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New Zealand policeman charged after brutal bashing of teenager
By John Braddock
9 October 2002
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A New Zealand police dog-handler appeared in court last week
charged with assault and causing grievous bodily harm to an 18-year-old
youth. The constable will stand trial in November for assaulting
Samoan teenager Tamati Selave outside a party in Cannons Creek,
a working-class suburb of the capital Wellington, on the night
of July 17.
Selave was rushed to hospital for emergency surgery after receiving
life-threatening head injuries in the incident. He was close to
death in a medically induced coma for six days, with the front
half of his skull removed to relieve pressure caused by brain
swelling. Now discharged from hospital and resting at home, Selave
remains on medication to prevent seizures, still suffers from
headaches and has limited memory of the night. He expects at least
one more major operation before he recovers.
After a five-week investigation, the police announced at the
end of August that the constable had been charged with assaulting
Selave with reckless disregard for his safety, causing grievous
bodily harm. A police spokesman justified the length of time it
took the Police Complaints Authority to carry out the investigation
and lay charges, by claiming there had been conflicting
statements from witnesses.
However, partygoers and independent witnesses were in no doubt
that police were responsible for the injuries. Neighbours concerned
about the noise initially called two cops to the party at about
11pm. At the same time, Selave was told by his older brother to
leave the party. He came across a younger friend arguing with
the police in the street outside. The last thing Selave can remember
was walking away from a cop who had called him over.
Five minutes after seeing her boyfriend leave the party, Selaves
girlfriend, Dezma Taeueu went outside to find him lying on the
ground with blood pouring from his ears and head, with two young
people and two police officers standing over him. She saw one
of the youth shouting hysterically at the officers. He said
that he saw the cops hit Tamati two or three times and then they
threw him to the ground, Taeueu told a reporter. He
was hard out screaming in the cops faces look at him,
he better not die, why did you hit him?
People living nearby also saw the police hit the slightly built
youth. One, who feared harassment if identified, told a Dominion
Post reporter they were watching from a window after hearing
a loud argument in the street. The police had approached a group
of three people. I saw the kid walk away and then the cop
ran after him. I saw him get picked up and thrown to the ground.
The kid then freaked out, like he was really scared. He got up
and ran for his life.
The witness said the policeman ran after the youth and hit
him on the back of the head with a long baton-like torch. He fell
to the ground in the middle of the road. They watched while more
police and an ambulancecalled by one of the neighboursarrived,
and Selaves friends put him on the stretcher. Another neighbour
described the officers tackle on Selave as like a
gridiron player.
Selaves mother, Ropine, said she was woken by the police
on the early hours of the morning following the assault, and taken
to the hospital while emergency surgery was underway. She remained
by her sons bedside in the intensive care unit throughout
the following week, fearing he would die. A police statement released
10 days after the incident further incensed the family, by claiming
Selave had assaulted the officer. His older brother, Pasene, 21,
questioned the timing of the accusation, released in the middle
of the police investigation, saying: They are telling the
whole country that he assaulted a cop but where are their witnesses?
They make it look like the cop was the victim, but who is in hospital
trying to fight for his life?
Wider police violence
The assault on Tamati Selave is not an isolated incident. There
is a pattern of increasing police intimidation, violence and brutality
against working class youth, particularly the most oppressed layers
among Maori and Pacific Islanders. According to official police
figures, nine officers were charged with assault last year, more
than double the number in the previous two years. These figures,
however, hide unreported daily incidents of verbal and physical
harassment meted out to young people in the depressed suburbs
of the main cities and rural towns. Pasene Selave told the World
Socialist Web Site that he had recently been abused, assaulted
and taunted with racist insults in the central Wellington police
cells after being arrested on a graffiti charge. He described
the experience as really scary.
Two prominent recent cases underline the extent of growing
state violence against young people. In April 2000, police in
the provincial town of Waitara gunned down Steven Wallace, a young
Maori ex-university student. His death came after a drunken rampage
through the town, during which Wallace used a softball bat to
smash shop and car windows before being confronted by two armed
policemen. The police, who shot Wallace four times in the chest
at close range, claimed self-defence, and were exonerated following
an investigation by the Police Complaints Authority.
