Friday, May 1, 2020

They might be polite bullies, but they're still bullies


(First published in The Dominion Post and on Stuff.co.nz, April 30.)

Pssst. Don’t mention the checkpoints.

That seems to have been the rule followed by politicians and much of the media in the five weeks since Hone Harawira and his supporters took the law into their own hands and began stopping travellers in the Far North.

The official response has been to either ignore the checkpoints or pretend they are a non-issue. On the few occasions when interviewers have asked hard questions about them, government politicians and police have danced around the question of whether they’re legal.

If they were confident of their legality, they would surely say so. That leads us to conclude they are not. They are, in fact, an audacious and calculated challenge to the rule of law.

Until this week, even Opposition MPs seemed strangely hesitant about raising the subject. Either National was frightened of being labelled as racist, or it didn’t want to risk being seen as less than 100 per cent committed to the fight against Covid-19.

In the mainstream media, the issue has been treated as a minor diversion; an inconsequential sub-plot to the main narrative. NewstalkZB’s Mike Hosking tried unsuccessfully to pin down the prime minister on the issue this week, but otherwise there has been little critical examination of the checkpoints’ legality and still less of what they might lead to, which is potentially an even more problematic issue.

Meanwhile the checkpoints have spread like … well, like a virus.

From the Far North and the East Coast, they have spread to Maketu in the Bay of Plenty, to Murupara on the fringe of the Urewera and now to Taranaki. In recent days, iwi elsewhere have asserted control over lakes and rivers by means or rahui, or bans – again, of dubious legal status.

Along the way, there has been a significant shift in the justification for the highway checkpoints. At the start, their purported purpose was to protect vulnerable Maori communities in remote places – an objective many people could sympathise with, even though the checkpoints were set up with no mandate or legal authority other than a nod and a wink from the police (and in Northland, from the mayor).

But the original pretext began to look less convincing once checkpoints started materialising in places where there were no isolated communities to protect, and it looks even less so now that the government has announced that the coronavirus is technically eliminated, which means the worst risk has passed. It's worth noting that Tairawhiti, which includes the East Coast, is one of four regions with no current cases of the virus.

This being the case, you might expect the vigilantes to pack up and go home. But not only are the checkpoints still there, there are more of them. This suggests that the purpose is something other than the protection of Maori communities.

Join the dots. Iwi activists watched what was happening in the Far North and the East Coast, noted that no one tried to stop it, and decided to organise their own checkpoints elsewhere. All of which was utterly predictable.

Under the smokescreen of the coronavirus crisis, the activists are boldly advancing a separatist agenda. Their objective is clear from their statements that they are policing their “borders”, which implies tribal sovereignty. And the longer they are allowed to get away with it, the messier it’s likely to be when the legally constituted authorities who are supposed to govern this country intervene.

For the moment, public unease has apparently persuaded the police to take a more active role in the checkpoints. But it’s clear they are involved only in a supporting role, if they’re present at all.

Pressed to clarify the situation, Jacinda Ardern and police commissioner Andrew Coster have kicked for touch with statements of masterful ambiguity. Coster sounds much surer of himself when he’s wagging his finger at dangerous lawbreakers driving the family Honda to the beach to take the dog for a walk. This is called picking the low-hanging fruit. 

Note that I use the word checkpoint rather than roadblock. That’s because the roads, to my knowledge, aren’t physically blocked.

Defenders of the checkpoints say no one is forced to stop. But a powerful psychological factor comes into play when motorists see people – often quite large people – standing on the road wearing masks and hi-vis jackets, surrounded by traffic cones and holding signs saying “stop”.

Most people’s natural instinct is to comply, whether they’re obliged to or not. That instinct is likely to be reinforced if people on the checkpoint are wearing gang insignia, as at Murupara. Small wonder that those defending the checkpoints insist that people are happy to stop.

And having stopped, many people are either too timid or too uncertain to refuse to give personal details or answer questions about where they are going, even though their interrogators have no right to ask such questions.

Intimidating people into stopping when they're not legally required to is bullying, pure and simple. Sure, the vigilantes might be polite. But that merely makes them polite bullies.

Footnote: This column has been amended since publication yesterday morning to take into account National's questioning of Andrew Coster at the meeting of the Epidemic Response Committee later on the same day. But the question remains: what took them so long?

11 comments:

Doug Longmire said...

I said this before, but it still bears repeating:-
"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."
The blind eye has become the bland eye.

Odysseus said...

