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New Zealand: tragic deaths of baby twins used to foment anti-welfare
campaign
By John Braddock
15 July 2006
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The tragic deaths in New Zealand last month of 11-week old
Maori twins is being used to justify a wide-ranging campaign by
the media, police and political establishment against the most
oppressed and impoverished layers of the countrys Maori
population.
On Tuesday June 13, Chris and Cru Kahui were taken to Aucklands
Middlemore Hospital with multiple injuriesboth had severe
head injuries and one a broken leg. Tests for brain function taken
on admission were negative. The babies did not recover. Five days
later they died in Starship Childrens Hospital, having been
diagnosed with brain damage caused by extreme violence.
The Kahui twins were the children of a young Maori couple.
The father, Sonny Chris Kahui, 21, and mother Macsyne, 27, are
separated, but both live in the working class area of South Auckland.
Press reports claimed the babies had been left overnight by Macsyne
Kahui at their fathers place, dubbed a party house
by reporters, with a floating population of unemployed adults
and allegedly used as a centre for alcohol and drug use.
The immediate circumstances suggested that one or other parent,
a family member or someone else in the house was most likely responsible
for the terrible injuries inflicted on the babies. However, no
sooner had the deaths become public than the media, prompted by
the police, began a witch-hunt. The chief investigating officer
rapidly designated it a case of murder. The combination of infant
deaths, apparent Maori culpability, drugs, alcohol and welfare
dependency became the ingredients used to whip up strident demands
for the culprits to come forward and take responsibility.
From the outset, both parents denied any knowledge of what
caused their childrens fatal injuries. The police publicly
charged that even before the twins had died, the wider family
had met and entered a pact to stonewall any investigation.
According to inquiry head Detective Sergeant John Timms, the family
had decided to thwart the investigation by choosing not to come
forward and assist the investigation until they were given
the go-ahead by a spokesperson and a lawyer.
In fact, within hours Chris Kahui, while still in a state of
shock, gave a lengthy statement to the police without being represented
by a lawyer. After he obtained counsel, it was the lawyer who
advised him not to say any more until she was given a transcript
of his interview. The police consistently refused to hand it over,
claiming that since Kahui was deemed a witness and
not a suspect, they were not obligated to do so.
The press needed no encouragement to stampede public sentiment
into calls for vengeance. The parents basic legal rights
to remain silent, take legal advice and not incriminate themselves
were ignored. Susan Wood, television anchor for the prime time
Close Up program, pursued Macsyne Kahui into the public
area of a police station, where she was waiting to be interviewed
by police. Wood demanded Macsyne front up before the
camera and the New Zealand public.
According to a Weekend Herald inquiry into
the deaths, an element of suspicion fell on Maksyne Kahui because,
when asked by the hospital authorities what had happened to the
babies, she immediately requested a patient advocateimplying
it was altogether dubious for someone facing criminal suspicion
to insist upon their legal rights. Maori Affairs Minister Parekura
Horomia joined the chorus, suggesting it was time the police put
aside any remaining legal niceties: I think quite bluntly
theyve got to go and get em, he declared.
As soon as the twins funeral was out of the way, Prime
Minister Helen Clark weighed in. The family, she said, were similar
to the violent and brutal characters from the film Once Were
Warriors, opening the door to a broadside over so-called welfare
dependency from all quarters of the political establishment.
Twelve recipients of unemployment benefits were reported to have
been living in the same house as the babies, and five at the house
where they were fatally injured. Leader of the right-wing anti-welfare
ACT party, Rodney Hide, declared in parliament that more than
$2,000 a week in welfare benefits was going into the two state-subsidised
houses.
Clark directed that a formal investigation be undertaken into
whether the identified people were receiving benefits legally.
The households of all so-called hardcore welfare beneficiaries
were also to be closely scrutinised. Social Development Minister
David Benson-Pope instructed the Department of Work and Income
to analyse and identify beneficiaries living together. Measures
put in place in 2003 to intensify case management of individuals
who were long-term unemployed would be applied to target clusters
of claimants from one household.
John Tamihere, former Labour cabinet minister and spokesman
for the National Maori Urban Authority, demanded that welfare
benefits be paid direct to Maori social service agencies, such
as his own Waipareira Trust, which would then pay beneficiaries
household bills such as rent, electricity and food. Benefits
are for those who experience tough times. They are not to reward
a lifestyle, he intoned, adding that welfare should be cut
to those refusing to use family support services or addiction
treatment.
The entire Maori political establishmentincluding the
so-called leftsrapidly rose to the forefront
of the campaign to demonise the Kahui family and Maori welfare
recipients. Matt McCarten, a prominent trade union official and
former chairman of the Alliance party, used his column in the
Herald on Sunday to deny there were systemic social and
economic causes behind the killings. He lambasted one well-meaning
academic who had been reported as saying that the issue
had to be tackled in tandem with the way society is violent
to Maori. McCarten called for support from all those appalled
at this sickness to join a torchlight vigil during the Maori
New Year celebrations and pledge an end to Maori violence.
