Waikato Times

Mahuta slams US riots, expats express dismay

- Stuff reporters

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern reacted to the riots that erupted at the Capitol building in the United States, saying democracy ‘‘should never be undone by a mob’’.

And, Foreign Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta condemned the riots in Washington yesterday, in which a woman was fatally shot by police, and three others died in ‘‘medical emergencie­s’’.

Americans in New Zealand watched in disbelief as proTrump supporters broke into the Capitol, protesting against the congressio­nal process to confirm Democrat Joe Biden as the winner of November’s presidenti­al election. There was shock as protesters ran through the halls seen as the bastion of democracy and it ricocheted around the US and across the world.

‘‘We regret unfolding events in Washington, DC. Our thoughts are with the American people,’’ Mahuta said on Twitter.

‘‘Violence has no place in thwarting democracy.

‘‘We look forward to the peaceful transition of the political administra­tion, which is the hallmark of democracy. Kia tau nga¯ manaakitan­ga.’’

Across New Zealand, Americans were stunned by the events, during which a woman was shot and later died.

Genice Paullay-Beazley, a New Yorker who lives in Auckland and is active in the New Zealand chapter of Democrats Abroad, described the scenes as ‘‘total anarchy’’ that amounted to an attempted coup by supporters of President Donald Trump.

Living in the relative calm of New Zealand for the past 16 years, Paullay-Beazley said her family in the US were having to deal with the unrest and the coronaviru­s pandemic. ‘‘Having said that, America is still my home and it breaks my heart. The Senate is the most secure place in

Washington outside the White House,’’ Paullay-Beazley said.

‘‘I said many years ago America was going to tear itself to pieces and we are seeing that happening now.’’

American expat and Canterbury University history professor Dr Peter Field said he believed most Americans would condemn the violence.

The real danger was a ‘‘Left and Right’’ media, and the targeted distributi­on through algorithms of news content that supported people’s establishe­d world views, Field said.

Rachel Bowyer moved from the US to Auckland in 2019 because of the ‘‘insufferab­le’’ political climate in her home country. ‘‘The divide in family and friends was getting so vicious.’’ The fact protesters had managed to storm Capitol Hill illustrate­d the double standards in the country, she said.

‘‘If it was a BLM [Black Lives Matter] protest, they would have been shot on sight.’’

Bowyer felt sad and helpless. ‘‘It is embarrassi­ng ... It will be on the news in every single country in the world, as if we hadn’t already been made fun of for four years.’’

Auckland-based Trump supporter Amy Benjamin said while she did not agree with the protesters’ tactics, she understood their frustratio­n.

‘‘I believe the election was stolen,’’ the California­n said.

New Plymouth resident Tay McDonald, originally from Texas, said he was not a Trump supporter but it was ‘‘idiotic’’ to blame one man for the protests ... ‘‘this is the result of years and years of chaos in politics, education and religion’’.

‘‘America is still my home and it breaks my heart.’’ Genice Paullay-Beazley

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