Africa Mass shootings in Africa include a 1927 shooting in
South Africa perpetrated by
Stephanus Swart, the 2016
Grand-Bassam shootings in
Côte d'Ivoire/Ivory Coast, and the 1994
Kampala wedding massacre in
Kampala, Uganda. In
Egypt, shootings include both the 1997
Luxor massacre and the 2013
Meet al-Attar shooting. In
Kenya, on 2 April 2015, armed
terrorists stormed a public university in the North Eastern part of the country and killed 148 people. Asia East Asia In China, the
Chongqing shooting occurred on 5 April 1993. Chen Xuerong, a worker at a machine factory used a hunting rifle to kill three coworkers before being captured by police. In 2013,
Fan Jieming entered a shop and shot six people dead before being apprehended by police. Jieming was executed in 2016. Another shooting was the 1994
Tian Mingjian incident. Japan has had several mass shootings, including the 1938
Tsuyama massacre, the
2007 Sasebo shooting, and the
2010 Habikino shooting. In
South Korea, the deadliest mass shooting was committed by
Woo Bum-kon in 1982, leaving 62 dead. For many years, it was the deadliest mass shooting in modern history, until surpassed by the
2011 Norway attacks.
South and Southeast Asia In India, during the
2008 Mumbai attacks, 10 gunmen affiliated with the terrorist group
Lashkar-e-Taiba attacked multiple targets in Mumbai, killing 175 people and injuring hundreds more. The attack lasted for four days and one of the perpetrators was sentenced to death. Other notable incidents include the
2001 Indian Parliament attack, in which five gunmen attacked the parliament building in New Delhi, killing nine people, and the
2016 Pathankot attack, in which militants attacked an
Indian Air Force base in Pathankot, killing seven security personnel. Mass shootings have also occurred in the context of regional conflicts. For example, the
2014 Chhattisgarh attack involved
Naxalite militants attacking a convoy of political leaders and security personnel, killing 15 people, while the
2021 Sukma-Bijapur attack involved
Naxalite rebels attacking security forces, resulting in the deaths of at least 22 security personnel. Other examples include the
1878 Hyderabad shooting and the 1983
Pashupatinath Temple shooting. In
Nepal, the
Nepalese royal massacre occurred in 2001. In
Thailand, a
mass shooting occurred near and in
Nakhon Ratchasima, colloquially known as Korat, between 8 and 9 February 2020. A soldier of the Royal Thai Army killed 30 people and wounded 58 others before he was eventually shot and killed. On 6 October 2022, 38 people, 24 of them children, were killed in a
shooting and stabbing spree by a former police officer. The main target was a childcare centre in
Nong Bua Lamphu province. The perpetrator then killed both his wife and son at his own home before committing suicide. Other mass shootings that occurred in Thailand are the
Pak Phanang school shooting, the
Lopburi mall shooting, and the
Siam Paragon shooting. Mass shootings in
Pakistan include the 1948
Babrra massacre, and the
2014 Peshawar school massacre in which 149 people were killed.
Israel Notable mass shootings in
Israel include the 1972
Lod Airport massacre, which killed 26 and injured 80, the
2002 Hadera attack in
Hadera, the
2008 Jerusalem yeshiva attack at
Mercaz HaRav, the
2014 Jerusalem synagogue attack in
Jerusalem, the
June 2016 Tel Aviv shooting at the popular Sarona centre complex in
Tel Aviv, and the
Nova music festival massacre, part of the larger
7 October attacks, which led to the death of 364 of the participants in 2023. Other notable mass shootings include the
2005 Shilo shooting, and the 2013
Beersheba bank shooting. In April 2022, a
mass shooting occurred on
Dizengoff Street in Tel Aviv, in which a Palestinian gunman killed three civilians and injured six. In January 2023, a Palestinian gunman killed at least seven civilians in the Israeli settlement of
Neve Yaakov in occupied
East Jerusalem. The suspect is also reported to have shot at worshippers exiting a synagogue and was shot and killed by police officers.
