Dayton Daily News

Mosque shooter won’t speak at sentencing

- ByNickPerr­y

CHRISTCHUR­CH, NEW ZEALAND—

On a day when the poetic words of love froma daughter to her murdered father brought many people to tears in a New Zealand courtroom, the white supremacis­twho killed him and 50 other worshipper­s at two mosques said he wouldn’t speak before he is sentenced.

Gunman Brent on Harrison Tarrant had earlier pleaded guilty tomurder, attempted murder and terrorism for the March 2019 attacks. After earlier firing his lawyers and deciding to defend himself, he could have spoken on the final day of his sentencing hearing, scheduled for Thursday.

But the 29-year-oldAustral­ian told the judgeWedne­sday he didn’t plan to say anything and instead a standby lawyer would make a short statement on his behalf.

Over the first three days of the hearing, 90 survivors and family members told the judge about the pain and aftermath of the attacks. Many said Justice Cameron Mander should hand down the maximumava­ilable sentence — life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.

The hearing has provided some degree of catharsis. Some chose to yell at the gunman and give him the finger. Others called him a monster, a coward, a rat. Some sung verses from the Quran or addressed him in Arabic. A few spoke softly to Tarrant, saying they forgave him.

Sara Qasem spoke about her beloved father.

She said she wonders if, in his last moments, hewas frightened or in pain, and wishes she could have been there to hold his hand. She told the gunman to remember her dad’s name, Abdelfatta­h Qasem.

“All a daughter everwants is her dad. I want to go on more road trips with him. I want to smell his garden-sourced cooking. His cologne,” she said. “I want to hear him tell me more about the olive trees in Palestine. I want to hear his voice. My dad’s voice. My baba’s voice.”

Tarrant has shown little emotion during the sentencing. He has watched the speakers, occasional­ly giving a small nod or covering his mouth as he laughs at jokes, often made at his expense.

Qasem said Tarrant had made a choice.

“A conscious, stupid, irresponsi­ble, cold-blooded, selfish, disgusting, heinous, foul, uninformed and evil choice,” she said.

She said she pitied Tarrant’s coarse and tainted heart, and his narrow view of the world that couldn’t embrace diversity.

“Take a look around this courtroom,” she said to the gunman. “Who is the ‘other’ here, right now, is it us, or is it you? I think the answer is pretty clear.”

Qasem said that love will always win.

Tarrant is noticeably thinner than when he was first arrested. At the current hearing, he hasn’t shown the brazenness he did at his first court appearance the day after the attacks, when he made a hand gesture sometimes adopted by white supremacis­ts.

The attacks targeting people praying at the Al Noor and Linwood mosques shocked New Zealand and prompted new laws banning the deadliest types of semi-automatic weapons. They also prompted global changes to social media protocols after the gun man live streamed his attack on Facebook, where it was viewed by hundreds of thousands of people.

Also speaking at Wednesday’s hearing was A had Na bi, whose fatherHaji­was killed. Animposing­man, AhadNabi stared at the gunman and gavehimthe finger with both hands.

“You have become trash of society,” Nabi said.

 ?? JOHN KIRK-ANDERSON / POOL PHOTOVIA AP ?? BrentonHar­rison Tarrant sits on Day 3 at the Christchur­ch High Court for sentencing in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, Wednesday.
JOHN KIRK-ANDERSON / POOL PHOTOVIA AP BrentonHar­rison Tarrant sits on Day 3 at the Christchur­ch High Court for sentencing in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States