* Required fields
Password must contain only letters and numbers, and be at least 8 characters
* Required fields
Password must contain only letters and numbers, and be at least 8 characters
NEW DELHI: A weekend trip to the movies for a medical student in her twenties and her male friend ended in horrifying brutality on Sunday night.
She was harassed and then gang raped on a moving bus. Her friend tried to intervene but was beaten up with an iron rod. The two were later thrown from the vehicle, semi naked.
The woman is now in critical condition in a New Delhi hospital suffering from head injuries, cuts, as well as sexual assault wounds.
"Five to seven people started harassing her. The boy protested and made every effort to come to her aid, but some people caught hold of him. Then three to four people took her and gang raped her in the cabin of the bus," said D.K. Mishra, a relative of girl's male friend.
Whilst tragic and very disturbing, incidents such as this are becoming far too common in the Indian capital.
Reactions from politicians are also becoming increasingly similar.
Opposition politicians blamed the party in power for not doing enough to protect women, while the chief minister of Delhi said her government would do whatever it took to make sure such incidents do not happen again.
"The stringent actions required will be taken, not just in this incident but precautionary measures will also be taken to prevent such incidents from happening in the future," said Chief Minister of Delhi Sheila Dikshit.
However that often-heard promise begins to sound hollow when the records of rape cases are analysed.
According to National Crime Records Bureau, 568 cases of rape were registered in New Delhi in 2011.
"If women are not safe here, then where ever in the country you can imagine a woman be safe? No parent can sleep in peace if this is the kind of situation which is developing in our capital," said Ranjana Kumari, Director of the Centre for Social Research.
India's other major cities are not far behind. Entertainment and financial hub Mumbai is second on the list with 218 cases.
One also has to bear in mind that these numbers are just cases which are registered. Many more cases in the cities and throughout the country are never registered.
There are laws to protect the rights of women but rape case statistics point to a very disappointing lack of enforcement borne out of deep-rooted social attitudes.
- CNA/jc
Delegates to the Dubai summit at last Friday's closing ceremonies, after the U.S. and other nations had refused to sign the treaty.
news analysis When the history of early 21st century Internet politicking is written, the meltdown of a United Nations summit last week will mark the date a virtual Cold War began.
In retrospect, the implosion of the Dubai summit was all but foreordained: it pitted nations with little tolerance for human rights against Western democracies which, at least in theory, uphold those principles. And it capped nearly a decade of behind-the-scenes jockeying by a U.N. agency called the International Telecommunication Union, created in 1865 to coordinate telegraph connectivity, to gain more authority over how the Internet is managed.
It didn't work. Backed by nearly a million people and some of the engineers responsible for creating the Internet and World Wide Web, the U.S. and dozens of other western democracies rejected the Dubai treaty. That dealt a serious blow to an alliance of repressive regimes -- led by Russia, China, Algeria, and Iran -- that tend to lack appreciation of the virtues of a traditionally free-wheeling Internet.
That rejection formalized a new geopolitical rift. "This conference was never meant to focus on Internet issues," said ambassador Terry Kramer, head of the U.S. delegation to the Dubai summit. "The Internet has given the world unimaginable economic and social benefit during these past 24 years -- all without U.N. regulation."
Washington quickly applauded its negotiators' decision. The Federal Communications Commission's Robert McDowell, a Republican, called it an ITU "power grab" and said the U.S. delegation "stood strong for Internet freedom." FCC chairman Julius Genachowski, a Democrat, said the U.S. "simply could not sign such a treaty," and Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat, warned it was time to stand against nations that want "greater control over the Internet in order to restrict or censor it for political or cultural reasons."
The new Internet political divide isn't east-west or north-south. Instead, it roughly tracks national governments' commitment to free expression and other human rights: the U.S., Canada, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, India, the Philippines, and Japan did not sign the Dubai treaty (PDF). They're joined by some Latin America and African nations including Chile, Peru, Malawi, Gambia, and Costa Rica.
