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Prime Minister Chris Hipkins today moved to blunt criticism on the government鈥檚 handling of law and order, saying it was top of his agenda but throwing youth ram raiders in jail was 鈥渘ot the answer鈥.
Hipkins was speaking at a Canterbury Employers鈥 Chamber of Commerce lunch event at the Air Force Museum in Christchurch this afternoon.
During a 30-minute speech, fresh from meeting his Trans-Tasman counterpart and 鈥済ood mate, the Prime Minister of Australia, Elbow鈥, Hipkins touched on the thorny issue of youth offenders twice, acknowledging that it was a major talking point for New Zealand鈥檚 business sector.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want anyone in the room to underestimate how seriously we鈥檝e been taking this,鈥 the Prime Minister told the large gathering.
听鈥淭his hasn鈥檛 been something that鈥檚 just popped up overnight - it鈥檚 been a problem that鈥檚 been slowly bubbling away in the background and it鈥檚 now burst its way into a much more visible manifestation of ram raids, smash and grabs, and things like that,鈥 he said.
Around a year ago, while holding both police and education portfolios, the ram raids were at their peak.
He spoke about waking every morning and wondering what he would be confronting that day.
鈥淪ometimes multiple incidents overnight, kids stealing cars and driving them into dairies 鈥 and the concern that created has been enormous,鈥 Hipkins said.
Desperate to understand how the disturbing and costly phenomena had occurred, he enlisted various agencies, including police, Oranga Tamariki, Ministry of Education, justice, social development and asked: 鈥淲ho are these kids who are doing this?鈥
Prime Minister Chris Hipkins jetted into Christchurch today to speak to the Canterbury Chamber of Commerce at the Air Force Museum. Photo / George Heard
A list was compiled of less than 100 youths who had done more than five ram raids and 鈥渨ere at the core of the ram raiding problem鈥.
Some of them were as young as 12, Hipkins said, and 鈥渢hrowing them in jail was not the answer鈥.
About 90 per cent had parents who had been involved in the Corrections system while also coming from 鈥渋ncredibly dysfunctional backgrounds鈥.
The government established 鈥渇ast turnaround鈥 initiatives for the problem youths, he said, which saw specialists 鈥渋ntensively鈥 working with families to help turn their lives around.
Hipkins claimed there was around a 75 - 80 per cent success rate in keeping them from reoffending.
But they still couldn鈥檛 get to that last 20-25 per cent 鈥 and last week more support was given to the Family Court to impose more conditions on the families, while also announcing a new criminal offence targeting ram-raiding, which carries a maximum 10-year sentence.
鈥淲riting off those kids is a complete waste of potential future Kiwis and we will all pay the price for that,鈥 Hipkins said today.
鈥淲e know that if we start sending them into more punitive justice settings that these kids will become lifelong offenders and they will be in and out of jail and we will all pay for that.
鈥淲e want to turn their lives around so they can become fully productive members of the community.鈥
Prime Minister Chris Hipkins was the event's main speaker. Photo / George Heard
During Hipkins鈥 speech, questions were curated by Canterbury Employers鈥 Chamber of Commerce chief executive Leeann Watson who said the biggest issue for the attendees was youth crime.
Hipkins spoke about his parents who had humble beginnings but 鈥渨orked damned hard鈥 and gave him and his brother opportunities that they never had.
鈥淭hat to me is what being a Kiwi should be all about 鈥 the idea that each generation should be able to make life better for the next generation that follows,鈥 Hipkins said.
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