District Court Wrong on Charanpreet Dhaliwal's Death
15 October 2013
District Court Decision Wrong on
Charanpreet Dhaliwal's Death
The decision yesterday by
the Waitakere District Court that the employer of murdered
security guard Charanpreet Dhaliwal did not need to take
further steps to ensure his safety lowers the bar for all
workers making them all less safe, CTU President Helen Kelly
said today.
“The agreed facts included in the
judgement show little care was taken when Mr Dhaliwal was
engaged including an unclear induction process, no regular
system for checking, no easy method of communications and
insufficient scrutiny of the employees ability to safety
undertake the job, yet the Court has said all of this is
acceptable."
"It even finds the because the
communication of the numerous security issues on the site
had not been properly examined between Fulton Hogan and the
Security Company, this was excusable."
Helen Kelly
says "effectively, this decision says not having a system,
employing someone on the day, leaving them alone in the dark
unchecked until four in the morning and using some
shonkyuncertain induction process meets the requirements of
the Health and Safety Act – in doing so the Judge has
effectively endorsed the worst kind of sloppy practice, and
this wasdespite an industry expert saying it was not up to
industry standard."
“We know from the Health and
Safety Taskforce that the District Courts are failing to
properly interpret the Health and Safety Act and do not have
sufficient numbers of cases to build expertise in this area.
The Taskforce recommends a speciality judiciary be
established trained to do this work, but that will be too
late for Charanpreet. If the test of all practicable steps
is a few quick words on a dark night to take care – then
any employer is likely to meet it," Helen Kelly
said.
“We have here a young man with little
experience, dead after one night at work on a remote
building site after a 20 minute induction from a young man
who himself had only one night experience and now we have a
judge saying the law says this is acceptable. Far from
enforcing the positive duty to actively take steps to
prevent him from harm, this judge has created an intolerably
low threshold of care," says Helen
Kelly.
Charanpreet's mother is still in New Zealand
following the unsuccessful prosecution of the man accused of
his murder.
Family spokesperson Jafjit Singh said “Mrs Kaur is devastated by yesterdays findings by the Court. She now believes there are serious problems with the New Zealand justice system that no one has been found accountable for what on any measure, was a dangerous job her son undertook that night."
"She will return to India a broken women if no efforts are made to recognise the wrong done to her boy. It appears no one wants to take responsibility for what happened to Charanpreet and it is time the New Zealand Government changed the system," said Mr Singh.
The CTU is calling on the Ministry to appeal the decision.
ends