The dark litany of shootings continues in the United States

At least six people died overnight from Saturday to Sunday in the United States during shootings, adding to a series of tragedies to which elected officials are struggling to respond, because they are hampered by reluctance to further regulate the carrying of weapons .

In Philadelphia, in the northeast, shooters opened fire on crowds on a crowded street.

“Fourteen people […] were shot and hospitalized,” police inspector DF Pace told reporters. “Three of these people, two men and one woman, were pronounced dead after arriving at hospitals with multiple gunshot wounds.”

And in Chattanooga, Tennessee (south), two people were shot dead and a third succumbed after being hit by a vehicle during a shootout, according to local police.

“More than one shooter was involved,” Chattanooga Police Chief Celeste Murphy told reporters.

The country is marked by an outbreak of gun violence, in particular the massacre in a school in Texas on May 24 (19 children and two teachers killed). Since then, more than twenty shootings have taken place, according to the association Gun Violence Archive.

Inspector Pace, in Philadelphia, told local media that police officers on the scene had “observed several gunmen opening fire on the crowd” in the busy South Street area.

According to him, the police opened fire on one of the shooters who dropped his weapon and fled, but it is not known if he was hit.

According to Inspector Pace, two semi-automatic weapons were found at the scene, one with a high-capacity magazine.

A witness, Eric Walsh, described to the Philadelphia Inquirer people fleeing the shooting “with blood spattered on white sneakers and scraped knees, scraped elbows.”

” Enough “

Democratic President Joe Biden on Thursday called on Congress to restrict the sale of assault rifles and blasted elected Republicans who oppose it, lamenting that “too many everyday places (have) become places of killing, fields of battle”.

Democratic Senator Chris Murphy is working with a group of parliamentarians from the two major American parties on reforms, an arduous task because Republicans almost systematically reject most measures intended to regulate weapons.

Murphy said on Sunday that the group hoped to craft a set of laws that could have the support of at least 10 Republicans, in addition to the approval expected of nearly all Democrats.

“I think the possibility of success is better than ever,” he told CNN. “But I think the consequences of failure for our whole democracy are greater than ever.”

Measures being developed would likely include, he said, “significant investment in mental health, funding for safe schools and some small but strong changes to gun laws,” including an expansion of background checks for firearm purchases.

According to a CBS News poll, a majority of Americans say they favor tougher gun ownership rules, with 81% saying they support background checks for all potential buyers, for example. But, according to this survey, they consider that the passage of such restrictions is notably hampered by the inaction of politicians.

Faced with the repetition of violence, Joe Biden said “enough” again on Sunday.

“In Texas, you can be 18 and buy an assault weapon — even though you can’t buy a gun until you’re 21. If we can’t ban assault weapons like we should, we need to at least raise the age to buy assault weapons to 21,” he tweeted.

In the United States, 393 million firearms — more than the population — were circulating in 2020.

In addition to the Texas killings, a series of deadly shootings have occurred recently. On May 14, a white man defining himself as “racist” and “anti-Semite” killed ten black people in a supermarket in Buffalo, on the border between the United States and Canada.

And four people were killed in a shooting at a hospital in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The shooter was targeting the doctor who had operated on his back and whom he considered responsible for his pain, according to the police.

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