Student shoots 14 dead at Prague university in Czech Republic’s worst ever mass shooting

Police say information suggests gunman was inspired by ‘terrorist attack’ in Russia this year

A 24-year old Czech student killed 14 people and wounded 25 others at his Prague university on Thursday before he was “eliminated”, police said, in what was the country’s worst ever mass shooting.

Police chief Martin Vondrasek said authorities were tipped off earlier in the day that the man was probably heading to Prague from his town in the Kladno region outside the capital with intentions of taking his own life. Shortly after that, the gunman’s father was found dead.

Police evacuated a Charles University faculty of arts building where the assailant was due to attend a lecture, but then were called to a different faculty building, arriving within minutes after reports of the shooting came in, Mr Vondrasek said.

“We have very fresh unconfirmed information from an account on a social network that he was supposedly inspired by a terrorist attack in Russia in the autumn of this year,” Mr Vondrasek told reporters, adding the gunman was a legal holder of several firearms.

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“It was a pre-mediated horrific act that started in the Kladno region and unfortunately ended here,” he said.

The gunman’s death may have been a suicide but authorities were also investigating whether he might have been killed by a police bullet, Mr Vondrasek added.

Police asked not to reveal the man’s identity, but his name as reported by some Czech media matched a police search report and an account on a social network where its owner talked about being inspired by a mass shooting in Russia.

Police sealed off the square and the area adjacent to the building, located in a busy part of town down the hill from Prague Castle on a popular street leading tourists to Old Town Square.

Media images showed students fleeing the building with their hands up in the air and others perched on a ledge near the roof trying to hide from the attacker.

“We always thought that this was a thing that did not concern us. Now it turns out that, unfortunately, our world is also changing and the problem of the individual shooter is emerging here as well,” Prague mayor Bohuslav Svoboda told Czech television.

Petr Nedoma, director of the Rudolfinum Gallery at a concert hall across Palach Square, told the broadcaster he saw the assailant.

“I saw a young person on the gallery who had some weapon in his hand, like an automatic weapon, and shooting toward the Manes Bridge,” he said. “Then I saw as he shot, [he] put [his] hands up and threw the weapon down on the street, it lay there on the pedestrian crossing.”

Another witness, Ivo Havranek (43) said he initially thought the “couple of bangs” he heard might have come from loud tourists or a nearby film set.

“Then suddenly there were students and teachers running out of the building. I went through the crowd not realising what is actually going on. I wasn’t ready to admit that something like that could happen in Prague,” he said. Only when he saw police officers with automatic rifles did he knowit was serious, he said. “They shouted at me to run.”

Czech primeminister Petr Fiala cancelled his trip to the east of the country and was en route to Prague, he said on the social media platform X.

Gun crime is relatively rare in the Czech Republic. In December 2019, a 42-year-old gunman killed six people at a hospital waiting room in the eastern Czech city of Ostrava before fleeing and fatally shooting himself, police said.

In 2015, a man fatally shot eight people and then killed himself at a restaurant in Uhersky Brod. – Reuters