The checkpoints are clearly illegal and having a member of the Police standing around doesn't make them any less so, as MPs made clear in their questioning of the new Commissioner in the Epidemic Response Committee yesterday. The Commissioner says he is not upholding the rule of law because, to quote him, "policing is not an exact science". He also suggested the Police were intimidated by the possibility of protests. So there you have it. A Police Force that from the very top refuses to uphold the rule of law unless of course you cannot claim to be Maori, in which case you will likely get dumped on for any transgression against the lockdown as many surfers for example recently discovered. The next question is, who is paying for all these people to hang about in their hi viz jackets etc harassing law abiding motorists? Is this where the special COVID 19 response money exclusively for Maori is being spent? It seems highly likely there is taxpayer funding in there somewhere.

Doug Longmire said...

Well said Odysseus.

Scott said...

Thanks for continuing to comment on this issue Karl. It seems we have one rule for Maori separatists and one rule for everyone else. This is where pandering to political correctness gets you.
Don Brash is right about this Maori separatist movement. Take a pinch of tribalism, stir in some neo Marxism, add in a labour government and you have a recipe for the breakdown of the rule of law.
The police should be directed to dismantle these checkpoints immediately.

hughvane said...

I urge your readers to look at what Garrick Tremain has to say in his cartoons - as well as his limericks! Here's the link: https://garricktremain.nz/cartoons

As discussed with a couple of neighbours, usually affable and sanguine about protests and reactionary kerfuffle, "if we (Pakeha) set about putting a road block at either end of our little town, the gendarmes would be down on us like a ton of bricks". Arrested, hurled into the local Bastille, and vilified by society's sanctimonious.

Trev1 said...

The Police are acting unlawfully if they require anybody to submit to these rogue "checkpoints" which have not been established under the State of Emergency legislation or regulations. They need to be taken to court. This is lawlessness.

Andy Espersen said...

Are we living out a tragedy or a comedy? Modern, instant mass communication has made possible, perhaps even unavoidable, mass hysteria, mass interest, mass concern about many varying issues. All these issues (of which you will find examples in whatever you read, see or hear in the media, in films or on radio) are about sex, food and and fear of enemies, humankind’s eternal centres of concern.

At present we are all consumed with fear of a very ordinary, not even particularly dangerous, infectious illness (this suddenly took over from the equally panicky fear of climate change– remember Greta Thunberg?).

One of the most influential novels ever written was Cervantes’ tale about Don Quixote, the illustrious Spanish gentleman who thought himself great and courageous and rode out in search of enemies to practice his valour on. Finding none, he attacked windmills. He was very sincere and certain he was right - likewise you will find no more thoroughly sincere person than our Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern.

Over the 400 years since this novel was written people have been arguing whether Cervantes meant it to be a comedy or a tragedy. Therein lies its greatness.

Doug Longmire said...

From Newstalk ZB recently:-
"National Party leader Simon Bridges said those checkpoints were illegal and claimed police had turned a blind eye and condoned the checkpoints by adding their presence.

Coster completely rejected this. He said they'd not turned a blind eye and had come alongside the community checkpoints to work with them to ensure they were legal."

Would the Police Farce "come alongside" other criminals also? Burglars, Drug Dealers, Car thieves, would also love the cosy comfort of the Police "coming alongside"

Andy Espersen said...

You're spot on, Doug Longmire. The presence of police at road blocks does not make them legal. It makes police accomplices in crime.

Trev1 said...

In the last 48 hours, in the wake of a legal opinion by Andrew Geddis and the leaking of emails from Police HQ, it has become apparent that the whole basis of the lockdown itself may be without legal foundation. There needs to be an urgent judicial review to ensure the Government and its agencies like the Police are acting within the law. The lockdown has been in my view excessively draconian, eg the shutdown of small businesses like butchers and the banning of periodicals, and aspects such as the condoning of race-based vigilantism continue to be deeply disturbing. Perhaps we could crowd-fund a QC to seek a review?

Jigsaw said...

There are other aspects that are also very worrying. In my area which is tourist area DOC has closed a well known tourist spot and posted a sign that says that its closed and a rahui is imposed. Next to this sign (and also in another place) and completely separate is another sign from the local iwi detailing (in English) a rahui over the whole area. Obviously the local iwi are trying it on as they have no authority to post such a notice (it has since been torn down and then replaced). It seems to me that many local Maori groups are using the pandemic as a chance to increase their authority and mark their boundaries-all quite ilegally. We are increasingly on the path to an apartheid state.