AUCKLAND – New Zealand supermarket chain Countdown has temporarily removed all knives and scissors from its shelves from today for safety reasons following yesterday’s terror attack that injured six people.
In a statement, Kiri Hannifin, Countdown’s general manager of safety, said the company has decided to temporarily remove all knives and scissors from the shelves while considering whether the shops should continue to sell them, the Xinhua news agency reported.
“This is in no way a reflection on our customers, but an act of support for our team. We want all of our team to feel safe when they come to work, especially considering the events of yesterday,” said Hannifin.
Another supermarket giant, Foodstuffs New Zealand, is also reviewing its safety policy regarding sharp knives.
Head of corporate affairs Antoinette Laird said a safety review into whether Foodstuffs stores would remove sharp knives from sale is being considered.
Foodstuffs New Zealand owns hundreds of New World and Pak’n Save stores across the country.
“Everyone deserves to be able to go to work and visit essential services like the supermarket safely,” said Laird.
Six people were injured, including three people in critical condition, during the Islamic State-inspired terrorist attack at a Countdown supermarket in the western Auckland suburb of New Lynn yesterday.
Police shot dead the 32-year-old attacker, a Sri Lankan national who had been convicted and imprisoned for about three years before being released in July, moments after he launched his stabbing spree.
Meanwhile, Reuters reported Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as vowing today to tighten counter-terrorism laws this month following the supermarket attack.
Ardern said earlier the man was inspired by IS and was being monitored constantly but could not be kept in prison by law any longer.
“I am committing, that as soon as Parliament resumes, we will complete that work – that means working to pass the law as soon as possible, and no later than by the end of this month,” Ardern told a news conference.
The Counter Terror Legislation Bill criminalises planning and preparation that might lead to terror attack, closing what critics have said has been a loophole allowing plotters to stay free.
But Ardern said it would not be fair to assume that the tighter law would have made a difference in this case.
“This was a highly motivated individual who used a supermarket visit as a shield for an attack. That is an incredibly tough set of circumstances,” she said.
Ardern said the attacker came to the attention of the police in 2016 because of his support for a violent ideology inspired by IS.
Police were following the man when he went into the Countdown supermarket in New Lynn mall in Auckland. They said they had thought he had gone in to do some shopping but he picked up a knife from a display and started stabbing people.
Police said they shot him within a minute of the start of the attack.
Ardern said the man arrived in New Zealand in 2011 on a student visa and was not known to have held any extreme views.
He came to the attention of police in 2016 after he expressed sympathy on Facebook for militant attacks, violent war-related videos and comments advocating violent extremism.
In May 2017, he was arrested at Auckland’s airport, where authorities believed he was travelling to Syria. He was charged after restricted publications and a hunting knife were discovered at his house but was released on bail.
In August 2018, he again bought a knife and was arrested and jailed. He was released into the community in July this year when surveillance began, Ardern said.
Ardern was briefed on the case in late July and again late last month, and officials, including the commissioner of police, raised the possibility of expediting the amendment to the counter-terrorism legislation.
Ardern said she wanted to explain why the attacker had not been deported but could not because to do so would violate court suppression orders, which also prevented her from identifying, him, she said.
But she said had no intention of naming him anyway.
“No terrorist, whether alive or deceased, deserves their name to be shared for the infamy they were seeking,” she said. – Agencies, September 4, 2021