A UAE resident has been deported for using social media to 'celebrate' last Friday's mosque attacks in Christchurch which left 50 people dead.
The Transguard Group employee posted about the attacks on Facebook under a fake name.
He was handed over to police after an internal investigation was launched by the company.
In a statement, Transguard said they 'have a zero-tolerance policy for the inappropriate use of social media.'
They also said the former-employee was stripped of his security credentials and fired before being handed over to the relevant authorities.
28-year-old Brenton Tarrant from Australia has been charged with murder following the attack on two mosques in the city.
He is suspected white supremacist and right-wing extremist.
Burials have begun for the victims, with the bodies of Khaled and his son Hamza Mustafa laid to rest at Christchurch’s Memorial Park Cemetery.

Gulf leaders condemn Iranian attacks in call with UAE President
Gargash says Iran is 'responsible for exacerbating crisis in Arabian Gulf'
UAE to mark 50 years of armed forces unification
UAE schools, universities to switch to distance learning
UAE air defences confront 15 missiles, 4 drones on Monday
World leaders condemn renewed Iranian attacks on UAE
UAE strongly condemns renewed Iranian missile, drone attacks
Three injured after drone attack at Fujairah oil complex
