The New Zealand Herald

Terrorist exploits conundrum

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Just days after we watched our Defence Force join other nations extracting desperate people from the Taliban taking power in Afghanista­n, a person claiming refuge in New Zealand turned on us. Ahamed Samsudeen’s terror attack on shoppers at the New Lynn Countdown supermarke­t was a repellent act of biting the hand that fed him.

National Party leader Judith Collins, has claimed two sections of the Immigratio­n Act would have given the Government the grounds to deport Samsudeen back to his Sri Lankan homeland. However, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has pointed out Samsudeen was in the midst of a tribunal process, and Crown Law advised he was likely to be considered a “protected person” as he would face persecutio­n if he was deported.

In this respect, the case illustrate­s a difference between the two leaders. Collins indicates she would have taken the unilateral approach for the safety of New Zealanders, at the risk of defying internatio­nal convention­s. Ardern has adhered to the convention­s while setting law change in motion. Under these laws, we hope for certainty that the offending by Samsudeen prior to Friday’s attack would be enough to detain such a person.

Whether Collins’ strategy would have been effective, particular­ly given the lengthy deliberati­ons of the courts into Samsudeen’s case, we won’t know. Seven people have been wounded, four grievously, and their deranged assailant is dead.

Ardern is right to seek answers on what to do with a person who fraudulent­ly gains refugee status as a protected person and then becomes a threat to national security. But as part of our commitment to human rights and human dignity, we should not bend to the will of terror and send people to their death or torture.

Some have asked why Samsudeen was prevented from flying on a one-way ticket to Singapore, en route — he claimed — for Syria. The answer is, New Zealand is not the kind of nation that wilfully sets maniacal threats on others.

Likewise, an act of terror should not derail our duty as a global citizen to our displaced coinhabita­nts; more than 82 million of them last year, according to the UN Refugee Agency. It says climate change is threatenin­g more nations who are unable to support themselves already and the refugee tide is predicted to worsen. “The dynamics of poverty, food insecurity, climate change, conflict and displaceme­nt are increasing­ly interconne­cted.”

Most refugees land gladly in Aotearoa, welcoming sanctuary and hospitalit­y. But it’s a sad reality that some arrive disturbed and hardened. The refugee regime can also be exploited by less than worthy candidates.

None of this, nor the events at LynnMall, should change how we view refugees. However, while seeking to better protect ourselves, we should remember how harsh some parts of the world are and how fortunate we are.

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