So the police are belatedly having second thoughts about the roadblocks set up by iwi vigilantes. But it’s several weeks too late, and even
now Police Commissioner Andrew Coster can’t bring himself to categorically state
what is obvious to everyone – namely,
that the checkpoints are illegal – or make a commitment that they will be
removed.
Interviewed on radio this morning, Coster floundered as he
tried to justify what plainly cannot be justified. He indicated that the police
would be more actively involved in what are euphemistically called “community
checkpoints” but left listeners unclear as to whether they would be allowed to
continue.
In the meantime, checkpoints that were originally justified
on the basis that they were protecting vulnerable Maori in remote places, such
as the Far North and the East Coast, have materialised at locations where there’s
no such justification, such as Maketu in the Bay of Plenty, where a Mongrel Mob
member reportedly prevented a 70-year-old man from going to buy milk.
The figleaf of justification is further diminished now that
health authorities are making real headway against Covid-19, meaning the risk
of infection is being reduced by the day. Yet the checkpoints remain. This
gives a clue to their real purpose, which has less to do with keeping elderly
Maori safe than with asserting Maori control and defying the law to do anything
about it.
Challenged on whether the checkpoints were illegal, Coster
took refuge in bureaucratic flannel. He said while it was understandable that local
communities were concerned about the coronavirus, they were not “specifically
authorised” to undertake “checkpoint-type activity”. That’s a masterful bit of
fudging.
His rationalisation seems to be that police were willing to
tolerate checkpoints at the outset, but the situation has changed now that the
risk of widespread infection has receded. That’s a convenient way of retrospectively justifying
the dangerous precedent the police created by allowing Northland activist Hone Harawira to go ahead
without any mandate or authority. (It bears repeating that Harawira lost his
parliamentary seat in 2014 and was roundly rejected by Maori voters again in 2017, raising questions about who, if anyone, he represents.)
The time for the police to act firmly was weeks ago, at the
outset. Why they failed to step in is unclear. Timidity? Misplaced cultural
sensitivity?
And we still don’t know whether the checkpoints will be
disbanded. Coster said the police were now “actively working to ensure that
there is a police presence or indeed preferably that the checkpoints cease because
the risk to our communities is lower”. More fudging.
On Morning Report, Corin Dann put it to Coster that residents of
Muriwai Beach, near Auckland, were concerned about a possible influx of
outsiders once the country goes to Level 3 and asked what the police would do
if Muriwai locals – whom I guess are
overwhelmingly Pakeha – took matters into their own hands and established a
roadblock.
His reply was a masterpiece of bureaucrat-speak. “Level 4
controls have aligned with the way various communities have gone about trying
to manage movement that is inappropriate. But we cannot have communities
running checkpoints preventing movement that is permitted under whatever level
we’re in.” He went on to say police would ensure that “people who are entitled
to use the road are free to do that”.
Interpret that how you will, but I took it to mean the police
would not look favourably at any attempt to set up a checkpoint at Muriwai. So
why is it apparently okay at Maketu? And when, exactly, did the police decide that
people’s freedom of movement shouldn’t be infringed? Form your own conclusions.
The one thing most people would heartily agree with Coster
on was his statement that “it’s not in anyone’s interests to let things
escalate to the point where you have a bigger problem than you started with”.
Er, precisely.
Meanwhile, he’s warning that the police will crack down on
anyone deemed to be travelling beyond their permitted area once we go to Level
3. “Our message is very clear,” Coster told Mike Hosking on NewstalkZB. Except
that it isn’t. The police talk tough when it comes to pulling errant motorists into
line but tip-toe around people who blatantly defy their authority.
15 comments:
"We're public guardians, bold yet wary
And of ourselves we'll take good care
To risk our precious lives we're chary
When duty calls, we're never there
But when we see a helpless woman
Or little boys who do no harm
We run them in (we run them in)
We run them in (we run them in)
You know that we're the bold gendarmes"
From the New Zealand Police Training Manual, woke edition, 2020.
This is intolerable. Andrew Coster is accountable to the Minister of Police - but he is statutorily independent. Yet here we see him obviously kowtowing to Government's line.