Europe (1540) The deadliest mass shooting by a lone individual in modern history occurred in Europe with the
2011 Norway attacks in
Norway, in which 77 people were killed. Of those killed, 67 died of gunshot wounds. In the United Kingdom, on
19 August 1987, in Hungerford, England, a man killed his mother before killing 16 people and injuring 15 others. On 13 March 1996, in
Dunblane, Scotland, a man entered a primary school and opened fire,
killing 16 children and one teacher before committing suicide. On 12 August 2021, in Plymouth, England, a man
killed five people and injured two others before taking his own life. Other mass shootings in the UK include the
Cumbria shootings on 2 June 2010, in which a man killed 12 people and injured 11 others before committing suicide; the
Wallasey pub shooting, where 1 person was killed and 4 others injured; and the
Monkseaton shootings, where 1 person was killed and 16 others injured. In
Germany, the
Erfurt school massacre on 26 April 2002 was inspired by the
Columbine High School massacre. Former student Robert Steinhäuser killed 16 people, including two students, 11 teachers, a trainee teacher, a secretary and a police officer, before killing himself. On 13 March 2009, a 17-year-old student named Tim Kretschmer went on
a shooting spree at his former high school in
Winnenden. Kretschmer killed 15 people, including nine students, three teachers, and three bystanders, before turning the gun on himself. On 22 July 2016, a lone gunman named David Sonboly
opened fire at a shopping mall in Munich, killing nine people and injuring 36 others. Sonboly, who had a history of mental illness, was armed with a pistol. After a brief exchange of fire with police, he turned the gun on himself. On 9 October 2019, a far-right extremist named Stephan Balliet
attempted to carry out a mass shooting at a
synagogue in the eastern city of
Halle. Balliet, who was armed with several
3D-printed firearms and
homemade explosive devices, tried to force his way into the synagogue during the Jewish holiday of
Yom Kippur. When he was unable to get inside, he shot and killed two people outside the building and injured several others. The entire shooting was live streamed on
Twitch. Balliet was later arrested and charged with murder and attempted murder. Later, on 19 February 2020, a mentally unstable man named Tobias Rathjen
opened fire at two shisha bars in the town of
Hanau, killing nine people before turning the gun on himself. Rathjen, who had a history of mental illness and far-right extremist views, left behind a manifesto in which he expressed his hatred for immigrants and called for the extermination of several ethnic groups. In the
Czech Republic,
the first mass shooting in its
independent history occurred on 8 March 2009, when a 42-year-old
North Macedonian national named Raif Kačar opened fire at the Sokol Restaurant in
Petřvald, killing four. Kačar then shot himself and died four days later as a result of his injuries. The pistol used in the shooting was obtained illegally.
A second mass shooting occurred on 24 February 2015, when a 62-year-old man named Zdeněk Kovář, who was legally armed with a
CZ 75B and an Alfa 820
revolver, entered the Družba restaurant in
Uherský Brod and started shooting. Nine people, including Kovář who committed suicide, died in the shooting, and one other person was injured. The police received criticism for its response to the shooting. This incident was the deadliest mass shooting in Czech history until the
2023 Prague shootings. On 10 December 2019, when 42-year-old Ctirad Vitásek, illegally armed with a CZ 75B,
opened fire at the traumatology room of the , killing seven and injuring two. Vitásek then fled the scene and committed suicide near the town of
Děhylov after being discovered by the police. On 21 December 2023, 24-year-old David Kozák, a world history student at
Charles University who was also a legal owner of several firearms, murdered his father at his home in
Hostouň and later opened fire at the Faculty of Arts building of the Charles University in
Prague. 16 people, including Kozák's father and Kozák himself, who committed suicide at the rooftop terrace of the building, died in the shootings. 25 people were wounded. This was the first case of a
school shooting in Czech Republic's history. Kozák had brought several firearms with himself into the school, a
Glock 47 pistol, a
SIG Sauer P322 semi-automatic pistol and an
AR-10–style rifle, which he used in the shooting and a
pump-action shotgun, which he used to commit suicide. Police later reported that Kozák was one of the many suspects in a case of a
double-murder of an infant and her father at Klánovice Forest near Prague, which occurred on 15 December 2023, Police also later announced that evidence linking Kozák to the double-murder has been found. On 27 December 2023, it was reported that police found a letter in Kozák's home, in which he confessed to the double-murder. The Prague shootings are currently the deadliest mass shooting in the Czech Republic's history. In
France, On 13–14 November 2015,
a series of religiously motivated mass shootings and suicide bombings occurred in
Paris leading to the death of 130 people and 7 out of the 9 perpetrators. A few hours after the attacks, the
Brussels Islamic State terror cell claimed to be behind the attacks. Less than a year prior to the Paris attacks,
a shooting at
Charlie Hebdo headquarters in Paris was perpetrated by two brothers,
Chérif and Saïd Kouachi, on 7 January 2015. The shooting targeted the employees of
Charlie Hebdo after they posted a satirical magazine article on
Prophet Muhammed. The shooting lead to the deaths of 12 people and 11 others were injured. The brothers were shot and killed by a
GIGN team two days after the attack during a
standoff.
