[Edit: link to Meurant piece reinstated. Thanks for the headsup Scott.]
Stephen pointed at this piece by Ross Meurant, describing his journey through police culture (“the forest”) as a true believer, and eventually out of it to the point where he can look back with perspective. Some of it is extraordinary:
Your mission is to protect society from this evil. Very soon you learn to decide what is evil and what is not. You are no longer just a collector of human rubbish at the base of the cliff but you have an obligation; yes, even a duty to guide the country to a decent society. That direction is best decided by you and others in your sub culture of police, for what better epitomises the values of a decent society than those cherished by the men and women in blue?
He urges action in response to the ‘terror raids’:
I urge every New Zealander not to allow the state apparatus to take from you by default, legal rights people long before us fought for, died for. I urge every New Zealand to contact their Member of Parliament and express concern that the anti-terror legislation currently before parliament, be placed on “hold” until the true nature of the present police raids under the auspicious of terror legislation, is tested before the courts.
This is a timely call, from an unexpected quarter. NZ’s politicians are, by and large, reluctant to throw their weight behind the raids in case they turn out to be shonky; they are likewise reluctant to speak out against them in case they turn out to be sound. Exceptions are the Maori party, who have been outspoken in framing this as a racist action, and the NZ First comedy bandwagon, who have been outspoken in framing the Maori party’s criticism as a racist action.
As the days have turned into weeks and the cloak of secrecy over the whole affair remains in place, my expectation that this is a legitimate action has dwindled to virtually nothing. New Zealand is a small society, and the informal networks are hard at work. People I trust in turn know and trust many of the arrestees, or those who have been harassed by the police in this operation. My faith in the strength of these networks is much greater than my faith in the official line of the police operation.
The public interest in this case is significant. While I don’t think the operation was intended to suppress protest as an end in itself, that is its effect, and that obligates a democratic state to act with care and transparency. The claims behind the raids are wide-ranging and unprecedented. The suggestion is that New Zealand is not the nation we think it is; that its heart is not what we understand it to be. This is enormously powerful stuff that has the potential to shift our national identity. Determining the worth of the raids is vital for us if we are to know the society of which we are part.
The public have not been entrusted with any real evidence. A few incendiary text messages, and claims of gun-running and illegal gun ownership, do not amount to much of anything. Given what is here at stake, the public has a right to know as soon as possible what basis exists for the operation. Continued secrecy will weaken our society. The public need for some hard facts is pressing, and keeping the specific accusations against the accused a secret – let alone the evidence – is rapidly becoming indefensible.
And, of course, there are many good reasons to doubt the worth of the raids – the Louise Nicholas affair has generally undermined our faith in the police, and the Ahmed Zaoui debacle demonstrated that secrecy can be used to keep the many weaknesses of a case out of the public eye.
It seems increasingly impossible that this is anything more than an elaborate fantasy, where the police (and SIS?) sought out only confirmatory evidence for their hypothesis that there was a threat. Of course, they found it.
Meurant urges that we demand to place the anti-terror legislation on hold until the truth about these raids comes out; I think we have every right to demand that the truth be revealed sooner rather than later. The state apparatus has not earned our good faith, and it is now time they fronted up.
