The Borneo Post

Gunman ‘faces isolation’ due to prison dangers

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CHRISTCHUR­CH, New Zealand: The white-supremacis­t accused of the Christchur­ch killings will spend the rest of his life in jail if convicted, likely in isolation for his own safety, a New Zealand criminolog­ist and former convict said yesterday.

Attacks at two mosques in the southern city last Friday left 50 Muslim worshipper­s dead and sparked global revulsion.

“He is going to be very highly unpopular in a prison where 80 percent ( of inmates) are Maori or Pasifika ( Pacific islanders) and he is a white supremacis­t,” said Greg Newbold, a professor of criminolog­y at Canterbury University.

“He will have no friends, not even the white guys,” added Newbold, who spent five years in jail on drugs charges – half of that in maximum security – before turning his life around.

New Zealand has no death penalty and alleged shooter Brenton Tarrant, 28, is expected to face a record prison sentence if found guilty of the massacre.

If convicted, he could be sentenced to life imprisonme­nt without parole, criminal lawyer Simon Cullen told AFP, adding that such a sentence would be ‘unpreceden­ted’ for New Zealand.

Newbold said it was possible that Tarrant could spend the rest of his life in ‘segregatio­n’ and at least the first five to ten years in “effective” solitary confinemen­t.

“There’s a lot (of people) in segs who would get at him as well... he would have to be in highlysegr­egated conditions,” Newbold said.

“If he’s convicted, he will be effectivel­y in solitary for a long, long time... he will be locked up most of the time in his own cell.”

New Zealand’s only maximumsec­urity facility is the recently upgraded Auckland Prison at Paremoremo, 25 minutes north of Auckland where the nine-squaremetr­e concrete block cells have a bed, toilet and shower all visible to staff via cameras.

Tarrant is said to be under 24hour surveillan­ce with no access to newspapers, television or other media.

Authoritie­s say Tarrant is being held in a ‘specialist security facility’ outside of Christchur­ch until his next court appearance on April 5. — AFP

 ??  ?? A tribute listing the victims of the mosque attacks is placed at a memorial site in Christchur­ch. — AFP photo
A tribute listing the victims of the mosque attacks is placed at a memorial site in Christchur­ch. — AFP photo

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