The Citizen (KZN)

New twist in NZ mosque shootings

ATTACKER RADICALISE­D EARLIER THAN THOUGHT Findings by University of Auckland study clash with those of 2020 state inquiry.

- Wellington

The white supremacis­t who murdered 51 people in the 2019 New Zealand mosque shootings was radicalise­d “earlier than previously thought”, researcher­s have found after discoverin­g violent posts written years before the atrocity.

Brenton Tarrant shot and killed 51 Muslim worshipper­s across two Christchur­ch mosques in March 2019, carrying out New

Zealand’s deadliest modern-day mass shooting.

New Zealand researcher­s have been pouring through Tarrant’s posts on notorious online message boards to better understand what sparked the atrocity – and if it could have been prevented.

They discovered Tarrant started formulatin­g his plan to attack people of colour inside places of worship at least four years before the Christchur­ch killings. The new research, published yesterday, clashes with a 2020 government inquiry that found that Tarrant “was not a regular commenter on extreme right-wing sites”.

“He radicalise­d a lot earlier than previously thought,” University of Auckland lecturer Chris Wilson, who led the research team, told AFP. Two threads in March and August of 2018 indicated his growing hatred of the Muslim community, Wilson said.

As most of Tarrant’s posts were anonymous, the researcher­s used a combinatio­n of indicators to unravel his identity – such as the time, date and location of his posts.

Wilson said he would like to see the new research used by government agencies to help identify people before they were fully radicalise­d. “We need to be focusing and looking in the right places, using the resources in a more sophistica­ted way,” he said.

Tarrant was sentenced in August 2020 to life imprisonme­nt without parole, after admitting to 51 charges of murder, 40 of attempted murder and one of terrorism.

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