The New Zealand Herald

Beating victim says attackers enraged by his ta¯ moko

- Craig Kapitan

Like a scene from a horror movie. That’s how Haraia BowenHakar­aia remembers the moments before a weekend attack in which he was beaten, racially abused and robbed as he cowered in his car at a Levin intersecti­on.

Police are investigat­ing his reported assault, at the intersecti­on of Winchester and Roosevelt Sts, in which a wallet and car keys were taken.

Bowen-Hakaraia had visited a friend about 5.30pm on Saturday and was driving home in his Toyota Corolla, having just pulled a u-turn, when he noticed a car in his rearview mirror with its high beams on.

“He’s sitting up there, like no movement,” he recalled of a lime green Suzuki Swift-like hatchback at the top of a rise in the road behind him.

“I carry on, thinking nothing of it. All of the sudden, he’s now at my bumper. Like a horror film – that close.”

Bowen-Hakaraia said he slowly drove on, confused as to what was happening, before the vehicle pulled up beside him at a nearby intersecti­on, the two strangers inside screaming abuse out the window.

The driver pulled in front of Bowen-Hakaraia’s car, stopping the vehicle in a lane of traffic before jumping out and approachin­g him.

“I can’t go anywhere,” BowenHakar­aia recalled.

“I see him get out of the car and he’s definitely on something – you can just tell.”

“What’s that on your face?” the stranger yelled at him, referring to Bowen-Hakaraia’s ta¯ moko – then calling him a f****** black c***” and a “n*****” as he punched him repeatedly for what seemed like five minutes.

“He steps away as if to tag team, and the other one comes in for what felt like five minutes,” BowenHakar­aia said, adding the first man then returned to the window and had another go.

“Give me your keys. Give me your keys, you f****** black n*****,” one of the attackers allegedly yelled at Bowen-Hakaraia, who leaned with his face to the passenger seat, trying to avoid the blows.

The two ran off after grabbing the keys from the ignition and his wallet from the dashboard.

They didn’t take his car. On Monday, Bowen-Hakaraia got his car back from police after a forensic examinatio­n. He was told a fingerprin­t found on the vehicle belongs to a person who matches his descriptio­n of one of the attackers, so he’s hopeful the case will be solved.

But what still cuts the most, he said, wasn’t the attack itself but that cars drove by without slowing as he screamed for help.

“I was yelling at the top of my voice,” he said.

He wants to hope the people in the three cars he saw pass called for help even if they were afraid to stop, but it haunts him wondering if they just didn’t care to get involved.

He doesn’t know exactly how to describe the attack, which seemed unprovoked, random and racial. He thinks the car might have been waiting at the top of the hill, looking for someone to victimise.

As he struggles to make sense of the attack, Bowen-Hakaraia said he takes comfort in advice a friend has given him: “They are the victim, not you. Don’t give them the power to stop you from living.”

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Haraia Bowen-Hakaraia believes the weekend assault was racially motivated.
Photo / Supplied Haraia Bowen-Hakaraia believes the weekend assault was racially motivated.

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