Hawke's Bay Today

‘Slave’ says he got hidings, no pay

‘He hit me with the timber . . . I said ‘Auga, please, Auga, please . . .’ I was crying and he said ‘don’t cry, don’t cry’

- Anusha Bradley of RNZ

ASamoan man the Crown says was trafficked to New Zealand and used as a slave says he was put to work within hours of getting off the plane and was constantly beaten for working too slowly.

He is one of 13 complainan­ts to give evidence at the trial of Joseph Auga Matamata, 65, at the High Court in Napier. Matamata denies 24 charges of human traffickin­g and slavery between 1994 and 2017.

The man, who arrived in New Zealand in July 2015 aged 53, described being recruited by Matamata in Samoa after making inquiries with his son about working in New Zealand.

He met Matamata, who at the time he only knew as “Old Man”, for dinner near his village. It was explained Matamata would pay for his visa and travel costs in return for taking a chunk of his New Zealand wages.

He did not know what work it was other than he had to be “strong and fit” and was told he would have to stay one to two years to make it worthwhile, the man told the court through an interprete­r.

He denied knowing he only had a threemonth working visa when he arrived or knowing he had a return ticket to Samoa in October.

On arriving at Auckland Airport at 1.20am on July 30, 2015, he was met by Joseph Matamata and his wife. They immediatel­y drove to Hastings, arriving at Matamata’s home about 7.30am.

The man changed and then they all drove to a vineyard where he and another worker had “training” in how to prune vines, he said. They worked all day but he was “happy”, he said.

“I was quite pleased I had a job and was getting some money.”

But despite working six or seven days a week for 17 months in orchards or vineyards, he did not receive any of his wages, he said.

Every three or four months, Matamata would give him some money to buy cigarettes and at his first Christmas in New Zealand he received $150.

His second Christmas he got $100, he told the court.

The man was often beaten up for being too slow or making mistakes in the fields or with his chores at home, he said.

As punishment he would have to “offer my head” to Matamata, which would then be hit with tools or firewood.

Once Matamata beat him with a piece of firewood because he’d thrown away two uneaten eggs after breakfast, he told the court.

“He asked me to go get him a piece of timber.

“I came to him and he said ‘give me your head’, so I gave him my head and he hit me with the timber.

“I felt so pain . . . he hit me once and then again.

“I said ‘Auga, please, Auga, please . . .’ I was crying and he said ‘don’t cry, don’t cry’.”

Another time he was hit with a pair of secateurs while working in a vineyard, he said.

“He said to me ‘give me your head’ and he punched me with the tool and blood came out of my head. It happened often.”

He finally told some New Zealandbas­ed Samoan workers he met while working in an orchard about his troubles with Matamata, asking them to go to the police.

They did and his house was raided in 2017.

“The police cars drove in and Auga called me to run away,” he told the court.

Instead, he hid in the garage and said he was “so happy” when police officers later found him there.

The man, now aged 57, had been living in New Zealand for three years.

Under cross examinatio­n by defence lawyer Roger Philip, he said he had been offered a work visa in New Zealand by Immigratio­n officials in exchange for giving evidence at the trial.

Philip questioned why the man didn’t run away when Matamata and his wife went on one of their regular lengthy trips to Samoa.

“It was in my mind but I was patient and I was thinking of a proper time to go,” he said.

Roger Philip also questioned whether it was really Matamata who assaulted him.

“The defendant will say he never struck you on the head with firewood,” Philip said.

“Who is correct? You or him?” “I’m correct,” the man replied. More complainan­ts will give their evidence to the court during the week, with Joseph Matamata expected to also give evidence at the end of the week.

 ?? Photo / RNZ Anusha Bradley ?? Joseph Auga Matamata.
Photo / RNZ Anusha Bradley Joseph Auga Matamata.

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