Iran Daily

New Zealand mosque shooter to represent himself at sentencing

-

The Australian white supremacis­t, who admitted to killing 51 worshipper­s in a mass shooting at two New Zealand mosques, dismissed his lawyers and will represent himself when he is sentenced next month.

Brenton Harrison Tarrant had pleaded guilty in March to 51 charges of murder, 40 of attempted murder and one charge of engaging in a terrorist act for the shootings targeting people praying at the two mosques in the city of Christchur­ch in 2019, The Associated Press reported.

His sentencing hearing, delayed by the coronaviru­s pandemic, is scheduled to begin in Christchur­ch on August 24 and could last more than three days. The date was confirmed at a High Court session in Christchur­ch on Monday that was attended by some shooting survivors.

Tarrant’s defense team, lawyers Shane Tait and Jonathan Hudson, applied during Monday’s hearing for permission to withdraw as his counsel, a role they have filled since April 2019. They told the court they had been instructed by Tarrant to withdraw as he wishes to exercise his right to represent himself.

Tarrant participat­ed in Monday’s proceeding­s by video link from his Auckland jail. Justice Cameron Mander approved Tarrant’s request to dismiss his lawyers, saying he was satisfied he understood his right to legal representa­tion and wished to waive that right.

A lawyer will still be appointed by the court to provide advice if Tarrant requests it. Mander called for a presentenc­e report and statements from victims for the hearing.

Tarrant faces life imprisonme­nt, with the judge having some discretion in deciding how many years Tarrant must serve before becoming eligible for parole.

The attacks targeting people praying at the mosques shocked New Zealand, where new laws were quickly approved banning the deadliest types of semiautoma­tic weapons. It also prompted global changes to social media protocols after the gunman live-streamed his attack on Facebook, where it was viewed by hundreds of thousands of people.

The sudden guilty plea in March surprised survivors and relatives and relieved many people who had feared Tarrant would try to use his trial as a platform to promote his views.

 ??  ?? REUTERS
REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran