Dozens killed in Christchurch mosque attack | CNN

Dozens killed in Christchurch mosque attack

Police stand outside a mosque in Linwood, Christchurch, New Zealand, Friday, March 15, 2019. Multiple people were killed during shootings at two mosques full of people attending Friday prayers. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)
Scenes from one of New Zealand's 'darkest days'
02:26 - Source: CNN

What we know now

  • Terror attack on mosques: At least 50 people were killed and 50 wounded, in a hate-filled terror attack targeting two mosques in the New Zealand city of Christchurch.
  • The suspect: The shooter, identified as 28-year-old Australian citizen Brenton Harrison Tarrant, has been charged with murder. Authorities found an 87-page manifesto filled with anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim ideas.
  • Gun laws will be tightened: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she would change the country’s firearm laws in response to the attacks
  • Here’s how you can help the victims.
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Our live coverage has moved

The latest updates on the aftermath of the Christchurch terror attack can be found here.

Many victims required multiple surgeries, head of surgery says

Thirty-four patients are still receiving treatment at Christchurch Hospital and two were discharged on Sunday, Christchurch Hospital Head of Surgery Greg Robertson said in a press conference.

Police aren't saying yet whether any other suspects were involved in the attack

So far, only suspected shooter Brenton Tarrant has been charged with murder for the attack on two mosques in Christchurch on Friday, according to New Zealand Police Commissioner Mike Bush.

Bush said at a press conference Sunday that others had been arrested but that police did not believe they were involved in the attack.

“I will not be saying anything conclusive until we are absolutely convinced as to how many people were involved, but we hope to be able to give that advice over the next few days,” Bush added.

Two other people were apprehended, Bush said, and police seized a firearm from them. The woman was released without charge, while the other man was charged with firearms offenses.

One additional man was also arrested in the aftermath of the shooting, but police said they don’t believe he was involved in the attack either. Bush said the man was helping get children to safety but that he armed himself, “which is not the right approach.”

A father of four chased off the shooter during the attack

Police stand outside a mosque in Linwood in Christchurch, New Zealand, on March 15. Multiple people were killed during shootings at two mosques full of people attending Friday prayers. (AP/Mark Baker)

Abdul Aziz Wahabzadah says he was inside Linwood Islamic Centre in Christchurch, New Zealand, when a gunman opened fire.

Wahabzadah grabbed a credit card reader and ran outside the building. He threw the credit card reader at the suspect while shouting at him in an attempt to distract the shooter away from the mosque.

“I was screaming at the guy, ‘Come here, I’m here’,” Wahabzadah told CNN. “I just want him to put more focus on me than go inside the masjid (“mosque”). But unfortunately, he got himself to the masjid.”

Wahabzadah’s four children were inside the mosque.

Wahabzadah said the shooter then dropped his weapon and ran back to his car. Wahabzadah said he thought the shooter went to get more weapons from his car.

Wahabzadah told CNN he ran after the shooter and picked up a discarded weapon of the gunman, which he described as a “shotgun.” He threw it at the gunman’s car, shattering his window.  

“When he sees me I am chasing with a gun, he sat in his car”, Wahabzadah said. “And I just got the gun and throw it on his window like an arrow and blast his window. He thought probably I shot him or something and then he drive off.”

Wahabzadah didn’t stop there. He said he continued chasing after him but the shooter did a U-turn and raced off. 

It was then that Wahabzadah said he returned to the mosque to discover the scope of the violence.

Death toll rises to 50

Fifty people were killed and 50 others were wounded in the attack, New Zealand Police Commissioner Mike Bush told reporters.

The death toll had been previously reported as 49.

A Syrian refugee and his teenage sons, a Pakistani academic and a blossoming student are among the victims of Friday’s attacks, the biggest massacre in New Zealand’s modern history.

As authorities begin to release information on the victims, here’s what we know so far.

SOON: New Zealand police give an update on the attack

New Zealand Police Commissioner Mike Bush is about to speak to reporters in Wellington to provide an update on the Christchurch attack.

Watch it here.

49 prayer mats for the 49 victims

A group of people in Melbourne, Australia, took part in a vigil for the victims of the attacks at two Christchurch, New Zealand, mosques, according to Zahraa Albadri.

They put out 49 prayer mats with candles for the 49 victims.

Here’s a photo from the scene:

Survivor posts video from hospital bed

Wasseim Alsati, who survived the Christchurch terror attack, posted a Facebook video from his hospital bed on Friday thanking people for their support.

In the caption, Alsati says he was shot three times and “was in a lot of pain.”

