|
Skip to comment form |
Skip
to poll |
Send to a friend
NZCPR
Mid-week Politics
John Boscawen ACT MP
26 March
2009
Time
for Clarity |
All
parents should have the fundamental ability to bring their
children up as well rounded, law abiding citizens in the best
way they see fit - a right that was taken away by Labour’s
passage of Sue Bradford’s Anti-Smacking law 21 months ago.
Labour
and the Greens might not like to admit it but, although there
are exceptions, the vast majority of New Zealand parents are
decent and loving - and, as such, more than capable of
deciding how best to raise their children into the successful
and upstanding citizens that we want them to be.
It
is for this reason that I have submitted my Crimes (Reasonable
Parental Control and Correction) Amendment Bill: to restore
parents’ fundamental right to use all reasonable methods
available in order to raise their children as well-rounded and
law-abiding citizens.
The
fact is that most parents do not actually WANT to smack their
children and only use it as a last resort after all other
options have been exhausted.
In most cases of parental discipline, guidance and
correction is distinctly NON-physical. However
there ARE occasions on which a parent may reasonably decide
that correcting their child’s behaviour requires some degree
of physical action.
Currently
Section 59(2) of the Crimes Act states that “Nothing
… justifies the use of force for the purpose of
correction.” This
means that any parent who corrects their child by use of a
light smack is now committing assault.
Thus,
parents who would never dream of abusing their children do not
even have the authority to decide for themselves whether or
not they can use a light smack to correct their behaviour.
But
the problems go so much further than just taking away a
parent’s freedom to choose how they raise their child.
As though it were not enough to simply tell parents
they cannot lightly smack their children, this law has created
uncertainty
among parents about what they can or cannot do. It
does so by stating that Police have the discretion NOT to
prosecute if the offence is deemed so inconsequential that
there is no public interest in proceeding with a prosecution.
So
which is it? Will
a parent who lightly smacks their child be charged – or will
police ‘wink, wink, nudge, nudge’ turn a blind eye?
The situation makes no sense; there is no respect for
the law in the fact that police can turn a blind eye to an
offence, and parents are left confused as to whether they will
be charged or not.
Further,
the law – while stating that police have discretion over
whether or not to charge a parent for smacking a child –
says nothing of the Department of Child, Youth and Family.
There is nothing to stop a witness – who sees a
parent smacking their child’s hand in the supermarket - from
reporting a parent to CYF, which could then investigate the
parent and possibly take the matter further.
My
Bill gets rid of this confusion with an additional clause that
states that reasonable force can be used for the purpose of
correcting a child’s behaviour. The
Bill removes clause 59(2) as stated above and replaces this
with guidelines that clearly outline the circumstances in
which the use of force may be unreasonable.
These are: if the force causes the child to suffer
injury that is more than transitory and trifling or materially
contributes thereto; it is inflicted by any weapon, tool, or
other implement; it is inflicted by any means that is cruel or
degrading.
These
terms do not, of course, relate to circumstances where the
person applying the force reasonably believes that the use of
force is necessary to prevent death or serious harm to the
child or another person.
No
one wants to see the removal of any measure that could
possibly have some chance of preventing even one child from
being abused. But,
at the same time, law-abiding parents deserve some certainty
about what they can and cannot do – and the ability to
choose for themselves how to raise their children.
It
is for this reason that ACT does not wish to revert to the
situation that we had before the Anti-Smacking law.
ACT wants to repeal and replace Section 59 of the
Crimes Act. This
is an attempt to give parents certainty about what they can
and cannot do when it comes to the raising of their children
– so they know what is acceptable in the eyes of the law and
what is not.
More,
however, it is to let parents do what they do best: parent.
It is parents in the home who are best equipped to
judge how best to correct their children’s behaviour – not
politicians sitting in an office in
Wellington
. The sooner
Parliament recognises that, the sooner parents can reclaim
their fundamental right to raise their children as they see
fit.
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
>>>
Skip to top | Skip
to poll
Send to
a friend
|