Texarkana Gazette

New Zealand protesters pushing limits

No tolerance for anti-mandate ‘intimidati­on and harassment’, premier says

- NICK PERRY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — New Zealand’s prime minister Monday said protesters who oppose coronaviru­s mandates were using “intimidati­on and harassment,” as authoritie­s appeared to take a harsher stance toward the convoy of demonstrat­ors that has disrupted the capital of Wellington for nearly a week.

Police initially let the protesters set up tents and camp on the grounds of New Zealand’s Parliament before arresting 122 people on Thursday and then backing off again. The size of the protest dropped to a few hundred last week but increased again to about 3,000 over the weekend.

Speaking with reporters, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern signaled that authoritie­s’ patience was thinning.

“I very clearly have a view on the protesters and the way that they’ve conducted their protest, because it has moved beyond sharing a view to intimidati­on and harassment of the people around central Wellington,” she said. “That cannot be tolerated.”

Parliament Speaker Trevor Mallard tried to make the protesters uncomforta­ble last week by turning on lawn sprinklers and blasting out decades-old Barry Manilow songs and the 1990s hit “Macarena” on a repeat loop.

Police on Monday told protesters to move their illegally parked vehicles as soon as possible, offering them alternativ­e parking at a nearby stadium.

“Wellington­ians have the right to move freely and safely around the city, so all roads being clear is a top priority,” said Superinten­dent Corrie Parnell, the Wellington district commander.

The protesters, who oppose vaccine mandates and were inspired by protests in Canada, appear fairly well organized after trucking in portable toilets, crates of donated food and bales of straw to lay down when the grass turned to mud.

Despite the arrests and scuffles with police last week, dozens of tents remain on Parliament’s grounds, with cars and trucks blocking surroundin­g streets. Protesters lined up Monday for a breakfast of barbecued sausages and schnitzels after surviving a weekend of torrential rain.

Kacheeya Scarrow drove her van about 235 miles from the town of Taupo to join the campout.

“All I want is the mandates lifted, and freedom of choice,” she said. “I’m not anti-vax, I’m not pro-vax. Everybody should have the right to choose what they want to do with their own body.”

Another protester, 70-yearold Joanna Plows, said the government had usurped the right “to choose whether or not we have medical interventi­on.”

New Zealand has mandated that certain workers get vaccinated, including teachers, doctors, nurses, police and military personnel. A vaccine pass is also required to enter most stores and restaurant­s.

The protests come just as New Zealand experience­s its first widespread outbreak of covid-19 after keeping its borders closed for much of the pandemic and implementi­ng strict lockdowns. Daily case numbers jumped to a new high of nearly 1,000 on Monday, up from about 200 per day just five days earlier.

However, not a single patient was in intensive care, thanks in part to a vaccinatio­n rate of 77% and what experts have described as the comparativ­ely less-severe symptoms of the omicron variant.

The nation has reported just 53 virus deaths among its population of 5 million people.

Ardern said the timing of the mass campout couldn’t be worse.

“At the very point where we are seeing an increase in cases, and an increase in risk to the public health and well-being of New Zealand, they want to see removed the very measures that have kept us safe, well and alive,” she said.*

“I very clearly have a view on the protesters and the way that they’ve conducted their protest, because it has moved beyond sharing a view to

intimidati­on and harassment.”

—Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern

 ?? (AP/New Zealand Herald/Mark Mitchell) ?? Vehicles of protesters against vaccine mandates are parked Monday on the streets near Parliament in Wellington, New Zealand.
(AP/New Zealand Herald/Mark Mitchell) Vehicles of protesters against vaccine mandates are parked Monday on the streets near Parliament in Wellington, New Zealand.

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