The New Zealand Herald

Focus on where criminals come from, not end up

A child that grows up without a father is five times more likely to commit crime.

- Garth McVicar comment Garth McVicar is founder of the Sensible Sentencing Trust.

The saying, “We reap what we sow”, highlights farming experience that if you don’t work in partnershi­p with nature, you get a dud crop. It comes to mind when I think about the latest twist in the crime and punishment debate; the numbers of people in prisons.

The focus on the product of crime, prisoners and victims, gives little attention to the root causes of the problem. That is to say, we are worried by what we’re reaping and not enough by what we’re sowing.

The Minister of Justice, Andrew Little, wants to find ways to reduce the prison population. Essentiall­y, this will be achieved by softening bail legislatio­n and making parole easier to get.

The result will be more offenders on the streets. The streets will become more dangerous and public safety will suffer as a consequenc­e.

The inconvenie­nt truth about high prison rates is that crime has fallen.

New Zealand’s homicides peaked at 176 a year but have now declined to around 80 per year and still falling.

As New Zealand locked up its criminals for longer, the terrible crimes that resulted in the formation of the Sensible Sentencing Trust, such as Teresa Cormack, Kylie Smith and Karla Cardno, have declined. But locking people up is a response to criminals, not the complete answer to preventing the creation of criminals.

I was born in 1951, at a time New Zealand’s crime and prison numbers were incredibly low, in fact averaging one or two homicides a year until the early 1960s. So what went wrong?

How did one of the safest countries in the Western world end up spiralling to a totally unacceptab­le level of crime?

Why is it that even locking people up doesn’t stop new criminals emerging?

What is different about our country now that is creating this new breed of criminals?

The one common denominato­r that Mr Little and his colleagues won’t dare talk about is the traditiona­l family.

I’m talking about a stable family unit — two parents and the children they bring into a loving cherished relationsh­ip — where the child grows up being taught right from wrong and to become a lawabiding, contributi­ng citizen.

The figures speak for themselves. In 1961, 95 per cent of children were born into a traditiona­l family with married parents. By 2015 only 53 per cent of children were brought into the world by parents who were married.

A child that grows up without a father is five times more likely to commit crime.

The evidence shows more children are abused in de-facto type households and a child that has been abused is 20 times more likely to end up in prison.

For Ma¯ ori the figures are worse. In 1968 72 per cent of Ma¯ ori children were born to married parents. They had both a mother and a father as role models, just as the vast majority of Pacific Island children do today.

By 2015 only 21 per cent of Ma¯ ori children were born into a traditiona­l mother and father married-to-each-other family.

The stark staring fact is that the mantra “all forms of family or whanau are equal” is clearly absolute nonsense, and the statistics clearly prove that to be so.

The evidence is clear that a child needs a father who wants and loves them.

This is the best way to raise a child to become a law-abiding, contributi­ng member of society.

Mr Little’s justice summit won’t dare say anything like that. They fear they might offend the left-wing liberals who have been at the forefront of breaking down the family unit.

These liberals would rather focus on the problem of prison numbers than face the reality of what their social ideology has created.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand