3 Apr 2019; DW: The Australian man accused of killing 50 Muslim worshippers in a shooting spree at two mosques in New Zealand will be charged with 50 counts of murder and 39 counts of attempted murder at a second court appearance on Friday, New Zealand police say.
Police added that other charges "are still under consideration." The suspect had earlier had a single representative murder charge filed against him for the killings on March 15.
Brief court appearance
- The man, 28-year-old Brenton Tarrant, will appear via video link from a maximum-security prison in Auckland.
- The hearing is to "ascertain the defendant's position regarding legal representation" and other procedural issues."
- The man will not be required to enter a plea, the court said.
-
He has sacked a court-appointed lawyer, raising fears he will use the trial to air white supremacist views.
-
Media photographs will not be allowed and reporting will be restricted to avoid prejudicing the potential jurors.
Wounded still in hospitals
Twenty-four people are still in hospital receiving treatment for injuries sustained in the attack, four of them critical, including a 4-year-old girl, health authorities said earlier this week.
What consequences has New Zealand drawn from the attacks? New Zealand has moved quickly to tighten its previously lax gun laws, among other things banning the semi-automatic and automatic military-style weapons used in the attack. The government has said it will also review laws dealing with hate speech.
Will the accused be tried for terrorism? Although the attacks have been termed a terrorist act by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, using New Zealand anti-terrorism laws, introduced after the 9/11 attacks, are little used and could make prosecution more complicated. Prosecutors may still apply them to make it clear that extremism of any kind, whether Islam, right-wing or left-wing, is equally dangerous. Charges of murder and attempted murder are easier to pursue, however.
How is the accused being held? New Zealand's Corrections Department said last month that the accused was being kept away from other prisoners and was without access to television, radio or newspapers. It said he was also not allowed to receive visitors.