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You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/02/world/europe/serbia-shootings-gun-control.html
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After Mass Shootings in Serbia, Few Are Ready to Give Up Their Guns | After Mass Shootings in Serbia, Few Are Ready to Give Up Their Guns |
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He learned how to shoot a gun from his grandfather before he started school, and he fought in three wars as a soldier in the Yugoslav and then the Serbian Army during the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s. | He learned how to shoot a gun from his grandfather before he started school, and he fought in three wars as a soldier in the Yugoslav and then the Serbian Army during the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s. |
Sinisa Janicijevic became such a good shot that he regularly gets invited to weddings in villages around his hometown, Kraljevo, in central Serbia, to make sure the bride shows up — which, by tradition, involves shooting down an apple placed in a tree outside her family’s home. | Sinisa Janicijevic became such a good shot that he regularly gets invited to weddings in villages around his hometown, Kraljevo, in central Serbia, to make sure the bride shows up — which, by tradition, involves shooting down an apple placed in a tree outside her family’s home. |
The groom is supposed to perform this task but, anxious about missing, he often calls in a substitute shooter. | The groom is supposed to perform this task but, anxious about missing, he often calls in a substitute shooter. |
Serbia’s deep attachment to guns, and the plethora of them, have been widely cited as an explanation for back-to-back massacres last month — one at a school in Belgrade, the capital, and another in nearby farming villages — that stunned the nation, even if the rate of violence involving weapons is low. Following the killings, President Aleksandar Vucic vowed to tighten gun control laws so as to enforce “almost complete disarmament.” | Serbia’s deep attachment to guns, and the plethora of them, have been widely cited as an explanation for back-to-back massacres last month — one at a school in Belgrade, the capital, and another in nearby farming villages — that stunned the nation, even if the rate of violence involving weapons is low. Following the killings, President Aleksandar Vucic vowed to tighten gun control laws so as to enforce “almost complete disarmament.” |
The two shootings appeared to have little in common other than the youth of the culprits; The school shooting by a 13-year-old involved legally registered pistols, the other massacre, by a 21-year-old, an illegal automatic rifle. |