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9
October 2011
Crime
- it’s
about demography not race
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The
Maori Party is claiming that New Zealand’s justice, police,
courts and corrections processes systematically discriminate
against Maori. Co-leader Pita Sharples says that he has based
his stance on a series of top-level reports. But it is clear
that he is ignoring overwhelming evidence that show his claims
of prejudice to be not only blatant electioneering, but
blatant racism as well!
Last week’s release of Police crime statistics show that
in the year to June 30, recorded offences across the country
have fallen by 25,636 to 416,324, a drop of 5.8 percent. The
number of recorded murders fell by almost 50 percent, from 65
last year to 34 - the lowest level since fiscal year reporting
began in 1986. With recorded crimes presently at 947 per
10,000 head of population, down from the peak of 1,325 per
10,000 in 1993, there is no doubt that overall crime rates
have been trending downwards for some years.
This same downwards trend is evident in the Ministry of
Justice’s Justice
Sector Forecast 2011-2021, which has just been released.
It shows a continuing fall in all justice-related areas. This
includes the rate of imprisonment which is expected to fall by
6.2 percent over the next decade, reducing the prison
population from the current 8,708 to 8,165. This will lower
the incarceration rate per 100,000 people from 198 in June
2011 to 170 by June 2021 - a fall of 16 percent over the
decade.[1]
In
addition to the improvements in policing and rehabilitation
practices that have been made over the years - as well as
advancements in personal and property security - the fall in
crime can be largely attributed to demographics.
The most
crime prone group in any population is young people aged from
15 to 24 years old. That means that the number of young people
in this age group is a key determinant of crime. The more of
these young people there are, as a percentage of the
population as a whole, the higher the crime rate. Put simply
– the fewer the number of 15 to 24 year olds in our
population, the lower the crime rate.
Following
World War II, the rise of the Baby Boomer generation
dramatically increased the number of young people in this
crime-prone age group. As this Baby Boomer cohort has aged, so
the number of young people in the 15 to 24 year old age group
has reduced – and with it crime.
According
to Census data, in 1971, young people in the 15 to 24 age
group made up 17.3 percent of the general population, but by
2006, the number had fallen to 14.4 percent - a 20 percent
decrease. However, the proportion of Maori in that 15 to 24
age group, which was 8.5 percent in 1971, had more than
doubled to 19.2 percent in 2006. That obviously means that
Maori will feature much more often in crime statistics than
they used to. This
does not in any way suggest Maori are being discriminated
against by our policing and justice systems as Pita Sharples
would have us believe.
But
while demography explains some of the disparity, it clearly
doesn’t tell the whole story.
According
to Statistics New Zealand, a key determinant in the way
official information involving Maori is reported was altered
in the mid-seventies when government
definitions were changed from being based on ancestry and
blood quantum (someone had to be half-caste
or more to be classified as Maori) to being based
on ethnic affiliation and self-identification.
In his
seminal work, Maori
Socio-Economic Disparity, Simon Chapple, a Senior Research
Analyst with the Department of Labour used census data to
explain the implications of this change: “In the 1996 census
there were 273,693 New Zealanders who identified ethnically as
Maori and Maori only. In addition to this, there were 250,338
New Zealanders who identified as members of another ethnic
group, usually Pakeha/European, and also as Maori. Currently
Statistics New Zealand’s official policy is to arbitrarily
classify mixed ethnicity individuals who have Maori as one of
their ethnic groups as Maori and not as the other group or
groups to which they also belong. This sole plus mixed group
is the Maori ethnic group as officially measured. In addition
the 1996 census reveals another 56,343 New Zealanders with
Maori ancestry but who do not identify ethnically as Maori.
Adding these ancestry-but-not ethnicity people gives around
580,374 Maori in 1996.”[2]
He
suggested that a more accurate reflection of the real
situation could be obtained by retaining half of those
classified as Maori as part of the Maori ethnic group, with
the rest allocated to a non-Maori groups using their other
primary stated ethnicity.
The bottom-line impact of all of this is that official
statistics relating to Maori massively overstate their
numbers. Given the high rates of intermarriage that have
always been a major feature of New Zealand’s population mix,
the notion that Maori are a distinct and growing population is
not based on reality, since the number of ‘true’ Maori
under the old blood quantum definition is in serious decline.
Instead it has become a political construct aimed at
fulfilling elite tribal ambitions for power and resources.
