Eswatini Daily News

BELGRADE (Reuters) – The Serbian government said it had introduced a set of measures on Thursday to prevent potential violence in schools a day after a 13-year-old boy shot and killed eight students and a guard in a Belgrade elementary school.

The shooter took guns belonging to his father and went to school where he killed nine people and wounded six students and a teacher before turning himself into the police.

Because of his age, the boy cannot be criminally prosecuted under Serbian law but he will be placed in a psychiatric institution, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said.

Read More: Belgrade school shooting: boy kills 9 in a planned attack

The government said in the statement that it had decided to halt issuing of licences to weapon holders. The justice ministry will prepare changes to the criminal law to prosecute those who enable access to weapons to children.

The government has tasked the justice ministry to change the legislation to lower the age for criminal punishment to 12 from the current 14 and organise groups of experts to counter peer violence in schools, the statement said.

Read More: Violence against cops to cost taxpayers E35m 

It also said it would set up a working group for the safety of children on the internet that will consider banning certain sites.

The government will also change legislation within one month to enable schools to test students for drugs and alcohol, the statement added.

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