A number of tabloid newspapers have been criticized for their coverage of Christchurch attacker Brenton Tarrant, which has been described as sympathetic and hypocritical. The outlets have been called out for fueling Islamophobia.

READ MORE: ‘Absolutely his intention’: Christchurch gunman planned further attacks, had other firearms

Daily Mirror

The UK Daily Mirror was slammed over its front page, which featured a photo of white supremacist Brenton Tarrant as a child and described him as an “angelic boy who grew into an evil far-right mass killer,” sparking a deluge of anger across social media.

What a perverse angle to take on such a barbaric act of terrorism. None of the victims are humanised or mourned. Instead the terrorist was an 'angelic boy' and the first paragraph describes him as 'hard-working'. Scumbags pic.twitter.com/A9x8mPd210 — Nooruddean (@BeardedGenius) March 15, 2019

Days like this I’m ashamed to be associated with the British Media. In the past, terror attack coverage has focussed on the terror, the victims, the childrenThis morning the focus is on an angelic blonde blue eyed young boy.When have we ever called a terrorist angelic? Shameful. — Adil Ray OBE (@adilray) March 16, 2019 Very wrong @DailyMirror front page picture of the #Australian terrorist & mass murderer from #Brisbane as an 'angelic' boy. Why no image of father who threw himself over his sons to protect them? ISIS terrorists are heartless psychopaths, never angels' gone wrong. #DoubleStandardpic.twitter.com/uu28w7yQs1 — Richard Woolley (@beingrichard) March 16, 2019

The Mirror has treated other terrorists in quite the opposite manner, referring to them as “maniacs” and “monsters.” In the aftermath of other terrorist attacks, the newspaper usually leads with the number killed, details about the victims or a negative portrayal of the terrorists.

49 people are dead, it must be a bit fucking galling for their families to see newspapers lead with how angelic the victims’ murderer was as a child pic.twitter.com/K9DGwvQ3VO — James Felton (@JimMFelton) March 15, 2019 pic.twitter.com/uBARMvCnG7 — Spiderplant (@Spiderplant2) March 16, 2019

Tarrant carried out a terrorist attack in two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, killing 49 and seriously wounding 20 others.

Daily Mail

The Daily Mail’s print front page led with “Massacre shame of Facebook,” detailing criticism the social media giant received for allowing Tarrant to live-stream the shooting. Its website’s front page was dominated by the same image of Tarrant as a boy, with the words, “How a blonde little boy turned into a far-right mass killer,” while its social media said Tarrant “looks like an innocent Australian child,” and shared an article about his granny saying he was a “good boy.”

@DailyMirror@MailOnline to refer to your headlines as grotesque would be an understatement.Your hypocrisy , underlying racism and the not very subtle headlines are what will ultimately provoke lunatics to commit even greater acts of evilYou are disgusting and shameless https://t.co/cwrdrItAKd — Seevali Abeysekera (@charlesabey) March 16, 2019 Christchurch terrorist's grandmother says he was a 'good boy' https://t.co/LuO6DyFUaF — Daily Mail Australia (@DailyMailAU) March 16, 2019 Would never condone using a phone whilst driving, but to suggest it's only foreigners is just so horribly wrong. pic.twitter.com/HS5VoWyIvJ — Gary Lineker (@GaryLineker) November 1, 2016

Media outlets were also called out for the way they have demonized Muslims and immigrants over the years, with some accusing them of being complicit in shaping the views of white supremacists.

The Daily Mail has been accused of fuelling anti-immigrant sentiment and Islamophobia.

Daily Express

The Daily Express’ front page led with a quote from Home Secretary Sajid Javid describing the attack as a “hate-fuelled attack on values that unites us all.” The paper has published many articles about values being under threat from Muslims, with past front page headlines including, “Now Muslims demand: Give us full Sharia law” and “Muslim schools ban our culture.”

After the Manchester terrorist attack in 2017, the Express led with the following: “Evil beyond belief. How could a jihadi barbarian murder our beautiful and innocent children?”

The Sun

The Sun, a newspaper with a controversial reputation, described the killer as a “maniac” and a “racist” on its front page.

Tomorrow's front page: A terrorist massacred 49 Muslims - live-streaming the horror on Facebook in scenes that shocked and appalled the world. https://t.co/xJQ8uuWSimpic.twitter.com/dtNQ7F3Bi2 — The Sun (@TheSun) March 15, 2019 The Sun had a front page: "1 in 5 Brit Muslims' sympathy for jihadis". They were ordered to admit British Muslims story was 'significantly misleading' /2 pic.twitter.com/1Ry0EM7pIn — Miqdaad Versi (@miqdaad) January 12, 2019

After the Manchester attack, the Sun’s front page featured a photo of one of the child victims and the killer, described as being “pure evil” and led with details of “vile suicide bombers’ secret jihadi training.” It referred to Barcelona terrorists as “bastards.”

Tomorrow's front page: Suicide bomber was trained in terror by IS warlords pic.twitter.com/mMzK0wxgQO — The Sun (@TheSun) May 23, 2017

Despite its inoffensive cover, the Sun was among those called out for spending years reporting on Muslims and immigrants as a threat.

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