The
Kauhajoki school shooting was a school shooting that occurred on 23
September 2008, at Seinäjoki
University of Applied Sciences in Kauhajoki
, a city in Western Finland
. The gunman, 22-year-old
culinary arts student Matti Juhani Saari, shot
and fatally injured ten people with a
semi-automatic pistol, before shooting
himself in the head.
He died a few hours later in Tampere
University
Hospital. One woman was injured but was in a
stable condition.
The shooting took place at the Kauhajoki School of Hospitality,
owned by the Seinäjoki Municipal Federation of Education. The
facilities and campus were shared between the Seinäjoki University
of Applied Sciences and the Seinäjoki Vocational Education Centre –
Sedu. Saari was a second-year student in a Bachelor of Hospitality
Management degree programme.
The
incident was the second school shooting in less than a year in
Finland, the other being the Jokela school shooting
in November 2007, in which nine people including
the gunman were killed. Before that, only one other school shooting
had taken place in the country's history, in Rauma
in 1989, leaving two people dead.
Shooting
Saari entered through the school buildings via the basement. The
shooting began at around 10:40 a.m. (
UTC+3), when roughly 200 people
were assembled inside the college. The emergency services received
their first call at 10:46 a.m. Saari was armed with a
.22 LR caliber
Walther
P22 Target semi-automatic
firearm and home-made
Molotov
cocktails. He wore dark clothing and a
balaclava (ski mask). The school's
caretaker Jukka Forsberg, who had several shots directed at him but
survived, said "[The gunman] was very well prepared. He walked
calmly."
Saari initially opened fire on a group of students taking a
business studies exam, and entered
at least one other classroom. According to the three students who
were able to escape the exam room (there were roughly 20 students
taking the exam), Saari had approached his victims individually
before shooting them. It was also said that he was revelling in the
situation and was acting very aggressively. Saari encountered
little resistance, and massacre was concluded relatively quickly.
He then covered the classroom in a flammable liquid, believed to be
petrol, and set the room alight.

A student in an adjacent classroom, Sanna Orpana, said that her
class had heard "shooting and a kind of a rumble like tables
falling down." Orpana believed at the time that the noise may have
been coming from a toy gun, and two other students went to
investigate the noise. Saari shot at them, and the remaining
students in Orpana's classroom hid under a table before running
upstairs. At some point between 10:45-11:00 a.m. Saari ran down a
corridor and threw a petrol bomb into a language laboratory. He
then shot out all of the windows in the school's main corridor,
that extended through the building. It was during this time that he
also took aim at Forsberg.

A fire engine and police car outside
the school.
A police van with two officers arrived a short time after the
shootings began, at around 11:00 a.m. They entered the yard of the
college where they were shot at by Saari, and forced to retreat.
From around 11:45 a.m. to 12:00 a.m. further police units,
bolstered by a number of
armoured vehicle,
began to arrive on the scene. They attempted to enter the building
through the main corridor, but this assault was aborted due to the
black smoke that was emanating from within the building.
Having escaped the buildings in a variety of ways (including
through doors and out of windows), some students found themselves
impeded by a river that adjoined the school. However, some were
able to use rowing boats as a means of escape. Saari started fires
at several other locations within the school buildings, and the
fire in the exam room damaged some of the bodies so badly that they
had to be identified from
DNA and dental
records. Nine of the victims were found in the exam room, and one
in a nearby corridor. It was later ascertained that this student
had fled the burning classroom and then died in the corridor. Eight
of the victims were female students, one a male student, and one a
male member of staff. All of the students killed were in their 20s,
and the teacher was in his 50s. A 21-year-old woman was shot in the
head but had two operations in the days after sustaining her
injury, and was reported as being in a satisfactory condition. A
further ten students were treated for minor injuries including
sprains and cuts from broken glass. All the victims were classmates
of Saari's.
Saari was originally from Pohjois-Pohjanmaa
, but lived in Kauhajoki where he was enrolled on
his catering course at the college. It was later revealed
that the male student was probably a close friend of Saari's. The
pair had spent an evening out together in February 2008 when they
were threatened with
starter pistol.
A photo of them together had been circulating on the Internet, in
which he jokingly points at his friend's head with his forefinger.
The names of the other victims were withheld by police.
Firefighters extinguished the fires without any major damage to the
school. Saari remained at large for some time in the school grounds
after they had been evacuated. Two days after the killings, a
friend of Saari's, named Rauno, told
7 päivää that at 11:53 a.m. he
received a call from Saari in which he confessed to having killed
ten people. Saari is claimed to have spoken to Rauno in a calm
manner, telling him that he wanted to say goodbye. He was found
alive by the police at 12:30 a.m., having shot himself in the head.
He was
taken to Tampere
University
Hospital, where he was treated for his gunshot
wound. He died a short time later.
With a
total of ten people killed, it was the deadliest peacetime attack
in Finnish history, surpassing the previous highest count of eight
in the Jokela school
shooting
. It was the deadliest attack on a school
campus since April 2007, when Seung-Hui
Cho killed 32 people during the Virginia Tech
massacre
. Saari had fired a total of nearly 200
shots, including towards the air. The highest number of shots
inflicted to a single victim was twenty.
Motive