Of the ITU's 193 member states, 89 have signed the treaty so far, putting the total at a little under half. Signatories include Russia, China, Libya, Nigeria, Iran, Cuba, Cambodia, and Egypt.
There's a chance that the Dubai summit could have been salvaged if the discussions remained focused on items unambiguously within the ITU's mandate, such as maritime telecommunications and balance of payments for telephone calls.
Delegates from Burundi, which signed the treaty.
But ITU chief Hamadoun Touré and Mohamed Nasser al Ghanim, the summit's chairman, pushed to insert language dealing with regulation of "unsolicited" Internet communications and cybersecurity. In addition, a resolution appended to the treaty says "all governments should have an equal role and responsibility for international Internet governance" and formally expands "the activities of ITU in this regard."
That amounts to a direct challenge to the traditional way the Internet is governed, which is primarily by ICANN, the organization that manages Internet domain names and addresses, and by protocols created by groups such as the Internet Engineering Task Force and the World Wide Web Consortium. It also suggests that topics related to Internet speech and surveillance could be put to a majority vote of ITU's 192 member countries, many of which have less-than-favorable views toward human rights. Two-thirds of the world's nations, according to Reporters Without Borders' ratings, suffer from significant "problems" with press freedom.
To list some examples: China, which boasts the world's most extensive Internet censorship regime, proposed Internet eavesdropping recommendations using deep packet inspection that the ITU adopted last month. In 2008, CNET disclosed that the ITU was drafting technical standards, also proposed by the Chinese government, to define methods of tracing the original source of Internet communications.
It's also telling that when a proposal surfaced in Dubai last week to include a brief mention of "human rights obligations" in the treaty, dozens of nations balked. China criticized the language, saying "we also have a very serious question about the necessity of the existence of this text." The "security of the state" is another concern that's equally valid, China's delegate said. Malaysia was worried that capitalizing Human Rights Obligations would make them seem too important.
"We will not vote on any issues"
Touré, the ITU chief, had promised in advance that the Dubai summit would not be Internet-focused, and would work by consensus.
"In the true tradition of the ITU, we will not vote on any issues," Touré told reporters over the summer. "Voting means winners and losers, and this is not simply acceptable. And we believe that we'll come to an agreement on all of the issues." Touré had said this month that the summit "is not about Internet governance."
But when the treaty expanded to include cybersecurity and the content of Internet communications, the U.S. and its allies felt they had walked into an ambush.
"We all agreed that content was not intended to be part of the ITR, but content issues keep coming up," the U.K.'s delegate said last week. "Unfortunately, the language that we proposed and the various alternatives we proposed were constantly rejected."
Another sticking point was procedural: instead of working by consensus, a vote to give the ITU a more "active" role in shaping the Internet's future took place at 1 a.m. local time last Thursday. (After the adoption of the proposal, Spain's delegate raised an objection, saying "had we known that it was a vote, we might very well have acted differently.")
The world's five Internet address registries, which assign blocks of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, published a statement over the weekend that criticized the ITU for secrecy and for violating its own promises to summit attendees: "Neither the content of this conference, nor its conduct during this critical final period, have met community expectations or satisfied public assurances given prior to the event."
For his part, Touré said in a statement after the summit that the event "succeeded in bringing unprecedented public attention to the different and important perspectives that govern global communications." He added, in what could be viewed as a swipe at the U.S. and other countries that refused to sign the treaty, "there is not one single world view but several, and these views need to be accommodated and engaged."
Large bureaucracies tend to discover justifications for expansion, of course, and the U.N. constellation of agencies is no exception.
At a 2004 summit at the U.N.'s headquarters in New York, U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan criticized the current system through which Internet standards are set and domain names are handled -- namely ICANN, IETF, W3C, and so on -- and delegates from Cuba, Ghana, Bolivia and Venezula objected to what they said was too much control of the process by the U.S. government and its allies.
