Residents have been mourning for the victims of a mass shooting that took place at noon on Tuesday at Risbergska Skolan, an education center mainly for adults in Orebro in central Sweden.
Investigators in Sweden are looking into whether the devastating incident was a targeted attack, the deadliest mass shooting in the country's history.
The shooter, a former student who took his own life during the attack, legally owned multiple firearms.
People including family and friends of the victims have been mourning for the deceased in the fatal attack.
"She was a 52-year-old mother, three children, one husband," said Sofia, friend of a fatal victim, recalling the life of her friend.
Investigators are now examining whether this was a hate-motivated attack. Many of the students at this school campus are immigrants who are taking Swedish language classes and vocational courses.
Multiple others remain hospitalized with gunshot wounds, and many in serious but stable conditions.
The deadly attack has left many in this community in great shock.
"Yes, it was like...I was lucky that I left before it happened, but sad so many people lost their lives," an immigrant student named Rhea said.
The suspected shooter, a 35-year-old man who had been unemployed for over a decade, was found dead at the scene after police say he shot himself.
Investigators are now reviewing his background and past statements, after reports surfaced that he held anti-immigrant views.
"It's painful to think, you know, everything that happened," Rhea said.
The government says it will seek to tighten gun laws in the wake of the country's deadliest mass shooting.
The attack has also raised questions about whether security at Sweden's schools needs to be tightened.
Yet, for those in Orebro, there are many more questions they need answers to.
Residents mourn for victims after Swedish school shooting kills 11
Residents mourn for victims after Swedish school shooting kills 11
Residents mourn for victims after Swedish school shooting kills 11
Japan's House of Representatives approved a bill to establish a national intelligence committee on Thursday, prompting widespread public questions and concerns. In March, the Japanese government approved a resolution to submit the relevant bill to the Diet, proposing a new intelligence mechanism centered on a national intelligence council with the national intelligence committee serving as its executive body.
According to the bill, the new committee will be tasked with coordinating "important intelligence activities" in areas such as national security and counter-terrorism, as well as "overseas intelligence activities" involving foreign espionage.
The bill also states that the committee's secretariat will "comprehensively coordinate" intelligence work across government ministries and agencies, with the authority to request that they share information.
The bill now moves to the upper house for review.
The bill and a series of reckless moves by the Takaichi administration have fueled deep public concern. Protesters gathered to voice their opposition to the legislation before its passage.
"Right now, the Takaichi administration is trying to drag Japan into war, through actions like promoting weapons imports and exports, provoking China, and failing to offer the apologies it should have made afterward. Against this backdrop, opposition voices are actually quite strong, but these remarks will be regulated. Once such a bill passes, not even opposing voices will be able to speak out. This is something I do not want to see," said a protester.
These grave concerns were widely echoed by other rally attendees, who said they cannot accept a string of radical moves by the Japanese government and the Takaichi administration, including the lifting of the ban on lethal weapons exports and the relentless push to amend Japan's pacifist constitution.
"Takaichi is forcing all of these moves through. Promoting this bill and lifting the ban on arms exports mean heading towards war," said another rally participant.
"I believe amending the Constitution is completely unacceptable. The Constitution is not something that members of the National Diet can revise on a whim, and it should never be revised in the first place," said another protester.
Japanese lower house approves bill to establish national intelligence committee, sparking protests