Preparations for the burial of the victims of the two mosques in Christchurch in New Zealand have begun after the identification of the bodies of 50 Muslims killed in the crime. Citizens continue to flock to Al Noor Mosque and Medina Hospital to express their solidarity with the victims.

Al-Jazeera correspondent in Christchurch Fadi Salameh said that the bodies had been handed over since morning. Nine bodies were handed over to a place to be cleaned and then cleaned. The victims' families meet their relatives and take a final look. The bodies are then returned to the city hospital.

He added that a representative of the Muslim community in the city told the island that they plan to mass burial of the victims after Friday prayers, a week after the massacre, and if they can not, it will be late, because the process of DNA identification by DNA takes some time.

The director of the Ministry of Civil Defense and Emergency Management told a news conference that the ministry was fully aware of the need to deal sensitively with the requirements of each family of victims.

Sadness and solidarity
On the other hand, feelings of sadness continue to be felt on the victims and solidarity with their families. Dozens of solidarity activists continue to gather around the mosque of Al-Nour, one of the two mosques that have been attacked, and visitors place bouquets and signs expressing their rejection of the tragic incident near the hospital where the injured are being treated.

Most of the victims are migrants or refugees from countries including Pakistan, India, Turkey, Somalia, Kuwait and Bangladesh. The families of the victims seek to travel there to attend funerals, and New Zealand immigration authorities said they had issued 65 visas.

The wave of solidarity with the victims and condemnation of the terrorist act did not stop (Getty Images)

Authorities said the 28-year-old Australian killed 50 people and injured a similar number, 32 of them still in hospital, nine of them critically.

The wounded
The hospital in Auckland received one of the injured and his four-year-old daughter, who is still in critical condition, said David Mates, chairman of the Health Council in Canterbury County, which includes Christchurch. He also said many of the wounded would undergo multiple operations and undergo a long recovery.

In a letter of condolence to the parliament today, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardenne called for support for the grieving Muslim community, especially when she returns to Friday prayers. "We are one, they are us," she said, ending her speech with a salute.

The prime minister said in a meeting in the capital Wellington that security forces have doubled security measures in Christ Church in front of the doors of mosques in particular. The families of the victims would receive justice and the perpetrator was a terrorist, a criminal and an extremist who did not deserve to be named, and the first mentioned the victims of the crime.

She also stressed the need to review the laws of possession of weapons in order to protect the security of the country, and said that the government met to discuss the matter and will announce its decisions soon.

Video Crime
In a related context, Facebook said that the video broadcast live published by the massacre through his account received only 200 views before the company deleted, but deleted more than three million videos cut from the live broadcast and published by other users.

The company confirmed that it had deleted personal accounts on Facebook and Entangram for the terrorist attack, and also deleted the accounts of defenders of attacks in New Zealand. The New Zealand police have considered the video of the massacre a prohibited article punishable by imprisonment for up to 14 years, and a fine of up to ten thousand dollars (seven thousand dollars).