Off the wire
Chinese foreign minister to visit Russia  • Nigeria splits state-run oil firm  • Three policemen killed in Mogadishu car blast  • South China Sea issue biggest challenge for Chinese diplomacy in 2016: survey  • Acrobatic show put on stage to celebrate 25 years of China-Brunei diplomatic ties  • China to deliver five-year plan on education  • 2nd LD Writethru: Trump continues momentum with 2 big victories, Sanders nets surprising win in Michigan  • Saudi-led coalition reaches truce deal with Yemen's rebel Houthis  • Israeli soldiers kill Palestinian attacker in West Bank  • 1st LD-Writethru: Chinese shares end 6-day winning streak  
You are here:   Home

5th LD Writethru: Four police officers shot in New Zealand

Xinhua, March 9, 2016 Adjust font size:

The military has been called in to help capture an armed person who shot and wounded four police officers in an incident in the Bay of Plenty, on the east of New Zealand's North Island, Wednesday, said the New Zealand Police.

The four officers were sent to hospital and one was reportedly in a critical condition.

Police initially said three officers had been shot, but it later emerged a fourth had been injured.

Deputy police commissioner Mike Clement said in a broadcast press conference that only one offender was thought to be involved.

Late on Wednesday, police were still in a standoff with the alleged offender, who was in a rural house on a road just outside the town of Kawerau.

The police Armed Offenders Squad was at the scene and police had asked the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) for assistance.

The NZDF had provided one NH-90 tactical lift helicopter and three light armoured vehicles, Clement said in a statement later Wednesday.

Police had been in the area in the morning to seize illegal cannabis when the first shots were fired.

All the injured officers were men, he said.

Two were in a stable condition in hospital, the third in a critical condition, and the fourth was receiving treatment for a gunshot wound to a hand.

The head of the New Zealand Police, Commissioner Mike Bush, had cut short a work-related visit to Australia to return to New Zealand and oversee the operation, said the New Zealand Police Twitter account. Endit