SINGAPORE: The harshest criminal punishment ever applied in New Zealand, life behind bars for the Christchurch mosque killer, gave justice and a relief but left a long and painful road to healing for survivors and relatives of those killed in the attack.
Brenton Tarrant, 29, will die in jail under a life sentence without parole that he was handed on Thursday. He killed 51 Muslim worshippers with high powered guns during Friday prayers at two Christchurch mosques in March 2019.
“Finally justice has been served,” said Hina Amir, on the phone from her living room a few suburbs away from the streetfront of Al Noor mosque where her and husband Amir Daud survived a hail of Tarrant’s bullets in their car.
Together on their lounge they watched a livestream of three emotional days of sentencing proceedings, as other survivors and relatives confronted Tarrant directly in court and asked he never be released.
“It’s a relief,” said Amir, 34. “You feel angry, anxious, mixed with a feeling that this guy maybe — maybe — he’s regretting his actions, which we can’t guess because he was so emotionless,” she said.
Also on Amir’s mind this week was Tarrant’s mother.
“She’s a mother,” she said. “Whatever your kid will do, he is your child. That is a kind of a feeling I’ve had for the last three days.”
Outside the courthouse, the sentence was greeted with cheers.
Abdul Alabi Lateef, imam of the second mosque that Tarrant attacked said justice had been done. Gamal Fouda, imam of Al Noor mosque, where 44 people were slain, said no punishment would bring lost loved ones back.
Tarrant has admitted his crimes and said through his lawyer that he did not oppose the sentence. He made no reaction when it was handed to him in court.
Earlier in the week, Hamimah Tuyan, whose husband Zekeriya Tuyan was killed at Al Noor, said the rampage had left behind 34 spouses, 92 children and more than 100 siblings. That network extends across the world, with those bereaved by Tarrant tuning in from Bangladesh and in Pakistan as well as Australia.
“This monster deserves the death penalty,” said Sarwar Hossain, brother in law of Mohammad Omar Faruk, 36, who was killed at Al Noor mosque.
“He has shown no remorse for what he has done. He killed 51 innocent people and wanted to kill more. It is still good he will never be free again.”