Two years later, at another U.N. summit in Athens, then-ITU Secretary General Yoshio Utsumi criticized the current ICANN-dominated process, stressing that poorer nations are dissatisfied and are hoping to erode U.S. influence. "No matter what technical experts argue is the best system, no matter what self-serving justifications are made that this is the only possible way to do things, there are no systems or technologies that can eternally claim they are the best," Utsumi said.
In an interview with CNET at the time, Houlin Zhao, director of the ITU's Telecommunication Standardization Bureau, was blunt about his agency's interest in expanding its mandate: "The ITU is trying to ensure its value. Any public network of communications is naturally of interest to ITU."
The ITU's problem is, as law professor David Post put it, that the Internet "arose and spread across the entire globe without any ITU oversight or involvement whatsoever." Worse yet, from the perspective of the ITU, its own set of technical standards, called the OSI protocols, developed in the 1980s, were largely rejected in favor of the Internet's lingua franca of TCP/IP.
Last week's summit is likely to spark calls for ITU reform -- or even its abolition. Andrew McLaughlin, former deputy chief technology officer in the Obama administration, recently said the ITU "should be killed off in its current form" because its "nature, structure, culture, values and processes...are all inimical to a free and open Internet, and they are all inconsistent with the nature of the technical infrastructure that now characterizes our communications networks." Anthony Rutkowski, a consultant who was previously a counselor to two different ITU secretary-generals, told CNET last week that the ITU is "the most failed body in the history of international telecommunications."
Significant reform is unlikely. So is the prospect of the ITU abandoning its bid to expand its authority over Internet governance. The next summit in the new Internet Cold War will take place in Busan, Korea, in November 2014. McDowell, the FCC commissioner, is already warning: "The United States should immediately prepare for an even more treacherous ITU treaty negotiation that will take place [then]. Those talks could expand the ITU's reach even further."
Photograph by Mike Theiss, National Geographic
The aurora borealis, also known as the northern lights, illuminates the Arctic sky in a recent picture by National Geographic photographer Mike Theiss.
A storm chaser by trade, Theiss is in the Arctic Circle on an expedition to photograph auroras, which result from collisions between charged particles released from the sun's atmosphere and gaseous particles in Earth's atmosphere.
After one particularly amazing show, he wrote on YouTube, "The lights were dancing, rolling, and twisting, and at times looked like they were close enough to touch!" (Watch his time-lapse video of the northern lights.)
Published December 14, 2012
Twenty bright first graders with their entire lives ahead of them were gunned down on Dec. 14 at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. Along with the students, the lives of six school staffers, including a devoted teacher and a proud principal, were lost. Click through to see the victims at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Noah Pozner and his twin sister celebrated their sixth birthdays on Nov. 20. His sister, Arielle, who was in another class, survived.
Pozner's uncle Alexis Haller told The Associated Press that he was "smart as a whip," gentle but with a rambunctious streak.
Haller told the AP that Pozner called Arielle his best friend.
"They were always playing together, they loved to do things together," Haller said. When his mother, a nurse, would tell him she loved him, he would answer, "Not as much as I love you, Mom."
Funeral services Pozner are planned for Monday.
Emilie Parker, the little girl with the blond hair and bright blue eyes, would have been one of the first to comfort her classmates at Sandy Hook Elementary School, had a gunman's bullets not claimed her life, her father said.
"My daughter Emilie would be one of the first ones to be standing and giving support to all the victims because that's the kind of kid she is," her father, Robbie Parker said as he fought back tears, telling the world about his "bright, creative and loving" daughter who was one of the 20 young victims in the Newtown, Conn., shooting.
"She always had something kind to say about anybody," her father said. "We find comfort reflecting on the incredible person Emilie was and how many lives she was able to touch."
Emilie was a budding artist who carried her markers and pencils everywhere. Her grandfather recently passed away and Emilie paid tribute to him by slipping a special card she had drawn into his casket, her father said.
WATCH: Emilie's father speaks about his daughter
Jack's funeral is scheduled to take place Monday.
