![]() New Zealand Police Commissioner Mike Bush says the gunman who killed 50 people and wounded dozens of others at two Christchurch mosques Friday acted alone, but may have had support.Īustralian white supremacist Brenton Tarrant was arrested moments after the shootings. Accused shooter was sole gunman, but may have had help, top cop says ![]() ![]() The teen is also accused of posting a photo of one of the mosques with the message "target acquired" and with posting other chat messages "inciting extreme violence," the Herald reported. He was arrested Friday but police have said they don't think he was directly involved in the attack. His request for bail was denied at a court in New Zealand Monday but the judge said his name could be kept out of the public eye. "You know I have lots of support, lots of love, lots of kindness from all of the New Zealand people." Teen charged with distributing gunman's livestream: ReportĪn 18-year-old man has been charged with distributing a livestream of the mass shooting at two mosques Friday, the New Zealand Herald reported, according to the Reuters news service. "I will not change my opinion about New Zealand. No further details were provided."It's good for the world to see what's happened because people around the world, they thought we were terrorists because some stupid people, they said they are Muslims, they go and kill innocent people, they thought we are terrorists," said Abulaban who emigrated to New Zealand from Jordan 17 years ago. In a recent post to Twitter, Musk told his 119 million followers that hate speech was down by a third from its pre-spike levels in October and produced a chart. ![]() Thousands of content moderators, as well as the human rights teams, have been laid off since Musk’s takeover, and the platform has been struggling to police harmful content, including the proliferation of misinformation accounts and racist tweets in the lead up to the World Cup. Writing for the Conversation, Markus Luczak-Roesch, an Associate Professor in Information Systems at Victoria University of Wellington, said Musk’s takeover has been disruptive to the Christchurch Call, with the entire Twitter team the government was planning to work with gone after lay-offs. But also, if misused, they can do a huge amount of harm.” But she said that partnership was in “unknown territory” after Elon Musk’s takeover of the company.Īrdern urged Musk – the world’s richest man and self-described free speech absolutist – to “stick strongly to the principle of transparency”, adding that social media platforms like Twitter “can be a force for democracy, a force for connection and for good. The Guardian attempted to contact Twitter for a response but received no reply.Įarlier this month, Ardern told a national security, disinformation and online extremism summit that Twitter has been deeply involved in the Christchurch Call “and – to date – been a really constructive partner”. “We will continue to maintain our expectation that everything they can on a day-to-day basis to remove that content but also to reduce terrorist content and violent extremist content online, as they’ve committed to,” Ardern said. Speaking to media on Monday afternoon, Ardern said that while “time will tell” over Twitter’s commitment to removing harmful content, the company had advised the government it had not changed its view over its membership to the Christchurch Call community. Twitter founder Jack Dorsey had supported the initiative. The mosque attack was livestreamed on multiple social media platforms and the terrorist’s manifesto published online.Īrdern launched the Christchurch Call after the attack, asking social media companies to counter online extremism and misinformation. ![]()
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