There Was a Terrorist Attack In New Zealand 2 Weeks Ago

Oppostion Is Mafia

Minister (2k+ posts)

The attacker caught police attention in 2016 and a year later was stopped at an airport, apparently heading for Syria.
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Ahamed Samsudeen was named by the New Zealand government as the person behind the attack in Auckland. Pic: Greg Bowker/New Zealand Herald via AP

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The man who stabbed seven people at a New Zealand supermarket has been named as Ahamed Samsudeen.
The 32-year-old had been assessed by authorities as such a high risk that he was being monitored by up to 30 police officers in the weeks leading up to the attack.
Samsudeen, who had arrived in New Zealand from Sri Lanka in 2011 on a student visa, had been charged a number of times with offences such as possessing knives and extremist publications.

NZ terror suspect thought to have tried to travel to Syria

In May 2017, he was also arrested at Auckland Airport where police suspected he was heading for Syria.
He was fighting deportation when he died, having appealed a 2018 decision to revoke his refugee status after authorities found he had fabricated documents.
"My understanding is that in the process of investigation into the terrorist, it was discovered that some of the documents that he had used in order to get his refugee status looked to have been fabricated," New Zealand's Deputy Prime Minister Grant Robertson said on Sunday.
Samsudeen's appeal meant he was allowed to stay in the country until a final decision was made. A hearing was due to take place this month, but it was delayed again due to coronavirus, with no date set.
New Zealand Police Commissioner Andrew Coster and Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told reporters on Saturday that the man had caught the attention of police in 2016 when he expressed extremist views and shared violent videos online.
Between then and Friday's attack, he spent three years in jail in relation to a number of charges, before being released in July this year under certain conditions.
Ms Ardern said surveillance had started "immediately" after his release but Mr Coster said that despite officers being "very good at what they do", they faced an extremely difficult job.
Their subject "had demonstrated a high level of paranoia about surveillance activity" - he was so paranoid that he had previously challenged members of the public who he thought were following him.
Auckland is also under COVID-19 restrictions, and fewer people on the streets meant officers found it more difficult to follow the man closely without being noticed.
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Police had been monitoring the attacker since his release from custody in July. Pic: AP
This meant that they had not been able to move around Lynnmall's Countdown supermarket with him on Friday afternoon.
Mr Coster said there had been "nothing unusual" about the attacker's routine as he travelled to the supermarket by train, grabbed a trolley and shopped as normal for 10 minutes.
But then he is believed to have taken a knife from the shelves of the store before stabbing people at random.
Mr Coster said that the man was shot dead by police 60 seconds after the officers became aware of shouting and people running away, although the first stabbing had occurred up to 90 seconds before then, he said.
Five victims remain in hospital - three of them in a critical condition and two stable - while two others were treated in hospital and are recovering at home.
Ms Ardern said there were many details yet to be released about the attacker and the efforts to keep him detained.
She also indicated she would continue her stance on not mentioning the names of terrorists, something she made a point of after a terrorist killed 51 people at two mosques in the South Island city of Christchurch two years ago.
She said on Saturday: "No terrorist alive or deceased deserves their name to be shared for the infamy they are seeking."
Ms Ardern also talked about efforts to introduce a law that would have allowed the prosecution of those planning to commit terrorist acts.
A draft bill was introduced in April, with its first reading in May, and there were efforts to speed up its passage even on the day of the attack.
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NZ terror attack witness 'lucky to even be here'

The bill was not brought about specifically to deal with the attacker, Ms Ardern said, but she acknowledged that, as his release had drawn nearer in July, it had appeared that under current laws, "we were reaching the point where all legal avenues were exhausted".
When asked if such a bill could have kept the attacker in custody for longer and, therefore, possibly prevented the stabbings, she said: "I don't think it's fair to make an assumption that law change itself would have made a difference in this case."
She revealed that, at times, there had been "up to 30" police officers monitoring the attacker for the 53 days between his release into the community and the stabbings.
But she added: "When you have a highly motivated lone actor like this individual, it is incredibly tough."

Analysis: New Zealand attack raises uncomfortable questions for authorities

Mr Coster said that officers at the scene had "acted exactly the way we would have expected them to... with great bravery and professionalism".
He also praised members of the public who had been in the supermarket, many of whom tried to help the victims, including one who had advanced medical training.
Ms Ardern encouraged New Zealanders to "be kind" to those affected by the attack, adding: "Please wrap your arms around all of our victims - those of yesterday and those of the past."
 
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hkniazi

Minister (2k+ posts)
Some poor person, mentaly depressed and deranged, and they knew it. they put him on a rekky. didnt put him in a hospital but gave him all the chance to prove themselves to be a hero. so they can put him in the same boat as that australian, who after killing 50 people is still living.
well they didnt put them in the same boat, otherwise one be living or another one would be dead as well.
 

HSiddiqui

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Some poor person, mentaly depressed and deranged, and they knew it. they put him on a rekky. didnt put him in a hospital but gave him all the chance to prove themselves to be a hero. so they can put him in the same boat as that australian, who after killing 50 people is still living.
well they didnt put them in the same boat, otherwise one be living or another one would be dead as well.
We will be a bunch of idiots if we do not understand who is behind this and the same power will be behind England's team refusal that we should expect. It is the power that wanted Pakistan to do more, Pakistan took a stand on principles and they don't like it. Now they are trying to bring Pakistan on its knees for misbehaving from the masters, this is a clear message from that power that we are the masters, rest of the world is subject.
Pakistan must not give up on its sovereignty and expedite its move towards the new block and let these dictators of the world go to hell.
 

hkniazi

Minister (2k+ posts)
self respect is all what Pakistan needs.
elsecase throw these BBs down the well and spit on `em

BB, stands for Big Bombs