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2 Dead, 1 Injured In Alabama Church Shooting

n assailant opened fire at a church in Alabama on Thursday evening, killing two people

An assailant opened fire at a church in Alabama on Thursday evening, killing two people and wounding one other, authorities said.

A suspect was in custody after the shooting, at St Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Vestavia Hills, a city of around 34,000 people about 9 kilometres (6 miles) south of Birmingham, said Capt Shane Ware of the Vestavia Hills Police Department.

The injured victim was being treated at a hospital, and the condition was not immediately known, Ware said.

“A lone suspect entered a small group church meeting and began shooting,” Ware said.

At the time of the shooting, a “Boomers Potluck Dinner” was being held in the church, according to a calendar on the church’s website.

It was supposed to be a relaxing evening without an agenda, according to organisers. “There will be no program, simply eat and have time for fellowship,” an advertisement for the event said.

Governor Kay Ivey of Alabama called the shooting “a tragic loss of life.”

“This should never happen — in a church, in a store, in the city or anywhere,” she said.

The shooting comes amid a nationwide explosion in gun violence, including two gun massacres in May: one at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, that left 19 children and two teachers dead; and a racist attack at a Buffalo, New York, supermarket in which a white gunman killed 10 Black people.

The back-to-back mass shootings pushed the issue of gun violence to the forefront in Washington, where Congress is trying to advance a bipartisan deal on a narrow set of gun safety measures, including enhanced background checks to give authorities time to check the juvenile and mental health records of any prospective gun buyer younger than 21.

Also in May, a 68-year-old Las Vegas man opened fire inside a church with a Taiwanese congregation in Southern California, killing one person and wounding five others in what the Orange County sheriff described as a “politically motivated hate incident.”

Reverend Kelley Hudlow of the Episcopal Diocese of Alabama spoke at the scene of Thursday’s shooting.

“It’s a scary thing when it happens,” she told WVTM 13 in Birmingham, “so what we really need is for people to come together and take care of each other.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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