Russia and post-Soviet states The deadliest shooting in Russia occurred on 8 October 1999, when Achmed Ibragimov
killed at least 34 Russian inhabitants in the village of Mikenskaya. Other shootings include the
Moscow Multifunctional Center shooting on 7 December 2021, where a 45-year-old man shot and killed two people and wounded four others, reportedly after being told to put on a face mask. In another incident on 4 April 2020, Anton Franchikov shot five people to death in
Yelatma, Ryazan Oblast. In the
Perm State University shooting on 20 September 2021, Timur Bekmansurov fatally shot six people before being apprehended by police. In another incident on 26 September 2022,
Artyom Kazantsev opened fire at his former school in
Izhevsk,
Udmurtia, killing 18 people before committing suicide. One of the largest shootings involving military personnel occurred on 15 October 2022, at the
Soloti military training ground in Belgorod Oblast. Two conscripts from Tajikistan committed friendly fire, killing 11 people before being killed by return fire. In
Ukraine, on 27 January 2022, a gunman
opened fire at the Yuzhmash factory in the city of
Dnipro. The attack left five people dead and five others injured. The shooter, a former employee of the factory, was reportedly disgruntled over his dismissal and had been seeking revenge. Another notable incident of mass shooting in Ukraine took place on 17 October 2018, when Vladislav Roslyakov, an 18-year-old student at the
Kerch Polytechnic College in
Crimea, which was
annexed by Russia in 2014,
opened fire on his fellow students and teachers, killing 20 and injuring more than 70 others. The shooter committed suicide in the library at the school. The perpetrator is believed to have been
inspired by Columbine.
North America Notable mass shootings in Canada include the 1989
École Polytechnique massacre (which led to stronger
gun control in Canada), the 1992
Concordia University massacre, the 2006
Dawson College shooting in
Montreal, the 2012
Danzig Street shooting, the
2014 Edmonton shooting in
Edmonton, the 2017
Quebec City mosque shooting in
Quebec City, the
2018 Toronto shooting, the
2020 Nova Scotia attacks, and the
2026 Tumbler Ridge shooting. Following the attacks in Nova Scotia, collectively considered to be the deadliest mass shooting in Canadian history, Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau banned the use, sale, purchase, and import of
AR-15sthe semi-automatic rifle used in the shooting and many other shootings in the United States. Notable mass shootings in
Mexico include the
2010 Chihuahua shootings in the state of
Chihuahua.
One of the deadliest mass shootings in Mexico occurred in 2010 in the town of
San Fernando, Tamaulipas. In that incident, 72 migrants from Central and South America were found dead in a ranch, allegedly killed by members of the Zetas drug cartel. 2 months prior to that, 19 people were killed in Chihuahua in another shooting. Another high-profile mass shooting in Mexico
took place in 2009, when a man opened fire on passengers on a Mexico City metro train, killing two people and injuring several others. In 2019, about south of the
Mexico–United States border, the
LeBarón and Langford families endured a massacre in the state of
Sonora, where nine women and children were killed by suspected members of a drug cartel. The victims were believed to have been mistaken for members of a rival cartel. Other notable mass shootings in Mexico include the
Minatitlán massacre in 2019, the
Salamanca nightclub shooting in 2019, and the
2019 Villa Unión shootout. In 2020, the country experienced several high-profile mass shootings, including the
Colegio Cervantes shooting in Torreón, the
Irapuato massacres, and the
Camargo massacre. On 23 May 2022, 11 people were killed in a
mass shooting at the Gala Hotel and a nearby bar in
Celaya, Guanajuato. The attackers were reportedly from the
Santa Rosa de Lima Cartel, and left a message referring to the
Jalisco New Generation Cartel and three dismembered bodies found earlier that day. On 27 March 2022, 20 people were killed in a
mass shooting at an illegal cockfighting pit in Las Tinajas, Zinapécuaro, Michoacán. The attackers were believed to be from the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, and the massacre was part of a conflict between the cartel and the local gang
Familia Michoacana. On 24 August 2022, eight people were
killed in the city of Tuzantla, Michoacán, in a firefight between rival factions of La Familia Michoacana. The dispute stemmed from infighting between brothers Johnny "El Pez" and Jose Alfredo "El Fresa" Hurtado Olascoaga, leaders of the Tuzantla cell, and their former coworker known as "El Chaparro".
