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Philip Duck New Zealand's Justice Minister Simon Power and a small army of bureaucrats from various government ministries and departments have been ordered to New York to front up to the United Nations Human Rights Committee.
The Minister will, over a two-day session, be asked by the representatives of countries such as Egypt, Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco, to 'provide detailed information on cases in which electro-muscular disruption devices, Tasers, have been used by the police.' And Power is also going to be asked to provide information on 'Operation Eight' and explain whether 'Maori individuals and their families were victims of violations of their rights and subjected to discriminatory treatment.'
So, the Algerian government, which is highly corrupt, controls the judiciary and routinely uses its secret police to beat journalists, is going to interrogate Power on New Zealand's unarmed police force's use of the Taser?
And the government of Egypt, which refuses to make spousal rape illegal, allows the searching of people and places without a warrant, detains without charge for 'security-related' offenses more than 12,000 people every year and, in 2008, shot and killed at least 32 migrants attempting to get into Israel, is going to challenge Power on 'Operation Eight?'
The reason for the Minister's trip is sick; it is not just a waste of time and money. It is far worse than that. By appearing before the committee, Power will not only deflect attention away from the worst of the world's human rights abusers and the governments of countries such as Iran, Zimbabwe, China, Egypt, North Korea and Sudan, he will also allow them to continue to engage in the sickest of moral equivalency and say, "Look! Don't pick on us, human rights problems are everywhere!"
If Simon Power were truly concerned about the worst of human rights abuses he would pull down his trousers and give the U.N his very own performance of a Whakapohane while telling the committee to sod off.
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Comments
To argue that other nations
To argue that other nations violate human rights more than New Zealand does, avoids the central question of whether stun guns are instruments of electro-torture and death. New Zealand should know better than to adopt a weapon of "compliance" which has not been tested by independent medical investigators, and has been cited officially as the proximate and contributory cause of death. When actual autopsy reports are examined in the country where the most popular stun gun is manufactured, we find that coroners and medical examiners point the finger at these electro-torture-death devices as contributing to or causing a police homicide.
Shame on New Zealand!
Tasers are clearly
Tasers are clearly instruments of torture. To achieve incapacitation, the electric shock is off-the-scale of pain. One calculation places it at about 2000 time more than intensely painful. Use of a taser typically leaves burns and permanent scars. Although dressed-up as modern and high tech weapon, when used in the "drive stun" mode, it is functionally similar to burning the subject with a glowing cigarette.
Tasers are also claimed to be safe. In fact they carry a risk of death through cardiac and other taser-death mechanisms. The manufacturers claims that tasers are safe are false and misleading. And they're starting to get called to the carpet on this issue.
New Zealand has a good human rights reputation. So does Canada. But Canada has gone through utter turmoil since late-2007 with tasers being associated with too many deaths than be reasonably explained away. Also, the police have been accused of over-reliance on tasers. The Victoria, BC force dropped their use of tasers by 85%, with a coincident 10% drop in overall use of force.
If the police leadership haven't yet got the message on tasers, then they need to stop being so naive and stop trusting the slick talking stungun salesmen.