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BLACKSBURG, Va. - Virginia Tech student Jiyoun Yoo was terrified when she heard a gunman had rampaged through her campus, killing 32 people. When news broke on Tuesday that the gunman was a South Korean student, her fear took a new direction.
A banner marking the day of a campus massacre hangs over the Squire Student Center as a couple holding hands enter the building at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia, April 17, 2007. [Reuters] |
The gunman who carried out the worst shooting rampage in modern US history was identified as Cho Seung-Hui, 23, an English literature student. He had lived legally in the United States with his parents for 14 years, a US immigration official said.
Yoo, a graduate student, said she didn't know the gunman and none of her Korean friends had heard of him either. She said her family in Seoul was concerned Yoo might be a target if there was a backlash against Asian students at Virginia Tech.
"It is big news in South Korea. Yesterday they were worried if I'm safe, now they are worried there might be a risk that I'm South Korean," said Yoo.
The South Korean government also expressed fears of a backlash.
"We are working closely with our diplomatic missions and local Korean residents' associations in anticipation of any situation that may arise," a foreign ministry official said.
South Korea has the largest number of foreign students in the United States -- nearly 15 percent -- according to the US Customs and Enforcement Web site.
"I think it's going to affect us quite seriously," said Sunwoong Kim, president of the Korean-American University Professors Association.
"It's certainly going to cause a negative stereotype of Korean Americans because he happens to be Korean and a loner and, under some emotional stress, he reacted very violently," said Kim, a professor at the University of Wisconsin.
Some 1,655 students at Virginia Tech, or 6.2 percent, are Asian, the university's Web site says.
White students on campus dismissed suggestions there might be a backlash against foreigners at the university.
"It hadn't even crossed my mind," said Andrew Rush, 20, an accounting major. "There is a huge Asian community on campus and we're all together in class all day. It's so integrated I don't think this will change anything."
Foreign-born residents in Blacksburg said the town, nestled in the mountains of southwest Virginia, is a welcoming place.
"Everyone has always been open and supportive," said Xiaojin Moore, co-owner of the Oasis World Market grocery store a mile from campus.
Moore, a native of China, hopes her three small children will not be targeted because of their Asian appearance.
"We just want to be left alone to figure things out, until things calm down," Moore said.
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