I
have not seen any journalism that would reflect the truth of the
matter or the conclusions I came to within minutes of hearing the
news on Sunday night.
Missing
Chris
Trotter
Where's
Jamie? Jamie-Lee Ross has promised to expose what he alleges to be
the corruption and moral failings of at least some of this country’s
leading parliamentarians. When a person promising revelations of this
kind is suddenly uplifted and immured in a secure mental health
facility, the public has a right to know on whose authority it was
done; how it was accomplished – and to what purpose?
23
October, 2018
LOCKING
DISSIDENTS AWAY in mental institutions was arguably a more humane
sanction than sending them off to the gulag. Even so, many of the
stories that have emerged from the Soviet Union of the 1970s and 80s
are just as chilling as Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s description of the
camps. “Patients” subjected to chemical lobotomisation wandered
the corridors of state asylums like ghosts. By no means all of the
citizens detained were released, and those who made it out were much
changed. For a start, they were no longer dissidents.
Learning
that a New Zealand Member of Parliament had been detained under the
Mental Health Act, it was hard not to think of those Soviet era
victims. After all, the MP for Botany, Jamie-Lee Ross must be counted
among the most destructive malcontents ever to occupy a seat in the
NZ House of Representatives. His determination to punish the National
Party and its leadership for (as he saw it) abandoning him, was
threatening to dissolve all the protections so painstakingly erected
by MPs to keep themselves safe from each other’s spite. Prior to
Ross’s detention, the party was looking at weeks, perhaps months,
of drip-fed excoriation. Who knew how much undiluted political acid
Jamie-Lee had in his possession?
Who
has that acid now? Who is in possession of Ross’ property? His
family? The unnamed mental health facility detaining him? The Police?
The National Party? What, if any, obligation are those holding Ross’s
phone, his laptop, his hard-copy files, under to keep them safe from
prying eyes? What, if anything, has been happening at Ross’s home
and/or his parliamentary and electorate offices in the time that has
elapsed since he was taken into state custody? Has anyone come
calling? If so, who was it – and what were they after?
The
public has a right to know the answers to these questions. That would
not be the case if Ross was just another citizen, but he is much more
than that. Ross is someone who has promised to expose what he alleges
to be the corruption and moral failings of at least some of this
country’s leading parliamentarians. When a person promising
revelations of this kind is suddenly uplifted and immured in a secure
mental health facility, the public has a right to know on whose
authority it was done; how it was accomplished – and to what
purpose?
In
particular, the public has a right to know what part, if any, the
most obvious beneficiary of Ross’s extraction from the political
environment, the NZ National Party, played in his detention.
There
has been some comment to the effect that National has a duty of care
to Ross. Such a claim presupposes that, in its dealings with Ross,
National stands in a relationship akin to that of an employer. Such a
presupposition is hard to reconcile with the fact that all political
parties are voluntary organisations, whose members are free to remain
with them, or leave, as they see fit. Having announced his
resignation from the National Party on Tuesday, 16 October, Ross had
clearly exercised his right to exit the organisation. Whatever
relationship existed between Ross and National ended then. So, why,
five days later, was the National Party giving out the very strong
impression that it had, in some way, been involved in his detention
under the Mental Health Act?
Moreover,
if some nebulous duty of care towards Ross remained on National’s
part, then why was the party so aggressive in its response to his
actions. If its MPs were convinced that their former colleague was
mentally unwell (something which the National Opposition’s
spokespeople had strongly insinuated in a number of public
statements) then why did they feel it necessary to so dramatically
increase the stress he was under?
On
his Whaleoil blog, Cameron Slater states that it fell to him and at
least one other person to inform Ross’s wife of her husband’s
fate. This information is deeply disturbing: suggesting, as it does,
that at least one of Ross’ next-of-kin was not told of his
situation, or even his whereabouts, by the authorities responsible
for his detention. If confirmed, it raises serious questions about
the legality of the entire process.
This
is why the public deserves a full explanation of the Who? What? When?
Where? Why? and How? of Jamie-Lee Ross’s detention. There may be a
completely acceptable reason for the MP for Botany being taken into
custody; and those responsible may have been acting in strict
accordance with the provisions of the Mental Health Act; but given
the extraordinary circumstances in which Ross and his antagonists
were enmeshed, and the very high stakes for which they were playing,
the people of New Zealand need to hear it – all of it.
The
old Soviet joke had it that the Russians must enjoy the best mental
health in the world, because only an insane citizen would complain
about living under Communist rule – and so few did. It’s the sort
of black humour that dictatorships have long been famous for. Let’s
hope that New Zealanders never learn to laugh, however sardonically,
at their own loss of freedom.
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