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Dairy crime fury: ‘If the Government is not able to provide safety . . . they have no right to govern’

Author
Neil Reid,
Publish Date
Sat, 7 Jan 2023, 9:40am
Dairy owners are increasingly working in fear due to aggravated robberies and night-time ram-raid burglaries. Photo / Hayden Woodward
Dairy owners are increasingly working in fear due to aggravated robberies and night-time ram-raid burglaries. Photo / Hayden Woodward

Dairy crime fury: ‘If the Government is not able to provide safety . . . they have no right to govern’

Author
Neil Reid,
Publish Date
Sat, 7 Jan 2023, 9:40am

Dairy owners working in increased fear have declared a 鈥渞etail crime emergency鈥 and called for urgent support from law-makers including more legal protection to use self-defence, installation of facial recognition cameras and cracking down on beggars and 鈥渇eral families鈥.

As New Zealand enters election year 鈥 and on the back of a shocking spate of violent incidents at dairies in 2022, including an alleged murder - the Dairy and Business Owners Group has called the Government out for being 鈥渟oft on crime鈥 and overseeing a 鈥減ermissive environment where criminals believe they can operate with impunity鈥.

The Government, however, says it is committed to backing community-led programmes aimed at reoffending which 鈥渨e know work鈥, and a series of multimillion-dollar, anti-crime initiatives.

Dairy and Business Owners Group chairman Sunny Kaushal has released to the聽贬别谤补濒诲听a seven-page plan on what it believes will resolve the 鈥渞etail crime emergency鈥 - a document given to Police Minister Chris Hipkins shortly before Janak Patel鈥檚 tragic death.

The dairy worker died in November after an alleged aggravated robbery at the Auckland store he was looking after while its owners were overseas.

鈥淓very New Zealander can see and feel the terrible state ... we are in a crime emergency, it鈥檚 now, it鈥檚 here,鈥 Kaushal told the聽Herald.

鈥淭he only people who are not able to see and accept are the Cabinet ministers sitting in Beehive.

聽鈥淐hris Hipkins replaced Poto Williams [as Police Minister in June]. But it is clear that he has not addressed Labour鈥檚 failings in law and order.

鈥淲e want the minister to deliver results not excuses. We want solutions now, we want the crimewave to stop, and we want to feel we have more rights as law-abiding citizens than the criminals who are ruining our businesses.鈥

The latter includes the contents of an eight-point plan the Dairy and Business Owners Group completed late last year.

The document, called 鈥淭he Retail Crime Emergency and What鈥檚 Needed to Resolve it鈥, includes a plea for greater legal protection under self-defence laws.

That includes dairy owners and workers having the power to use force to protect their shops, as well as using force to protect themselves and their customers.

Dairy and Business Owners Group chairman Sunny Kaushal claims the Government is guilty of being "soft on crime" and has called for greater protection for retailers. Photo / Jed Bradley

Dairy and Business Owners Group chairman Sunny Kaushal claims the Government is guilty of being "soft on crime" and has called for greater protection for retailers. Photo / Jed Bradley

鈥淭he current law is inadequate as it does not allow the defence of property and has more holes than Swiss cheese. Australia defines acceptable force and extends self-defence to your property and your house.鈥

Kaushal has also called for the Government鈥檚 Retail Crime Prevention fund, which includes a fog cannon subsidy scheme, to be increased to $30 million. Currently, $10m has been set aside, including an additional $4m to support local councils in Auckland, Hamilton and Bay of Plenty with crime-prevention programmes.

He argued the current scheme should cover all dairies, petrol stations, liquor stores and other retailers targeted by crime - a group Kaushal said could cover up to 10,000 businesses.

Some of that money could also be provided to retailers so they could lease pavements outside their stores allowing them to place anti-ram raid bollards and also trespass 鈥渂eggars, vagrants and troublemakers鈥.

Kaushal said dairy owners needed further protection quickly, especially given the latest rise in tax placed on tobacco products.

He said cigarette and tobacco theft was a 鈥渕ajor crime driver鈥.

鈥淭hese businesses are bleeding to generate $2 billion in tobacco tax for this Government,鈥 he said.

鈥淭hese businesses have been paying the ultimate price of being good citizens, contributing to the economy by paying their GST and taxes, but the Government is not helping them or listening to them.

鈥淵ou have seen how serious these incidents have been. There has been a loss of life, another person had their fingers chopped off, and there are so many incidents now that we are losing count of them.鈥

A greater use of technology in cities and towns across the country was also needed to target the 鈥渃rime emergency鈥.

That includes the deployment of artificial intelligence-based street lighting and CCTV in partnerships with local councils.

