Setidaknya Reuters mencatat ini pembunuhan massal 
ketigakalinya di Amerika Serikat pada tahun ini saja. 
Pengamat lain mengatakan, kekerasan semacam ini 
sudah menjadi tradisi ketika Republik tidak berkuasa. 


-- 

Seven dead, including gunman, in shooting at 
Wisconsin Sikh temple 

(Reuters) - A gunman killed six people and 
critically wounded three at a Sikh temple during 
Sunday services before police shot him dead, 
and the attack is being treated as domestic terrorism, 
police said. 

The gunman opened fire when he entered the kitchen 
at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin in suburban Milwaukee 
at about 10:30 a.m. CDT (11.30 a.m. EDT) as women were 
preparing a Sunday meal, witnesses said. They 
described the shooter as a white man.

Turban-wearing Sikhs are often mistaken for Muslims, 
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation is overseeing 
the probe into shootings, Oak Creek Police Chief 
John Edwards said. 

"We're treating this as a domestic terrorist incident," 
he told reporters. 

Four people were shot dead inside the sprawling temple. 
Three, including the gunman, were killed outside.

The gunman ambushed and shot a police officer several 
times when he responded to a 911 call and was helping a 
shooting victim, Edwards said.

A second officer shot the gunman dead. Edwards had no 
identification of the shooter or what kind of weapon 
or weapons he had.

The wounded officer, a 20-year veteran, was taken to 
a hospital and is expected to survive, he said.

The Oak Creek shooting is the latest in a series of 
gun rampages in the suburban United States.

The shooting came little more than two weeks after a 
gunman opened fire at a theater in Aurora, Colorado, 
killing 12 people and wounding 58. In January 2011, 
then-congresswomen Gabrielle Giffords was the target 
of an assassination attempt in which six people were 
killed and 13 were wounded.

"The gunman is worse than the one at the theater a 
couple of weeks ago because he targeted an entire 
community," said temple member Jagatjit Sidhu.

He was among dozens of temple members and onlookers 
who gathered in a parking lot near the temple after 
police sealed the building off.

LONE GUNMAN

Witnesses at the temple had said there was more than 
one gunman, but Edwards said reports of multiple 
gunmen were common in incidents that involved only 
one shooter.

"We believe there was one but we can't be sure," he said. 
Officers finished sweeping the temple only after hours 
of searching, and Edwards said the investigation was just 
starting.

President Barack Obama said he was "deeply saddened" 
and pledged his administration's commitment to fully 
investigate the shooting.

Obama was briefed by counterterrorism adviser John 
Brennan and FBI director Bob Mueller and told the 
situation at the temple was "under control."

"The president said that he wanted to make sure that 
as we denounce this senseless act of violence we also 
underscore how much our country has been enriched by 
our Sikh community," the White House said in a statement.

The Indian embassy in Washington said it was in touch 
with the National Security Council about the shooting 
and an Indian diplomat had been sent to the Sikh temple 
in Wisconsin.

Milwaukee's Froedtert Hospital said three men had been 
brought in wounded and were in critical condition. One had 
been shot in the abdomen, one in the extremities and face, 
and a third was hit in the neck.

SIKHS IN U.S.

The Sikh faith is the fifth-largest in the world, with 
more than 30 million followers. It includes belief in one 
God and that the goal of life is to lead an exemplary 
existence.

The temple in Oak Creek was founded in October 1997 and 
has a congregation of 350 to 400 people. There are an 
estimated 500,000 or more Sikhs in the United States.

Since the attacks of September 11, 2001 by Islamist 
militants, Sikhs have sometimes been confused publicly 
with Muslims because of their turban headdress and beards.

In September 2001, a Sikh gas station owner in Mesa, Arizona, 
was shot dead by a man who was said to be seeking revenge 
on Muslims for the hijacked plane attacks on the United States.

Members of the Milwaukee Sikh community complained to police 
and a state representative last year about an upturn in 
robberies and vandalism at Sikh-owned gas stations and stores.

New York police said they were increasing security at Sikh 
temples as a precaution. There are no known threats against 
temples in the city, they said in a statement.

Sapreet Kaur, executive director of the Sikh Coalition 
civil rights organization, said Sikhs had been the target 
of several hate-crime shootings in the United States in 
recent years.

"The natural impulse of our community is to unfortunately 
assume the same in this case," he said in a statement.

(Additional reporting by Jim Wolf, Matt Spetalnick and Paul 
Eckert in Washington; Writing by Ian Simpson; Editing by Philip 
Barbara and Anthony Boadle)






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