Clearly,
under the current classification, where almost one in five of
the young people in the high risk 15 to 24 year old age group
are classified as Maori, it is inevitable that a large
proportion of the young people who are arrested and imprisoned
are going to be Maori. If the classification was changed to
better reflect the true situation - as was suggested by Simon
Chapple – the number of Maori falling foul of the law would
drop sharply.
But
there is another story here, and that is the huge influence
that family has on crime. New Zealand’s Chief Youth Court
Judge Andrew Beecroft has described the majority of the
serious youth offenders that he deals with in his court as
boys who have had no contact with their father; 80 percent do
not go to school and have chronic drug and alcohol addictions;
most have psychological or psychiatric issues; 50 percent –
up to 90 percent in some courts – are Maori; and all of them
have been seriously abused as a child. He explains, “14, 15,
and 16 year-old boys seek out role models like ‘heat seeking
missiles’. It’s either the leader of the Mongrel Mob or
it’s a sports coach or it’s a Dad. But an overwhelming
majority of the boys who I see in the Youth Court have lost
all contact with their father”.
In light
of these comments the statistics on birth rates paints a
rather bleak picture for the future. In 1971, Statistics New
Zealand data shows 31 percent of Maori children were born to
unmarried mothers, compared to 11 percent for non-Maori.
However, by the end of June 2011, a massive 79 percent of
Maori children were born to unmarried mothers - compared to 35
percent for non-Maori.
This
collapse of marriage signals a tragic start for many Maori
children. While the causes of crime are complex, in reality it
is a story of family. Children growing up in strong families
with a mother and father who provide for them and are fully
committed to helping them achieve their potential in life, are
unlikely to become involved in crime. On the other hand,
children growing up in unmarried families - especially where
their mother is dependent on welfare - where there is no
father to protect them, where violence and abuse are
commonplace, and where there is no role model of a breadwinner
who works for a living, are disadvantaged from the day they
are born. They are far more likely to eventually find
themselves on the path to criminal offending.
In light
of the reality of what is going on it’s surely time for
Maoridom to turn its back on grievance as the path to power
and privilege and instead concentrate on doing what others do
– help to grow strong and caring families that cherish their
children and place a strong focus on education as the path to
the future.
Pita
Sharples does not address these issues of demography,
statistics and family in his call for reform. Instead he
prefers to slur the Police and the criminal justice system
with accusations of racism. He says he wants to remove the
so-called bias against Maori by adopting the ideas of Moana
Jackson, “restructuring the Justice system upon the basis of
the Treaty of Waitangi and the foundation of partnership”.
He also wants to indoctrinate the whole of the public service
“to cover every ministry and department across the whole of
government” with his race-based ‘cultural competency’
propaganda.
This
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, Garth McVicar, is the
founder of the Sensible Sentencing Trust, a voluntary
organisation that has changed the crime and punishment
landscape in New Zealand over recent years by tirelessly
campaigning for victims’ rights and tougher penalties for
violent crime. Garth is appalled at the Maori Party’s claims
of racism:
“For
Pita Sharples to suggest that the Police have an ‘ethnic
bias’ or pick on Maori is an insult to Police and every
law-abiding New Zealander – no matter what race. Most Maori
– like most other people do NOT commit crime – to suggest
the Police are to blame for the high level of Maori offending
is typical of the tactics used by opponents to discredit any
threats to their agenda. So what is Pita Sharples’ agenda?
The answer can only be that they do not want criminals
caught.” To read Garth’s article, click here
>>>.
Claims
of racism against the Police and the justice system are
politicking of the worst kind. This slur is being used by the
Maori Party as a political ploy to justify their attempt to
take control, not only of the criminal justice system, but the
whole of the public service as well. Not all at once, of
course, but incrementally: a cultural competency
programme here (to ensure that all
public servants embrace the ‘Maori World View’), and a
claim of Treaty partnership rights there - to give Maori
privileges that other New Zealanders don’t have.
It is
all, of course, a self-serving agenda. Dr Sharples believes
that the ultimate solution is to have a Maori Justice system
– one land, two peoples, two laws.
Everything the Maori Party and other Maori activists do
is designed to advance Maori privilege
and power. The self-serving manipulation of crime statistics
and the orchestration of the notion of racial prejudice when
there is none, is just another example.
This
week’s poll asks: Do
you support the concept of a Maori Justice system? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1. Ministry of Justice, Justice
Sector Forecast 2011-2021
2.Simon Chapple, Maori
socio-economic disparity
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