Jack was a fan of New York Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz, who paid tribute to the 6-year-old during Sunday's game against the Atlanta Falcons.
Cruz honored Jack Sunday on his cleats, writing on them the words "Jack Pinto, My Hero."
"I also spoke to an older brother and he was distraught as well. I told him to stay strong and I was going to do whatever I can to honor him," Cruz said after the game. "He was fighting tears and could barely speak to me."
Cruz said he plans to give the gloves he wore during the game to the boy's family, and spend some time with them.
The family released a statement saying, Jack was an "inspiration to all those who knew him."
"Jack loved school, reading, wrestling, skiing and football. Most of all Jack loved to play with his friends and keep up with his big brother," said his family. "He had a wide smile that would simply light up the room and while we are all uncertain as to how we will ever cope without him, we choose to remember and celebrate his life. Not dwelling on the loss but instead on the gift that we were given and will forever cherish in our hearts forever."
Like most first graders, Jesse Lewis was excited for the holiday season. The 6-year-old, who was in Victoria Soto's class, couldn't wait to go to school on Friday because they were making gingerbread houses, and his father had planned to join them.
Victoria Soto, 27, one of the adult victims, loved being a teacher, her cousin, Jim Wiltsie, told ABC News' Chris Cuomo Friday. In fact, her first-grade students' safety was such a high priority that Soto reportedly lost her life protecting them.
"The family was informed that she was trying to shield, get her children into a closet and protect them from harm, and by doing that put herself between the gunman and the children," Wiltsie said. "And that's when she was tragically shot and killed.
"I'm very proud to have known Vicki," Wiltsie added. "Her life dream was to be a teacher. And her instincts kicked in when she saw there was harm coming to her students.
"It brings peace to know that Vicki was doing what she loved, protecting the children," he said. "And in our eyes, she is a hero."
| Grace Audrey McDonnell, 7 |
"We are overwhelmed by the outpouring of love and support from so many people. Our daughter Grace was the love and light of our family. Words cannot adequately express our sense of loss."
As with so many, the ABC family has been touched directly by the tragedy in Sandy Hook.
One of the young victims, Catherine Hubbard, is the niece of an ABC News employee.
Here is a statement from the family:
"We are greatly saddened by the loss of our beautiful daughter, Catherine Violet and our thoughts and prayers are with the other families who have been affected by this tragedy.
"We appreciate the overwhelming support from our community that we have received over the past 24 hours.
"We also wish to express our gratitude for all of the emergency responders who responded to this tragic incident as well as the teachers and staff of Sandy Hook School. Our local police and fire departments and the other agencies who are working on this continuing investigation have been incredible.
"We also want to recognize outstanding work of The Connecticut State Police who have been supporting us from the very beginning of this ordeal and continue to provide unwavering support to our family.
"We have no further statement to make at this time and ask that we be afforded the opportunity to grieve with our friends and family.
"We ask that you continue to pray for us and the other families who have experienced loss in this tragedy.
"Jennifer and Matthew Hubbard"
Hochsprung became principal of Sandy Hook in recent years and by all accounts, was devoted to the students and teachers at her school.
"When we had our orientation, you could tell she loved her job," Brenda Lediski, a parent, told ABC News by phone.
Kristin Larson, a former PTA secretary, told the Boston Globe that Hochsprung was "always enthusiastic, always smiling, always game to do anything."
"When I saw her at the beginning of the school year, she was hugging everyone," Larson said.
The terrifying moment Hochsprung came into contact with the gunman were heard over the school intercom and may have saved lives.
It's not clear whether the intercom was turned on purposefully to alert the school's staff to the menace or whether the intercom was on for morning announcements.
Either way, it caught the initial moments of Adam Lanza's lethal fury and gave teachers and others life saving moments to lock their doors and try to hide their children.
| Mary Sherlach, School Psychologist |
Sherlach had been a school psychologist at Sandy Hook since August of 1994 and had experience working on committees devoted to school safety, according to her website.
