Hawke's Bay Today

Elections a bad mix with gang violence

Gang clashes of the 1990s hold lessons for us as we head to the polls next year

- Jarrod Gilbert

It’s 1996, and guns are being fired. In Christchur­ch, a new chapter of the Road Knights is shooting at the Epitaph Riders, and the Epitaph Riders are shooting back. After one shooting, a gang member turns up at the hospital but he says nothing. The gangs are at war.

Shots ring out again, in the middle of the day and innocent bystanders are hit. Police smother the warring parties and things calm down, but further south another war breaks out.

In Invercargi­ll, the formation of Black

Power sparks an offensive by the Road Knights. A bomb planted at the Black Power clubhouse starts the violence but doesn’t end it. Shootings become common.

Violence begets headlines and headlines beget politician­s.

An election is looming. The first MMP election.

The Labour Party was in Opposition, and attacked the Government for being too soft and saying more needed to be done about the gangs. The National Government initially said police had adequate powers to take care of things and that it was under control.

But Labour MPs banged the drum too hard and so often that the Government was forced to act, and they did so by hastily proposing a swathe of laws to tackle the gang issue. The fact they didn’t really know what the issues were was no impediment, but we certainly know they were flying blind.

The introducti­on to the bill that housed the laws explained there was no research to assess the nature of the problem.

But you wouldn’t have known that by what both sides of the political aisle were saying. Politician­s had overnight become experts in everything about gangs.

Labour and National voted for the laws in a rare show of bipartisan­ship.

The gang laws were the most significan­t legislativ­e thrust targeting gangs in New Zealand’s history. They came about with massive political fanfare, and had very few critics; largely lawyers and academics who said the laws were poorly researched and conceived, with one saying they were “a sop to public opinion. I think it’s a political device to make people feel that something is being done about something that the public has been

I’d bet we’ll get the same before next year’s election. And the result will likely be the same, too — politics over sound policymaki­ng.

encouraged to feel frightened about”.

With support of the New Zealand Law Foundation, I have examined the outcomes of those laws using more than 20 years of data, and the findings are remarkable. Not least because those few critics were remarkably correct.

A number of the laws proved to be unworkable, others have not been used, and others only hit gangaffili­ated people as a small minority and therefore were used much more extensivel­y against people not in gangs.

Those are not gang laws, then, they are general law and order provisions and that is not how they were sold. The latter point is interestin­g, because one of the laws had been asked for by police twice before and not given, but when couched as a “gang law” it was passed. It’s hard not to be cynical.

In my opinion, it’s important we learn from this.

The gang scene in 1996 is remarkably similar to what is occurring now — new gangs are entering establishe­d territorie­s leading to significan­t violence. In the leadup to an election, politician­s responded. I’d bet we’ll get the same before next year’s election. And the result will likely be the same, too — politics over sound policymaki­ng.

I’d also bet our politician­s will look to Australia for guidance, which has notoriousl­y cracked down on its “bikies” in recent years.

I looked across the ditch at those efforts and they should offer us a warning for caution as much as anything else. Any politician who says the various Australian measures offer easy answers hasn’t had a good look. If history is anything to go by, we can expect that to happen.

Most politician­s are good people trying their best to do good things. But sometimes they genuinely don’t. Sometimes they just chase votes. This is one of those stories, and a sequel is on the way.

Dr Jarrod Gilbert is a sociologis­t at the University of Canterbury and the director of Independen­t Research Solutions.

i Making Gang Laws in a Panic can be found on the New Zealand Law Foundation’s website or on this link: www.lawfoundat­ion.org. nz/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/Making-GangLaws-in-a-Panic.pdf

 ?? ?? The increasing frequency of gang clashes is likely to be a hot election topic.
The increasing frequency of gang clashes is likely to be a hot election topic.

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