British tabloid Daily Mail on Friday evening came under fire when it narrated the details from the past of Christchurch terror attack’s prime culprit Brenton Tarrant.
The twin attack on Christchurch mosques had left 49 people dead in what New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern described as one of nation’s darkest days.
The story, which is Daily Mail’s top story at the time of writing this news, claims that Tarrant, the man single-handedly responsible for the death of 49 people, was a “country boy from a small town in Australia’s New South Wales”.
The story paints a humane picture of him by narrating the details of his ‘troubled boyhood’ during which his father died.
Tarrant ‘worked as a personal trainer before travelling the world to North Korea and Pakistan as well as Europe’, the story claims.
It goes on to quote one of Tarrant’s former acquaintances that he may have radicalised at some point during his travels.
Although the story tells that Tarrant travelled to ‘several countries’ of Europe, it doesn’t detail their names.
Read More: Of horrors and heroism: survivors recall Christchurch terror attack
The countries it does name, however, are North Korea and Pakistan, which are mentioned in the headline.
This, however, did not go well with many around the world, who took a strong exception to it and called out Daily Mail for humanising a terrorist.
Author and poet Fatima Bhutto in one of her tweets called the story as ‘garbage’.
Similarly, accomplished novelist Kamila Shamsie took a jibe at Daily Mail for referring to Tarrant as ‘a blonde little boy’.
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