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Charles and Camilla comfort family of man killed in Christchurch terror attack

Prince Charles and Camilla alongside New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as they visit Cashmere High School and meet with victims of the Christchurch Mosque Shooting: Getty Images
Prince Charles and Camilla alongside New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as they visit Cashmere High School and meet with victims of the Christchurch Mosque Shooting: Getty Images

The Prince of Wales and his wife Camilla today comforted the family of a young man murdered in Christchurch terror attack.

The royal couple consoled the loved ones of 24-year-old victim Tariq Omar, one of the 51 killed in New Zealand’s deadliest mass shooting.

Charles spoke too of the “terrible anguish” he experienced after IRA terrorists murdered his beloved great uncle Lord Mountbatten.

The Prince and the Duchess of Cornwall, on a five day official visit to the country, were told how keen footballer Tariq was one of 51 killed when a gunman opened fire at the Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre.

A further 49 people were injured in the bloody attack on two mosques in the city of Christchurch on March 15.

Charles and Camilla met members of the Omar family during a visit to Cashmere High School. Four current or former students of the school were killed in the attack.

The Prince of Wales (R) and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern visit the Christchurch Cathedral site (Getty Images)
The Prince of Wales (R) and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern visit the Christchurch Cathedral site (Getty Images)

Rosemary Omar, the mother of Tariq, said: “From my point of view, it’s just very comforting to know that the Duchess of Cornwall understands how we feel.

“She’s been very sympathetic and very caring, good advice as well.

Tariq’s sister Qariah, 27, added: “She was lovely, she was very heartfelt.

“Tariq was dedicated, very dedicated to his family, his faith, his sports, his academic studies.”

The 27-year-old added that the Duchess “really took the time to put her energy and love” into their exchange.

The Prince told an audience at Cashmere Public School that he knew of the “terrible anguish” felt by the community, referring to the murder of his great-uncle Louis Mountbatten by terrorists in 1979.

The prince said: “I can only say how much you have been in our thoughts and prayers over these past months as you have sought to come to terms with the appalling atrocity that was perpetrated on this community.

“I believe I may know something, just something perhaps, of the terrible anguish you have suffered having lost my own beloved great-uncle as well as one of my godsons when they were murdered by terrorists some 40 years ago.

“I can appreciate therefore the intense grief and anger that you have faced and the terrible despair that can result. It seems to me the only possible remedy for such understandable feelings of despair is hope.”

Lord Louis Mountbatten was killed alongside his teenage grandson Nicolas Knatchbull and two others when a bomb exploded on a wooden fishing boat off the western coast of the Republic of Ireland in 1979 with the IRA going on to claim responsibility.

The Prince said: “The worst of times, it seems to me, can so often bring out the very best in us all.

“In the wake of the terrible events of March 15, we have seen many examples of this as all the communities of Christchurch have stood proudly with their Muslim brothers and sisters, as those who have suffered so grievously have shown such dignity in response.

“In all of this the strength of New Zealand character, which I have long admired, has shone through with tolerance, courage and compassion on such conspicuous display.”

Prince Charles and Camilla alongside New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as they visit Cashmere High School and meet with victims of the Christchurch Mosque Shooting (Getty Images)
Prince Charles and Camilla alongside New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern as they visit Cashmere High School and meet with victims of the Christchurch Mosque Shooting (Getty Images)

He added: “In the midst of the most dreadful loss there is, therefore, cause for great hope,” and signed off with saying “strength and courage to us all” in Maori.

The assembly of the school’s students was also attended by New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern who, in the aftermath of the Christchurch attack, said it was an “act of extreme and unprecedented violence" on "one of New Zealand's darkest days”.

The school’s head boy Okirano Tilaia, who led a vigil specifically for school children after the attacks, said: “That Friday, no words can describe what any of us felt.”

Speaking about the vigil, three days after the attack, he said: “We stood together, united. Our message was, and is, this is who we are, not darkness but light, not hate but love.

“One evil act does not define who we are, what defines us is how we choose to respond.”

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Charles speaks of 'courage and compassion' in NZ after terror attack