Barack Obama to console grieving families in Orlando
Barack Obama will come face to face with the heartbreaking aftermath of America`s deadliest mass shooting when he visits Orlando.
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Florida: President Barack Obama will come face to face with the heartbreaking aftermath of America`s deadliest mass shooting when he visits Orlando Thursday to comfort grieving families and thank emergency medical crews.
Obama, traveling with Vice President Joe Biden, will offer his condolences to families of 49 people killed in Sunday`s shooting at a gay nightclub in the central Florida city. Another 53 people were wounded.
The White House said Obama will also confer with emergency medical crews and hospital staff who worked feverishly to patch together broken bodies and save lives in the chaotic hours after the massacre by gunman Omar Mateen, who was shot dead when police stormed the club.
"This will be, I think, an emotional trip," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Wednesday.
Obama also wants to "make clear that the country stands with the people of Orlando, stands with the LGBT community in Orlando, as they grieve for their loss," Earnest said.
As the city geared up to receive the president, the process of saying goodbye to the dead began.
The first wake was held Wednesday. It was for a 40-year-old man named Javier Jorge Reyes.
More wakes and funerals are expected later this week.US authorities also warned that threats against Muslims would not be tolerated, and could be prosecuted, after alleged incidents in the wake of the massacre. Mateen was Muslim.
Officials asked the public to help in the investigation.
"Civil rights violations are a priority for the FBI," assistant special agent Ron Hopper told reporters. "We will investigate reported incidents against individuals based upon any class, any protected class, to include race, religion, and sexual orientation."
US attorney Lee Bentley chimed in: "Making these threats is not only wrong, in most cases, making these threats is illegal. Stop it. Any threats like this detract from what we`re doing in law enforcement."
Members of the small Muslim community in Mateen`s hometown of Fort Pierce say they have endured profanity-laced taunts in recent days -- and even death threats.
"We`re scared," Bedar Bakht, a taciturn Pakistani in his 50s who worships at the same mosque attended by Mateen, told AFP.Mateen`s motives for carrying out the slaughter are still unclear.
In a 911 call during the attack in the early hours of Sunday, he pledged allegiance to the leader of the Islamic State group, and Obama has said he was radicalized by reading extremist propaganda online.
But witnesses also say he was a regular at the Pulse gay club, and was using gay dating apps.
"He appears to have been an angry, disturbed, unstable young man who became radicalized," said Obama.
Authorities refused to comment on reports that Mateen`s wife would face charges over her alleged knowledge of his intentions to carry out an attack, calling any talk of charges "premature" and saying no stone would be left unturned in the probe.
The city is reeling mainly from the mass shooting but also the murder last week of a singer who competed on TV reality show "The Voice" and the death Wednesday of a toddler in an alligator attack at a Disney resort hotel.A new family assistance center opened in Orlando Wednesday in a part of the stadium once known as the Citrus Bowl.
Sarita Figueroa, the director of readjustment counseling services for the Department of Veterans Affairs`s Southeast District, explained that her personnel were pitching in to help those in need of trauma and grief counseling.
"This is for the community," Figueroa told AFP, noting that counselors had come from across the country.
For relatives of the dead, the aftermath is "very difficult. It`s too fresh," she said.
"Some are still getting belongings from that night that were on the floor. Glasses, watches, a wallet... You receive the news that you lost someone, and then you receive the note that you need to go and pick up things. That`s another process."US media outlets, citing unnamed law enforcement officials, reported that Mateen`s wife Noor, who is 30, may have had prior knowledge of her husband`s plan and could face criminal charges.
CNN said Wednesday that federal prosecutors planned to present evidence to a grand jury, including that she accompanied Mateen to the gun store and the club on what may have been a mission to plan the attack.
The woman claims she tried to talk her husband out of the attack and did not know of a specific plot, CNN said, citing unnamed law enforcement officials.
On Wednesday, authorities refused to comment on their discussions with her.
"With respect to the wife, I can tell you that is only one of many interviews we have done and will continue to do in this investigation," Hopper said. "I cannot comment on the content or outcome of that investigation."
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