<p>At least three people including an adolescent girl were killed and 11 others wounded Friday when a 16-year-old shooter opened fire on two schools in southeastern Brazil, officials said.</p>.<p>Authorities in the town of Aracruz, in Espirito Santo state, said the shooter had opened fire on a group of teachers at his former school Friday morning, killing two people and leaving nine others wounded.</p>.<p>He then left that school -- a public primary and secondary school -- and went to a nearby private school, where he killed an adolescent girl and left two other people wounded, officials said.</p>.<p>Authorities have arrested the shooter, said Governor Renato Casagrande, who declared three days of mourning in the state.</p>.<p>"He was a student at (the first) school until June, a 16-year-old minor. His family then transferred him to another school. We have information he was undergoing psychiatric treatment," Casagrande told a news conference.</p>.<p>He said some of the survivors' lives remained at risk from their wounds.</p>.<p>"We are rooting and praying for them to recover," he said.</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. He then sprinted through the hallways, sending staff fleeing in terror as he began firing shots.</p>.<p>Investigators said he had a swastika on his fatigues.</p>.<p>Officials said the shooter, a policeman's son, used two handguns in the attack, both registered to his father -- one his service firearm, the other a privately registered weapon.</p>.<p>Casagrande said the boy appeared to have planned the attack carefully, breaking in through a locked door and skirting the school's security guard.</p>.<p>He then entered the teachers' lounge -- the first room he came to -- and opened fire, the governor said.</p>.<p>"He was looking to shoot people. He opened fire on the first people he came across," he said.</p>.<p>Investigators could be seen carrying victims' bodies in coffins and loading them in police trucks outside the school, which was cordoned off with crime scene tape, an AFP photographer said.</p>.<p>The town has a population of around 100,000 people.</p>.<p>School shootings are relatively rare in Brazil, but have been increasing in recent years.</p>.<p>Brazil's deadliest school shooting left 12 children dead in 2011, when a man opened fire at his former elementary school in the Rio de Janeiro suburb of Realengo, then killed himself.</p>.<p>In 2019, two former students shot dead eight people at a high school in Suzano, outside Sao Paulo, then also took their own lives.</p>.<p>Brazilian president-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva called the latest shootings an "absurd tragedy."</p>.<p>"I was saddened to learn of the attacks," he wrote on Twitter.</p>.<p>"All my solidarity to the victims' families... and my support to Governor Casagrande for the investigation and assistance to the two school communities."</p>.<p>Lula, who was previously Brazil's president from 2003 to 2010, will take office on January 1 after defeating far-right President Jair Bolsonaro in elections last month.</p>.<p>He has been sharply critical of Bolsonaro's dramatic curbs on gun-control laws.</p>.<p>Since ex-army captain Bolsonaro became president in 2019, the number of registered gun owners in Brazil has more than quintupled, from 117,000 to 673,000, boosted by a series of presidential decrees relaxing regulations on firearms and ammunition.</p>.<p>Public security expert Bruno Langeani of research institute Sou da Paz told AFP the outgoing administration's policies had made such attacks more likely.</p>.<p>"The increase in availability of firearms in recent years promoted by the Bolsonaro government facilitates this kind of episode," he said.</p>
<p>At least three people including an adolescent girl were killed and 11 others wounded Friday when a 16-year-old shooter opened fire on two schools in southeastern Brazil, officials said.</p>.<p>Authorities in the town of Aracruz, in Espirito Santo state, said the shooter had opened fire on a group of teachers at his former school Friday morning, killing two people and leaving nine others wounded.</p>.<p>He then left that school -- a public primary and secondary school -- and went to a nearby private school, where he killed an adolescent girl and left two other people wounded, officials said.</p>.<p>Authorities have arrested the shooter, said Governor Renato Casagrande, who declared three days of mourning in the state.</p>.<p>"He was a student at (the first) school until June, a 16-year-old minor. His family then transferred him to another school. We have information he was undergoing psychiatric treatment," Casagrande told a news conference.</p>.<p>He said some of the survivors' lives remained at risk from their wounds.</p>.<p>"We are rooting and praying for them to recover," he said.</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. He then sprinted through the hallways, sending staff fleeing in terror as he began firing shots.</p>.<p>Investigators said he had a swastika on his fatigues.</p>.<p>Officials said the shooter, a policeman's son, used two handguns in the attack, both registered to his father -- one his service firearm, the other a privately registered weapon.</p>.<p>Casagrande said the boy appeared to have planned the attack carefully, breaking in through a locked door and skirting the school's security guard.</p>.<p>He then entered the teachers' lounge -- the first room he came to -- and opened fire, the governor said.</p>.<p>"He was looking to shoot people. He opened fire on the first people he came across," he said.</p>.<p>Investigators could be seen carrying victims' bodies in coffins and loading them in police trucks outside the school, which was cordoned off with crime scene tape, an AFP photographer said.</p>.<p>The town has a population of around 100,000 people.</p>.<p>School shootings are relatively rare in Brazil, but have been increasing in recent years.</p>.<p>Brazil's deadliest school shooting left 12 children dead in 2011, when a man opened fire at his former elementary school in the Rio de Janeiro suburb of Realengo, then killed himself.</p>.<p>In 2019, two former students shot dead eight people at a high school in Suzano, outside Sao Paulo, then also took their own lives.</p>.<p>Brazilian president-elect Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva called the latest shootings an "absurd tragedy."</p>.<p>"I was saddened to learn of the attacks," he wrote on Twitter.</p>.<p>"All my solidarity to the victims' families... and my support to Governor Casagrande for the investigation and assistance to the two school communities."</p>.<p>Lula, who was previously Brazil's president from 2003 to 2010, will take office on January 1 after defeating far-right President Jair Bolsonaro in elections last month.</p>.<p>He has been sharply critical of Bolsonaro's dramatic curbs on gun-control laws.</p>.<p>Since ex-army captain Bolsonaro became president in 2019, the number of registered gun owners in Brazil has more than quintupled, from 117,000 to 673,000, boosted by a series of presidential decrees relaxing regulations on firearms and ammunition.</p>.<p>Public security expert Bruno Langeani of research institute Sou da Paz told AFP the outgoing administration's policies had made such attacks more likely.</p>.<p>"The increase in availability of firearms in recent years promoted by the Bolsonaro government facilitates this kind of episode," he said.</p>