Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is defending her decision not to travel to her local electorate to be with grieving members of the Sandringham community after a man managing a dairy was fatally stabbed.
Ardern, speaking to media from the Chatham Islands where she was visiting for the first time, said she had directly contacted some community leaders concerning the man鈥檚 death but said she was wary of disturbing a grieving family.
鈥淚t is my local community so I will be looking to be present there as soon as I鈥檓 able to, but I鈥檓 also very aware there鈥檚 a family grieving and there is an active police investigation into a homicide and I do need to delicately balance being in the right place in the right time.鈥
Ardern rejected any suggestion her not being in Sandringham represented a Government not doing enough to address crime, noting that there was a time and place when the man鈥檚 family might want to engage politicians.
鈥淲e will continually have to do as much as we can to support our police, which we have - they are the best resources they have ever been.鈥
Act Party leader David Seymour said Ardern not choosing to be in her Mt Albert electorate where the incident took place showed a 鈥渃omplete lack of judgment鈥.
鈥淚nstead of dropping everything to be in her electorate today and making the response to retail crime a priority, she is on a plane to the Chathams. A trip she could have easily postponed.
鈥淛acinda Ardern should be in Mt Albert today and nothing should have got in the way of that.鈥
The dairy worker, who friends, had relocated to Auckland from Hamilton only last week to look after the Rose Cottage Superette in Sandringham while the owners were overseas.
Police say he was stabbed several times 100 metres from the store after he confronted a thief who had stolen the cash register around 8pm on Wednesday.
- Sandringham Business Association: Something like this was bound to happen
- Auckland dairy owner: Offenders don't fear consequences
The man, who was newly married and in his mid-30s, managed to make it back to the dairy, where emergency services were called, but died from his injuries.
The attacker, who police were still searching for, was described as being dressed in a black shirt, black pants and a black hat, and wore a black and white bandana over his face.
Today, Ardern made her trip to the Chatham Islands, alongside local MP Paul Eagle, M膩ori Crown Relations (Te Arawhiti) Minister Kelvin Davis, Emergency Management Minister Kieran McAnulty and Under-Secretary to the Minister for Oceans and Fisheries Rino Tirikatene.
Act leader David Seymour. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Seymour said the man鈥檚 death should prompt action from Labour in targeting offenders.
鈥淭his should be a turning point where the Government finally takes retail crime as seriously as it deserves.鈥
Ardern would likely respond to Seymour鈥檚 comments when she addressed media from the Chathams later today.
Meanwhile, Police Minister Chris Hipkins was聽聽after it was revealed yesterday the dairy owners had been denied support from a Government initiative that installed fog cannons to protect small retailers against robberies.
Sandringham neighbourhood watch co-ordinator John McCaffery claimed he had been working with the owners since 2017 to get the police to install fog cannons and other security measures, but had been turned down multiple times.
Given the man confronted the thief outside the dairy, it appeared a fog cannon would not have prevented the man鈥檚 death.
However, Hipkins said yesterday it was 鈥渘ot clear鈥 to him why the dairy wasn鈥檛 approved for a fog cannon and wanted to know why.
鈥淏ased on what I can see, that business should have qualified so I鈥檝e asked for an explanation [from police] as to why they didn鈥檛 get a fog cannon.鈥
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