7-year-old girl in critical condition after shooting outside London church

The wounded received gunshot wounds when unidentified perpetrators performed a drive-by shooting outside a church in London. (Screenshot/Google Maps)
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Updated 15 January 2023
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7-year-old girl in critical condition after shooting outside London church

  • Shooting happened following a requiem mass for a mother and daughter
  • The requiem mass was for Sara Sanchez, 20, and her mother, who both died within a month of each other in November

LONDON: A seven-year-old girl was fighting for her life in hospital Saturday and five other people were injured after a shooting following a requiem mass for a mother and daughter in London, police said.
Mourners ran screaming from the scene outside a Roman Catholic church in the capital as gunshots rang out.
“Initial enquiries suggest the shots were fired from a moving vehicle which was then driven away from the scene,” London’s Met Police said in a statement as they launched an urgent appeal for witnesses.
The priest who conducted the service, Father Jeremy Trood, told the PA news agency it had been a requiem mass for Sara Sanchez, 20, and her mother, who both died within a month of each other in November.
The younger woman had succumbed to leukemia while her mother died after suffering a blood clot on arrival from Heathrow from Colombia, the MyLondon news website reported.
“I heard this almighty bang and I thought this was not normal, and the next minute everyone was screaming and shouting,” a neighbor told PA.
In addition to the seven-year-old girl, four women and another girl, 12, were wounded in the incident near the busy Euston train station.
The other girl was discharged from hospital after treatment for minor leg injuries.
A 21-year-old woman is also in a central London hospital. Police said her injuries were not life-threatening.
Three other women aged 41, 48, and 54, remained in hospital with non life-threatening injuries, police said.
“Any shooting incident is unacceptable, but for multiple people, including two children, to be injured in a shooting in the middle of a Saturday afternoon is shocking,” said the police Superintendent Ed Wells.
“An investigation into this dreadful attack is already well under way involving local officers and specialist detectives,” he added.
A witness told MyLondon the shots were fired as mourners who had attended the mass watched doves being released afterwards.
 


Indian writer Arundhati Roy pulls out of Berlin Film Festival over Gaza row

Updated 4 sec ago
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Indian writer Arundhati Roy pulls out of Berlin Film Festival over Gaza row

  • Writer pulls out after jury president Wim Wenders said cinema should 'stay out of politics' when asked about Gaza
  • Booker Prize winner describes Israel’s actions in Gaza as 'a genocide of the Palestinian people'
BERLIN: Award-winning Indian writer Arundhati Roy said Friday she was withdrawing from the Berlin Film Festival over jury president Wim Wenders’s comments that cinema should “stay out of politics” when he was asked about Gaza.
Roy said in a statement sent to AFP that she was “shocked and disgusted” by Wenders’s response to a question about the Palestinian territory at a press conference on Thursday.
Roy, whose novel “The God of Small Things” won the 1997 Booker Prize, had been announced as a festival guest to present a restored version of the 1989 film “In Which Annie Gives It Those Ones,” in which she starred and wrote the screenplay.
However, she said that the “unconscionable” statements by Wenders and other jury members had led her to reconsider, “with deep regret.”
When asked about Germany’s support for Israel at a press conference on Thursday, Wenders said: “We cannot really enter the field of politics,” describing filmmakers as “the counterweight to politics.”
Fellow jury member Ewa Puszczynska said it was a “little bit unfair” to expect the jury to take a direct stance on the issue.
Roy said in her statement that “to hear them say that art should not be political is jaw-dropping.”
She described Israel’s actions in Gaza as “a genocide of the Palestinian people by the State of Israel.”
“If the greatest film makers and artists of our time cannot stand up and say so, they should know that history will judge them,” she said.
Roy is one of India’s most famous living authors and is a trenchant critic of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, as well as a firm supporter of the Palestinian cause.

Shying away from politics

The Berlinale traditionally has a reputation for topical, progressive programming, but so far this year’s edition has seen several stars shy away from taking a stance on the big political issues of the day.
US actor Neil Patrick Harris, who stars in the film “Sunny Dancer” being shown in the festival’s Generation section, was asked on Friday if he considered his art to be political and if it could help “fight the rise of fascism.”
He replied that he was “interested in doing things that are apolitical” and which could help people find connection in our “strangely algorithmic and divided world.”
This year’s Honorary Golden Bear recipient, Malaysian actor Michelle Yeoh, also demurred when asked to comment on US politics in a press conference on Friday, saying she “cannot presume to say I understand” the situation there.
This isn’t the first edition of the festival to run into controversy over the Gaza war.
In 2024 the festival’s documentary award went to “No Other Land,” a portrayal of the dispossession of Palestinian communities in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
German government officials criticized “one-sided” remarks about Gaza by the directors of that film and others at that year’s awards ceremony.
The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliation has left at least 71,000 people dead in Gaza, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory, whose figures the UN considers reliable.