Legal
Mass shooting at tavern in South Africa leaves 14 dead

A mass shooting at a tavern in South Africa’s Gauteng province has left at least 14 killed, according to local media citing officials. Another 10 were injured, with 3 of them in critical condition.
The apparently random attack happened during the early hours of Sunday at around 12:30 a.m., when an undetermined number of “masked gunmen” opened fire at patrons of a tavern located in the suburb of Orlando, in the township of Soweto, local media eNCA reported.
“Primary investigations suggest the people were enjoying themselves in the tavern,” Gauteng police commissioner Elias Mawela told eNCA. “They just came in and shot at them randomly.”
13 victims died at the scene, while another died after being transported to a local hospital, according to eNCA. 10 more were transported to hospitals with various injuries, with 3 of them said to be in critical condition.
Preliminary information indicates the ages of the victims were between 19 to 35 years old, commissioner Mawela said. The gunmen have still not being identified.
South Africa saw another mass death incident just two weeks ago, when 21 teenagers, some of them minors, died under still unclear circumstances at another tavern in the city of East London, Eastern Cape province. Over a thousand people, including President Cyril Ramaphosa, attended the funeral held on Wednesday.

-
Legal6 days ago
3 killed after gunman on boat opens fire at Southport, NC restaurant
-
US News6 days ago
At least 10 people shot at Mormon Church in Michigan, others missing
-
World1 week ago
Magnitude 6.2 earthquake strikes Venezuela; strong shaking reported
-
Legal1 week ago
Top Model USA among 3 dead in murder-suicide outside El Paso police HQ
-
Legal1 week ago
Florida man arraigned in plot to bomb New York Stock Exchange
-
Legal1 week ago
Amber Alert: Colt and Bradley Brussel missing from Arkansas, may be in Florida
-
World1 week ago
Drone activity forces closure of Danish airport airspace for 2nd time this week
-
Politics1 week ago
Former FBI Director James Comey indicted on federal charges