Wallaces parents refused to accept that his shooting
was necessary. They initiated a private prosecution for murderthe
first in the countrys legal historyafter mortgaging
their home and launching a public fund to raise the money to cover
costs. At the end of a five-week depositions hearing in February,
two presiding justices of the peace dismissed the case, ruling
that the constable had acted in self-defence and followed police
procedure. In an appeal taken to the High Court by the Wallace
family in June, however, Chief Justice Sian Elias criticised the
justices for overstepping their authority. Elias declared that
there was a clear case for the police to answer and ordered a
jury trial in the High Court, which has yet to be scheduled.
In another case, the Court of Appeal quashed the convictions
of three Pacific Island girls from the working class southern
suburbs of Auckland, New Zealands largest city, after they
had spent seven months in Mt. Eden Womens Prison for aggravated
robbery. Krishla Fuataha, Tania Vini and Lucy Akatere were aged
between 14 and 15 years when sentenced to prison terms of up to
two years each for delivering what the trial judge described as
a sadistic slashing in the course of stealing $10
from another teenager. The three were only released after a private
investigator and lawyer hired by one of the girls families
carried out a painstaking investigation, which uncovered evidence
pointing to possible criminal offences by the detectives handling
the case.
The police not only failed to investigate alibis presented
by the girls and obtain a positive identification from the victim;
they pressured a 13-year-old friend into making false statements
about the girls involvement in the crime. A year after the
Court of Appeal said the girls wrongful conviction raised
serious questions about the police conduct which must
be properly investigated, the chief detective on the case
is still on duty. Although the internal police investigation has
been completed, no report has been released. Meanwhile, the girls
lawyer, who is fighting for compensation on their behalf, has
said all three are still suffering from the experience with drinking
problems, recurring nightmares, need for ongoing psychiatric help,
and serious educational disadvantage.
Law and order offensive
Police victimisation of young people is taking place against
the background of a political and media offensive over so-called
youth crime. The campaign has come to a head in recent
weeks with concentrated coverage of three separate murders allegedly
carried out by under-17 year oldsincluding one involving
the killing of a pizza delivery worker by a group aged between
12 and 16 yearsproviding grist for newspaper editorialists
and headline writers.
The campaigns purpose is to divert attention and political
responsibility for declining social and economic conditions away
from those most responsiblethe governing political parties
and their business backers. The recent parliamentary election
campaign was dominated by competing claims from the contesting
parties over which was the strongest advocate of harsher law
and order measures. The ruling Labour Party, while declining
to offer any programs to address rising social and educational
inequality, highlighted plans to introduce tougher prison sentences
and boasted seven new initiatives to crack down on youth
crime, which it justified as necessary to prevent a
new generation of hardened criminals emerging.
The chief Youth Court judge, Justice Beecroft, last month took
the unusual step of releasing figures showing there had, in fact,
been no recent increase in serious youth crime. While there had
been a doubling of violent offences committed by under 17-year-olds
between 1991 and 1995, from 121 cases to 235 cases per year, since
then the figures had remained constant at around 250 per year.
Over the past 12 months, the number of arrests for cases of violence
had declined, as had crimes defined as serious.
The judge emphasised that most youth offences were committed
by a small number of young people, with 15 percent of offenders
responsible for 80 percent of cases before the Youth Court. This
group he identified as being from deeply disadvantaged
backgroundsmostly not enrolled at school, from poor single
parent families and usually suffering significant psychological
problems and substance addiction.
This picture is supported by data gathered by Dr Gabrielle
Maxwell, director of the Crime and Justice Research Centre at
Victoria University, and recently cited in the Dominion Post
newspaper. The incidence of crime committed by young people
over the age of 14 years had been remarkably consistent
over the past decade and mostly involved dishonesty offences.
Violent offences, accounting for 10 percent of youth crime, had
increased slightly in amount and seriousness and began
at an earlier age, but the increases had been greater for adults.
Serious violence by young people was still rare. According to
Dr Maxwell, children and youth remain far more offended
against than offenders.
Young people, particularly those in the working class, have
borne the brunt of the restructuring programs of successive
governments for the past two decades. New Zealand now ranks near
the top of OECD countries for youth suicides and teenage pregnancies.
A third of children grow up in poverty. Since the mid-1980s governments
have imposed mass youth unemployment, removed benefit entitlementsincluding
the dole for 16 to 18 year-olds, introduced user pays
policies in education, thus creating massive fee debts, and enforced
youth pay rates far below the meagre adult minimum.
The case of Tamati Selave provides further evidence that the
powers-that-be are bent on intensifying the systematic oppression
of young people as social conditions deteriorate.
See Also:
New Zealand police exonerated
in the killing of young Maori
[7 September 2000]
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