Text Only
Search

 
International Students React To Virginia Tech Shootings


18 April 2007
Watch International Student React / Real broadband - download   video clip
Watch International Student React / Real broadband  video clip
Watch International Student React / Real dialup - download   video clip
Watch International Student React / Real dialup  video clip

One day after the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history, the Virginia Tech University campus was quiet. Classes were canceled and police were stationed throughout the campus. Authorities say the man who killed 32 students before taking his own life was himself a student from South Korea.   VOA's Brian Padden spoke to some other international students at the university.

Flags are at half-staff at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Virginia, some four hours south of Washington, D.C.  With classes canceled, few students were out walking the grounds.  Inside the war memorial chapel, cadets held an around-the-clock vigil to honor those who died.  Outside, students left flowers and condolences at another small memorial.  Here, a number of international students gathered, including Ceylan Oner of Turkey. She was off campus when the shooting took place.

Ceylan Oner
Ceylan Oner
"I'm in shock.  I'm still in shock. I cannot believe it and it is causing so much disturbance in me.” she says. “This is coming from someone that didn't even see the incident.  I cannot even think about people who have been there. And I think it's going to cause a lot of distress in the students."

In the wake of police saying the gunman was an international student from South Korea, some Asian students, such Cambodian-American Virak Kchu, are concerned that all Asians might be blamed for what happened.

Virak Kchu
Virak Kchu
"It's always in the back of my mind. It's all friendly and everybody is nice and things like that.  But emotions might take over.  Somebody gets angry and says this guy kind of looks Korean. Their emotions might take over and I might be that guy," worries Kchu.

Indonesian student association president Rhondy Rhardja says there is no ethnic or cultural connection to this crime.  "America is a really nice country.  It's a peaceful country. And this incident, it really can happen anywhere in the world.  Doesn't matter if it is Indonesia or the United States. It can happen anywhere to anybody."

And this time it happened here in what was once the quiet college campus.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Automakers Pledge Restructuring in New Bid for Loans  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Motivation for Mumbai Attacks Murky  Audio Clip Available
US Renews Call for Pakistani Cooperation in Mumbai Attack Investigation  Audio Clip Available
Efforts Underway to Defuse Rising Indo-Pakistani Tension  Audio Clip Available
Pakistan Offers to Help Investigate Mumbai Terror Attack  Audio Clip Available
Indian Maritime Forces Rebuff Criticism in Wake of Mumbai Attack  Audio Clip Available
Mumbai Terrorists Aided by Security Lapses, Technology  Audio Clip Available
NATO Agrees to Thaw in Contacts With Russia
Thai PM to Resign, Protesters to Leave Airports  Audio Clip Available
Iraqi Court Sentences Saddam Cousin 'Chemical Ali' to Death  Audio Clip Available
UN Security Council Extends Anti-Piracy Measures off Somali Coast  Audio Clip Available
China Stands by Decision to Postpone Summit with EU  Audio Clip Available
Israeli Airstrike Kills 2 Palestinian Boys in Gaza
Israel Buries Jewish Victims of Mumbai Attack  Audio Clip Available
Zimbabwe Relief Agencies Ramp Up Efforts to Combat Cholera  Audio Clip Available
Obama-Clinton Relationship Will Bring New Dynamic to White House  Audio Clip Available
Obama to Foster US-Europe Relations  Audio Clip Available
US Defense Secretary Comfortable with Obama's Iraq Plan, With Proper Pacing  Audio Clip Available
US Congressional Visitor Center Opens to Public  Audio Clip Available