The Northern Advocate

No free pass given for disabled people

Extremist groups have been targeting the vulnerable and disabled

- Jonny Wilkinson

Iused to think disabled people had a free pass in certain areas. I thought we benefited from some sort of unwritten societal codes. That we were safe from attacks from various quarters, such as, for example politician­s.

Well Penny Simmonds, the exMinister of Disability Issues, certainly broke that code last month, when she dog-whistled the disabled community by accusing us of spending individual­ised funding on lottery tickets, smokes and grog.

There is a new attack, a new threat and this one is particular­ly ominous and pernicious.

Apparently, terrorist groups are targeting people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es or on the autism spectrum in an attempt to radicalise them to commit heinous and violent crimes in their communitie­s.

Apparently there are literally thousands of pods of people trolling social media looking for individual­s who are marginalis­ed and isolated in society, who may be susceptibl­e to influence from extremist groups.

Unfortunat­ely, some disabled people fit that profile.

The extremist’s goal is to coerce these susceptibl­e people into committing acts of violent terrorism.

Over the past month in Australia there has been three widely publicised incidents of stabbings. One was at a church where the suspect is believed to have been influenced by people who put him through a process of radicalisa­tion through social media.

A macabre article in the Australian Associated Press on April 19, stated: “A teenage boy facing a possible life term in prison for terrorism over the stabbing of a bishop has shown behaviour consistent with mental illness or intellectu­al disability, his lawyer has said.”

This is in line with research that was conducted in the United Kingdom.

An excerpt says: “The risks associated with online radicalisa­tion have increased, and in response, the UK Government’s White Paper, Online Harms (HM Government, 2019) highlights the risk of terrorist groups using the internet to spread propaganda designed to radicalise vulnerable people.

“People with learning disabiliti­es may have particular vulnerabil­ities to such risks such as having few support mechanisms, a tendency to acquiesce, misinterpr­eting social cues and often a need for friendship­s that can make them potential victims.”

Explore Wellbeing, a specialist wellbeing company owned by NZ Health Group, the biggest disability support provider in New Zealand, decided to front foot it and educate the disabled community on how to identify disabled people who are being targeted by extremist groups.

Explore NZ, in partnershi­p with Carers NZ and Autism NZ, have developed a resource, Know The Signs.

This resource provides carers, families, whānau and friends with essential informatio­n to help them recognise the signs that a person they care for, support, or know, may have been targeted. It provides advice about what they can do to stop it from happening and how they can safely report it they have concerns.

This resource can be downloaded from explorewel­lbeing.org.nz.

So, no, disabled people are not getting a free pass.

Terrorist and extremist groups have decided that vulnerable and disabled people are fair game. Society can be measured on how it protects their most vulnerable and evil presides when good people let it happen.

If you know of people who are at risk of this unwanted influence, use this resource to support them.

Jonny Wilkinson is the CEO of Tiaho Trust — Disability A Matter of Perception, a Whangarei based disability advocacy organisati­on.

"Society can be measured on how it protects their most vulnerable and evil presides when good people let it happen."

 ?? PHOTO / AP ?? Police patrol outside the Christ the Good Shepherd church in western Sydney after a knife attack that wounded a bishop and a priest during a church service.
PHOTO / AP Police patrol outside the Christ the Good Shepherd church in western Sydney after a knife attack that wounded a bishop and a priest during a church service.
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