The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Mourners pay tribute to shooting victims

- By Nick Perry and Juliet Williams The Associated Press

CHRISTCHUR­CH, NEW ZEALAND >> Thousands of people paid tribute Sunday at makeshift memorials to the 50 people slain by a gunman at two mosques in Christchur­ch, while dozens of Muslims stood by to bury the dead when authoritie­s finally release the victims’ bodies.

Hundreds of flowers were piled up amid candles, balloons and notes of grief and love outside the Al Noor mosque and the city’s botanic gardens. As a light rain fell, people clutched each other and wept quietly.

“We wish we knew your name to write upon your heart. We wish we knew your favorite song, what makes you smile, what makes you cry,” read one of the tributes, which contained cutout paper hearts under a nearby tree. “We made a heart for you. 50 hearts for 50 lives.”

Two days after Friday’s attack, New Zealand’s deadliest shooting in modern history, relatives were still waiting for authoritie­s to release the bodies. Islamic law calls for bodies to be cleansed and buried as soon as possible after death, usually within 24 hours.

Supporters arrived from across the country to help with the burials in Christchur­ch and authoritie­s sent in backhoes to dig graves at a site that was newly fenced off and blocked from view with white netting.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said authoritie­s hoped to release all the bodies by Wednesday, and Police Commission­er Mike Bush said authoritie­s were working with pathologis­ts and coroners to complete the task as soon as they could.

“We have to be absolutely clear on the cause of death and confirm their identity before that can happen,” Bush added. “But we are so aware of the cultural and religious needs. So we are doing that as quickly and as sensitivel­y as possible.”

Police said they had released a preliminar­y list of the victims to families, which has helped give closure to some who were waiting for any news.

The suspect in the shootings, 28-year-old white supremacis­t Brenton Harrison Tarrant, appeared in court Saturday amid strict security, shackled and wearing all-white prison garb, and showed no emotion when the judge read one murder charge and said more would likely follow.

Tarrant had posted a jumbled 74-page anti-immigrant manifesto online before the attacks and apparently used a helmetmoun­ted camera to broadcast live video of the slaughter.

Facebook said it removed 1.5 million videos of the shootings during the first 24 hours after the massacre.

The revelation in a late Saturday tweet provided a chilling snapshot of how quickly provocativ­e — and often disturbing — images circulate on the internet.

Ardern said the gunman had sent the manifesto to her office email about nine minutes before the attacks, although she hadn’t gotten the email directly herself. She said her office was one of about 30 recipients and had forwarded the email to parliament­ary security within a couple of minutes of receiving it.

Bush said at a news conference that another body had been found at Al Noor mosque as they finished removing the victims, bringing the number of people killed there to 42. Another seven people were killed at Linwood mosque and one more person died later at Christchur­ch Hospital.

Thirty-four wounded remained at the hospital, where officials said 12 were in critical condition. A 4-year-old girl at a children’s hospital in Auckland was also listed as critical.

 ??  ??
 ?? VINCENT THIAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mourners lay flowers on a wall at the Botanical Gardens Saturday in Christchur­ch, New Zealand. New Zealand’s stricken residents reached out to Muslims in their neighborho­ods and around the country in a fierce determinat­ion to show kindness to a community in pain as a 28-year-old white supremacis­t stood silently before a judge, accused in mass shootings at two mosques that left dozens of people dead.
VINCENT THIAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mourners lay flowers on a wall at the Botanical Gardens Saturday in Christchur­ch, New Zealand. New Zealand’s stricken residents reached out to Muslims in their neighborho­ods and around the country in a fierce determinat­ion to show kindness to a community in pain as a 28-year-old white supremacis­t stood silently before a judge, accused in mass shootings at two mosques that left dozens of people dead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States