Gulf Today

Imran announces award for Christchur­ch hero

‘Pakistan is proud of Naeem Rashid who was martyred trying to tackle the white supremacis­t terrorist & his courage will be recognised with a national award,’ PM tweeted

- Tariq Butt / AFP

Prime Minister Imran Khan on Sunday announced that national award will be conferred posthumous­ly on Mian Naeem Rashid, a Pakistani citizen who lost his life while atempting to prevent a terrorist from shooting worshipper­s at a mosque in New Zealand on Friday.

Imran spoke as the Pakistani foreign office confirmed that nine of its citizens had been killed in the mass shootings at two mosques in the New Zealand city which claimed the lives of 50 people on Friday, including many who had emigrated from around the world.

“Pakistan is proud of Mian Naeem Rashid who was martyred trying to tackle the White Supremacis­t terrorist & his courage will be recognised with a national award,” Imran Khan tweeted on Sunday.

He said the government was ready to extend all support to families of Pakistan victims of the terrorist atack in Christchur­ch .

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Foreign Office said nine Pakistani nationals were killed in Friday’s atack.

Naeem Rashid also lost a 22-year-old son in the massacre which Bangladesh cricket team escaped narrowly.

Foreign Office spokespers­on Dr Mohammad Faisal Sunday said Zeeshan Raza, his father Ghulam Hussain and mother Karam Bibi have now been confirmed to have embraced martyrdom in the terrorist atack in New Zealand.

“We are in touch with their families. A total of 9 Pakistanis embraced shahadat in the Friday atack,” he added.

Earlier, the New Zealand authoritie­s confirmed that six Pakistanis have lost their lives in one of the most brutal atacks on Muslims in the Western countries.

Sohail Shahid, Syed Jahandad Ali, Syed Areeb Ahmed, Mahboob Haroon, Naeem Rashid and his son Talha Naeem were among those 50 people killed in the terrorist atack.

The Foreign Office said Naeem Rashid, the Pakistani who sacrificed his life to save others at the Al Noor Mosque, will be buried along with his son Talha Naeem, 22, in Christchur­ch.

Rashid became a hero when he embraced martyrdom trying to stop the shooting by launching himself at the gunman. He was a resident of Jinnahabad, Abbotabad, and a professor in New Zealand. He received his education from the Army Burn Hall College and went to New Zealand for higher education, eventually setling there.

In the meantime, 27-year-old Syed Areeb Ahmed was also among the unfortunat­e Pakistanis who died in the Christchur­ch terrorist atack. He was a chartered accountant and was the resident of Block 14, Federal B Area in Karachi. He was declared missing ater the deadly attack. However, the Foreign Office confirmed his death on Saturday.

Rashid’s elder brother Khurshid Alam told AFP in the northweste­rn Pakistani city of Abbottabad that the award “means a lot” to his family.

“I feel very proud,” he said, calling the loss of his brother and nephew a “big, big shock.”

Naeem, he said, had visited the family last year, staying for two months.

“We had a lovely time. He was a man who would be like a kid with children, and like an adult with grown-ups,” Alam said.

Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said the award would be given on March 23, Pakistan Day.

He confirmed that nine Pakistani citizens had been killed in the atack while one was in critical condition.

One “is still not out of danger but he is being treated,” he told reporters in Islamabad without identifyin­g the victim.

Qureshi said families of six of the victims have decided to bury them in Christchur­ch, while the other three want to bring the remains to Pakistan.

“Whatever the families will decide, we will respect it and fulfil their wishes,” he said, adding that flags will be flown at half-mast in Pakistan on Monday in honour of the victims.

Officials in Pakistan’s picturesqu­e northern areas also confirmed that the main suspect, 28-year-old white supremacis­t Brenton Tarrant, had visited the region as a tourist in October, staying for more than a week.

Syed Israr Hussain, owner of Osho Thang Hotel in Minapin Nagar, told AFP: “(Tarrant) ... stayed for two days before leaving for Khunjerab (Pass, on the border with China).

“He was a decent and quiet guy.”

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 ?? Agence France-presse ?? Rizwan Rashid, brother of Naeem Rashid, shows his family picture at Naeem house in Abbottabad on Sunday.
Agence France-presse Rizwan Rashid, brother of Naeem Rashid, shows his family picture at Naeem house in Abbottabad on Sunday.

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