1300 people write letters to stop Waikeria
mega-prison
The Labour-led
government are close to making a decision about whether or
not to go ahead with building a new billion-dollar prison in
Waikeria.
The prison, 30 kilometres
north of Otorohanga, will have the potential to hold 3000
people, making it the largest in the country.
1300 people have written letters to
Justice Minister Andrew Little and Corrections Minister
Kelvin Davis urging them to stop the new prison.
The action follows the release of a
report last week from the Prime Minister's Chief Science
Advisor that says New Zealand's justice system is broken and
building new prisons is not the
answer.
Laura O’Connell Rapira,
Director of ActionStation, the community campaigning
organisation that coordinated the letter writing effort
says, “Our community are passionate about supporting
efforts to build a more compassionate justice system which
prioritises prevention, restoration and rehabilitation, and
an end to the over-incarceration of Māori
people.”
“We understand the
difficult situation the government is in with wanting to end
the horrific practice of double-bunking and feeling
reluctant to forge ahead with a new prison that will
inevitably fail in terms of reducing
crime.
We would like to offer our
collective support to the government should they choose to
go down the path of stopping the Waikeria prison build, and
reducing the prison population more
broadly.”
The letters are from a
wide range of people from all around the country. Here are a
sample:
"Our levels of incarceration
are extraordinarily high, and this helps neither the victims
nor the incarcerated people. NZ's rate is shameful, and
that's not even taking into account the appalling proportion
of the prison population who are Maori or Pasifika. Prison
needs to be a last resort, we need to focus on non-punitive
responses that help ACTUALLY rehabilitate people, and
address the underlying issues that have turned people on to
this path. Prison is expensive, it takes people away from
society, and helps separate them further by making it
considerably harder to rejoin normal society once they are
released." - Lucy, 30,
Wellington
"In my 18 years as a care
and protection and youth justice worker for Oranga Tamariki,
I have witnessed first hand what these places can do to a
young person. One needs to see the outcomes it has had on
those who were not only in care but the effects their
upbringing have had on them. Most of those as we know derive
from whānau who are displaced or who are addicted to drugs,
alcohol and mental health problems... This saddens me
particularly when you know that if things were different for
them they can achieve much in so many ways. Keeping in mind
the above factors would it not be better to explore
solutions using the positive approach... I am [also] of the
view that the whānau, hapū and iwi should take an active
role in this area." - Peter, 58,
Rotorua
"I have been studying
criminology and politics for the past 2 years at the
University of Otago. I have never been one to speak out
publicly on issues that concern me, but over the past two
years of my life I have come to learn a lot more about our
criminal justice system and the policies and practices in
place. I firmly believe that a new mega prison would be a
detrimental choice to New Zealand society. I don't believe
we should just be locking offenders away and leaving them in
prisons, almost like an afterthought, with no proper attempt
to remedy the many issues that led them to where they are. I
think it is our responsibility - as informed members of
society, as politicians in places of power, as New
Zealanders - to help shift the focus of dealing with crime
to reassessing the many issues and circumstances within our
society that has lead to crime, marginalisation and an
ever-increasing prison population that can, with support and
understanding, be eliminated. It is our duty as New
Zealanders to help support individuals who have been failed
by government (and by society - myself included!) due to the
lack of investment in education, health, housing and jobs,
and the naive misunderstanding many Kiwis have of crime,
criminals and our justice system. It would be extremely
naive of our government to build a new prison when it is
clear that there are bigger issues at play. This is not a
permanent fix to a widespread issue we are facing, it is
simply temporary - a band-aid that will no doubt fall off in
a matter of time, causing a mass infection that may be more
difficult to remedy in the future." - Heather, 20,
Dunedin
"Much of my work as a
psychotherapist is involved with the treatment of
traumatised people. People who have been traumatised have
often experienced significant disconnections in their lives,
and in my experience, sensitive reconnection is imperative
in healing and rehabilitation. The majority of prisoners in
Aotearoa have a history of trauma and disenfranchisement. I
believe it is often these factors which create the pathway
towards criminal activity. It is for this reason that I do
not support the expansion of our prison system. Isolation
is not a healthy way for perpetrators to face their actions
and move forward into a new way of being. I believe that
cutting people off from healthy connectors has a significant
bearing on a person's ability to change their behaviour." -
Anna, 30, Auckland
"I've been in the
prison system and another mega prison is not the answer. We
need rehabilitation centres an specialists." - Eliza, 68,
Kawerau
“We need to draw a line in
the sand. The need for new prisons will increase unless we
do, locking people up, fracturing whanau in environments
that will perpetuate the problems that cause prisons to be
needed. We need to learn from other countries how to turn
the tide; how we can get to the heart of why we have the
problems we do and rehabilitate offenders in ways that will
make a difference. We need to learn from other countries who
are achieving this. ...if we keep doing the same thing we
will keep getting the same outcome.” - Jan, 70,
Tauranga
ENDS