Europe 1 with AFP 3:40 p.m., June 2, 2022

A new shooting took place this Wednesday in the United States in a building of a hospital in Tulsa, Oklahoma, more than a week after the massacre of Uvalde in Texas which had made 21 victims.

According to police sources, an unidentified man shot dead at least four people before committing suicide. 

A man armed with a rifle and a handgun killed at least four people on Wednesday in the building of a hospital in Tulsa, in the US state of Oklahoma (southeast), before committing suicide , according to the police.

This new tragedy took place a few hours after the funeral, in the city of Uvalde, Texas, of the 21 people, including 19 children, victims of another massacre that occurred barely a week ago.

"We now have four dead civilians, we have one dead shooter," Tulsa Deputy Police Chief Eric Dalgleish told reporters, adding that early evidence from the investigation said the killer had ended his pursuits. days.

Police responded immediately to a call of a gunman inside the grounds of Saint Francis Hospital in downtown Tulsa and searched the building floor by floor, Eric Dalgleish said.

The suspect, who has not yet been identified by authorities, is a black man between the ages of 35 and 40, the police officer added.

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A "fast and strong" police response 

"I saw the helicopters and I heard all kinds of noises," Elizabeth Buchner, 43, who lives in a house just behind the building where the killings took place, told AFP.

"I was there a little earlier in the day," added this legal assistant, who said she was relieved by the speed and efficiency of the police intervention.

"There was no hesitation. The police response was quick and strong," said Elizabeth Buchner, while in Uvalde the response time of the police, deemed too long, made the subject of investigation and much criticism.

US President Joe Biden has been updated on the shooting, the White House said.

A member of the Oklahoma parliament, Melissa Provenzano, also welcomed the rapid police response, four minutes having passed between the call for emergency services and the intervention.

"It could have been a lot worse," she told CNN.

But "we deserve much better than that," she added.

"These things can be avoided; and it's time to wake up and face this." 

In the United States, shootings in public places are a recurring scourge that successive governments have so far been powerless to stem.