Mass shootings killed at least 70 people in US just in March 2021
People attend a prayer vigil at Olivet Missionary Baptist Church held for victims and families of the FedEx facility mass shooting in Indianapolis, Indiana, April 17, 2021. (AFP Photo)


More than 70 people lost their lives in 45 mass gun attacks in the U.S. last month, according to a Gun Violence Archive (GVA) report.

The data of the GVA, which tracks and compiles the events related to gun attacks in the U.S., revealed that there have been 45 mass gun attacks in March 2021. The number of mass shootings since the beginning of 2021 reached 150.

At least 72 people died and more than 100 people were injured in these attacks.

Mass shootings are gun attacks that cause at least 4 deaths, not including the shooter.

In the first 3 months of 2021, more than 4,500 gun deaths have been observed, 8,100 people have had gun injuries and over 200 children and more than 900 teenagers have been shot.

The latest massacre was in Indianapolis where 8 people were shot and killed in a shooting on April 15, at a FedEx facility.

Just a month ago, Colorado and Georgia faced similar gun violence. A shooting at a Colorado supermarket killed 10 people on March 22 and at least 8 people, most of them Asian women, were killed in shootings at 3 different massage parlors in the U.S. state of Georgia on March 16.

U.S. President Joe Biden spoke about mass shootings and gun violence at a White House ceremony on April 8. "This is an epidemic, for God's sake, and it has to stop," he said while calling the shootings "a public health crisis."

Biden has called for Congress to strengthen gun laws including requiring background checks on all gun sales and banning assault weapons. At a speech in February, he said there was no time to wait.

Again in March, the U.S. Democrats took steps for the first major new gun control laws in more than two decades.

"The gun violence crisis in America is a challenge to the conscience of our country, one that demands that we act," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, California's Democratic representative, said during floor debate on the bills in March. "These solutions will save lives."

The number of mass gun shootings in the U.S. was 417 in 2019, and increased to 600 in 2020, according to the data provided by GVA.