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THE lone gunman who killed ten people in Austria’s mass school shootout has been pictured for the first time.
Identified as Artur A., the 21-year-old was a former student at the school who rocked the country with its worst mass shooting in modern history.

The perpetrator resided in a suburb of Graz and had departed from BORG Dreierschützengasse high school two years prior without completing the sixth grade.
He had no previous convictions and was only known to the police as a victim of pick-pocketing.
Former classmates have said he was subjected to severe bullying during his school years, according to local reports.
There is speculation he targeted the school in an act of furious revenge, though officials are yet to specify a motive.
When cops searched his house, they found a non-functional “pipe bomb” and a suicide note.
Cops also found what appeared to be abandoned plans for a bomb attack during the search, the local media reports.
In the “farewell letter”, Artur A. reportedly said goodbye to his parents and framed himself as a victim of bullying, reports Krone.
He also reportedly recorded a video and sent it to his mother where he spoke of his imminent atrocity and said he was acting “of his own free will”.
Police investigating the mass shooting say the gunman had no prior criminal record.
Artur A. stormed through two classrooms, firing with a Glock pistol and shotgun – both of which he owned legally.
Ten people were killed in the horrific attack.
A further 12 were taken to hospital with serious injuries, and an adult woman became the tenth victim to pass away on Tuesday evening.
Lea Bajrami, 15, was named as the first victim of the tragic mass shooting.
She was one of the six girls to be killed alongside three boys and a woman.
Another 15-year-old girl named Hana Akmadžićis has been identified as the second victim of the tragedy.
Her uncle, Ilhad, offered touching tributes to his niece, saying, “She was my child, not merely my niece. A flower of paradise. It’s unbelievable that she’s gone.”
The 11 surviving victims range in age from 15 to 26 years and are currently receiving hospital care. They are reported to be in stable condition.
Eight of them are from Austria, two from Romania, and one from Iran, according to the police.
Austria was stunned by the senseless violence, and three days of national mourning was declared.
Horrifying video from the scene yesterday showed pupils hiding in a classroom as gunshots rang out nearby.
Other clips showed students running for their lives as heavily armed cops made their way inside the BORG Dreierschützengasse high school.
A dad told local media that one of his sons lay down on the floor and pretended to be dead to escape gunfire.
The youngest victim of the fatal mass shooting was only 14 years old, while other students were between 15 and 17. A 59-year-old teacher was also killed.
Immediately after the killing spree, the attacker went into a toilet and turned one of the guns on himself.
On Tuesday evening, government officials attended a memorial service in Graz Cathedral, and thousands gathered for a candlelight vigil in the city’s main square.
Austria’s Chancellor Christian Stocker said: “Today is a dark day in the history of our country.”
There is no record of a mass shooting in Austria with a death toll this high in the post-war period.
A nationwide minute of silence was observed Wednesday morning, and flags on official buildings were flying at half-mast.
Crisis centres were set up to support Graz locals, with specially-trained psychologists on hand to support students and parents associated with the school.
Austria’s Red Cross said it had deployed 65 ambulances to the scene and 158 emergency staff.
It was looking after 300 students in the Helmut List Hall, a converted factory, and 200 parents and relatives in the ASKÖ Hall, a sports complex.