Mississippi school homecoming celebrations turn deadly as 6 people are killed in separate shootings

High school homecoming celebrations in Mississippi ended in gunfire, with two separate shootings on opposite sides of the state Friday night that left at least six people dead and many more injured, authorities said. (X/@MikeSington)
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Updated 11 October 2025
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Mississippi school homecoming celebrations turn deadly as 6 people are killed in separate shootings

  • About 20 people were injured in the gunfire after people gathered in downtown Leland
  • No arrests have been announced, and Simmons said late Saturday morning that he had not heard any information about possible suspects

MISSISSIPPI, USA: High school homecoming celebrations in Mississippi ended in gunfire, with two separate shootings on opposite sides of the state Friday night that left at least six people dead and many more injured, authorities said.
Four of the dead were killed in downtown Leland, after a high school football homecoming game in the Mississippi Delta region on the state’s western edge, a state senator said Saturday.
About 20 people were injured in the gunfire after people gathered in downtown Leland following the game, state Sen. Derrick Simmons said. Of the 20 wounded, four were in critical condition and flown from a hospital in nearby Greenville to a larger medical center in the state capital city of Jackson, Simmons told The Associated Press.

Simmons said he was being updated on developments by the Washington County Sheriff’s Office as well as from other law enforcement authorities in the Delta.
“People were just congregating and having a good time in the downtown of Leland,” Simmons said of the town with a population of fewer than 4,000 people.
He was told that after the gunfire, the scene was “very chaotic,” as police, sheriff’s deputies and ambulances “responded from all over.”
“It’s just senseless gun violence,” he said. “What we are experiencing now is just a proliferation of guns just being in circulation.”
No arrests have been announced, and Simmons said late Saturday morning that he had not heard any information about possible suspects.
“They are on the ground working and I have all the faith in the world that they will get to the bottom of this,” he said.
“As the state senator for the area, we are asking any and all individuals who might have any information regarding the horrific shooting last night to come forward and provide whatever information they have,” he added.
Meanwhile, police in the small Mississippi town of Heidelberg in the eastern part of the state are investigating a shooting during that community’s homecoming weekend that left two people dead.
Both of them were killed on the school campus Friday night, Heidelberg Police Chief Cornell White said. He declined to say whether the victims were students or provide other information about the crimes.
“Right now we’ve still got a subject at large, but I can’t give specifics,” White said Saturday morning.
An 18-year-old man was being sought for questioning in the Heidelberg shooting, the Jasper County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement. The sheriff asked that anyone with information contact the police chief or sheriff’s office.
The shooting in Heidelberg happened on the school campus where the Heidelberg Oilers were playing their homecoming football game Friday night. The town of about 640 residents is about 85 miles (137 kilometers) southeast of the state capital of Jackson.
It wasn’t clear exactly when the gunfire occurred or how close it was to the stadium. White said he was at the scene Saturday investigating, and that more information might be released in coming days.


India joins US-led initiative to build secure technology supply chains powering AI 

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India joins US-led initiative to build secure technology supply chains powering AI 

  • Pax Silica was launched in December by the US Department of State
  • Joining initiative gives Delhi opportunity to help shape global AI order, says expert 

NEW DELHI: India joined a US-led initiative on Friday which will strengthen technology and supply chain cooperation and further boost the development of artificial intelligence infrastructure, making New Delhi the latest member alongside countries including Japan, South Korea, Qatar and the UAE.

The US Department of State launched the Pax Silica Declaration in December, with the aim of securing the global supply chain for silicon-based technologies that are crucial for AI infrastructure and deepen partnerships on artificial intelligence. 

India, represented by S. Krishnan, secretary at the Ministry of Electronics and Information, signed the declaration on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi. 

“The signing at the India AI Impact Summit underscored a clear message: The future of artificial intelligence and advanced technologies will not be left to chance. It will be built deliberately, by nations committed to freedom, partnership, and long-term resilience,” the ministry said in a statement. 

India’s entry into Pax Silica was both “strategic and essential,” said US Ambassador to India Sergio Gor. 

“Pax Silica is the coalition that will define the 21st century economic and technological order,” he said during the signing ceremony. 

“It is designed to secure the entire silicon stack, from the mines where we extract critical minerals, to the fabs where we manufacture chips, to the data centers where we deploy frontier AI.”

In 2024, the Indian government launched the IndiaAI Mission, an initiative worth in excess of $1 billion to develop the AI ecosystem in the country. 

This week saw it host the five-day India AI Impact Summit 2026, which saw participation from more than 60 countries and the attendance of 20 heads of state, including French President Emmanuel Macron, Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo, and Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, Abu Dhabi’s crown prince.

Joining Pax Silica gives India a “seat at the table in shaping the global AI order, better access to semiconductors and critical minerals it currently lacks, legitimacy as a trusted technology partner, and deeper economic-security cooperation with the US,” Subimal Bhattacharjee, a policy advisor in cyber security and high-end technology, told Arab News. 

The writer of “The Digital Decades,” a book chronicling India’s digital transformation since the early 1990s, said that the South Asian nation brings several assets to the alliance, including a massive pool of AI and software talent, a large domestic data market and a growing manufacturing capacity. 

As such, by hosting the first global AI summit in the Global South this week, Delhi is underlining “its ambition to be not just a consumer but a rule setter” for AI governance, he added. 

With Pax Silica aiming to become “a technology alliance for the AI age” that encompasses critical minerals and energy to chips, compute, AI infrastructure and digital networks, it serves as a potential platform to establish “coordinated action among trusted partners,” said Pranay Kotasthane, deputy director at the Takshashila Institution. 

Indians already make up around 20 percent of the world’s chip design talent, with around 30,000 engineers designing about 3,000 chips annually, he added. 

“Indian firms are positioned to be the global deployment engine for enterprise AI,” Kotasthane told Arab News. 

“Pax Silica membership could help them get preferential access to the trusted ecosystem of compute, models and markets. India was always going to capture value from this stack. Membership ensures it also captures influence.”