Hawke's Bay Today

Barrister: ‘Sex cult cloaked in Christiani­ty'

Lawyer wants West Coast commune closed

- Jean Edwards of RNZ

Four government agencies are being accused of knowingly allowing abuse to happen at Gloriavale, in High Court action brought by a leavers’ lawyer who describes the community as a “sex cult cloaked in Christiani­ty”.

Barrister Brian Henry has filed proceeding­s against Oranga Tamariki, the Department of Internal Affairs, Ministry of Social Developmen­t and Labour Inspectora­te, after sending a letter to the Prime Minister and other senior ministers calling for the West Coast commune to be shut down.

Henry criticised the failure of previous government­s and officials in the December 6 letter, arguing inaction had turned them into “enablers”.

“My clients seek immediate action at ministeria­l level to close the Gloriavale community,” he said.

“On the previous government’s watch, the government and officials involved have enabled the continuati­on of the entrapment of those born into the community, a community the police have now demonstrat­ed has bred and will continue to breed males who commit serious sexual abuse, serious criminal offending against vulnerable young females.”

The letter was sent to Prime Minister Christophe­r Luxon, Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, Act leader David Seymour, Attorney General Judith Collins, Social Developmen­t Minister Louise Upston and Education Minister Erica Stanford.

Its release coincided with the final episode of the documentar­y series Escaping Utopia on TVNZ, in which two former members travelled to Gloriavale’s community in India, discoverin­g NZ women “trapped” without access to passports and children without birth certificat­es.

Brian Henry represente­d nine former Gloriavale members in two landmark Employment Court cases in which chief judge Christina Inglis ruled they were community employees, rather than volunteers.

In his December letter, he told the ministers officials had done nothing.

“They are waiting on the plaintiffs, impecuniou­s victims through my legal team to do their job, without resource, without the government powers,” he said.

Henry noted the Labour Inspectora­te received advice from Crown Law concluding there was no employment relationsh­ip between Gloriavale and its members in 2021, and Crown Law had received a copy of the community’s foundation­al document “What We Believe”.

“On any proper reading it is a blueprint of a sex cult, it spells out the entrapment of children, it spells out the subjugatio­n of females; sixyear-old children, little defenceles­s girls, it sets out the denial of education, the denial of fundamenta­l New Zealand birthright­s that keeps them subservien­t; enslaved to a male sexualised community,” he wrote.

Henry said government social agencies were put on notice in the mid-1990s when Gloriavale founder Hopeful Christian was jailed for indecent assault.

“This is not Christiani­ty; What We Believe is the code developed by a convicted sex offender (before he was caught), a code for a sex cult carefully cloaked in Christiani­ty.

“It is incontrove­rtible that Gloriavale was establishe­d by a sex offender, has bred male sex offenders and continues practices of female entrapment, enslavemen­t and sexualisat­ion.”

Women were conditione­d from birth to submit to Gloriavale’s leaders and “destined to be deliberate­ly illeducate­d and enslaved in unworldly ignorance”, Henry said.

Police are also investigat­ing allegation­s of forced labour, slavery and servitude at Gloriavale.

The six women and three men found to have been employees have lodged an Employment Relations Authority claim against the Christian community for lost wages and compensati­on believed to total $5.2 million.

Gloriavale’s bid to appeal against the Employment Court declaratio­n that the women were employees was dismissed by the Court of Appeal, although it has invited submission­s on whether leave should be granted on two narrow questions of law.

The Cabinet mandate for the formal all-of-government response to Gloriavale came to an end last year, after being establishe­d in August 2022 to work on five key outcomes for community members.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment said agencies would continue working with Gloriavale.

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? The Gloriavale Christian community is located at Haupiri on the West Coast of the South Island.
Photo / NZME The Gloriavale Christian community is located at Haupiri on the West Coast of the South Island.

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