The New Zealand Herald

Homicide report shows 1 in 10 killed by a parent

Police analysis of factors around killings comes as Govt targets family violence A few peaks from space

- Nicholas Jones

Almost one in 10 homicide victims are killed by their parent or a parent’s live-in partner, a new report that delves into the circumstan­ces surroundin­g murder and manslaught­er cases has found.

The Homicide Victims in New Zealand Police report analyses all cases over eight years according to gender, age, ethnicity, relationsh­ip of the victim to offender, where the crime took place and if a weapon was used.

Maori are far more likely to be homicide victims — 31 per cent of all cases, despite Maori accounting for 15 per cent of the national population.

Homicide numbers are not released with monthly police statistics because investigat­ions typically take many months to close. The latest annual report covers finalised data from 2007-14, and other findings include:

One in 10 homicides involved firearms and 24 per cent a stabbing or cutting weapon. Just over half of homicide victims were not killed with weapons.

More than a third of all female victims were killed by their partner.

Overall, 65 per cent of victims were male, and this gender gap has widened — 67 per cent of victims were male in 2014, compared to 57 per cent in 2007.

The number of homicide victims is stable at between 62 and 64 for each of the last four years.

Of the 538 homicide victims, 174 were manslaught­er cases and 364 murders.

Law and order is a key issue in election year, with Labour and New Zealand First calling for more police officers and resourcing.

Responding to rising crime rates and public concern about crime such as burglary, in February the Government announced a $503 million package to boost police officer numbers by 880 over four years. Those numbers include 140 extra specialist investigat­ors for child protection, sexual assault, family violence and other serious crime.

Legislatio­n before Parliament will also overhaul how family violence is dealt with, including the creation of new offences, making the safety of victims a principal considerat­ion in all bail decisions, and allowing others to apply for a protection order on a victim’s behalf.

Labour’s police spokesman, Stuart Nash, said they were steps in the right direction but greater police resourcing was still needed, and the crucial point was to get officers back out into the community.

“We know, for example, in Hamilton you will have 101 more police. But we don’t know if they are going to be stuck in the head office, in community police stations or how they will operate,” Nash said.

“If you go back to the Kahui twins, at the funeral for those two boys you had a hall that was absolutely packed out. But where were those people

Ministers from [16 portfolios are] working together to address both family and sexual violence. Anne Tolley, Acting Police Minister

when that mother and father needed support from the community?

“If there were community cops operating in a way that was meaningful and beneficial . . . then someone would have said to them, ‘. . .we have a real problem here’.”

Anne Tolley, Acting Police Minister and co-chairwoman of the Ministeria­l Group on Family Violence and Sexual Violence, said the Government had prioritise­d family violence.

“Nearly half of all homicides in New Zealand are the result of family violence. We have ministers from across 16 portfolios working together on a . . . strategy to address both family and sexual violence.”

That work includes “integrated safety response” pilot programmes in Christchur­ch and Waikato, that have helped more than 24,000 people to date, Tolley said. About $1.5 billion is invested each year in the family violence and sexual violence sectors. Out of this world photos snapped 400km above Earth are not in your average travel brochure.

But Thomas Pesquet is not your average traveller. The Internatio­nal Space Station astronaut was orbiting above New Zealand when he looked down on some of our most beautiful South Island landscapes.

He picked up his camera and began taking photos.

The most striking showed a row of mountains described by Pesquet as being near New Zealand’s highest peak, Aoraki/Mt Cook.

In a photo posted to Pesquet’s Twitter account ripples of snowdusted peaks, ridges and valleys, surrounded by turquoise snow-fed lakes, can be seen.

Pesquet wants to visit.

In an English caption accompanyi­ng the photo, the Frenchman described the area as “another beautiful landscape I’d love to explore one day”.

In a second posting of the photo, with a caption in his native language, he said it was impossible to talk about New Zealand without “invoking its national parks”. “A call to adventure!” Pesquet didn’t stop there. Banks Peninsula also captured his attention. He wrote of its “distinctiv­e shape” in another photo posted to Twitter.

“Lots of outdoor fun to be had in these parts.”

Zooming out, he also shared the bigger picture with his 502,000 followers, capturing much of the South Island. — Cherie Howie

 ?? Picture / Thomas Pesquet ?? French astronaut Thomas Pesquet has described his views of the South Island from space as “a call to adventure”.
Picture / Thomas Pesquet French astronaut Thomas Pesquet has described his views of the South Island from space as “a call to adventure”.

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