The Borneo Post

Thousands gather for Anzac Day amid heightened security

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WELLINGTON/ SYDNEY: Tens of thousands gathered in Australia and New Zealand at Anzac Day memorials yesterday amid heightened security following the shooting massacre at Christchur­ch mosques and deadly suicide bombings of churches and hotels in Sri Lanka.

A Sri Lankan government minister says the bombings on Easter Sunday were retaliatio­n for the Christchur­ch massacre on March 15, in which a lone gunman killed 50 Muslim worshipper­s at two mosques. New Zealand says it has no evidence of a link.

Turkish authoritie­s arrested a suspected member of the Islamic State group they believe was planning to attack an Anzac Day commemorat­ion at Gallipoli attended by hundreds of Australian­s and New Zealanders, Turkish police said.

The arrest didn’t deter some 1,100 Australian­s and New Zealanders who attended a dawn service at Anzac Cove in Turkey.

“I feel quite safe, I feel that if there is any concerns, that it would have been called off and they wouldn’t have put us at risk,” said Chris King, a nurse from New Zealand.

Anzac Day commemorat­es the bloody battle on the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey during World War One. On April 25, 1915, thousands of troops from the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps ( ANZAC) were among a larger Allied force that landed on the narrow beaches of the Gallipoli peninsula, an illfated campaign that would claim more than 130,000 lives.

While the Gallipoli campaign against the Turks failed, the landing date of April 25 has become a major day of remembranc­e in Australia and New Zealand for their troops killed in all military conflicts.

Addressing thousands gathered for a dawn service at the Auckland War Memorial Museum, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said that, in the wake of the Christchur­ch massacre, Anzac Day 2019 should be an even greater uniting force.

“Let us recommit to always rememberin­g our shared

Our sense of independen­ce is as strong as our sense of responsibi­lity to each other and not just as nation states but as human beings. That is part of the Anzac legacy. Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand Prime Minister

humanity that there is more that unites us than divides us,” Ardern said.

“Our sense of independen­ce is as strong as our sense of responsibi­lity to each other and not just as nation states but as human beings. That is part of the Anzac legacy,” she said.

Heavily armed police surrounded the function area and snipers were positioned on rooftops during the ceremony.

Britain’s Prince William, the Duke of Cambridge, paid tribute at the Auckland War Memorial alongside Ardern. He travel to Christchur­ch later yesterday to honour the 50 victims of the shooting.

Heightened security saw about 1,000 police deployed across New Zealand at hundreds of locations and security concerns meant Anzac Day events in Auckland, New Zealand’s largest city, and elsewhere were scaled back. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison addressed a dawn service in Townsville, Queensland, where he shared memories of his grandfathe­r, who served in World War Two.

“Our heroes don’t just belong to the past, they live with us today,” Morrison said. —

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 ??  ?? An Australian soldier stands at attention during the Anzac Day dawn service in Sydney. — AFP photo
An Australian soldier stands at attention during the Anzac Day dawn service in Sydney. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? William (front right) and Ardern (front second right) attend the Anzac Day service at Auckland War Memorial Museum. — AFP photo
William (front right) and Ardern (front second right) attend the Anzac Day service at Auckland War Memorial Museum. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? People walk among gravestone­s after an Australian Memorial service at Lone Pine, at Canakkale Turkey. — AFP photo
People walk among gravestone­s after an Australian Memorial service at Lone Pine, at Canakkale Turkey. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A Australian national flag is pictured in front of a grave at the Australian War Memorial in the northern French city of Villers-Bretonneux during Anzac Day marking 101 years since Australian and NZ Army Corps soldiers landed in Gallipoli during WWI, and were deployed to the Western Front, where they played an important role in the 1916 Battle of the Somme. The memorial in Villers-Bretonneux lists 10,773 names of soldiers of the Australian Imperial Force with no known grave who were killed between 1916, when Australian forces arrived in France and Belgium, and the end of the war. — AFP photo
A Australian national flag is pictured in front of a grave at the Australian War Memorial in the northern French city of Villers-Bretonneux during Anzac Day marking 101 years since Australian and NZ Army Corps soldiers landed in Gallipoli during WWI, and were deployed to the Western Front, where they played an important role in the 1916 Battle of the Somme. The memorial in Villers-Bretonneux lists 10,773 names of soldiers of the Australian Imperial Force with no known grave who were killed between 1916, when Australian forces arrived in France and Belgium, and the end of the war. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? William, lays a wreath during an Anzac Day service at the Auckland War Memorial, in Auckland, New Zealand. — Reuters photo
William, lays a wreath during an Anzac Day service at the Auckland War Memorial, in Auckland, New Zealand. — Reuters photo

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