Maori Party co-leader Pita Sharples played a key role in emphasising
that family violence was a problem for all Maori to own.
This represented a significant shift. The partys other leader,
Tariana Turia, a former Labour cabinet minister, had blamed previous
abuse and deaths of Maori children on the legacy of white colonial
rule. Now, Turia fell into line with Sharples, a point not lost
on the Dominion Post, which editorialised that this proved
welfare and not colonialism was to blame for the
plethora of issues low-income Maori families face.
Sharples, who has a close relationship with law enforcement
agencies in Auckland, interceded with the family at the behest
of the police. Following his uninvited visits to the Kahui house,
Sharples labelled them dysfunctional, providing graphic
descriptions of their drunkenness and apparent indifference to
the situation. Sharples intervention has served to boost
the stocks of the Maori Party in official political and media
circles. He was soon being dubbed as the nations Kaumatua
(Maori elder).
The purpose of this vicious campaign has been to avoid any
probing of the deeper social causes of the tragedy. While the
violence committed against the Kahui twins was particularly horrendous,
so too are the social conditions under which the most vulnerable
are forced to live their lives. The hysteria is aimed at directing
any real examination away from where the real responsibility lieswith
successive governments of all stripes and their social agendas.
Class divisions in New Zealand are generating a form of social
existence characterised by extreme tension and destructiveness.
Since 1994, the country has fallen from sixth to third worst in
the OECD for child deaths. According to police figures, there
were 103 children killed in the 12 years to 2001, the overall
rate of deaths equating to 12.2 per 100,000 children. The rate
was double for Maori.
Over the past six years under Labour, social and economic conditions
for the majority of people have deteriorated sharplywhile
record business profits and a share market boom have seen an unprecedented
transfer of wealth to the rich. A Ministry of Social Development
report released this week found one million peoplea quarter
of the populationliving in hardship, with 250,000 facing
severe hardship, the most extreme category.
Not only has there been an increase in the proportion of the
population living in poverty since 2000, but those at the bottom
have become even more impoverished. Nearly two-thirds of beneficiary
families with children reported suffering severe or significant
hardship, a 20 percent increase in four years. The number found
in severe hardship was up from 5 to 8 percent of the population.
More than a third of the countrys children, or 380,000,
are being brought up in hardship. Pacific Island, Maori and sole
parent households are disproportionately affected.
The pervasive and intensifying immiseration behind these statistics
exerts a deep corrosiveness on daily life. In South Auckland,
the number of family violence emergency calls has doubled in the
past four years, with more than 10,000 in the past year alone.
In 2005, nine out of 12 murder victims in the district were killed
by the people closest to them.
The figures further underline the bankruptcy of the entire
perspective of Maori ethnic empowerment. Under this
program, which was initiated two decades ago by the Lange Labour
government, hundreds of millions of dollars were handed over in
land settlements to establish tribally-based Maori business enterprises.
The outcome was that the struggles of working people against the
governments assault on jobs and social conditions were divided
along ethnic and racial lines.
Since then, the mass of ordinary Maori, who make up some 18
percent of the population, have seen their living standards decline,
while thousands now live in grinding poverty and increasing desperation.
Meanwhile, a thin layer of middle class entrepreneurs, community
leaders and politicians has been nurtured to prevent any development
of the unification of Maori with the rest of the working class
in a common struggle against the government, and the profit system
itself. Its role is to keep the vast majority of Maori tied to
the existing political set-upas the Kahui case demonstrates.
With the police investigation still proceeding, the government
is moving to establish a cross-party conference on family violence.
Such an initiative would only provide a reactionary platform for
further assaults on public services and basic rights. The Maori
affairs minister has already foreshadowed the agenda by declaring
that the problem of Maori child abuse must be addressed as
a culture rather than rely on government agencies.
The Maori Party has concurred, with Turia indicating she supports
any move to reduce welfare dependence, as long as
Maorithat is, the privileged layer for whom she speaksare
involved in decision-making.
Far from tackling the terrible social problems that lie at
the heart of the Kahui twins death, these solutions
will simply create the conditions for more such tragedies. They
will serve to further brutalise the most oppressed sections of
society and to create even more intolerable pressures on their
daily lives. At the same time, they will be used to drastically
reduce government expenditure on social programsa key demand
of New Zealand big business.
See Also:
New Zealand government demands further
wage restraint as living standards decline
[6 July 2006]
New Zealand: CEO pay skyrockets
as workers' living standards fall
[5 June 2006]
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