Sherlach and her husband, Bill, had been married for 31 years and have two adult daughters.
"I truly enjoy working with the SHS staff, parents and children," she wrote. "And am always ready to assist in problem solving , intervention and prevention."
Her son-in-law, Eric Schwartz, said Sherlach felt she was "doing God's work by helping children."
Lauren Rousseau worked as a substitute teacher before landing a full time position this year at Sandy Hook Elementary School. For the 30-year-old, it was a dream job.
"We will miss her terribly," Lauren's mother, Teresa Rousseau , told the Delaware County Times. "And will take comfort knowing that she had achieved that dream."
The 6-year-old was just learning the rosary and would lead the family in grace every night before dinner, the New Haven Register reported. Her favorite colors were pink and purple. She leaves behind a 3-year-old brother.
Her family released a statement describing Olivia as "creative" and a fan of craft projects and art class. She was a patient big sister to 3-year old Brayden and would lead Grace each evening at the dinner table, according to her father, Brian.
"Olivia was smart, bubbly, and unbelievably entertaining. Her physical loss will be felt every day by those who loved her most, but her sparkly spirit will live on," the statement read.
D'Avino was a behavioral therapist who had only recently started working at Sandy Hook Elementary School, according to Lissa Lovetere, a friend who is handling her funeral planned for Friday.
D'Avino's boyfriend, Anthony Cerritelli, planned to ask her to marry him on Christmas Eve, Lovetere told The Associated Press.
Police told her family that she shielded one of the students during the rampage, Lovetere told the AP.
Jessica's parents, Rich and Krista Rekos, released a statement describing their daughter's love of horses. When she turned 10, they promised, she could have a horse of her own. For Christmas, she asked Santa for new cowgirl boots and hat.
"She devoted her free time to watching horse movies, reading horse books, drawing horses, and writing stories about horses," her family said in the statement.
The family described Jessica as "a creative, beautiful little girl who loved playing with her little brothers, Travis and Shane.
"We cannot imagine our life without her. We are mourning her loss, sharing our beautiful memories we have of her, and trying to help her brother Travis understand why he can't play with his best friend," they said.
The 6-year-old, with her beaming smile, was the daughter of a jazz musician. She sang in a home video with her brother, who was also at Sandy Hook Elementary School during the massacre.
The girl's grandmother, Elba Marquez, told The Associated Press the family moved to Connecticut just two months ago, drawn from Canada, in part, by Sandy Hook's sterling reputation. The grandmother's brother, Jorge Marquez, is mayor of a Puerto Rican town.
Charlotte's parents, Joann and Joel, had lived in Newtown for four or five years, Joann's brother John Hagen, of Nisswa, Minn., told Newsday.
"She was going to go some places in this world," Hagen told the newspaper. "This little girl could light up the room for anyone."
Daniel was the youngest of three children, his family said in a statement. The family described Daniel as "fearless in the pursuit of happiness in life."
"Words really cannot express what a special boy Daniel was. Such a light. Always smiling, unfailingly polite, incredibly affectionate, fair and so thoughtful towards others, imaginative in play, both intelligent and articulate in conversation: in all, a constant source of laughter and joy," the family said.
Josephine's father, Bob, said Sunday that the family will be releasing a statement soon.
"You couldn't think of a better child," neighbor Kevin Grimes told The Associated Press.
Grimes told the AP that he was recently speaking with Chase and the little boy was telling him about winning his first mini-triathlon.
James' mother, Cindy, is a native of Sherrill, N.Y.
"It's a terrible tragedy, and we're a tight community," Mayor William Vineall told the Utica Observer-Dispatch. "Everybody will be there for them, and our thoughts and prayers are there for them," he added.
| Victims of Sandy Hook Shooting |
As more information and images emerge of the victims from Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in coming days, here are the names of the other students and staffers killed:
Madeleine Hsu, 6
Dylan Hockley, 6
Anne Marie Murphy, 52
Caroline Previdi, 6
Avielle Richman, 6
Benjamin Wheeler, 6
Allison Wyatt, 6
PERHAPS the little fish embryo shown here is dancing a jig because it has just discovered that it has legs instead of fins. Fossils show that limbs evolved from fins, but a new study shows how it may have happened, live in the lab.