Watch here:

Here’s what he said:

Candles burn outside one of the New Zealand mosques

This photo was taken at 2:45 a.m. across the street from the Al Noor mosque, where 41 people were killed on Friday.

Flowers line the area behind the police tape and candles are burning to remember the victims.

In a video on Twitter, police officers were seen earlier taking flowers from a memorial into their police car so they could place them outside the mosque.

Shooting suspect visited Pakistan in 2018

A hotel owner confirmed to CNN that Christchurch shooting suspect Brenton Tarrant visited Pakistan in October 2018.

“He was a regular tourist,” owner Syed Israr Ahmed told CNN. “All I remember was that he was a fan of local food. He would leave the hotel in the morning and come back in the evenings.” 

Ahmed owns Osho Thang Hotel in Pakistan’s northern town of Nagar. He posted a picture of Tarrant online when he visited the hotel but has since removed it.

Six Pakistanis were among the 49 people killed in the mass shooting on Friday, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry confirmed.

New Zealand Police Association supports call for gun law changes

The New Zealand Police Association says it fully supports Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s calls to change the country’s gun laws.

“Jacinda Ardern has said emphatically that New Zealand’s gun laws will change and that now is the time for that change,” Police Association President Chris Cahill said in a statement.

Cahill added that the debate that New Zealand is about to have on access to certain firearms should be short and swift.

“There is no place in the upcoming debate for the radical gun lobby which has made its presence felt in previous attempts to make our country safer,” he said. “That input undoubtedly contributed to the rejection of most of the select committee recommendations on tightening our gun laws.”

He continued:

New Zealand’s weapons legislation is considered more relaxed than most Western countries outside of the US. Gun owners do need a license but they aren’t required to register their guns – unlike in neighboring Australia.

That said, gun-inflicted deaths are relatively low in New Zealand. 

UK official calls on tech companies to stop video of attack from spreading

United Kingdom Home Secretary Sajid Javid called the livestreaming of the New Zealand attack “absolutely repellant,” and called on tech companies to do more to stop the video from spreading.

“Online platforms have a responsibility not to do the terrorists’ work for them,” Javid wrote in an article for The Daily Express on Saturday.

He added that the attacker filmed the shooting “with the intention of spreading his ideology.”

“Allowing terrorists to glorify in the bloodshed or spread more extremist views can only lead to more radicalisation and murders,” Javid said.

Javid also called upon people to stop viewing and sharing the “sick material.”

He mentioned a new policy proposal that will be introduced in the UK to ensure that tech companies that don’t “clean up their platforms” would have to answer to the law.

Far-right Italian official: Only extremism that 'deserves attention' is Islamic

Italy’s Minister of the Interior Matteo Salvini was asked whether attacks like the one in New Zealand could happen in his home country because of his aggressive, anti-immigrant rhetoric.

“The only extremism that deserves attention is the Islamic one,” Salvini said on Friday.

The far-right politician added that while any violence linked to extremists should be condemned, other forms of extremism like the right-wing extremism that inspired the New Zealand attacks were just “nostalgia.”

“The fringes of the extreme right and the extreme left represent nostalgia, removed from world and from time, deserving of moral condemnation,” Salvini said. “If there is an extremism for which I set the goals of the acts I sign at the Ministry of the Interior, it is extremism of an Islamic mould.”

Salvini has clashed with the European Union over his extreme stance on immigration.

Syrian refugee among the dead

Khaled Mustafa, a refugee from Syria, was killed in the attack on Friday, Syrian Solidarity New Zealand said on its Facebook page. He was with his two sons during Friday Prayers when the shooter opened fire.

“Khaled Mustafa is a Syrian Refugee who has come with his family (wife and three children) to NZ, which they thought was the safe heaven, in 2018,” Syrian Solidarity New Zealand said. “One of Khaled’s two sons has gone under a six hour operation last night in Christchurch Hospital.” 

The group’s spokesperson, Ali Akil, told New Zealand news media company Stuff that he had spoken to Mustafa’s wife, who was “devastated and deeply horrified.” He added that she did not wish to speak with the media during this time, Stuff reported. 

Synagogues close in New Zealand on "police advice"

Synagogues and Jewish community centers in New Zealand are reportedly being closed on Sunday, following Friday’s shooting attack at two mosques in Christchurch.

“For the first time in history synagogues in NZ are closed on Shabbat following the shocking massacre of Muslims in Christchurch,” Israeli politician Isaac Herzog tweeted Friday.

Herzog added that “the Jewish Agency and the NZ Jewish Council stand in solidarity with the bereaved families. We are united in fighting violent hatred and racism.” Herzog was recently elected chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel.

