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		New Zealand mosque shootings kill 49 in 
		what PM calls 'terrorist attack' 
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		 [March 15, 2019] 
		By Praveen Menon and Charlotte Greenfield 
 WELLINGTON/CHRISTCHURCH (Reuters) - At 
		least one gunman killed 49 people and wounded more than 40 during Friday 
		prayers at two New Zealand mosques in the country's worst ever mass 
		shooting, which Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern condemned as terrorism.
 
 A gunman broadcast livestream footage on Facebook of the attack on one 
		mosque in the city of Christchurch, mirroring the carnage played out in 
		video games, after publishing a "manifesto" in which he denounced 
		immigrants, calling them "invaders".
 
 New Zealand was placed on its highest security threat level, Ardern 
		said, adding that "this can now only be described as a terrorist 
		attack".
 
 Police said three people were in custody including one man in his late 
		20s who had been charged with murder.
 
 He will appear in court on Saturday.
 
 "We were not chosen for this act of violence because we condone racism, 
		because we are enclave for extremism," Ardern said in a national 
		address. "We were chosen for the fact that we are none of these things. 
		It was because we represent diversity, kindness, compassion, a home for 
		those who share our values.
 
		
		 
		
 "You have chosen us but we utterly reject and condemn you."
 
 Police Commissioner Mike Bush said 49 people had been killed in total. 
		Health authorities said 48 people were being treated for gunshot wounds, 
		including young children.
 
 The video footage widely circulated on social media, apparently taken by 
		a gunman and posted online live as the attack unfolded, showed him 
		driving to one mosque, entering it and shooting randomly at people 
		inside.
 
 Worshippers, possibly dead or wounded, lay huddled on the floor, the 
		video showed. Reuters was unable to confirm the authenticity of the 
		footage.
 
 One man who said he was at the Al Noor mosque told media the gunman was 
		white, blond and wearing a helmet and a bulletproof vest. The man burst 
		into the mosque as worshippers were kneeling for prayers.
 
 "He had a big gun ... he came and started shooting everyone in the 
		mosque, everywhere," said the man, Ahmad Al-Mahmoud. He said he and 
		others escaped by breaking through a glass door.
 
 Forty-one people were killed at the Al Noor mosque, seven at a mosque in 
		the Linwood neighborhood and one died in hospital, police said. 
		Hospitals said children were among the victims.
 
 The visiting Bangladesh cricket team was arriving for prayers at one of 
		the mosques when the shooting started but all members were safe, a team 
		coach told Reuters.
 
 Three Bangladeshis were among the dead and one was missing, the 
		consulate said.
 
 Shortly before the attack began, an anonymous post on the discussion 
		site 8chan, known for a wide range of content including hate speech, 
		said the writer was going to “carry out an attack against the invaders” 
		and included links to a Facebook live stream, in which the shooting 
		appeared, and a manifesto.
 
 The manifesto cited "white genocide", a term typically used by racist 
		groups to refer to immigration and the growth of minority populations, 
		as his motivation.
 
 The Facebook link directed users to the page of a user called 
		brenton.tarrant.9.
 
 A Twitter account with the handle @brentontarrant posted on Wednesday 
		images of a rifle and other military gear decorated with names and 
		messages connected to white nationalism. What looked like the same 
		weapons appeared in the livestream of the mosque attack on Friday.
 
		
		 
		Facebook and Twitter said they would take down content involving the 
		shootings.
 
 KILLINGS CONDEMNED
 
 It was not immediately clear if the attacks at the two mosques were 
		carried out by the same man.
 
 Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said one of the men in custody 
		was Australian.
 
 All mosques in New Zealand had been asked to shut their doors and armed 
		guards posted at them, police said, adding they were not actively 
		looking for any other "identified suspects".
 
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			AOS (Armed Offenders Squad) member following a shooting at the Al 
			Noor mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand, March 15, 2019. REUTERS/SNPA/Martin 
			Hunter 
            
 
            Political and Islamic leaders across Asia and the Middle East 
			condemned the killings.
 "I blame these increasing terror attacks on the current Islamophobia 
			post-9/11," Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan posted on social 
			media. "1.3 billion Muslims have collectively been blamed for any 
			act of terror."
 
 Al-Azhar University, Egypt's 1000-year-old seat of Sunni Islamic 
			learning, said the attacks had "violated the sanctity of the houses 
			of God".
 
 "We warn the attack is a dangerous indicator of the dire 
			consequences of escalating hate speech, xenophobia, and the spread 
			of Islamophobia."
 
 Six Indonesians had been inside one of the mosques, with three 
			managing to escape and three unaccounted for, its foreign minister 
			said.
 
 Afghanistan's ambassador said on Twitter three Afghans had been 
			wounded. Two Malaysians were wounded, their foreign ministry said.
 
 Muslims account for just over 1 percent of New Zealand's population, 
			a 2013 census showed.
 
 'FIRING WENT ON AND ON'
 
 The online footage, which appeared to have been captured on a camera 
			strapped to a gunman's head, showed him driving as music played in 
			his vehicle. After parking, he took two guns and walked a short 
			distance to the mosque where he opened fire.
 
 Over the course of five minutes, he repeatedly shot worshippers, 
			leaving more than a dozen bodies in one room alone. He returned to 
			the car during that period to change guns, and went back to the 
			mosque to shoot anyone showing signs of life.
 
 One man, with blood still on his shirt, said in a television 
			interview that he hid from a gunman under a bench and prayed that he 
			would run out of bullets.
 
 "I was just praying to God and hoping our God, please, let this guy 
			stop" Mahmood Nazeer told TVNZ.
 
 "The firing went on and on. One person with us had a bullet in her 
			arm. When the firing stopped, I looked over the fence, there was one 
			guy, changing his gun."
 
 The video shows the gunman then driving off at high speed and firing 
			from his car. Another video, taken by someone else, showed police 
			apprehending a gunman on a pavement by a road.
 
            
			 
            
 Police said improvised explosive devices were found. The gunman's 
			video had shown red petrol canisters in the back of his car, along 
			with weapons.
 
 The Bangladesh cricket team is in Christchurch to play New Zealand 
			in a third cricket test starting on Saturday.
 
 "They were on the bus, which was just pulling up to the mosque when 
			the shooting begun,” Mario Villavarayen, a team coach, told Reuters 
			in a message. "They are shaken but good.”
 
 The third cricket test was canceled, New Zealand Cricket said later.
 
 Violent crime is rare in New Zealand and police do not usually carry 
			guns. Britain's Queen Elizabeth, the head of state of New Zealand, 
			said she was deeply saddened by the shootings.
 
 Before Friday, New Zealand's worst mass shooting was in 1990 when a 
			gun-mad loner killed 13 men, women and children in a 24-hour rampage 
			in the tiny seaside village of Aramoana. He was killed by police.
 
 (Additional reporting by Tom Westbrook, John Mair and Swati Pandey 
			in Sydney, Ruma Paul in Dhaka and Michael Holden in London; Writing 
			by Micheal Perry; Editing by Robert Birsel and Nick Macfie)
 
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