The widespread use of cameras featuring facial recognition would help detect those who had been trespassed from an area or for patterns associated with crime and disorder, Kaushal said.

鈥淭his includes video smart search including what they look like or were wearing, including colour of clothing and even gender,鈥 the plan states.

鈥淎lso, what colour vehicle they were in with licence plate-tracking detecting stolen cars before they are used as weapons. This also closes up the time gap between ringing 111 and a police response by tracking a suspect from camera to camera.鈥

Kaushal has also challenged government agencies to tackle 鈥渇eral families鈥 who he believes many of those behind retail crime belong to. He said it appeared New Zealand currently had a 鈥渞ights-obsessed culture where families, no matter how dysfunctional, are being left to their own devices鈥.

Youth knew what they could get away with, he said.

鈥淭here are no consequences as the police pursuits policy leads to escape and they know it,鈥 his group鈥檚 paper said. 鈥淚t is a slap with a wet bus ticket.

鈥淐hildren must be removed from dysfunction and given the stability, help and education they need to break free.鈥

Dairy worker Janak Patel died after being stabbed near the Auckland store he was looking after. Photo / Akula Sharma

Dairy worker Janak Patel died after being stabbed near the Auckland store he was looking after. Photo / Akula Sharma

Government departments also had a big responsibility for getting beggars and homeless people off the streets, a move Kaushal said would reduce their impact on crime.

He proposed the creation of specialist centres 鈥渕odelled on what we do to resettle refugees鈥. They would also be places returning 501s from Australia 鈥 some who have contributed to the recent crimewave - could go before assimilating back into society.

On December 20, Kaushal wrote to leaders of all political parties in Parliament with his safety concerns after the latest tobacco tax rise of 7.3 per cent.

He feared the price hike would cause 鈥渇urther crime鈥 and the fear of more 鈥渂arbaric鈥 attacks.

In the aftermath of Patel鈥檚 death, the Dairy and Business Owners Group organised several protests around the country raising awareness about the increasingly dangerous environment many retailers were operating under.

But given what he said was the Government鈥檚 reluctance to act decisively enough 鈥 that includes Hipkins who is yet to respond in writing to the document Kaushal gave him on October 19 鈥 he said it was time to make political allies who might support dairy owners more.

鈥淵ou can beat the drum, but you cannot beat the drum in front of deaf [people],鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen no one is listening you need to look to [something else].

鈥淭here is a lot of anger building across the community because the Government is not doing enough to protect these hardworking people and small businesses. If the Government does not listen, the [people] will decide the Government鈥檚 fate.

鈥淚 am not taking any political side, but the government of the day is responsible for the safety of the country and its citizens. If this Government is not able to provide safety to New Zealand, then they have no right to govern New Zealand ... simple.鈥

When asked if dairy security would become a vote-deciding policy for dairy owners, Kaushal said: 鈥淵eah. Enough is enough鈥.

Last year the Government repealed the Three Strikes Law; a law which had meant those convicted of a third serious violent, sex or drugs offence got the maximum available sentence, unless it would be 鈥渕anifestly unjust鈥.

The Dairy and Business Owners Group was opposed to the repeal, with Kaushal telling a select committee considering the stance in March: 鈥淚f a dairy or retail worker is seriously hurt, or worse, by someone that would have been subject to three strikes, then go on record in your report and pledge to resign your seat. Put your careers where our lives are. Things are going to get a whole lot worse鈥.

A spokesperson for Duty Minister Ayesha Verrall said questions about the discussions between Kaushal and Hipkins would be best addressed to the Police Minister when his office reopened.

But, she said, the Government had introduced a multimillion-dollar package to tackle retail crime and offending, describing it as 鈥渢he most significant crime prevention financial package in recent memory鈥.

That included a new fog cannon subsidy scheme which saw the Government provide $4000 to shops and dairies as part payment.

The package also included the $4m to councils in Auckland, Hamilton and Bay of Plenty with crime-prevention programmes, as well as an expansion of the existing $6m fund.

In terms of young offenders, the spokeswoman said the Government was 鈥渟upporting the evidence, backing community-led programmes and putting money into areas we know work to help keep young people on the right track鈥.

鈥淭hrough our Better Pathways Package we are ensuring young people have a shot at getting a job or back into education and are less likely to go on to offend or reoffend,鈥 she said.

A fast-track intervention pathway had been introduced for children aged 10-13 who were engaging in serious and persistent offending. Children who did reoffend would now have a plan put in place within 24-48 hours.

Te Kotahi Whakaaro, a programme aimed at re-engaging children and young people in education, their family and communities, had been expanded to 14-17 year olds.

鈥淭his programme has seen great results so far, with just a 14 per cent reoffending rate,鈥 she said.

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