UNC Shooting
Terror struck the campus of the University of North Carolina Monday as alerts of an active shooter went out to students and the entire Chapel Hill community. After several hours of a lockdown, police apprehended the alleged shooter. One person was killed, a faculty member, Dr. Zijie Yan. On Wednesday evening, hundreds of students, faculty, and family held a candlelight vigil at the Dean Smith Center to honor the life of Dr. Yan.
Earlier in the day Wednesday, hundreds of students gathered on the campus for a rally to address gun violence. Students and activists from different groups, including March For Our Lives, Students Demand Action, and the Democratic Party, took turns speaking about their shared experiences, and called for federal and state policies that they felt would lead to fewer mass shootings. David Hogg, a survivor of the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, spoke and said if legislators “won’t change the gun laws here in North Carolina, guess what, it’s time to change the government.”
Democrats in the General Assembly echoed similar sentiments in online statements, specifically targeting
SB 41: Guarantee 2nd Amend Freedom and Protections, which passed earlier this year and repealed the state’s pistol purchase permit.
No information has been shared publicly about the shooter’s motivation, or type of gun that was used.
Other leaders in state government shared their sadness about Monday’s tragedy, including public statements by Governor Roy Cooper and House Speaker Tim Moore (R-Cleveland), and stressed their commitment to assisting the UNC community with resources and support following the shooting.