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    Christchurch attacks: NZ suspect ordered to undergo mental health tests

    April 05, 2019

    The man accused of killing 50 people in last month's attacks on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, has been ordered to undergo mental health tests.He would be seen by experts to decide if he was fit to stand trial or insane, said high court judge Cameron Mander.

    The suspect faces 50 murder charges and 39 attempted murder charges.Australian Brenton Tarrant, 28, appeared in the courtroom - packed with relatives of some of the victims - via video link from prison.He was not required to enter a plea.It is the deadliest mass shooting attack New Zealand has ever seen.

    Tarrant was previously charged with one murder as a holding measure, but police said Thursday that all the deaths and injuries in the March 15 attacks will be reflected in upgraded charges during his next appearance.“The man arrested in relation to the Christchurch terror attacks will face 50 murder and 39 attempted murder charges when he appears in the High Court in Christchurch on Friday,” they said in a brief statement.

    Tarrant, 28, will appear via video link in the Christchurch court from a maximum-security prison in Auckland.A note from the court this week said the appearance was likely to be brief and would “ascertain the defendant’s position regarding legal representation” and other procedural matters.

    Tarrant sacked a court-appointed lawyer after his first court appearance on March 16, raising fears he wanted to represent himself and attempt to use any trial as a propaganda platform.The court said Tarrant would not be required to enter a plea during Friday’s hearing.The court has now barred media from filming or photographing the accused.

    Police said further charges were being considered against Tarrant -- a self-avowed white supremacist -- but did not specify what they were.They may relate to whether the court deems the attack a terrorist act, something Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has repeatedly labelled the atrocity.

    However, New Zealand’s Terrorism Suppression Act, introduced after the 9/11 attacks, is little used and could complicate the prosecution.Criminal charges, such as murder and attempted murder are easier to pursue, although prosecutors may want the accused tried as a terrorist to make the point that right-wing extremism is just as dangerous as its Islamic counterpart.

    New Zealand is in the process of tightening its gun laws after the attack and the government has also said it will review laws dealing with hate speech.Ardern has called for action by social media giants after the alleged gunman livestreamed the attacks online.The latest update from health authorities earlier this week said 24 people remained in hospital after the attacks, four of them critical, including a four-year-old girl. - AFP

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