
Oranga Tamariki鈥檚 review into two military-style is yet to see the light of day, despite being close to release about mid-February.
The agency, which is leading the Government鈥檚 , launched a review into the circumstances surrounding two youths from the pilot who absconded and went missing for days before allegedly becoming involved in an .
The incident was sparked by the of another pilot participant in a car crash near Tirau in November. One of the youths who absconded did so from the boy鈥檚 funeral.
During an interview on February 14 about the release of the , Oranga Tamariki deputy chief executive and pilot lead Iain Chapman told the Herald the review into the absconding incidents was 鈥渘ear-finalised鈥.
鈥淭he minister [Karen Chhour] has been kept informed, but the finalised review, it鈥檚 within days, I believe, of being released,鈥 he said.
Children's Minister Karen Chhour and Oranga Tamariki leaders appear before a Parliament select committee. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Six weeks on, the review hadn鈥檛 been publicly released. An Oranga Tamariki spokesperson said an update would be provided when the review was ready for release.
Children鈥檚 Minister Karen Chhour couldn鈥檛 provide a comment before publication.
In December, Chhour told the Herald she would receive reports on the incidents at the 鈥渧ery beginning鈥 of 2025.
Delays in the review being published followed Oranga Tamariki鈥檚 continued refusal for months to release details about its pilot on the basis the increased scrutiny in light of the boy鈥檚 death and the absconding events would have a detrimental impact on the participants鈥 wellbeing and compromise their privacy.
Chhour and the agency decided updates would be provided alongside significant milestones in the pilot. A timeline of those milestones had not been specified.
One piece of information that also hadn鈥檛 been released was the level of participant reoffending. The pilot was promised by National and Act during the 2023 election campaign as seeking to reduce youth offending.
The latest update was in December, when Chhour confirmed three of the nine participants had reoffended. She had since declined to provide further updates, refusing to confirm or deny claims by Labour MP Willow-Jean Prime that several more had returned to youth justice facilities after reoffending.
This week, Prime continued her line of questioning by asking Chhour in the House whether her office had directed Oranga Tamariki to withhold the reoffending rate, which Chhour denied.
Labour MP Willow-Jean Prime questioned Minister Karen Chhour about the bootcamp pilot programme in the House this week. Photo / Michael Cunningham
Chhour later said she would 鈥渁pplaud鈥 any of her staff if they had 鈥渞eiterated to Oranga Tamariki my expectation that the privacy, safety, and wellbeing of these young people comes first鈥.
When asked about the delays to the review鈥檚 release, Prime said she believed Chhour and the agency were withholding information that would damage the perception of the pilot.
鈥淭hey never planned to be open with us, I don鈥檛 think, right from the beginning.
鈥淣one of us know when those milestone dates are, so it just waiting, waiting, waiting.鈥
Among Prime鈥檚 main concerns was that details such as the reoffending rate would not be made public until after the legislation proposing to make such programmes permanent was passed into law.
Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei before moving to the NZ Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.
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