I grew up in a country which was reasonably benign and free of corruption. I cases where there was injustice this would be corrected.
Now, thanks to this government, this has changed., probably for ever. Perhaps I should be grateful that no one has been shot (yet).
From Kevin Hester in Auckland, via Facebook
Now, thanks to this government, this has changed., probably for ever. Perhaps I should be grateful that no one has been shot (yet).
From Kevin Hester in Auckland, via Facebook
Arrested
for carrying out civic duty
I
am Completely Livid, My mate has been attacked.
This
is my Great mate of 30+ years, Marx Jones.
Marx
has been an amazing role model for me since I first met him during
Anti-Nuclear and Anti-Apartheid actions in the early Eighties.
On
the 19 of April Marx, disturbed by loud voices outside his amazing
1870's workers cottage in the inner city, coincidentally only 100m
away from the Central Police Station went out to see what was going
on and was confronted by a large group of people spilling out of a
local karaoke bar called Vivo Party World.
Marx
was threatened by some young thugs and armed himself with a builders
level, sitting inside the door of the house. As one youth charged at
him Marx, defended himself with the level.
Because
there were so many of them Marx put down his lavel and picked up his
nail gun, which incidentally was empty and was never
fired.Fortunately that diffused the situation and the group withdrew.
Shortly
after there was a knock on the door and very strong command to come
outside.
Marx
opened the door and immediately noticed a Red Laser beam on his
chest! WTF? A Cop had a bead on him, presumably from a Taser but Marx
isn't sure!
The
cops immediately handcuffed Marx and charged him with " Wounds,
Intent to Injure ( Other Weapon) !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
My
mate protected himself on his doorstep and the freakn Cops arrested
him.
There
are lots of reports of minor disturbances like this happening in the
inner city and my freakn mate could have been KILLED as other
innocent people have been.
By the way, Guys, Marx is a national hero - (for half of the population at least) He was the 'flour bomber' who disprupted a rugby match against racist South Africa in 1981.
Traditionally, people who can't pay have been entitled to legal aid paid for by the state. A few years ago the government changed the rules and retroactively charged people for legal aid (with interest). Poor people who find themselves on the wrong side of the law can apply for legal aid. Presumably they get access to the lawyer, but have to take pot-luck as to whether their application will be successful, or not. If not (innocent or guilty) they are presumably in hock to the government for the rest of their lives.
---SMR
Legal aid debtor upset at charges
A grandmother with a $12,000 legal aid debt believes it is unfair the Government is charging interest retrospectively.
9
May, 2014
The
Crown started charging 8 percent interest on outstanding debt in
March.
A
woman who does not want to be named said when she applied for custody
of her grandchildren in 2009 she had no option but to get legal aid.
She
said she understood the debt would be payable if and when her house
was sold, but the situation changed.
"One
day I got a letter explaining the changes and all of a sudden I stood
there with a letter in my hand and I suddenly had a twelve thousand
dollar debt that I didn't have the day before.
"It
was really, really distressing because I didn't feel like it was my
debt - I had no choice but to step in and do what I did."
The
woman said she would be 72 by the time the debt was paid off.
Legal
aid debt keeps climbing
Tens
of thousands of New Zealanders are being charged 8 percent interest
on outstanding legal aid debt.
9
May, 2014
In
September last year, the Legal Services Amendment Act came into
effect, with interest being added on debts six months from then in
March.
The
Ministry of Justice says total legal aid debt to the Crown is about
$109 million.
Radio
New Zealand News has received documents under the Official
Information Act, which reveal 40,136 people are being charged
interest as at 18 March. Of those, 3067 are for debts of $5000 or
more.
The
OIA documents say all legal aid debts have a six-month grace period
before interest is charged, with interest calculated daily and added
weekly to the principal amount.
Criminal
Bar Association president Tony Bouchier believes very little of the
debt will be paid back.
"The
idea of legal aid is for people who are suffering financial hardship
... the idea that they can repay the debt is absolutely foolish in
our view ... if people cannot afford a lawyer, they should get a free
lawyer," he said.
The
Justice Ministry said people were told the maximum amount they might
have to repay when the legal aid was granted. Repaying it depended on
how much someone earned, if they owned property and if they were
likely to gain money or assets as a result of a court case.
He
said some people signed on to legal aid in desperation.
"They
are prepared to sign anything under the circumstances, so long as
they have a lawyer that can represent them," he said.
And
this -
Road
block complainant not satisfied
A
man who complained about a police road block in Christchurch that
trapped about 250 young people for more than six hours said he
doesn't believe the police are genuinely sorry for their actions.
Police
Minister Anne Tolley
9
May, 2014
The
apology follows an Independent Police Conduct Authority ruling they
acted unlawfully and in a disrespectful and degrading manner towards
the drivers and their passengers, who were forced to wait in their
cars while safety checks were carried out.
The
road block in an industrial area of the suburb of Bromley in 2012 was
in response to the gathering of so-called boy racers to raise money
for the Canterbury earthquake appeal.
Dan
Cossar said it was a peaceful gathering ahead of a planned drive into
the centre of town but quickly turned nasty when about 35 police
turned up, some in riot gear.
Mr
Cossar said people were abused and forced to wait in their cars, some
until 2am the next day.
He
said the group, including a pregnant woman, was prevented from
leaving their cars, even to go the the toilet.
