14 People Killed, More Than 20 Wounded In Mass Shooting in Downtown Prague: Reports

Czech police say the gunman in the Prague mass shooting has been killed, according to multiple reports

<p>CTK via AP Images</p> Jan Palach Square

CTK via AP Images

Jan Palach Square

At least 14 people have reportedly been killed in a mass shooting in downtown Prague in the Czech Republic, according to initial reports from The Associated Press, The New York Times and Reuters.

More than 20 people were wounded in the shooting, the AP reports. Reuters reports the shooter was 24 years old and that the killing began shortly after 3 p.m. local time.

Czech police said the shooter is believed to be a student and that he killed his father before the shooting began, Reuters also reports. Police said that based upon a search of the shooter's home, the gunman is also suspected to have killed a man and his 2-month-old child east of Prague last week.

Police Chief Martin Vondrasek reportedly said the shooter legally owned several guns and that Thursday's shooting was a “well thought out, a horrible act."

Authorities say the shooting began shortly after 3 p.m. inside the philosophy department of Charles University was evacuated, according to the AP.

"We mourn the loss of life of members of our university community, express our deepest condolences to all the bereaved and our thoughts are with all those affected by the tragedy," the university said in a statement.

<p>CTK via AP Images</p> A police officer patrols Manes Bridge

CTK via AP Images

A police officer patrols Manes Bridge

The outlet reports that Petr Nedoma, the director of the Rudolfinum Gallery concert hall, which is also located on the square, told Czech TV that he saw the shooter.

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<p>CTK via AP Images</p>

CTK via AP Images

"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. Repeatedly, with some interruptions, then I saw as he shot, put hands up and threw the weapon down on the street, it lay there on the pedestrian crossing," he said.

<p>CTK via AP Images</p> A police officer patrols the closed Manes Bridge

CTK via AP Images

A police officer patrols the closed Manes Bridge

Prague Mayor Bohuslav Svoboda tweeted that he has “no words” to describe Thursday’s shooting.

“I have no words. All I feel at this moment is sadness,” the mayor wrote, according to an English translation on the social media site X (formerly Twitter).

“As the mayor of Prague, I have to react. And to assure the people of Prague that they are safe,” Svoboda wrote. “We witnessed a tragedy of unprecedented proportions. It is appalling how many innocent lives have been wasted. My deepest condolences to all the bereaved. We must not give way to evil!”

Gun crimes are relatively rare in the Czech Republic. The country last experienced a mass shooting in 2019 when a man killed six people, including himself, at a hospital, according to Reuters. In 2015, a man shot and killed eight people before killing himself.

The European country has not experienced more than 10 gun-related homicides in a single year since 2014, according to GunPolicy.org, an international gun violence prevention group.

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