Funeral for young Arizona victim
Christina Taylor Green, the nine-year-old killed in Saturday’s shooting in Arizona, is being buried on Thursday in the first of six such funerals.
Christina, whom President Barack Obama hailed on Wednesday night, was a top student, dancer and athlete.
She had hoped to meet Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords at a constituency event on Saturday when she was killed and Ms Giffords gravely injured.
Doctors say Ms Giffords is making “encouraging” progress in hospital.
They said they had begun intense physical therapy, and that she was able to lift her legs on command.
Jared Loughner, 22, is jailed pending trial in the attack in the city of Tucson. Six people were killed in the shooting, including Christina Green and a federal judge. More than a dozen were wounded.
Mourners at the St Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church in Tucson, where the massacre took place, unfurled the largest flag recovered from Ground Zero, the site of the 9/11 terror attacks in New York City. The flag is a tribute to Christina, who was born that day in 2001.
Mourners in white, some dressed as angels, lined the road leading to the church in silence. Relatives and friends were seen entering the church amid heavy security.
Among those were dozens of Christina’s classmates and boys wearing baseball outfits – Christina was a fan of the sport and was the granddaughter of former professional baseball player and manager Dallas Green.
“I want our democracy to be as good as she imagined it”
President Barack Obama
The night before, President Barack Obama honoured Christina and other victims of the shootings, urging the US to heal divisions opened by “sharply polarised” political debate.
“Imagine,” Mr Obama said at a public ceremony in Tucson, “here was a young girl who was just becoming aware of our democracy; just beginning to understand the obligations of citizenship; just starting to glimpse the fact that someday she too might play a part in shaping her nation’s future.”
A witness to Saturday’s attack said Christina had been smiling broadly as she waited in line to meet Ms Giffords.
Christina had just been elected to the student council at Mesa Verde Elementary School, and her father has said her interest in politics was inspired by Mr Obama.
“President Obama and his campaign is where she started getting interested in politics, and at least to have heard him mention her makes me feel better,” John Green said. “She began her life on a tragedy, on 9/11, and her life was ended with a tragedy, here in Arizona.”
Mr Obama called on the nation to honour her: “I want us to live up to her expectations. I want our democracy to be as good as she imagined it.”
Meanwhile, Ms Giffords’s doctors said on Thursday morning that she had opened her eyes and appeared to be trying to focus her vision, “encouraging” signs she was recovering.
Ms Giffords is moving both legs and both arms, has opened both eyes and is responding to friends and family, doctors said.
“She’s making the progress that we could hope for her,” Dr Michael Lemole said.
In another development, documents released by Pima Community College, where Mr Loughner attended school in the months before the attack, show a pattern of increasingly bizarre behaviour that troubled school officials and police.
The documents suggest Mr Loughner was prone to nonsensical outbursts and was confronted several times by police.
School officials described Mr Loughner’s “dark personality” and some feared for their safety around him.
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