Mr
Cossar said he did not believe the police apology is genuine and said
police intimidation of boy racers is common.
No-one
from the police was willing to be interviewed for this story.
Police
Minister Anne Tolley was reluctant to criticise the police's actions.
Ms
Tolley said boy racers were difficult to police due to the fact they
gathered in large groups that were hard to control.
She
maintained new legislation cracking down on boy racers was working.
Civil
libertarian Peter Williams QC said a new approach was needed to deal
with boy racers that involved working alongside them and giving them
a place to meet.
Mr
Williams said photos of the police minister standing on top of
crushed cars did nothing to help the situation and what was needed
was some sort of compromise.
In
a written statement the Acting District Commander, Superintendent
Andy McGregor, said since the operation the police had introduced new
procedures for dealing with anti-social road users and the same
problems were unlikely to occur again.
Last, but not least - political corruption and crony capitalism, NZ-style
POWER PLAY
Brent Edwards, Political Editor
Justice Minister Judith Collins is on holiday, apparently taking a break to deal with the stress she has suffered over scrutiny of her involvement with export company Oravida.
Radio NZ
9 May, 2014
The
woman who took pride in the moniker Crusher Collins has this week
looked crushed.
Ms
Collins has taken leave on the advice of Prime Minister John Key,
after an extraordinary outburst last Sunday that raised further
questions about her judgement.
In
an interview with 3News about the resignation of Maurice Williamson
as minister and her own difficulties over Oravida Ms Collins
questioned the conduct of One News political reporter Katie Bradford.
She also implied other Press Gallery journalists were in her sights.
Later
that day she apologised to Ms Bradford on Twitter but the damage had
been done.
Ms
Collins is under more pressure after the release of emails by the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade about the minister's visit to
China last October.
The
emails, despite the protestations of both Ms Collins and Mr Key, do
little to answer questions raised by Opposition parties about the
minister's conduct on the China visit.
In
short they accuse her of a conflict of interest over the visit
because her husband David Wong-Tung is a director of Oravida and
owner, Stone Shi, and managing director Julia Xu are close personal
friends.
What
the emails confirm is that Ms Collins' office wrote to the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and Trade to get Mr Shi and Ms Xu invited to a
lunch meeting at the embassy on the day she arrived in Beijing. They
also had a visit to Oravida's Shanghai headquarters added to the
itinerary, despite the fact Ms Collins was there in her role as
Justice Minister.
But
what has excited most interest is a dinner Ms Collins had with Mr
Shi, Ms Xu and an unnamed senior Chinese border control official in
Beijing.
Ms
Collins has consistently said it was a private dinner and the
official was simply a close friend of Mr Shi. Nothing was discussed
about border control matters related to Oravida's difficulties at the
time of getting its milk into China.
Mr
Key has repeatedly said the emails proved that because they always
referred to the dinner as a private one.
But
the Prime Minister is wrong.
On
at least four occasions emails between Ms Collins' office, MFAT and
the embassy in Beijing simply refer to it as a dinner.
On
15 October at 7.44am the New Zealand ambassador gets an email in
regard to what then is called a meeting on Sunday evening.
"She
(the minister) would like you and Connie to attend," it says.
About
20 minutes later the minister's office emails the Beijing embassy
requesting a briefing for the dinner.
The
next day at 8.13am the office emails again noting that the dinner is
not included in the programme.
The
emails make it clear by this time the ambassador, Carl Worker, is
worried about the dinner, although whatever he writes in his emails
have been deleted from the Official Information Act release.
At
10.09am on 16 October he gets an email from the director of the
ministry's North Asia Division, Grahame Morton, saying: "Squared
away. The dinner will be a private one. Your attendance is not
expected or required."
The
next day Ms Collins office emails the embassy: "Nothing from
MFAT is required. The Minister is having a private dinner on the
Sunday evening."
These
are the first emails that refer to the dinner as a private one, which
raises questions about why Mr Key continues to spin the emails a
different way.
Now
not only is Ms Collins' reputation at stake in this affair. So, too,
is the Prime Minister's. That is why Opposition parties are focussing
as strongly on his role as they are on that of Ms Collins.
They
believe Ms Collins had a conflict of interest in promoting Oravida so
strongly. No other New Zealand exporter appears to have had the same
support from Ms Collins on her visit.
When
she returns to Parliament she will face further questions about her
role, particularly if more emails are made public.
Mr
Key has so far been resolute in his defence of Ms Collins but at some
point he might have to assess whether her problems are also harming
the Government's prospects, with the election just four months away.
He
might fear though that the consequences of moving against Ms Collins
- who is reluctant to ever admit she is wrong - would be worse than
leaving her as a target for Opposition parties.
But
Opposition parties also face a quandary.
They
have the Government under real pressure over Ms Collins' conduct but
risk undermining that by their broader attack on the National Party's
fundraising activities.
Labour,
the Greens and New Zealand First have accused National of giving its
wealthy donors preferential access to government ministers.
John
Key has rejected that accusation and used it to, in turn, accuse
those parties of engaging in similar activities.
The
problem in politics is that when it comes to fundraising and
donations no party is squeaky clean.
Was Mr. Jones inside his house when this happened?
ReplyDeleteYes, I believe he was. He stepped out to confront the mob.
Delete