Lobby group Hobson's Pledge has started a nationwide petition calling for the end of iwi-led "vigilante" checkpoints and has chosen a photo of the Murupara team to illustrate every social media post related to the topic.
The photo shows checkpoint organiser Leila
Rewi flanked by Mongrel Mob member Deets Edwards and
Tribesman member Conlyn Parekura, both in full gang
regalia.
Checkpoint spokesperson Te Akauroa Miki
said it was unfair how the group had targeted his whanau and
their mahi on the checkpoints and was using their photograph
without permission.
"It is unfair how they are
going about trying to shut the checkpoints having little to
no facts about our volunteers who wear a gang patch," Mr
Miki said.
"Volunteers come in all shapes and
sizes and we do not sugar coat things when our community is
at risk."
Mr Miki said the checkpoints had three
volunteers from different gangs volunteering since "day one"
and in a nationwide pandemic the priority was to educate,
monitor and to ask all non-residents to turn around to
prevent Covid-19 from entering the community.
"The
call was put out to volunteer, these three gang members
chose to put aside their differences and help out," Mr Miki
said.
"How they dress is up to them, but all
volunteers approaching vehicles are kind, have a smile and
donned in a hi-viz reflective vest."
It appears it
is not only Hobson's Pledge that has an issue with the
checkpoints and by extension the gangs manning
them.
The Beacon and local radio station 1XX have
both received calls from the public saying they felt
intimidated when they saw volunteers in gang
patches.
Many said they were too afraid to
complain as they still had to live in the
area.
Checkpoint organisor Leila Rewi wrote on
Facebook she had received a lot of messages about having the
Mongrel Mob and Tribesman on the checkpoints and said
whether people liked it or not, they were a part of
Murupara.
"They have been polite and smile whilst
on checkpoints," Ms Rewi said.
"I've been getting
‘it’s not a good look for Murupara’. Well we ain't
going to sugar coat it and act like they don't exist in
Murupara. Why not utilise them? How about you all look at
them differently instead of stigmatising/stereotyping them
because of the colour they wear."
Hobson's Pledge
leader Don Brash said the group's main concern about the
iwi-lead checkpoints was that they were set up against the
"Prime Minister's quite explicit insistence that citizens
did not take the law into their own hands".
If
some citizens felt able to ignore the Prime Minister on this
point, what was there to stop other citizen's doing the
same?
"Our strong suspicion is that the police are
turning a blind eye to this flagrant breach of the Prime
Minister's direction because the offenders are Maori, no one
else would have been able to get away with that," Mr Brash
said.
"New Zealand's future will be a bleak one if
we go more and more into a society where there are a
different set of rules for those with a Maori
ancestor."
The petition page on Change.org states
that checkpoints such as these are potentially a public
health risk.
"No one knows whether those on the
roadblocks and those they stop carry Covid-19, and whether
the roadblocks are transmitting Covid-19," it
says.
"The official blind eye to lawbreaking and
potentially creating a health risk by vigilante iwi-gangster
road-blockers looks like one law for Maori and another law
for everyone else.
"Such separate treatment erodes
the unity of our nation at a time when we are being urged to
unite against Covid-19."
The petition had over
3500 signatures at the time of going to print.
Mr
Miki said the Murupara volunteers did the best they could to
abide by the two metre distancing rule but often when the
checkpoints were busy this was difficult to
practise.
The checkpoints were disestablished as
the country moved into level three but remain ready to go
again should there be a move back to level
four.
Mr Miki said they were a success and
volunteers saw a decrease in people flouting the lockdown
rules once word got around they would be
stopped.
He said 9540 vehicles were stopped by the
two checkpoints during the lockdown. Of these, 2575 were
non-essential travellers, 3526 were accessing essential
services in Whakatane or Rotorua, 2946 were carrying
essential workers and 493 were non-residents who were asked
to turn around and go home.
"After day three, the
evening travellers reduced dramatically," Mr Miki
said.
"Our night shift team from midnight to 6am
reported that there were only one or two vehicles coming
through. Previous nights there had been at least 20 vehicles
after midnight."
Mr Miki said once whanau learned
and understood why they were educating at the checkpoints,
it brought unity and comfort.
He said many of
those stopped supported the kaupapa and returned later to
donate food to the volunteers and register their interest
for a shift.
"Our project lead Leila Rewi was
immensely impressed with our work to prevent the virus," he
said.
"We have had no reported cases in our
community.
"I think it all went to plan, we
achieved what was put out. We gained lots of aroha from
motorists, we made many new friendships and, overall, the
whole feeling of coming together for the cause is beyond
words."