An 11-year-old student, survivor of the appalling shooting at a school in Uvalde, Texas, said she smeared herself in blood and played dead to escape the shooter who had just killed her classmates and teachers.
In a testimony to the CNN channel, not filmed and without direct quote, Miah Cerrillo explained that he used the mobile phone of a dead teacher to call the police and ask them to intervene against the 18-year-old teenager, who massacred 19 children and two teachers on Tuesday.
This is the first known testimony from a survivor of this shooting.
That morning, she and her classmates were watching the cartoon “Lilo and Stitch” when the two teachers, Eva Mireles and Irma Garcia, learned that there was a shooter in the school.
One of them, says the student, tried to close the classroom door, but the shooter, Salvador Ramos, was already there. Everything happened very quickly, she said, he looked at the teacher, said “good night” to her and then shot her, before shooting her colleague and then some students. Miah was injured in the shoulder and head by shrapnel.
Then, continues the student, the shooter opened a door leading to a second class. She heard shots, screams. Salvador Ramos put music on speakerphone — sad music, according to Miah Cerrillo.
With the dead teacher’s phone, the little girl and a friend beg the police to intervene: “Come on, please…we have a problem.”
Frightened with some other surviving students of a possible return of the shooter in their class, she says she plunged her hands into the blood of a comrade, whose corpse was next to her, to coat it all over her. and play dead.
She thought then, she said, that the police had still not arrived on the scene. Later, she recalls to the American channel, she heard the police arrive outside.
Miah continued, in tears, saying she couldn’t understand why the police hadn’t come to save them.
She told CNN she was too scared to speak to a man or on camera, but wanted people to know what happened in that classroom.
Tufts of hair have been falling out of his head ever since. His parents have launched an online kitty to finance his medical and psychological follow-up.