Saari in a photograph uploaded by him
under the title "Wumpscut (2)" on the day of the shooting.
Saari left behind two handwritten notes in his school dormitory
stating that his motive for the shooting was: "I hate the human
race." He also wrote: "The solution is Walther 22", a reference to
the handgun used in the shooting. The notes revealed that he had
been planning the massacre for six years. A police spokesperson
commented: "Saari left notes saying he had a hatred for mankind,
for the whole of the human race, and that he had been thinking
about what he was going to do for years. The notes show he was very
troubled and he hated everything." One former classmate, Susanna
Keronen, stated: "He was happy, a social guy –– there was nothing
exceptional – and he got along with people well and he was not
lonely. He had friends." However, Saari had a history of violence:
he had been thrown out of the
Finnish
Army in 2006, after being a member for only a month, for
opening fire in a woodland exercise, against orders.
Police
were also investigating whether a copycat element was involved after it emerged
that both Saari and Pekka-Eric Auvinen, the gunman in the Jokela school
shooting
, had bought their guns from the same store.
Both gunmen had taken photographs of themselves in similar poses,
and Jari Neulaniemi, the detective leading the Kauhajoki
investigation, said that it was "very likely" that the two men had
been in contact at some point. Both had been part of a group of
people, who centred their activities around
YouTube and Finnish
social networking site
IRC-Galleria, who were interested in school
shootings.
This community, which included members from
Finland, Germany
, and the
United
States
, exchanged videos related to school
shootings.
Police said that although most of the victims were female, the
motive did not seem to be a hatred of women. Rauno stated in his
interview that Saari had opted for a catering course in order to be
surrounded by female students. Saari had told Rauno that he had
been the victim of bullying in secondary school, and later upper
secondary, and that he had had to drop out for this reason. Rauno
said that Saari's behaviour had begun to worry him over two years
before the shootings, when Saari began expressing a fondness for
guns and an admiration of the
school
shootings in the United States. He said that around 18 months
previously Saari had sent him a message saying that he would carry
out a school shooting the next day. Saari reportedly denied being
serious about carrying out his threat. A friend of Saari also
reported that he had been seeing a
psychologist in the months before the shooting,
and had been obsessed with guns.
Police said after their preliminary investigation (March 2009) that
they were unable to determine the underlying motives of Saari. They
added that he had committed his crimes alone: 200 people were
interviewed during the investigation, none of whom said they knew
of Saari's plans. Contact with Auvinen was also ruled out.
Internet videos and photographs

Saari declares in English "You will
die next" in an Internet video posted before the shooting.
In the weeks leading up to the incident, Saari had posted several
videos on
YouTube under the username of
"Wumpscut86", showing him firing a handgun at a local shooting
range. The YouTube user channel was accompanied by the quote "Whole
life is war and whole life is pain. And you will fight alone in
your personal war". These are lyrics from the song "War" by the
German
industrial project
:wumpscut:.
Among the user's
YouTube account favourites was footage of the Columbine
High School massacre
. Saari listed his interests on YouTube as
"horror movies, guns, sex, beer and computers." YouTube suspended
the account, on which he called himself "Mr. Saari", as soon as
news reports linking him to the shooting emerged. A spokesperson
for YouTube commented that the site operated a zero tolerance
policy towards threats and incitement to violence. Finnish police
had been informed about the YouTube videos in an anonymous tip-off
on the Friday before the shooting. The police talked to Saari and
searched his home on the day before the incident, Monday 22
September. They found no reason to arrest him as he held a
temporary weapons permit. In August 2008, Saari had obtained a
licence for a .22-calibre (5.6 mm) pistol. The police said
that Saari did not have a criminal record. However, a police
inspector was subsequently charged with dereliction of duty, and
his court case began in September 2009.
Saari also posted another video on a Finnish
social networking site, in which he
pointed a gun at the camera and said in English "You will die
next", followed by firing four shots in the direction of the
camera. This video was not available to the police when Saari was
questioned. A police spokesperson commented: "The only video we saw
was where he was shooting at the range. It was only afterwards that
much more information came out." Police said that Saari would have
been detained if they had known about this video at the time of the
questioning. Police said that they believed Saari's videos were
shot by someone else, and that they were trying to identify who
this person was. The Chief Investigator of the case, Jari
Neulaniemi, speculated that the cameraman may have been the friend
of Saari's who was murdered.
Saari's account on
IRC-Galleria, which
contained similar gun-wielding photos, was also suspended. Interior
Minister
Anne Holmlund announced that
the actions of the police would be investigated.
Police Commissioner Mikko Paatero said
that Finnish police would increase their monitoring of YouTube and
other social networking sites, and when asked whether similar
attacks could take place in the future, he replied: "I badly fear
it's possible."
Response
On the day of the incident, a crisis meeting was held, with
government ministers, chairs of the parliamentary groups, and
police officials all in attendance. The
Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen described it as a "tragic day"
and appealed for unity in the hope "that events like these will not
happen again." A
national day
of mourning was declared for the following day, and Vanhanen
travelled to Kauhajoki to meet with students.
Within days of the shooting, the police said they had received a
sizeable number of tip-offs alerting the them to suspicious
photographs, videos, and comments on
chat
rooms. Finnish media reported that several bomb threats and
other threatening messages were circulating among students
nationwide in the few days after the shootings as well.
See also
References
- A screenshot of Saari's IRC-Galleria photo
gallery
External links