I
missed this till now
Protesters
give Prime Minister John Key a hard time
Prime
Minister John Key had to be shielded by the linked arms of police
officers from a group of shouting and shoving protesters when he
arrived for a National Party function in Auckland yesterday.
16
February, 2014
He
arrived smiling but showed visible concern at one point as he brushed
against sailing boats parked by the wall of the function room at the
Royal Akarana Yacht Club in Orakei.
Inside,
the noise from people chanting "Stop the War on The Poor,"
amplified music and protesters banging on wooden rear doors drowned
out speeches, until police enforced a 20m buffer zone.
However,
the Prime Minister did not leave by the same door as he came in -
choosing an exit out of the sight of the body of protesters and
driving away in a different car.
The
police presence, reinforced by dog handling and maritime sections,
numbered 31 - nearly as many as the protesters from the Auckland
Action Against Poverty, led by former Green Party MP Sue Bradford.
At
one point, the veteran protester gave police the slip and ran up
external stairs to the clubhouse upper floor where she said she was
met by police and bundled down the inside stairs, her loudhailer
breaking in the struggle. "I was trying to get to talk to the
Prime Minister but many police came and stayed with us."
National
Party member Steve Clerk said he walked by the side of Auckland
Central MP Nikki Kaye as she left the function and they had to run a
gauntlet of protesters.
Police
pulled out one of the protesters, who had earlier revved a car close
to the club door and waved a red banner, and took him to Auckland
Central Police Station. It's not clear if he was arrested or charged.
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