ZAGREB, Croatia — A suspected gunman in a mass shooting at a nursing home in Croatia is facing 11 criminal charges, including murder, after he was accused of killing six people, including his own mother, and wounding as many more, police said on Tuesday.
The carnage stunned Daruvar, a spa town of some 8,500 people in central Croatia and sent shock waves throughout the European Union country where such shootings have been rare despite many weapons left over from war in the 1990s.
''The 51-year-old walked into the nursing home in Daruvar where he opened fire, with the intent to kill multiple people,'' police said in a statement.
The statement said he "committed 11 criminal acts," including murder and attempted murder. It said the charges also include femicide, which refers to women being killed because of their gender.
Police charges are a first step in the criminal proceedings against a suspect. Prosecutors are yet to open a formal investigation; that would precede filing an indictment that could lead to a trial.
Monday's shooting raised questions about gun control in a country where many people kept their weapons after the end of country's 1991-95 war, one of the conflicts unleashed by the breakup of the former Yugoslavia. Croatia became an EU member in 2013.
''The man was illegally armed and a lot of people knew that. That weapon should have been taken away from him," President Zoran Milanovic, said. "He should have been prevented and stopped.''
The town of Daruvar declared Wednesday a day of mourning for the victims, who were five residents of the nursing home and one employee.