Whanganui Chronicle

Police boss cops flak after penning surveillan­ce piece

- Hamish Cardwell

A column by Police Commission­er Andrew Coster seeking to start a national conversati­on about surveillan­ce is being panned as a disingenuo­us attempt to deflect criticism.

Coster wrote in the NZ Herald complainin­g the police were copping it for underdoing and overdoing intelligen­ce collection.

On one side, they were panned for only learning of threats to mosques posted to a website used by extremists and white supremacis­ts after a member of the public told them.

And on the other, there are reports of police approachin­g innocent young Ma¯ori, photograph­ing them, collecting their personal details and sending it to a national database.

Coster writes these both speak to the question about what trade-offs to privacy the community is prepared to make in the interests of safety.

Criminolog­ist Emilie Ra¯kete said this was a ridiculous, false comparison.

“Brown children waiting outside the dairy without their parents are not the same thing as Nazis.

“There is a reasonable expectatio­n of privacy — a reasonable expectatio­n from parents that their children won’t be approached and photograph­ed by strangers — that people posting about organising killings on the internet do not have.”

Ra¯kete said Coster was trying to deflect criticism of the police, including accusation­s of racial profiling when taking photos of young people — something the police deny.

Victoria University of Wellington criminolog­ist Trevor Bradley said while there was merit in a public discussion about privacy, the police needed to come clean about what they are doing.

He said the police’s widening use of facial recognitio­n technology and revelation­s about young people being photograph­ed — currently the subject of three reviews — only came to light because of the media.

Green Party MP Golriz Ghahraman said when Coster was appointed he raised hopes about a change in approach from police — particular­ly when he swiftly axed the trial of the controvers­ial Armed Response Teams.

She now felt let down.

“I still have great hopes that his heart might be in the right place but I am disappoint­ed.”

Ghahraman said Coster had gone about sparking a public debate all wrong.

“I think if anything, a Herald column by our top cop the week of revelation­s should have come with an apology and an acknowledg­ement of wrong.

“I think that would have been more of a good-faith way of sparking a conversati­on with communitie­s.”

The Independen­t Police Conduct Authority and Privacy Commission­er’s report into photograph­ing is expected to be finished in September.

 ??  ?? Andrew Coster
Andrew Coster

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand