Family Integrity Comments on Police Comments
EPOCH NZ said yesterday they are greatly reassured by the
Police
Commissioner's latest statement as to how the
Police would respond to
parents using even minor physical
punishment with their children should
Section 59 ever be
repealed. The Police confirmed that even minor
physical
punishment would be worthy of an investigation for assault.
The
Police Commissioner wrote to Family Integrity last
year to say not only
light physical punishment but any
form of force by way of correction
would not be
authorised by law.
EPOCH said the same in their own
newsletter of July 2005: "If section 59
is repealed,
parents could be charged with assault if using any
force
for the purposes of correction." Please note: a
charge of criminal
assault can arise from the use of
"any" force, not just "minor physical
punishment".
So
EPOCH have confirmed again a parent's nightmare: that any
form of
force by parents toward their children for
correction, training or
discipline would be a criminal
act of assault, not only worthy of a
police investigation
with all its attendant stress and trauma on the
children,
the marriage and the family, but possibly worth as much as
two
years in jail according to Section 194(a) of the
Crimes Act.
Time out or carrying an objecting child to
bed or making a child eat
something specific or change
out of certain clothing or holding a hand
to make the
child go with you will all become criminal acts of
assault.
This is certain and undeniable, given the
definition of assault from
Section 2 of the Crimes Act.
And after all, if a stranger could not use
even
reasonable force to do any of these to your child, you will
not be
allowed to use force to do any of these to your
own child either,
precisely as Sue Bradford intends
according to her Explanatory Note in
the Bill itself.
EPOCH are greatly reassured because the Police have
confirmed they will
not go lightly on parents who would
dare to discipline their own
children. Repeal of Section
59 will be disastrous for New Zealand
families.
Craig
Smith
National Director
Family
Integrity