Fernando Casares of the Spanish National Research Council and his colleagues injected zebrafish with the hoxd13 gene from a mouse. The protein that the gene codes for controls the development of autopods, a precursor to hands, feet and paws.
Zebrafish naturally carry hoxd13 but produce less of the protein than tetrapods - all four-limbed vertebrates and birds - do. Casares and his colleagues hoped that by injecting extra copies of the gene into the zebrafish embryos, some of their cells would make more of the protein.
One full day later, all of those fish whose cells had taken up the gene began to develop autopods instead of fins. They carried on growing for four days but then died (Cell, DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2012.10.015).
"Of course, we haven't been able to grow hands," says Casares. He speculates that hundreds of millions of years ago, the ancestors of tetrapods began expressing more hoxd13 for some reason and that this could have allowed them to evolve autopods.
If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.
All comments should respect the New Scientist House Rules. If you think a particular comment breaks these rules then please use the "Report" link in that comment to report it to us.
If you are having a technical problem posting a comment, please contact technical support.
MOSCOW: Russian police said on Sunday they had released some 40 people detained during a banned protest against Vladimir Putin, including opposition leader Alexei Navalny.
Braving freezing cold and the threat of heavy fines, hundreds of people defied the authorities on Saturday to gather at Moscow's Lubyanka Square, the seat of the FSB security services, to mark one year since the start of unprecedented anti-Putin protests triggered by fraud-tainted parliamentary polls last December.
Police said around 40 people had been detained at the rally, including star anti-corruption blogger Navalny; Sergei Udaltsov, the leader of leftist group the Left Front; Ksenia Sobchak, the daughter of Putin's late mentor Anatoly Sobchak; and well-known activist Ilya Yashin.
"All those detained have been released," a Moscow police spokesman told AFP on Sunday, declining to provide any other details.
The opposition had originally planned a march through the city centre, but for the first time since the start of the anti-Putin protests, organisers were unable to get permission from city authorities.
On the eve of the planned event, they urged their supporters to simply show up at Lubyanka Square.
Authorities said that because the rally was unauthorised, its participants would face the threat of jail or fines of up to 300,000 rubles (US$9,700), nearly equal to the annual average salary in Russia.
According to police, 700 people showed up, over 300 of them journalists and bloggers. Participants say a few thousand poured into the square, many of them with flowers they laid at a monument to victims of Stalin-era purges.
Udaltsov said some 5,000 were in attendance.
Observers say the opposition movement is struggling to maintain momentum in the face of the authorities' tough crackdown on dissenters since Putin's return to the Kremlin in May and internal divisions between liberals, leftists and nationalists.
Up to 120,000 people gathered near the Kremlin walls at the peak of the protests last winter.
While some observers said Saturday's rally proved that many people were undeterred by the threat of heavy fines, others called it a disappointment and a blow to the opposition movement.
"The rally was an absolute mistake," political observer Yulia Latynina said on Echo of Moscow radio.
The opposition, she said, had taken unnecessary risks by urging people to show up at the unauthorised rally and was fortunate that the protest had not ended in violent clashes.
Scores of activists are facing jail time for taking part in May 6 protests on the eve of Putin's inauguration for his third term as president.
- AFP/xq
The Federal Trade Commission may bring its two-year antitrust investigation of Google to a close by allowing the company to make voluntary changes to its search business, according to a report.
The search giant is said to be readying an announcement about changes to its use of "snippets," bits of text culled from sites such as Yelp and TripAdvisor and displayed in search results, Politico reports, citing unnamed sources. Yelp and others had charged Google with using their content without permission.
Google will also makes tweaks that will allow for easier porting of search-ad campaigns from Google to rival search services, Politico's sources said.
