The Columbus Dispatch

Man killed after he stabs 6 people in New Zealand

Prime minister calls incident terror attack

- Nick Perry

WELLINGTON, New Zealand – New Zealand authoritie­s were so worried about an extremist inspired by the Islamic State group they were following him around the clock and were able to shoot and kill him within 60 seconds after he unleashed a frenzied knife attack that wounded six people Friday at an Auckland supermarke­t.

Three of the shoppers were taken to Auckland hospitals in critical condition, police said. Another was in serious condition, while the other two were in moderate condition.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said the incident was a terror attack. She said the man was a Sri Lankan national who was inspired by the Islamic State group and was well known to the nation’s security agencies.

Ardern said she had been personally briefed on the man in the past but there had been no legal reason for him to be detained.

“Had he done something that would have allowed us to put him into prison, he would have been in prison,” Ardern said.

The attack unfolded at about 2:40 p.m. at a Countdown supermarke­t in New Zealand’s largest city.

Police Commission­er Andrew Coster said a police surveillan­ce team and a specialist tactics group had followed the man from his home in the suburb of Glen Eden to the supermarke­t in New Lynn.

But while they had grave ongoing concerns about the man, they had no

particular reason to think he was planning an attack on Friday, Coster said. The man appeared to be going into the store to do his grocery shopping.

“He entered the store, as he had done before. He obtained a knife from within the store,” Coster said. “Surveillan­ce teams were as close as they possibly could be to monitor his activity.”

Witnesses said the man shouted “Allahu akbar” – meaning God is great – and started stabbing random shoppers, sending people running and screaming.

Coster said that when the commotion started, two police from the special tactics group rushed over. He said the man charged at the officers with the knife and so they shot and killed him.

One bystander video taken from inside the supermarke­t records the sound of 10 shots being fired in rapid succession.

Coster said there would be questions about whether police could have reacted even more quickly. He said that the man was very aware of the constant surveillan­ce and they needed to be some distance from him for it to be effective.

Ardern said the attack was violent and senseless, and she was sorry it had happened.

“What happened today was despicable. It was hateful. It was wrong,” Ardern said. “It was carried out by an individual. Not a faith, not a culture, not an ethnicity. But an individual person who is gripped by ideology that is not supported here by anyone or any community.”

Ardern said the man had first moved to New Zealand in 2011 and had been monitored by security agencies since 2016. She said authoritie­s are confident he acted alone in the attack.

 ?? ALEX BURTON/NEW ZEALAND HERALD VIA AP ?? A police officer stands outside a supermarke­t in Auckland, New Zealand, after a man who stabbed six people was fatally shot.
ALEX BURTON/NEW ZEALAND HERALD VIA AP A police officer stands outside a supermarke­t in Auckland, New Zealand, after a man who stabbed six people was fatally shot.

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