<p>The death toll from a twin school shooting in Brazil rose to four on Saturday after a teacher wounded in the attack by a 16-year-old shooter wearing Nazi symbols died from her injuries, officials said.</p>.<p>Authorities in the city of Aracruz, in Espirito Santo state, had said some of the around 10 wounded, including three teachers and a student, were in serious condition after the Friday attack that shocked the country, which has seen a rise in school shootings in recent years.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, the tragedy of Aracruz has not yet ended," said state Governor Renato Casagrande on Saturday.</p>.<p><strong>Also read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/three-killed-in-twin-school-shootings-in-brazil-1165799.html" target="_blank">Three killed in twin school shootings in Brazil</a></strong></p>.<p>"With deep regret we confirm the death of another victim, teacher Flavia Amboss Mercon," tweeted the governor, who had declared three days of mourning in Espirito Santo.</p>.<p>The shooter was a former student at the public school he targeted first, where he fired on a group of teachers, killing two people and wounding some nine others. He then went to a nearby private school where he killed an adolescent girl and left several more people wounded.</p>.<p>He has been arrested and will face charges of murder and attempted aggravated murder, Espirito Santo police said.</p>.<p>Relatives of the other three people killed held wakes on Saturday, according to Brazilian media.</p>.<p>"My daughter was always light and love. I lost my daughter to hate," Thais Sagrillo, the mother of a 12-year-old girl who was killed, told <em>Globonews</em>.</p>.<p>The attack was the twelfth school shooting in Brazil since 2002, according to research institute Sou da Paz.</p>.<p>The latest attacks spurred calls for gun policy reform, with critics hitting out at a series of presidential decrees relaxing regulations on firearms and ammunition under far-right President Jair Bolsonaro.</p>.<p>Brazilian president-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who has been sharply critical of the ex-army captain's relaxation of gun-control laws, defeated Bolsonaro in elections last month.</p>.<p>Officials said the shooter, a policeman's son, used two handguns in the attack, both registered to his father -- one being his service firearm, and the other being a privately registered weapon.</p>.<p>Casagrande said the boy appeared to have planned the attack carefully.</p>.<p>Security camera footage aired on Brazilian media showed the shooter running into the school dressed in military-style camouflage and brandishing a gun.</p>.<p>Investigators said he had a swastika on his fatigues and that they were looking into whether he had links to any extremist organizations.</p>
<p>The death toll from a twin school shooting in Brazil rose to four on Saturday after a teacher wounded in the attack by a 16-year-old shooter wearing Nazi symbols died from her injuries, officials said.</p>.<p>Authorities in the city of Aracruz, in Espirito Santo state, had said some of the around 10 wounded, including three teachers and a student, were in serious condition after the Friday attack that shocked the country, which has seen a rise in school shootings in recent years.</p>.<p>"Unfortunately, the tragedy of Aracruz has not yet ended," said state Governor Renato Casagrande on Saturday.</p>.<p><strong>Also read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/three-killed-in-twin-school-shootings-in-brazil-1165799.html" target="_blank">Three killed in twin school shootings in Brazil</a></strong></p>.<p>"With deep regret we confirm the death of another victim, teacher Flavia Amboss Mercon," tweeted the governor, who had declared three days of mourning in Espirito Santo.</p>.<p>The shooter was a former student at the public school he targeted first, where he fired on a group of teachers, killing two people and wounding some nine others. He then went to a nearby private school where he killed an adolescent girl and left several more people wounded.</p>.<p>He has been arrested and will face charges of murder and attempted aggravated murder, Espirito Santo police said.</p>.<p>Relatives of the other three people killed held wakes on Saturday, according to Brazilian media.</p>.<p>"My daughter was always light and love. I lost my daughter to hate," Thais Sagrillo, the mother of a 12-year-old girl who was killed, told <em>Globonews</em>.</p>.<p>The attack was the twelfth school shooting in Brazil since 2002, according to research institute Sou da Paz.</p>.<p>The latest attacks spurred calls for gun policy reform, with critics hitting out at a series of presidential decrees relaxing regulations on firearms and ammunition under far-right President Jair Bolsonaro.</p>.<p>Brazilian president-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who has been sharply critical of the ex-army captain's relaxation of gun-control laws, defeated Bolsonaro in elections last month.</p>.<p>Officials said the shooter, a policeman's son, used two handguns in the attack, both registered to his father -- one being his service firearm, and the other being a privately registered weapon.</p>.<p>Casagrande said the boy appeared to have planned the attack carefully.</p>.<p>Security camera footage aired on Brazilian media showed the shooter running into the school dressed in military-style camouflage and brandishing a gun.</p>.<p>Investigators said he had a swastika on his fatigues and that they were looking into whether he had links to any extremist organizations.</p>