Reason exists for having him sacked. I think a court of law would agree - if somebody would bother to put a case before it. I would gladly help towards legal expenses.
I suggest that community checkpoints should not be seen as an assault on everything we love, but rather an opportunity to reaffirm what we see as important.
I, myself, am establishing a community checkpoint outside my letterbox. I shall be checking all motorists for wardrobe, personal grooming and a good sense of humour.
Anyone wearing labelled fashion clothing, beige, hemp, visible undergarments or anything made in Nicaragua is a gone burger.
Anyone with a turnip hair cut (shaved sides and hair on top), any ornament piercing their skin or any ink despoiling their hides will not pass go. If confronted by any sort of ring protruding from lip, tongue, eyebrow, nipple or wherever, I reserve the right to give it a really good tug.
The possibilities are pleasurably endless...
Odysseus got it in one.
This is outrageous. The highest cop in the nation cannot bring himself to condemn a criminal vigilante action.
Andy said:
"This is intolerable. Andrew Coster is accountable to the Minister of Police - but he is statutorily independent. Yet here we see him obviously kowtowing to Government's line."
Naturally.
Apparently:
The Prime Minister wouldn't be drawn on the "final elements" of the selection process or whether she'd received advice from the SCC.
"It was my decision."
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12315174
I share your concern about these "checkpoints," Karl. The police appear to be too scared to interfere with them, lest they be accused of racism. I think this is the reason for their inaction, and for the fudging you get when police or politicians are asked about them.
And so they are proliferating. This Radio NZ story from yesterday says Taranaki iwi plan to blockade their region under Level 3:
https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/te-manu-korihi/415039/covid-19-more-iwi-checkpoints-to-be-set-up-in-taranaki-for-alert-level-3
Once these become well established, I suspect they will not easily be removed. Any police attempt to remove them (when or if we get our freedom of movement back) will assuredly have cameras everywhere and a media full of stories about "racist police." This will make the police even more timid than to date.
This is the same police farce that put Arthur Allan Thomas in jail using planted evidence twice over.
I think you nailed it, David.
An email from Simon Bridges yesterday: We have repeatedly said we are against these (roadblocks) and will put this directly to the Police Commissioner this coming week.
Perhaps finally some action? Watch this space.
I agree with David. The separatists will get great encouragement from the fact that two successive police commissioners have, on two successive occasions within the last month, been asked point blank what action they will take in response to the illegal blockade.
Each commissioner in turn made it quite clear that the police are turning a blind eye to the blockades.
The separatists will of course now be greatly encouraged to continue in their quest for a separate Maori state. They will also be grooming friendly reporters in the media to prepare the ground.
I can already hear the cries of "Racist" launched in protest against anyone (including the Police Farce) who supports any action against these criminals
Max Ritchie - I believe your optimism is quite naive. This matter has been "put directly to the police commissioner" before - and he just shrugged his shoulders. To my mind (as I have already stated above), this is a very clear cut matter : Road blocks such as these are criminal offences - period. That, of course, whether or not a police constable is present at the scene of crime.
So Andrew Coster must prove to a court of law that he is upholding the law of the land, as obliged to by his oath of office. If he cannot prove this to the court's satisfaction he must be immediately dismissed from office.
Taking him to court is the only action needed.
The illegal race-based, vigilante roadblocks spread to Taranaki tomorrow even as the alert level is reduced, with Police complicity: https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12327723. So where is this going to end?
Wonderful! Mr du Fresne, you unerringly hit the nail on the head every time! Please keep up the good work.
John Lanham
Wellington
Not just the Commissioner, but the Minister, who appears to be condoning community checkpoints https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12327073. One law/rule for all? Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!
Well said Mr du Fresne; either NZ has a rule of law or it doesn't. It appears that both the Minister and Commissioner of Police are confused As I understand the role of parliament is to pass laws, the Police and other authorities to ensure compliance and the courts to adjudicate. It is not the role of the Minister or Commissioner to interpret or amend the law. The law is the law or it is not. The Polices Minister's attempts to confuse the issue by attacking Mongrel Mob gang members setting up road blocks is contemptible and is akin to the tactics of populist leaders like Trump and Erdogan.
Hugh Graham Northland
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