The New Zealand Herald

Bomb threat made against Auckland councillor Collins

- Justin Latif

“God, not my girls” is the thought that immediatel­y ran through Fa’anana Efeso Collins’ mind as he led a bomb squad through his home after being told an anonymous death threat had been made against him and his family.

The South Auckland councillor made the revelation at a church conference at Auckland’s Spark arena on Saturday. He told the hundreds gathered, while speaking on the topic of social justice, that when he was asked by police to come to the station he at first had no idea what to expect.

“I went into this interview room and they told me, ‘We’ve received a death threat, and it’s in the form of a bomb threat against you and your family’. They told me it’s been elevated to the point they would like to send the bomb squad to your offices and to your house.”

Collins said the threat was made six weeks ago via the police’s anonymous tip line in response to his suggestion­s TVNZ’s Police Ten 7 programme was reinforcin­g negative stereotype­s about Ma¯ori and Pacific peoples. Police swept his home and his offices in the CBD and Manukau but no bomb was found.

“The doubts began to rise in my heart,” he told the audience with tears streaming down his face, “as I led a group of detectives with all this equipment through my home, while Fia [his wife] and my daughters were on the balcony.”

Collins said he’s had moments where he’s questioned if he should stay in politics. “I feel like my confidence has taken a dent and I’ve had doubts around whether it’s worth the safety of my family to continue in a political role.”

But he’s come to the decision, along with wife Fia, that they can’t let the threats deter them from what they see as their calling as a couple. “I also felt that they would win, if I changed my life.”

Collins said police asked if he had received racist or abusive emails or messages prior to this but he said because he receives so much, he’s almost become immune to it and he’s even created a separate folder on his work computer to file them all. “In the recording of the phone call they said: ‘Efeso is a racist’ because of my complaints about Police Ten 7 — so it’s obviously racially motivated. But the police have been really good. They were really sensitive and thorough.”

Collins told The Spinoff he chose to share this experience at this church event as he hoped it would encourage others wanting to fight injustice to know that while hard times might come, there were also ways to deal with the challenges. “There’s a cost when you’re trying to make a difference and I wanted to share that with them. But also that having a faith has reminded me I can turn to a source that’s beyond me, and I can find strength from that.”

Police are continuing to investigat­e the threat.

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