The Sun (Malaysia)

Four stabbed in ‘random’ New Zealand knife attack

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A knife-wielding attacker stabbed four people in a New Zealand supermarke­t yesterday, critically injuring three, in a rampage authoritie­s said was “random” and not terror related.

Police said the attack – highly unusual in the normally peaceful South Pacific nation – occurred at a Countdown supermarke­t in central Dunedin at 2.30pm and a man had been taken into custody.

Witnesses told local media a man carrying two knives stabbed staff in the supermarke­t and bystanders who tried to stop him were also injured.

The most recent mass-casualty attack in New Zealand was the Christchur­ch mosques shootings in March 2019, when a white supremacis­t gunman murdered 51 Muslims and severely injured another 40.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said her first question to police was whether the Dunedin attack had national security implicatio­ns but they assured her it did not.

“At this stage, there’s nothing to suggest from the police’s perspectiv­e that this is what they would define as a domestic terror event,” she told reporters.

Southern police district commander Paul Basham characteri­sed the incident as a “random attack” and said the perpetrato­r would be taken to court today.

Authoritie­s initially reported five people were stabbed but later revised it down to four, with Basham saying the attacker received a minor injury during the incident.

The district commander described the actions of those who stopped the man as “nothing short of heroic”, saying they had prevented more injuries.

Basham said three of the victims were due to undergo surgery.

Countdown’s managing director Spencer Sonn said everyone at the supermarke­t chain was “shocked and devastated” by the attack.

New Zealand introduced tough gun laws in the wake of the Christchur­ch attack to limit access to firearms. – AFP

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