The New Zealand Herald

Register all kids, urges coroner

Minister disagrees with idea that inquest says would have given Moko a chance

- Jared Savage

The coroner who investigat­ed the death of Moko Rangitoher­iri says all children should be registered at birth and monitored until the age of 5 to help prevent another tragedy — but the Minister for Children has poured cold water on the idea.

Moko, 3, was subjected to horrific abuse at the hands of his carers, Tania Shailer and David Haerewa, who were jailed for 17 years after admitting the 2015 manslaught­er.

The compulsory monitoring of children, by midwives or Plunket, was the top recommenda­tion of Rotoruabas­ed coroner Dr Wallace Bain in his findings into Moko's death.

He pinpointed specific failings by government department­s, individual­s and social welfare agencies which missed numerous “red flags” in the care of Moko and his siblings.

Bain said it was a major concern that Moko was not visited by any organisati­on despite those flags.

If Moko had been seen — and given medical treatment — even several hours before his death, Bain said, the pathologis­t report was clear the tod- dler could have been saved.

Compulsory checks on children until they reached 5, when they attend school, Bain said, would have given Moko a better chance of survival.

But Children's Minister Tracey Martin said although she understood where Bain was coming from, “I don’t think [compulsory monitoring is] something that most New Zealanders would be comfortabl­e with”.

“My initial conversati­ons with colleagues reflect a similar view. While every child’s death is a tragedy and there are far too many, thankfully they are still rare. Most families are loving families,” she said.

Compulsory checks on children was the same recommenda­tion Bain made after the inquest of Nia Glassie, who died at the hands of her carers in 2007.

“Had that recommenda­tion been in place, and for example midwives and Plunket were empowered to check on children and enter homes (subject to safety considerat­ions)

and properly funded to do so, Nia Glassie and Moko would probably still be alive today,” Bain wrote.

Martin said what happened to Moko was “shameful” and a “hideous crime”. She acknowledg­ed Bain’s work on the inquest and said it was positive he had noted improvemen­ts since Nia’s death.

Martin also highlighte­d changes being made to the Ministry for Children, Oranga Tamariki, which would improve outcomes for vulnerable children. The ministry is undergoing a five-year overhaul, with a raft of changes including making health, education and children’s services work more closely and making registrati­on of social workers mandatory.

Children’s Commission­er Judge Andrew Becroft shied away from compulsory monitoring, but said the concept was worthy of national debate.

He pointed out about 91 per cent of New Zealand children already voluntaril­y get comprehens­ive Well Child checks, which sees Plunket nurses or Maori providers monitoring children up to age 5.

Of the 9 to 10 per cent of children who were missed, there is a group that are hard to reach and “would clearly benefit from good-quality visits and assistance”, he said.

But rather than “reinventin­g the wheel” to create a new mandatory monitoring system, Becroft recommende­d efforts be made to extend Well Child coverage to all families and make checks more frequent and in-depth.

He also called for the stalled Children’s Teams initiative — which focuses on vulnerable children — to be extended from its pilot phase.

The costs of extending such programmes would be “chicken feed” compared with the long-term benefits and savings to the health, education and justice systems, he said.

In his findings Bain echoed the words of Becroft, who gave evidence at the inquest.

“We have a once-in-alifetime opportunit­y ... to build a world-leading care and protection . . . we will never get this chance again.

“As a country, we must. This shameful abuse against our children has to stop.”

 ??  ?? Moko Rangitoher­iri was just 3 when he died.
Moko Rangitoher­iri was just 3 when he died.

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