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суббота, 16 марта 2019 г.

«Breaking News» Blood-soaked Christchurch worshipper embodies grief as he wanders from scene of mosque massacre

A blood-soaked Christchurch worshipper was seen wandering away the scene of a mosque massacre that left 49 dead on New Zealand's darkest day. 


Survivors could be seen spilling out of two Christchurch mosques on Friday afternoon with blood covering their clothes after suspected terrorist Brenton Tarrant, 28, unleashed hell.


A worshipper was pictured inconsolably wandering with his tunic turned red in the street outside the Linwood Avenue mosque.


The distraught man was spoken to by a crowd of people outside the police cordon before he crossed the street, his face full of dismay.




The survivor wandered aimlessly from the mosque on Linwood Avenue with blood covering his chest, arms and legs after the terrorist slaughtered 49 people on Friday


The survivor wandered aimlessly from the mosque on Linwood Avenue with blood covering his chest, arms and legs after the terrorist slaughtered 49 people on Friday



The survivor wandered aimlessly from the mosque on Linwood Avenue with blood covering his chest, arms and legs after the terrorist slaughtered 49 people on Friday





Face of utter despair: Seven people were killed at the Linwood Avenue mosque, another later died in hospital after the terrorist attacked the Al Noor mosque three miles away


Face of utter despair: Seven people were killed at the Linwood Avenue mosque, another later died in hospital after the terrorist attacked the Al Noor mosque three miles away



Face of utter despair: Seven people were killed at the Linwood Avenue mosque, another later died in hospital after the terrorist attacked the Al Noor mosque three miles away





A concerned group tried to engage him before he walked away totally devastated


A concerned group tried to engage him before he walked away totally devastated



A concerned group tried to engage him before he walked away totally devastated



Tarrant's sickening film showed casualties crawling across the bloody floor of the Al Noor mosque as the terror suspect unloaded rounds into them.


He used a semi-automatic shotgun as well as a modified semi-automatic rifle as he pummelled victims with multiple bullets.


He had taped magazines to each other and could be seen calmly reloading fresh ammunition into the gun - thought to be an AR-15.


The massacre left 41 at the Al Noor Mosque dead before the suspect journeyed to the Linwood Avenue Mosque where he killed another seven victims, one more later died in hospital.


It is the worst attack of its kind in the country's history and was dubbed its 'darkest day' by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.


New Zealand's stricken residents reached out to Muslims in their neighbourhoods and around the country on Saturday.




A woman (pictured) was seen distressed outside a community center near Masjid Al Noor in Christchurch, and said her husband has been missing since Friday's mosque attack


A woman (pictured) was seen distressed outside a community center near Masjid Al Noor in Christchurch, and said her husband has been missing since Friday's mosque attack



A woman (pictured) was seen distressed outside a community center near Masjid Al Noor in Christchurch, and said her husband has been missing since Friday's mosque attack




The woman was pictured holding up pictures of her missing husband on her mobile phone. He's not been seen since the attack


The woman was pictured holding up pictures of her missing husband on her mobile phone. He's not been seen since the attack



The woman was pictured holding up pictures of her missing husband on her mobile phone. He's not been seen since the attack



Some offered lifts to the supermarket or volunteered to walk with their Muslim neighbours if they felt unsafe.


In online forums, people discussed Muslim food restrictions as they prepared to drop off meals for those affected.


'Love always wins over hate. Lots of love for our Muslim brothers,' read a handwritten card on a wall of flowers in a historic part of the city that stretched a full block.


Still, Muslims were advised to stay away from mosques while the nation's security alert remained at the second-highest level a day after the deadliest shooting in modern New Zealand history. 


Outside one of the two mosques, 32-year-old Ash Mohammed pushed through police barricades in hopes of finding out what happened to his father and two brothers, whose cellphones rang unanswered. An officer stopped him.


'We just want to know if they are dead or alive,' Mohammed told the officer.

Desperate for any news, families and friends of the victims gathered at the city's Hagley College, near the hospital.


They included Asif Shaikh, 44, who said he was among more than 100 people at the Al Noor mosque when the attacker came in.


He said he survived by playing dead, but was desperate to know what happened to his friends who were there with him.


'It's been 36 hours, I haven't heard anything about them,' he said. 


New Zealand, with a population of 5 million, has relatively loose gun laws and an estimated 1.5 million firearms, or roughly one for every three people. But it has one of the lowest gun homicide rates in the world. In 2015, it had just eight.


Ardern said Tarrant was a licensed gun owner who bought the five guns used in the crimes legally. 




Two of Mr Nabi's sons Omar Nabi, 43, and Yama Nabi, 45, appeared outside Christchurch District Court on Saturday morning where they shared photos of their father


Two of Mr Nabi's sons Omar Nabi, 43, and Yama Nabi, 45, appeared outside Christchurch District Court on Saturday morning where they shared photos of their father



Two of Mr Nabi's sons Omar Nabi, 43, and Yama Nabi, 45, appeared outside Christchurch District Court on Saturday morning where they shared photos of their father





Omar (pictured) said his father was one of the first Muslims in New Zealand, opening the Tuam Street mosque in Christchurch, after discovering the country was a 'slice of paradise'


Omar (pictured) said his father was one of the first Muslims in New Zealand, opening the Tuam Street mosque in Christchurch, after discovering the country was a 'slice of paradise'



Omar (pictured) said his father was one of the first Muslims in New Zealand, opening the Tuam Street mosque in Christchurch, after discovering the country was a 'slice of paradise'





Mucad Ibrahim (pictured left) was attending Friday prayers with his father and older brother Abdi Ibrahim (pictured right) when a gunman stormed the al Noor mosque


Mucad Ibrahim (pictured left) was attending Friday prayers with his father and older brother Abdi Ibrahim (pictured right) when a gunman stormed the al Noor mosque



Mucad Ibrahim (pictured left) was attending Friday prayers with his father and older brother Abdi Ibrahim (pictured right) when a gunman stormed the al Noor mosque





Mucad (pictured) reportedly ran from the attacker while his father and brother played dead


Mucad (pictured) reportedly ran from the attacker while his father and brother played dead



Mucad (pictured) reportedly ran from the attacker while his father and brother played dead



'I can tell you one thing right now, our gun laws will change,' Ardern said.


She did not offer too much detail, but said a ban on semi-automatic weapons would be looked at. Neighboring Australia has virtually banned semi-automatic rifles from private ownership since a lone gunman killed 35 people with assault rifles in 1996.


Before Friday's attack, New Zealand's deadliest shooting in modern history took place in 1990 in the small town of Aramoana, where a gunman killed 13 people following a dispute with a neighbour.


Link hienalouca.com

https://hienalouca.com/2019/03/16/blood-soaked-christchurch-worshipper-embodies-grief-as-he-wanders-from-scene-of-mosque-massacre/
Main photo article A blood-soaked Christchurch worshipper was seen wandering away the scene of a mosque massacre that left 49 dead on New Zealand‘s darkest day. 
Survivors could be seen spilling out of two Christchurch mosques on Friday afternoon with blood covering their clothes after suspected terrorist ...


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Dianne Reeves Online news HienaLouca





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