The Wellington Jewish Community Centre on New Zealand’s North Island informed worshipers that on Facebook that the center would be closed on “police advice.”

“The Wellington Jewish Community Centre will be closed and all activities suspended tomorrow Sunday 17 March on Police advice. Community members should check their email and our member Facebook group for more information and updates. We hope to have an update Sunday,” the center wrote.

Events cancelled as New Zealand sport responds to tragedy

Canterbury Bulldogs players observe a moment of silence before their Rugby League match in Auckland, New Zealand on Saturday.

Few countries are more closely associated with sport than New Zealand - but sporting events are taking a back seat this weekend after Friday’s terror attack.

A cricket test match between New Zealand and Bangladesh, due to be held in Christchurch’s Hagley Oval on Saturday, was cancelled. Bangladesh players had been staying in a hotel in the city when the attacks took place, but the team confirmed all players were safe.

The Plunket Shield, a domestic cricket competition, was also decided with a round of fixtures to go. Canterbury were still in contention to win the trophy, but agreed to withdraw from the running after the attack.

A rugby game between the Highlanders and Crusaders, due to be played at Dunedin’s Forsyth Barr Stadium, was also cancelled. The 28-year-old shooter had been living in Dunedin, a city about 225 miles from Christchurch, New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said.

New Zealand’s world-leading rugby team, the All Blacks, also shared condolences after the attack.

Police move flowers from memorial to lay outside mosque that is taped-off from the public

Police in Christchurch have been receiving praise on social media for their response to Friday’s attack.

One video, which has been liked over a thousand times, shows police officers taking flowers from a memorial into their police car so they can place them outside Al Noor mosque, which is taped-off from the public.

Meanwhile, Canterbury Police - who represent the region to which Christchurch belongs - have thanked people for donating food.

“Cantabrians are so generous,” they wrote. “The family assistance centre at Hagley College has more than enough food! Thank you to everyone who has supported its efforts so far but no more food is required at this stage.”

Suspect "visited Bulgaria last year"

More details about the shooting suspect’s travels throughout Europe are emerging.

28-year-old Brenton Tarrant, who appeared in court Saturday, visited Bulgaria between November 9 and 15 of last year, Bulgarian Prosecutor General Sotir Tsatsarov told journalists on Friday, according to state news agency BTA.

Tarrant arrived in Sofia on a flight from Dubai, rented a car the next day and toured cities connected with Bulgarian history, Tsatsarov said according to BTA. He added that the New Zealand attack suspect had a very good knowledge of the region’s history.

“Our task is to collect information about Brenton Tarrant’s whole visit to Bulgaria and whether he has any ties with Bulgarians,” Tsatsarov said according to BTA. “According to the preliminary information, the Australian had a tourist visa”.

Tsatsarov also told journalists that after leaving Bulgaria, Tarrant went to Romania, traveling from there to Hungary by car.

Turkish officials also told CNN on Saturday that the suspect had spent an extended period of time in Turkey.

New Zealand PM received email with manifesto minutes before attack

Jacinda Ardern speaks at a press conference on Saturday.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s office received an email with the manifesto from the shooter minutes before the attack, Ardern’s chief press secretary Andrew Campbell told CNN.

Campbell confirmed the email was sent minutes before the attack to a “generic” email account that was maintained by staff, and was not seen by the Prime Minister.

The shooter’s hate-filled 87-page manifesto contained anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim ideas, and was also posted online before the attack.

He fled Afghanistan to escape violence, only to watch a man die in his arms

When Ahmed Khan moved to New Zealand as a refugee from Afghanistan 12 years ago, he thought he had left violence and death behind.

But on Friday, as he was praying at Linwood mosque in Christchurch, Khan saw an armed man starting to shoot indiscriminately at worshipers. Khan said he pulled one injured child out of danger and was holding a man who’d been shot in the arm when the gunman returned.

“(The wounded man) was asking for some water. I said to him, ‘calm down, the police are here now’ and stuff. And the gunman came through the window again while I was holding him and shot him in the head. And he was dead,” Khan told CNN.

His is one many heartbreaking stories shared by survivors of Friday’s tragedy, which took place in a city they had trusted was safe.

“We felt it was such a safe city, such a safe country,” a 30-year-old construction project manager, who did not want to be named, told CNN. “The hatred has spread everywhere.”

Ahmad Khan said he watched as a man was shot dead in his arms during one of the mosque shootings.

Related article He fled Afghanistan, only to see death in Christchurch

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