The Herald (South Africa)

New Zealand pays tribute to victims

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New Zealanders flocked to pay tribute on Sunday to the 50 worshipper­s slain in a twin mosque attack, as families clamoured for the return of their dead.

Coroners said they hoped to let grieving relatives fulfil Islamic burial customs soon, but insisted they had to move carefully through their investigat­ion into the horrific multiple murder.

As New Zealand grappled to come to terms with the slaughter – the worst attack on Muslims in a Western country – tales of heroism, suffering and grace began to emerge.

Farid Ahmad, whose 44year-old wife Husna was killed as she rushed back into a mosque to rescue him, refused to harbour hatred toward the alleged gunman, Australian­born, self-avowed white nationalis­t Brenton Tarrant.

“I would say to him ‘I love him as a person’,” Ahmad, who uses a wheelchair, said.

Asked if he forgave the 28year-old suspect, he said: “Of course. The best thing is forgivenes­s, generosity, loving and caring, positivity.”

Husna Ahmad was among four women believed to have been killed by Tarrant, who documented his radicalisa­tion and two years of preparatio­ns in a lengthy, meandering and conspiracy-filled far-right “manifesto”.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said her office and 30 other officials had received the document by e-mail about nine minutes before the attack.

“It did not include a location, it did not include specific details,” she said, adding that it was sent to security services within two minutes of receipt.

The country remained on high alert on Sunday, with police closing an airport in the southern city of Dunedin – where Tarrant had lived – after an unidentifi­ed package was spotted on the airfield.

The dead from Friday’s attack span generation­s, aged between three and 77, according to a sombre list circulated among relatives.

Some victims came from the neighbourh­ood, others from as far afield as Egypt or Fiji.

At least two of the dead – a father and son – came from the same family.

“It’s a massacre, what else do they need to know?” school principal Sheikh Amjad Ali said, expressing frustratio­n with the wait for loved ones’ remains.

Islamic custom dictates that the dead should be buried within 24 hours, but strained authoritie­s, desperate to make sure no mistakes are made or the complex investigat­ion harmed, said a quick process was difficult.

Ardern said she expected all the dead would have been returned to their families by Wednesday.

Authoritie­s said 34 people remained in hospital.

Among those fighting for their lives is four-year-old Alin Alsati, who was praying alongside her father Wasseim at the Al Noor mosque when she was shot at least three times.

Her father, who was also shot, recently emigrated to New Zealand from Jordan.

“Please pray for me and my daughter,” he pleaded in a Facebook video message from his hospital bed before undergoing surgery.

The number of dead and injured could have been higher, were it not for people like Afghan refugee Abdul Aziz.

Aziz was at the Linwood mosque with his four sons when he rushed the attacker armed with the only weapon he could find – a hand-held credit card machine.

When Aziz heard one of his four sons cry “Daddy, please come back inside!”, he picked up an empty shotgun discarded by the gunman and shouted “come on here” repeatedly in an effort to draw him away from his sons and the other worshipper­s.

“I just wanted to save as many lives as I could, even if I lose my life,” he said.

Meanwhile, Tarrant’s family said on Sunday they were stunned and shattered by his horrific deed.

“We’re all gob-smacked, we don’t know what to think,” Tarrant’s grandmothe­r, Marie Fitzgerald, told Australia’s Channel Nine network.

“It’s just so much to take in that somebody in our family could do anything like this,” she said from her home in New South Wales.

Tarrant grew up in the small town of Grafton and she said he had shown no signs he would later become enthralled with white nationalis­t ideology, hatred and violence.

The mosque attacks have shaken this usually peaceful country, which prides itself on welcoming refugees fleeing violence or persecutio­n.

On Monday, Ardern, who spent Sunday morning with the Muslim community of Wellington, will gather her cabinet to discuss changing the country’s gun laws.

That could include a ban on semi-automatic weapons of the type used by Tarrant.

A series of reform attempts in recent years have failed.

The cabinet will also hear from intelligen­ce agencies about how a self-avowed fascist legally purchased and trained with his armoury without drawing the attention of the authoritie­s.

Ardern also wants answers from social media giants over the live-streaming of the carnage.

Facebook said it had removed 1.5-million videos of the attack around the world in the first 24 hours.

‘It’s just so much to take in that somebody in our family could do anything like this’ Marie Fitzgerald

ATTACKER’S GRANDMOTHE­R

 ?? Picture: CARL COURT/GETTY IMAGES ?? NATION MOURNS: Residents look at the flowers and tributes at the wall of the Botanic Gardens on Sunday in Christchur­ch following the shooting, above, while women comfort each other, below
Picture: CARL COURT/GETTY IMAGES NATION MOURNS: Residents look at the flowers and tributes at the wall of the Botanic Gardens on Sunday in Christchur­ch following the shooting, above, while women comfort each other, below
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 ?? Picture: AFP ?? HAILED A HERO: Abdul Aziz
Picture: AFP HAILED A HERO: Abdul Aziz

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