The appeal hearing for Australian national Brenton Harrison Tarrant, who murdered 51 people at two Christchurch mosques in 2019, begins today in Wellington under heightened security arrangements.

Tarrant is seeking to vacate his 2020 guilty pleas, arguing he was not capable of making rational decisions at the time. If that bid is rejected, he is asking for leave to appeal his sentence of life imprisonment without parole.

He will address the court via video link from a specialised high‑security unit inside Auckland Prison. His lawyers, whose identities are suppressed for safety reasons, will argue that the conditions of his confinement affected his decision‑making.

For many families of the victims, the hearing has reopened deep wounds. Some have expressed frustration that the process forces them to relive the events of 2019, describing the appeal as another attempt by Tarrant to insert himself back into public attention.

Aya Al‑Umari, whose brother Hussein Al‑Umari was killed at Al Noor Mosque, said the hearing risks causing further harm to families who have already endured years of trauma.

The Court of Appeal is expected to tightly manage proceedings to prevent any attempt by Tarrant to use the platform for extremist messaging. The hearing is scheduled to run for five days, with provisions in place for victims and families to watch a delayed broadcast in Christchurch.

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