Rotorua Daily Post

Dairy stabbing: New arrest

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Police have arrested a third person as part of the investigat­ion into the death of dairy worker Janak Patel in Sandringha­m. A 36-year-old man has been charged with robbery and was scheduled to appear in Auckland District Court today.

Police have also found and seized a car which was being sought in relation to the homicide investigat­ion.

The man accused of murdering Patel was deported from Australia earlier this year, the Herald on Sunday understand­s.

After he was deported, he wound up in emergency housing in South Auckland.

The grounds for his deportatio­n from Australia cannot be reported for legal reasons.

The man, 34, is accused of killing dairy worker Patel on Wednesday night at the Rose Cottage Superette in Fowlds Ave, Sandringha­m. The newly married man was working in the shop while its owners were out of the country. He suffered stab wounds and died shortly after calling for emergency help.

A funeral for Patel was scheduled last night in Wiri.

A manager of the boarding house, which the Herald on Sunday has chosen not to identify, said the man came with a good reference and had only stayed for a few days before leaving abruptly on Monday.

On Saturday, loved ones of Patel, customers of the superette and other mourners gathered to pay their respects to the slain dairy worker.

The vigil was organised by the Migrant Workers Associatio­n, whose president Anu Kaloti said on Friday that the group offered “the deepest

condolence­s to Janak’s wife and his family”.

Those gathered packed the footpath and observed a minute of silence after a short, sombre speech from Migrant Workers Associatio­n president Anu Kaloti.

“It’s important to unite as a community to be in solidarity with Janak’s family,” Kaloti told the crowd.

Kaloti said the country needed to look at the material conditions that had led to an environmen­t where crime was thriving.

“This is not Aotearoa,” she said. Wayne Orbell was among those who turned out to pay their respects to Patel.

He grew up in the 1980s and 90s in the now demolished row of state

houses on Haverstock Rd near the shop, known as “the pink dairy”.

Orbell fondly remembered spending hours playing Space Invaders then running home for dinner when the street lights came on.

He was shocked to hear of Patel’s death and said he came to the vigil to pay his respects.

“It’s my childhood right here. It’s the pink dairy.”

A number of politician­s were also there including Labour MP Helen White, who spoke, former Labour MP turned independen­t Gaurav Sharma and Green MP Ricardo Menendez who cautioned against turning the death into a political football.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern visited members of the Sandringha­m community on Saturday after she came under fire from Act Party leader David Seymour following the stabbing — he said she had displayed a “complete lack of judgment” by opting to visit the Chatham Islands and not her grief-stricken electorate.

The PM told media after her Sandringha­m visit she had spoken with Patel’s family and Cabinet would be meeting today to discuss what more could be done to combat crime.

She said it was about “prosecutin­g and holding to account those who are responsibl­e”.

“I think the most important thing is that we are able to talk directly with one another.”

A man, 34, was arrested on Friday night in New Lynn, West Auckland, after a major manhunt and charged with murder and aggravated robbery with a knife.

In a brief appearance on Saturday morning in the Auckland District Court he was granted interim name suppressio­n and was remanded in custody without plea. Wearing a boiler suit, he stood calmly in the dock with his hands behind his back.

A second man, aged 42, was charged with robbery of the same dairy on the same day.

Charging documents show the 34-year-old man’s most recent address was a boarding house complex in South Auckland.

The other man is charged with the robbery of a cash register, butane lighters and vapes from the dairy. He also did not enter a plea and was remanded in custody.

Kaloti said “no one should get hurt on the job”.

“Unfortunat­ely, we have a long way to go before the most vulnerable workers in our society can feel safe at work.” — NZ Herald”

 ?? Photo / George Block ?? Candles were lit at the vigil for the slain dairy worker.
Photo / George Block Candles were lit at the vigil for the slain dairy worker.

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