was dismissed from police service after being found to be infected with tubersulosis, entered the Katholische Volksschule (Catholic elementary school) in Cologne, Germany, and opened fire on girls playing in the courtyard. He then knocked in classroom windows with his mace and fired inside. Eight students and two teachers were killed. He then consumed a cyanide pill and died the next day in police custody.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Obama approves air surveillance of IS in Syria

    Obama approves air surveillance of IS in Syria
    US President Barack Obama has authorised surveillance flights over Syria in a move to gain intelligence on the activities of Islamic State (IS) Sunni...

    Obama approves air surveillance of IS in Syria

    Protests continue in Islamabad's Constitution Avenue

    Protests continue in Islamabad's Constitution Avenue
     Protesters Tuesday continued to occupy Islamabad's Constitution Avenue despite the Supreme Court's order to vacate the area, Dawn online reported....

    Protests continue in Islamabad's Constitution Avenue

    Mourners fill huge church for Michael Brown's funeral, urge black Americans to take action

    Mourners fill huge church for Michael Brown's funeral, urge black Americans to take action
    ST. LOUIS - The mourners filled an enormous church to remember Michael Brown — recalling him as a "gentle giant," aspiring rapper and recent high school graduate on his way to a technical college....

    Mourners fill huge church for Michael Brown's funeral, urge black Americans to take action

    Swiss parliament rocked by nude selfie again

    Swiss parliament rocked by nude selfie again
    The Swiss parliament has suspended Geri Muller, mayor of Baden municipality in Switzerland, for reportedly `sexting` his nude selfies to a former girlfriend....

    Swiss parliament rocked by nude selfie again

    Indian-American named to key post in US island territory

    Indian-American named to key post in US island territory
    Indian-American lawyer Reena Patel has been named civil division chief in the attorney general's office in the Northern Mariana Islands, one of the five inhabited US island territories...

    Indian-American named to key post in US island territory

    Wisconsin, Indiana set to defend gay marriage bans before federal appeals court in Chicago

    Wisconsin, Indiana set to defend gay marriage bans before federal appeals court in Chicago
    CHICAGO - The legal skirmish over same-sex marriage shifted Tuesday to a federal appeals court in Chicago as attorneys for Wisconsin and Indiana sought to...

    Wisconsin, Indiana set to defend gay marriage bans before federal appeals court in Chicago