Discussion:
[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----worldwide----NZ
Rick Halperin
2017-06-26 14:51:26 UTC
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June 26




NEW ZEALAND:

Drug Foundation head slams Harawira's execution policy


New Zealand Drug Foundation executive director Ross Bell has slammed Hone
Harawira for floating the death penalty as a policy idea to combat
methamphetamine.

The Mana party leader told The AM Show on Monday morning that he was
'absolutely serious' about his policy that Chinese people who import P should
be executed.

Mr Bell said it's frightening that Mr Harawira is bringing up "the ultimate
breach of human rights" as a solution to New Zealand's methamphetamine problem.

"In 2017 this conversation shouldn't be one that we're having, full stop. The
thing that worries me is when these ideas, which are usually confined to the
fringes of the internet, are mainstreamed by political candidates, when they're
spoken about on national TV. All we see happening is you give license to people
who hold those obscene views about the role of the death penalty, and it
diverts attention away from real solutions".

"Sadly he didn't say it was an accident. He said it once, he said it twice, and
he put out a press release about it."

Mr Harawira has singled out Chinese drug dealers in his policy because it's the
biggest source of P. He told The AM Show "the greatest source for
methamphetamine is China, the greatest source for the precursors of
methamphetamine is China, the greatest source of expertise for the production
of methamphetamine is China".

However Mr Bell said focusing on China as the source of P is short-sighted. "In
fact we're also getting meth out of Mexico, we're getting methamphetamine from
Canada, what are we killing Mexicans and Canadians now? Whether it's coming
from China, Mexico, Canada or homegrown, it's going to exist as long as there's
demand. So the best way to tackle New Zealand's drug problem is to focus on the
demand."

Mr Harawira said he'd modelled his policy idea on Singapore, where they have a
3-strikes penal policy and the execution of drug smugglers. They also use the
cane as punishment for possession of marijuana, leading Mr Bell to ask whether
the Mana leader would also back that policy.

Mr Bell said the policy would harm the people in the Northland electorate the
most, the seat the Mana leader has his sights on. "When countries double down
and try to fight a literal war on drugs like they're doing in Mexico, the
people that get harmed most in those punitive approaches are the most
vulnerable people. In this scenario the most vulnerable people are Hone's
constituents in Northland."

The New Zealand Drug Foundation focuses on treatment, prevention and
rehabilitation as solutions to the problems caused by drugs rather than
focusing on punishment.

"You're not going to fix health and social problems through beating people and
through executing people, as much as [Rodrigo] Duterte has tried that in the
Philippines," Mr Bell said.

"New Zealand has a proud history on the world stage of speaking out against the
death penalty and we should continue to do that. We should never entertain the
idea that the death penalty is a justifiable thing."

(source: newshub.co.nz)


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