New Zealand’s Chief Human Rights Commissioner Paul Hunt urged Kiwis to stand together Friday as the toll from a gunman’s apparent racist attack on two mosques mounted in the South Island citystill rebuilding after its 2011 earthquake.New Zealand’s other official language since 1987. “This is not New Zealand,” Mustafa Farouk, president of the South Pacific island nation’s Federation of Islamic Associations (FIANZ) told Fairfax media. “We go around the world telling people we are living in the most peaceful country in the world,” he said, adding “we are doubly shocked.” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern called it “one of New Zealand’s darkest days,” recalling previous earthquakes and the 1979 Erebus airliner sightseeing crash in Antarctica that saw the loss of 257 lives. ‘Premeditated attack’ Visibly shocked, Christchurch Mayor Lianne Dalziel, a former immigration minister, urged the city’s population of about 340,000 to “pull together” after what she described as an extremist’s premeditated attack. “Christchurch is a city that welcomes people from all cultures, religions and backgrounds and it breaks my heart to see this happen in our city,” said Dalziel. A large silver fern frond — a national symbol alongside the Kiwi bird — was placed by local residents Wendy and Andy Johnson near the targeted Al Noor…