Families of NZ shooting victims receive bodies for burial

NZ police release bodies of six Christchurch attack victims

The families of New Zealand attack victims have received six bodies, according to New Zealand police.

There is growing anguish over a lack of progress by officials tasked with identifying the bodies.

In a statement on Tuesday evening, police said six other bodies were ready to be released having been “identified to the satisfaction” of coroners tasked with distinguishing the 50 victims killed last week in the Pacific country’s worst-ever mass shooting.

Autopsies had been completed on all those killed, the statement added.

“While identification may seem straightforward the reality is much more complex, particularly in a situation like this,” the police statement said. 

“Our absolute priority is to get this right and ensure that no mistakes are made,” it added.

Anguish over delayed burials

The police announcement came against a backdrop of growing frustrations within Christchurch’s Muslim community over the release of the bodies of Friday’s attack, with families eager to bury their loved ones thwarted from doing so to date.

Muslims customarily bury the deceased within 24 hours of death. Before their burial, the bodies are washed and wrapped in a white shroud so that funeral prayers can be conducted.

On Sunday, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said some bodies would be returned to victims’ families the same evening and expressed hope that all of those killed would be with their relatives again by Wednesday at the latest.

It now seems unlikely that that will be the case, however, with coroners and police yet to confirm the identity of 38 of those killed at the Al Noor and Linwood mosques in what Ardern has branded a “terrorist” attack. 

Volunteers at a makeshift victim support centre in Christchurch, set up in the wake of the massacre, said the Muslim community’s initial patience with the authorities’ processes was beginning to run out.

“They were understanding but no longer as much now” Javed Dadabhai, who is part of a team at the support centre helping to organise the release of bodies and burials, told Al Jazeera.

“The mood is starting to shift, there’s still nothing the families can do about it because it’s not something they can push, but there’s a bit more venting starting to happen,” he added.

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