Braving rain, they lit candles in front of the Druzba, or "Friendship," restaurant in Uhersky Brod a day after a gunman opened fire during lunchtime, killing eight and seriously wounding a woman before he fatally shot himself.
Following surgery, the 37-year-old woman, who was shot in the chest, wasn't in life-threatening condition, said Dana Lipovska, spokesman for the hospital in nearby Uherske Hradiste.
Police identified the gunman as a 63-year-old local man who had no criminal record and had a gun license.
Interior Minister Milan Chovanec suggested after the shooting that the number people in the country who legally own weapons might be too high.
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But Jiri Hynek, head of the Defense and Security Industry Association of the Czech Republic, said it's difficult to get a license and any future gun holder has to undergo strict procedures, including a medical exam.
"If we have such strict conditions for getting a driving license, we would have no traffic jams in Prague because half of the drivers wouldn't get a driving license," Hynek told Czech public television.
The gunman had two legal weapons, authorities said.