The Northern Advocate

Troubled suburb welcomes police

Community racked by violence has had enough of being preyed upon by ‘opportunis­tic’ gangs, writes Karina Cooper

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A Northland community grappling with the presence of patches in its neighbourh­ood has welcomed a police operation to curb gang violence, guns, and organised crime.

Operation Tauwhiro provides Northland police with an opportunit­y to disrupt violent offenders, prevent crime and victimisat­ion, and engage with communitie­s.

The six-month nationwide operation is the first affiliated to the new Organised Crime Strategy that addresses organised crime, its social drivers and the harm it causes.

Whangarei suburb Otangarei has a long-standing reputation as a breeding ground for gang influence, says Martin Kaipo, chief executive and cofounder of community organisati­on Te Hau A whiowhio o Otangarei Trust.

The last high-profile gang presence in the area was on February 11 when a trio of Black Power gang members and two high-calibre firearms were found by police in O¯ tangarei and Whananaki.

Kaipo has been a driving force behind challengin­g harmful behaviours in O¯ tangarei. He abandoned his post as a high-ranking Black Power member and spent the past three decades working with urban Ma¯ori communitie­s, high-need Ma¯ori youth and their wha¯nau.

The police operation would be a tool that further complement­ed hard work by¯community initiative­s, such as the Otangarei Trust, to counter organised crime and get weapons off the street, Kaipo said.

“Any community would want to be put at the highest safety level we can get, so this whole police operation is a good thing. No one wants weaponry in their communitie­s and especially in the hands of people whose lack of considerat­ion for others makes them high risk.”

Firearms in the wrong hands posed a massive risk to children in O¯ tangarei because there was an abundance of youngsters in the area, Kaipo said.

He appreciate­d that police, like the Otangarei ¯ Trust, were committed to quashing the influence gangs have in vulnerable neighbourh­oods.

“You gotta have a willingnes­s to challenge those behaviours,” Kaipo said. “I see gangs as being opportunis­t. They prey on communitie­s that have high unemployme­nt, are high in benefit dependency, and high in terms of low-decile schooling.”

Detective Inspector Bridget Doell said Northland frontline staff, specialist intelligen­ce and investigat­ions work groups, as well as prevention and community engagement team would work towards Operation Tauwhiro’s objective: to diminish the frequency of gang-related violence and organised crime, and the involvemen­t of firearms.

“Gang violence and the criminal use of firearms has no place in the Northland community and this operation is focused on reducing harm in the community.”

Doell said a recent spate of gunrelated violence was relentless­ly investigat­ed by police to hold the offenders accountabl­e.

“Operation Tauwhiro will see this work continue and increase.”

In January three Rebels gang members, accused of shooting at a police officer on Puketona Rd, appeared in the Kaikohe District Court charged with a raft of serious offences including kidnapping, using a firearm against a police officer, aggravated robbery using a firearm, participat­ing in an organised criminal group, unlawful possession of a firearm and two counts of arson.

And in May last year a 29-year-old male Rebels gang member and a 28-year-old female associate faced multiple charges of manufactur­ing methamphet­amine. They were jointly charged with the unlawful possession of firearms including the prohibited semi-automatic.

A 39-year-old man, with links to the Head Hunters, was charged with

multiple offences related to conspiring to manufactur­e and dealing in methamphet­amine in the same month.

One of New Zealand’s top five wanted offenders was arrested in Northland in a police crackdown on organised crime during alert levels 3 and 4 in May last year. He was one of 23 people, all with links to gangs, who were nabbed in the region as police used the Covid-19 lockdown to target gangs, including the Comanchero­s, Mongrel Mob, Black Power, Nomads, Headhunter­s, Rebels, King Cobras, Tribesmen and Mongols.

But Doell said arrest and enforcemen­t action was only one aspect of the entire operation.

“Wider social issues, such as mental health and family violence stressors will be considered to ensure an outcome that allows the recovery of firearms, accountabi­lity for offending, together with wraparound support for wha¯nau.”

A heavier emphasis was being placed on social service interventi­ons that targeted offending gangs or gang members, identified underlying risk factors and implemente­d appropriat­e interventi­ons.

They also planned to collaborat­e with local iwi, community nongovernm­ental organisati­ons, probation and parole officers, churches and other groups to meet underlying causes of violence and dysfunctio­n with tailored services and support.

 ?? Photo / File ?? Martin Kaipo, chief executive of Te Hau Awhiowhio ¯ o¯ Otangarei ¯ Trust, supports the police operation as he wants to see guns and violence out of Northland communitie­s.
Photo / File Martin Kaipo, chief executive of Te Hau Awhiowhio ¯ o¯ Otangarei ¯ Trust, supports the police operation as he wants to see guns and violence out of Northland communitie­s.
 ?? Photo / File ?? Patched gang members are not an unusual sight in O¯ tangarei, in Whanga¯ rei. Here they attend a tangi for Moses Noor Mahanga, who was fatally shot on William Jones Drive in 2017.
Photo / File Patched gang members are not an unusual sight in O¯ tangarei, in Whanga¯ rei. Here they attend a tangi for Moses Noor Mahanga, who was fatally shot on William Jones Drive in 2017.

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