The bereaved and bullet injured got their copies of the 800-page report on Saturday, and on Sunday met with Prime Minister Jacinda to ask questions. But the roughly 200 people who witnessed the attacks, will only receive a copy hours before it is publicly released on Tuesday. Aya Al-Umari, who lost her brother, Hussein, has four days to read the report before its public release on Tuesday. "My hope is that the recommendations are acted on in a very swift manner. Another spokesperson from her office said witnesses were given a "verbal briefing" about the contents of the report on Saturday.
Source: Otago Daily Times December 06, 2020 19:03 UTC