United States On August 1, 1966, at the
University of Texas in Austin, 25-year-old Marine veteran
Charles Whitman killed 15 people, including an unborn child, and injured 31 others in the
University of Texas tower shooting Whitman was killed by 2
Austin Police Department officers approximately 96 minutes after he began firing from the observation deck of the
Main Building tower. In the 1999
Columbine High School massacre,
two students from the school shot and killed 13 classmates, including a
victim who died in 2025, and a teacher before committing suicide in the school's library. On April 16, 2007, 23-year-old student
Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 students and teachers, and wounded 17 others in the
Virginia Tech shooting. Other people were injured attempting to escape. When police stormed the building he was in, the shooter killed himself. In the
Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, 20-year-old
Adam Lanza killed his mother before shooting and killing 20 children and 6 adults at
Sandy Hook Elementary School in
Newtown, Connecticut. He then committed suicide; the motive is still inconclusive. On May 24, 2022, in
Uvalde, Texas, 18-year-old
Salvador Ramos shot and wounded his grandmother before he drove to his former elementary school,
Robb Elementary School, and opened fire. Ramos targeted adjoining classrooms 111 and 112. He killed 19 children and 2 teachers before being shot dead by police around 77 minutes after Ramos entered the classrooms. Eighteen other people were hospitalized as a result of the
Uvalde school shooting. On June 17, 2015, 21-year-old white-supremacist
Dylann Roof killed 9 African Americans, including senior pastor and state senator
Clementa C. Pinckney, in the
Charleston Church Shooting. Roof left the scene and a manhunt began before he was apprehended the next morning. He later confessed to attacking the historic black church in an attempt to start a race war. Roof is currently imprisoned at USP Terre Haute where he awaits his death sentence. On June 12, 2016, 29-year-old
Omar Mateen killed 49 people and wounded 53 others in the
Pulse nightclub shooting. Mateen was killed in a shootout with the police. On May 14, 2022,
Payton Gendron killed 10 people and injured 3 in the
2022 Buffalo shooting. Gendron wrote in a lengthy manifesto that he was radicalized after having "extreme boredom" during the COVID-19 pandemic, when he began browsing
4chan and
neo-Nazi websites linked from it; the accused gunman's manifesto espoused notions from the "
Great Replacement" conspiracy theory and included screenshots of memes and conservative news headlines that he cited as sources for his ideology.
South America Notable mass shootings in
Argentina include the 2004
Carmen de Patagones school shooting in
Carmen de Patagones, the
2006 San Miguel shooting, a workplace attack in a suburb of
Buenos Aires, and the June 2006 mass shooting on Cabildo Avenue in
Belgrano, Buenos Aires, committed by serial shooter
Martín Ríos. Notable mass shootings in Brazil include: •
Suzano school shooting (2019): Two former students killed 7 people and injured 11 others at Raul Brasil State School in Suzano, São Paulo before killing themself. The perpetrators also killed one of their uncles before the school shooting. •
Realengo school shooting (2011): A gunman killed 12 students and injured 22 others at Tasso da Silveira Municipal School in Realengo, Rio de Janeiro before committing
suicide. • Fortaleza nightclub shooting (2018): A man killed 14 people at a nightclub in
Fortaleza •
Campinas Cathedral shooting (2018): A man killed five people and injured 4 others at the Metropolitan
Cathedral of Campinas in
Campinas, São Paulo. Police shot the gunman on his side before he killed himself. •
Aracruz school shootings (2022): On 25 November 2022, a 16-year-old
neo-nazi former student opened fire at two schools in Brazil, killing four and injuring 12.
Oceania Notable mass shootings in Australia include the 1987
Hoddle Street massacre in
Hoddle Street,
Clifton Hill,
Melbourne; the 1996
Port Arthur massacre in
Port Arthur, Tasmania; and the
2025 Bondi Beach shooting in
Sydney,
New South Wales. There were 13 mass shootings with five or more deaths between 1979 and 1996, and four mass shootings involving four or more deaths have occurred since the introduction of
new gun laws following the Port Arthur incident. On 4 June 2019, a 45-year-old gunman
began shooting at multiple locations in
Darwin, Australia, resulting in the death of four people and the injury of one other person. The gunman was sentenced to three life sentences without the possibility of parole, with an additional 15-year sentence. The 2022
Wieambilla shootings was a religiously motivated
terrorist attack that resulted in the death of two police officers and a neighbour, as well as the fatal shooting of the three perpetrators. The shooting lasted six hours. The motive was found to be
Christian fundamentalism. New Zealand has a relatively low rate of gun violence compared to other developed countries despite its formerly lax gun laws. The country has experienced three major mass shootings since the late 20th century. The
first mass shooting occurred in
Aramoana, a small town on the east coast of the South Island, in 1990. David Gray, a 33-year-old man with a history of mental illness, killed 13 people and injured three others before being shot and killed by police. == See also ==