Politico suggested on Tuesday that the FTC may leave the search-related case to the European Commission, which has mounted an investigation of its own. Reuters reported on Tuesday that some Google competitors, sensing a possible defeat, are taking the case to the Justice Department.
Google and the FTC also look to be close to a settlement in a case involving so-called frand -- or standard essential -- patents owned by Google.
Politico said the FTC declined to comment on today's report about the search tweaks, and it said Google would provide only the following statement: "We continue to work cooperatively with the Federal Trade Commission and are happy to answer any questions they may have."
Photograph by Mike Theiss, National Geographic
The aurora borealis, also known as the northern lights, illuminates the Arctic sky in a recent picture by National Geographic photographer Mike Theiss.
A storm chaser by trade, Theiss is in the Arctic Circle on an expedition to photograph auroras, which result from collisions between charged particles released from the sun's atmosphere and gaseous particles in Earth's atmosphere.
After one particularly amazing show, he wrote on YouTube, "The lights were dancing, rolling, and twisting, and at times looked like they were close enough to touch!" (Watch his time-lapse video of the northern lights.)
Published December 14, 2012
Along with fire drills, schools have been conducting lockdown drills -- often known as active shooter drills -- since the Columbine massacre in 1999.
But safety officials do not agree yet on what teachers and students should do when a homicidal gunman invades their school.
At Sandy Hook Elementary School, teachers, staff and students had been drilled on how to handle such a situation.
"We practice it, and they knew what to do, and you just think about protecting the kids, and just doing the right thing," library clerk Mary Ann Jacob said.
She said had been drilled to send the kids in the library to a back closet between book shelves, a plan developed in advance.
"You have to have a certain amount of fire drills, and evacuation drills, and a certain amt of lockdown drills," she said. "Kids know the routine, and the teachers know the routine, and everyone has a spot in the room where they are supposed to go to."
Click here for more photos of the scene.
School safety expert Ken Trump told ABC News that he thinks the Sandy Hook teachers did what they could to protect their students.
"It does sound as though the teachers did everything humanly possible, down to risking their lives, to protect the children in this Connecticut school," Trump said.
The school's principal and five other adults died in the Sandy Hook school shooting in Newtown, Conn.
"Teaching kids to lock down, securing your rooms, and, in some cases, teachers stepping forth to protect the children at the risk of their own lives, is something that we see occurring more and more over the years in school safety," Trump said.
He and others particularly praised the actions of first grade teacher Kaitlin Roig, who locked her classroom door and barricaded herself and her 14 students in a locked bathroom.
But former SWAT officer Greg Crane told ABC News that he thinks existing lockdown procedures aren't sufficient.
"What she [Roig] did was a fantastic move," said Crane, who founded a school safety program called ALICE, which stands for alert, lock down, inform, counter, evacuate.
"Was she taught that move? Did every teacher know to lock the door and also barricade it? If that's the case, why weren't other teachers taught that?" Crane asked.
Most schools tell teachers to lock their doors and sit quietly until helps arrives, Crane said.
Typical are the procedures, obtained by ABCNews.com, outlined by a New Jersey school district that calls their drills "Lock Down Yellow."
Instructions to the students include:
"Go to the room nearest your location in the hallway.
"No one will be able to leave room for any reason.
"Silence must be maintained (Use of cell phones are not permitted).
"Make sure you are marked present.
"Do not leave the classroom until directed by PA System, telephone or by an administrator."
But Crane founded ALICE because he believed there was something wrong with the lock down-only policies in most schools.
"We've taught a generation of Americans to be passive and static and wait for police," said Crane, whose wife was an elementary school principal in Texas at the time of the Columbine attack.
"We don't recommend just locking a door because locked doors have been defeated before," Crane said. "Try to make yourself as hard a target as possible."
ALICE argues students and teachers should not be passive and that they should improvise. He even suggests they throw things are their attacker.
Copyright © News sibilous. All rights reserved.
Design And Business Directories