New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced on Thursday an immediate ban on semi-automatic and automatic weapons like the ones used in the terror attacks on two mosques in Christchurch that killed 50 worshippers.
The man charged in the attack had purchased his weapons legally using a standard firearms license and enhanced their capacity by using 30-round magazines “done easily through a simple online purchase", she said.
“Every semi-automatic weapon used in the terrorist attack on Friday will be banned,” Ardern added.
Ardern's announcement comes less than a week after the killings, as more of the dead were being buried. At least six funerals took place on Thursday, including for a teenager, a youth soccer coach and a Muslim convert who loved connecting with other women at the mosque.
Cashmere High School student Sayyad Ahmad Milne, 14, was known as an outgoing boy and the school's futsal goalkeeper. Tariq Rashid Omar, 24, graduated from the same school, played soccer in the summer and was a beloved coach of several youth teams.
In a post on Facebook, Christchurch United Football Club Academy Director Colin Williamson described Omar as “a beautiful human being with a tremendous heart and love for coaching". Linda Armstrong, 64, who converted to Islam in her 50s, was also buried, as were Hussein Mohamed Khalil Moustafa, 70, Matiullah Safi, 55, and Haji Mohammed Daoud Nabi.