New Zealand Shooting: Brits Hold Candlelit Vigils After Mosque Attacks

“It is a very important time to bring people together and not to try and divide."
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Hundreds gathered on Friday night in London's Hyde Park for a vigil in tribute to those killed in the New Zealand mosque attack.
Australian Associated Press

Hundreds of mourners stood in silence to honour those killed in the New Zealand shootings.

Flowers and candles were laid as night fell on the peaceful gathering at the New Zealand memorial in central London’s Hyde Park.

Organiser Zaharan Sofi, said she spent Friday her 30th brithday, feeling “very emotional”.

Sofi, a corporate accountant of Brixton, south London, said: “I am a British Muslim and I wanted to make sure that people come together.

“It is a very important time to bring people together and not to try and divide.

“Bringing people together is how you deal with terrorism. In this sensitive time and in our society, it is important that we all know we are human beings first.”

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Flowers and candles were laid as night fell on the peaceful gathering.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The event was aimed at showing solidarity and to provide comfort after the horror of the Christchurch shootings in which at least 49 people were killed at two New Zealand mosques.

A minutes silence and traditional Moari music were part of the moments of reflection. It came at the same time as events in other cities, including at St Ann’s Square in Manchester.

Meanwhile, hundreds of people, of nationalities including British-based New Zealanders, attended and stood in respectful silence in Hyde Park.

New Zealand couple Blair Godby, 25, originally of Invercargill, and Amy Louise Mill, 24, originally of Nelson, both said that waking up to hear that terror had struck their homeland was a “shock”.

Godby said: “It is just hurtful and just plain shocking.

“New Zealand is very small, and now so far away.

“I have always taken such pride in these sorts of things not happening.

“It feels like a betrayal.

“Coming here and knowing that we are around New Zealanders brings a feeling that we are together and can send some if that support back to the communities at home.”

Mill, who said she had always felt New Zealand was “a safe haven”, added: “Being here makes you feel a little connected to you community in a way.

“It is a little thing we can do to help acknowledge the 49 people who were murdered and the communities who are mourning them.”

Written on a white balloon fluttering among the tributes was the message: “Heartfelt sympathies to everyone. RIP to the victims. There is no such place for hatred in my country. We carry you in our hearts. Know you are loved.”

A wreath of white roses marked “from the people of Australia,” a kiwi bird soft toy and a handwritten placard which read “We Stand With New Zealand” were also among the tributes offered.

It came as New Zealand’s prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, spoke against the “rhetoric of racism, division and extremism” at a press conference on Saturday morning local time.

Ardern said: “I want to finish by saying that while the nation grapples with a form of grief and anger that we have not experienced before, we are seeking answers.

“As is the entire nation, we are all unified in grieving together.”

She added: “Rhetoric of racism, division and extremism has no place not only in New Zealand but I would say in a society as a whole.”

Adern told the same press conference that the suspected killer had five firearms.

She said there were two semi-automatic weapons, two shotguns and a lever-action firearm. He had obtained a gun licence in November 2017.

She said: “Our gun laws will change. There were attempts to change the law in 2005 and 2012, and after an inquiry in 2017. Now is the time for change.”

Ardern said advice for mosques to close remains in place and that a police presence will continue.