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King and Queen 'shocked and saddened' by school shooting in Austria

Officials in Graz say that the youngest victim among the 10 people killed in Tuesday's attack was aged 14, while 11 other people remain in hospital. But questions remain about the gunman's motive.

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The King has said he and the Queen are "shocked and saddened" by the "appallingly聽tragic events" in Austria where a gunman shot and killed 10 people at a school.

A teacher and nine students were killed - six girls and three boys aged between 14 and 17. Another 11 people were wounded.

"My wife and I were deeply shocked and saddened to learn about the appallingly tragic events at the Dreierschützengasse school in Graz," the King said in a statement to the people of Austria.

"Schools should be places of sanctuary and learning, which makes this horrific attack on students and staff all the more dreadful.

"Our most heartfelt thoughts and prayers are with the families of all those affected by this terrible loss of life and injury. We send our deepest sympathy to all Austrians at this profoundly distressing time."

Map of Austria showing location of Graz
Image: Graz, where the attack happened, is Austria's second-largest city

On Wednesday, it emerged a farewell letter and video were discovered at the home of the 21-year-old gunman, as the nation observed a minute's silence.

The country paused at 10am local time (9am UK time), marking the moment of the attack a day earlier at the BORG Dreierschützengasse high school in the southeastern city of Graz.

People light candles in honour of the victims of a deadly shooting at a secondary school, at the main square in Graz, Austria, June 11, 2025
Image: People lit candles in honour of the victims on Wednesday. Pic: Reuters
Emergency personnel stand infront of the site of a deadly shooting at a secondary school, in Graz, Austria 
Pic: Reuters
Image: Medics gathered at the site of the shooting on Wednesday. Pic: Reuters

Hundreds of people gathered in the central square of Austria's second-biggest city, some also lighting candles in memory of those killed, others hugged each other, as they tried to come to terms with the tragedy.

In the capital Vienna, trams, subway trains and buses also stopped for a minute.

Hundreds of people joined Austrian officials at a service on Tuesday evening in Graz cathedral.

People light candles on the main square in the city center after a deadly shooting at a school in Graz, Austria. Pic: AP
Image: Candles were lit as people gathered in Graz's main square on Tuesday night. Pic: AP

Police said the gunman, who took his own life, was a former student at the school who had not completed his studies.

But they added they do not yet know what his motive was.

The gunman, who has not yet been named by officials, used two weapons in the attack, a shotgun and a pistol, which he owned legally.

On Wednesday, officers searched the home where he lived with his mother near Graz and found a pipe bomb, which was not operational, along with abandoned plans for a bombing.

Police officers stand guard near a school following a deadly school shooting in Graz, Austria.
Pic: Reuters
Image: Officers secured the scene after the shooting on Tuesday in Graz. Pic: Reuters
Rescue service personnel attend the scene of a shooting at a school in Graz, Austria, Tuesday, June 10, 2025. (Kleine Zeitung via AP)
Image: Paramedics were called to the scene on Tuesday. Pic: AP

Franz Ruf, public security director at Austria's interior ministry, told TV network ORF about the messages which officers discovered.

"A farewell letter in analog and digital form was found. He says goodbye to his parents. But no motive can be inferred from the farewell letter, and that is a matter for further investigations," Mr Ruf said.

He added that the wounded people were found on various levels of the school and in the front of the building, but would not speculate on whether they were specifically targeted by the gunman.

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'It could happen to anybody in any school' - Eyewitness

Sky News correspondent Rachael Venables
Rachael Venables

News correspondent

The sight of teenagers dressed in black - crying, holding candles and hugging each other - has defined our past two days in Graz. Some are pupils at BORG Dreiersch眉tzengasse high school, some lost friends, and others are local young people who feel personally affected, and fearful.

We spoke to three boys aged 14 to 15 years old - the same age as the youngest victims in Tuesday's mass shooting - who go to a different secondary school. "A friend of mine has a friend, and she - I think she got shot and died," one tells me. "And her best friend was also shot in the head. But she is now in the hospital."

They're on their way to school themselves. I ask how they feel about the place now? "Unsafe," they all say in chorus, "because what happened is just so near to our school - it could happen to anybody in any school".

Now, feeling vulnerable, in what was always a safe city, they want security at their school.

It's a sentiment the police are all-too aware of. Concerningly, Sabri Yorgun, press spokesperson for the Styrian Provincial Police Directorate (LPD Steiermark), tells me copycat threats have sprung up "trying to exploit the situation to spread further fear".

He says: "We treat every threat seriously. For example, security measures had to be taken yesterday at Graz central station due to a threat. A school also received a threatening email, and we had to conduct searches and security sweeps today."

It all adds to the community's sense of unease and confusion about why this happened.

Among those in the square on Wednesday was Chiara Komlenic, 28, who said she always felt safe when she attended the school.

"I made lifelong friendships there. It just hurts to see that young girls and boys will never come back, that they experienced the worst day of their lives where I had the best time of my life... it just hurts a lot," she said.

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On Wednesday morning, local health officials said that those injured were aged between 15 and 26 and were in a stable condition.

Nine were still in intensive care units. Another two had been moved to regular wards.

Austria has declared three days of national mourning after what appears to be the deadliest attack in its post-Second World War history.