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Christchurch Shootings: What Really Happened

on 15.03.19? Pictures of Alleged Survivors


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Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor
Hot work as a crisis actor?

Ad for fake blood

Click here to see the iconic picture of a crisis actor at the "Boston Bombing".

Later:

Shooting survivor

At the March 20 funeral. AAP Image/Mick Tsikas. According to Greg Hallett, bodies were shipped in, via the "coffee run", to ensure there would be real human remains to bury.


Shooting Survivor
Zahid Mustafa at the March 21 funeral.

Shooting survivor
Ahmad Feroz and Sonny Bill Williams, March 23, 2019. Getty Images.

Shooting survivor
Nazril Omar and Sonny Bill Williams, March 23, 2019. Getty Images.

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

Shooting survivor

"Mr Kamran [Taj Mohammed Kamran] was left with three bullets lodged in his leg from the terrorist attack on March," TVONE News said in an article on May 29, 2019. In the accompanying video, the reporter said, "Two months in hospital and a number of surgeries couldn't fix the numbness in his leg." See more pictures of Kamran here.


Turkish survivor Mustafa Boztas
Turkish "survivor" Mustafa Boztaş. Note that there is no sign of injury to the left arm.

Boztas in wheelchair
Now — surprise! surprise! — Boztaş has a bandage on his left arm.

Shooting survivor

Shrapnel lodged in his body? I don't think so. Only shells and explosive devices produce shrapnel. Anyway, what's so funny? December 28, 2019: This must be Turkish "survivor" Mustafa Boztaş, whose testimony is here.


Boztaş flashes his scar

Is this the result of a wound inflicted by an AR-15? My guess is that, during the planning phase of the operation, they rounded up a few people who had suffered injuries and/or undergone operations, and then attributed the various scars to the "terrorist shooting". The picture is a screenshot from TVNZ's We Are One: The Mosque Attacks One Year On, which was screened on March 10, 2020.

Ziyaad Shah and SBW

Ziyaad Shah and SBW

Ziyaad Shah and Anthony Mundine

Ahmed Jahangir

A Radio New Zealand article on Ahmed Jahangir (pictured above) is here. A Herald on Sunday article on medical aspects of March 15, headlined "A Day of Horror, Day of Heroes", is here. It reads like a scenario constructed for the day's mass-casualty training exercise, as does a newsroom.co.nz article headlined "Shooting Victims' Shocking List of Injuries", which is here. Two points can be made in connection with these articles: (1) In the opinion of Allan C. Weisbecker (see Homepage), the "shooter" did not use frangible (fragmenting) ammunition. Indeed, the evidence, i.e. the "live-stream", indicates a replica airgun was used, as the "shots" fired in the mosque's prayer hall do not damage either "bodies" (almost certainly mannequins) or walls. (2) There appears to be no evidence that anyone suffered wounds that required "long and complex reconstructions", despite what Canterbury surgeon Dr James McKay says. Is he referring to Adeeb Sami, who was as chipper as a cock sparrow when he met Prince William on April 26? Or is he referring to Sazada Akhter (below), whose claim she was shot "in the chest and abdomen as she fled the Al Noor Masjid" is not supported by the "live-stream". Furthermore — to the best of my knowledge — there is no photograph of her lying, seriously wounded, on the ground near the mosque. Such a photograph could constitute evidence — unlike this supplied photograph of someone in a hospital bed.


Sazada Akhter
The Stuff article about Sazada Akhter, from June 19, 2019, is here.