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As New Zealand Police Pledge To Stay Unarmed, Maori Activists Credit U.S. Protests

Protesters march on June 1 in Auckland, New Zealand, in solidarity with demonstrations across the United States following the killing of George Floyd. Aotearoa is the Maori name for New Zealand.
Hannah Peters
/
Getty Images
Protesters march on June 1 in Auckland, New Zealand, in solidarity with demonstrations across the United States following the killing of George Floyd. Aotearoa is the Maori name for New Zealand.

Although New Zealand is about as far — in miles, at least — as you can get from Minneapolis, protests have erupted there over the killing of George Floyd. The Indigenous Maori people in particular have pushed back against police use of force, which disproportionately affects them.

At first glance, the context seems quite different. New Zealand police don't usually carry firearms. The reason goes back to the 19th century British aversion to creating a police force too much like a military. In general, if New Zealand police officers need to use a gun, there is one in a lockbox in their car that they can use with a supervisor's permission.

But after a white nationalist gunned down 51 people in two mosques last March in Christchurch, New Zealand's police introduced a pilot program to send heavily armed police teams on patrol in three communities. One of these communities was around Christchurch. The other two were far away in counties near the city of Auckland. The police said it would enable them to respond more quickly to violent crime.

Julia Amua Whaipooti, a Maori lawyer and activist in Wellington, received the police announcement with fear. Both of the communities near Auckland that were selected for armed patrols had large populations of Maori and Pacific Islanders, another minority community in New Zealand.

Even though the perpetrator of the crime that inspired the pilot program was white, "it's predominantly brown communities [they're patrolling]," she says.

"We are on the precipice of heading towards an Americanization of our policing."

Whaipooti and other activists have been fighting the program since its announcement last fall. They filed a legal claim that it was in breach of the treaty first signed between Maori chiefs and the British crown in 1840.

Maori and Pacific people make up about 25% of New Zealand's population. But in the last decade, 66% of people shot by police have been members of the Maori and Pacific Islander communities, according to advocates and news reports. Maori and Pacific people are also more likely to be tasered and pepper-sprayed than white New Zealanders.

Whaipooti says that the George Floyd protests have resonated with Maori because they've experienced similar issues of racial bias.

Even the police association has agreed that there has been "institutional bias" in how officers interact with Maori.

"So if we put guns in [police] hands as well to interact with us, that's going to mean lives," Whaipooti argues.

New Zealand's police association defended the program, saying no officer fired a single shot during the six-month pilot, and insisting that its goal is to protect these communities from violent crime.

But, following Floyd's killing last month, the hashtag #ArmsDownNZ trended to No. 1 on Twitter in New Zealand. When questioned about the movement on national radio, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she opposed the routine arming of police.

Then, this week, New Zealand Police Commissioner Andrew Coster announced he is not extending the pilot program and said he's committed to keeping New Zealand cops unarmed.

Coster attributed his decision to public feedback and consultation with community groups. "It is clear to me that these response teams do not align with the style of policing that New Zealanders expect," he said.

Though Coster did not reference the recent protests over police brutality against people of color, Whaipooti believes that the Arms Down New Zealand campaign might not have succeeded without the U.S. demonstrations.

"The power and impact of George Floyd, whose life was stolen so violently and so brutally," she says, "I owe a big duty to that man, because that means he has saved lives of Maori people in this country."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Gregory Warner is the host of NPR's Rough Translation, a podcast about how things we're talking about in the United States are being talked about in some other part of the world. Whether interviewing a Ukrainian debunker of Russian fake news, a Japanese apology broker navigating different cultural meanings of the word "sorry," or a German dating coach helping a Syrian refugee find love, Warner's storytelling approach takes us out of our echo chambers and leads us to question the way we talk about the world. Rough Translation has received the Lowell Thomas Award from the Overseas Press Club and a Scripps Howard Award.
Tina Antolini
Tina Antolini is a Peabody Award-winning storyteller and radio producer. She grew up in rural Maine and studied ethnomusicology at Stanford University and at Hampshire College, where she earned her B.A. in 2004. She attended the radio program at the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies as part of her senior thesis project at Hampshire, and began working in public radio immediately upon graduating.

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