The Southland Times

Plea to back up apology

- Justin Latif Local Democracy Reporter

‘‘Dad was an overstayer,’’ Alf Filipaina says.

The Auckland councillor and former police officer says his father might have been deported had it not been for a timely torrent of rain.

‘‘My mum says she had to hide him up north and immigratio­n officers ended up tracking him down to this property.’’

Filipaina says when police and immigratio­n officers arrived at the site where his dad was holed up, a small bridge was washed out due to recent flooding, giving him enough time to escape.

‘‘My dad was on one side of the bank, and the immigratio­n officers were on the other side calling out, ‘Mr Filipaina, come over here!’ but because he knew they wouldn’t cross, he was able to take off.’’

Filipaina became a police officer in 1978, just as the Muldoon Government began to wind back this policy.

The bitter irony of the dawn raids, he says, was that the largest group of illegal immigrants weren’t from the Pacific.

‘‘The majority of people who were overstayer­s were from European countries, but the dawn raids were concentrat­ed on Pacific people, even though there were less of them.’’

One of the ‘most racist’ NZ laws

Due to the Covid level changes in Wellington, the formal apology event, which was due to take place at the Auckland Town Hall this afternoon, has been postponed to a yet-to-be-determined date.

Fellow Manukau ward councillor Fa’anana Efeso Collins says the rescheduli­ng may give the Government more time to consider what further steps are needed alongside the apology.

‘‘The apology is the acknowledg­ement of wrongdoing and the beginning of the healing process. But it needs to be accompanie­d by meaningful action like an amnesty, compensati­on and immediate inclusion in social studies curriculum if it’s not already there.

‘‘The Treaty of Friendship [signed between the two nations in 1962] means we should work harder to forge a stronger relationsh­ip with Samoa and Samoans.’’

Both Filipaina and Collins would also like the Citizenshi­p (Western Samoa) Act of 1982 thrown out. ‘‘Not many people know about it, but we need to revoke this piece of legislatio­n as it would mean a lot to people,’’ Collins says.

Auckland University law lecturer Dylan Afaso says this little-known piece of legislatio­n was passed out of ‘‘moral panic’’ to stop Samoans who were born as British subjects between 1920 and 1948 from becoming New Zealand citizens.

‘‘It’s one of the most racist pieces of legislatio­n on the books. It came about because the Muldoon Government deemed Pacific migrants a danger to NZ society,’’ he said. ‘‘If the Government is genuine and wants to apologise for the racism [of the dawn raids], then it needs to repeal this piece of legislatio­n, to at least offer to Samoans, who had their citizenshi­p rights revoked through that legislatio­n, to get their citizenshi­p back.’’

Filipaina says that if his dad, who lived in New Zealand for most of his life, was still alive, he would have welcomed the chance to take up citizenshi­p.

‘‘The stigma about being an overstayer and being chased was always there for him, so he would have liked to have taken

up the opportunit­y to become a citizen.’’

Second-class citizens

Kennedy Maeakafa Fakana’ana’a-ki-Fualu is a community leader who also goes by the name the ‘‘Tongan Robin Hood’’ due to his focus on helping vulnerable members of his community, particular­ly overstayer­s.

He, and a team of volunteers, visit more than 50 families every Friday with supplies, and he’s worried the apology will brush over the current challenges faced by Pacific migrants.

He would like to see an amnesty offered to all overstayer­s in New Zealand, so their families can participat­e fully in society.

‘‘I feel we Polynesian­s are still being treated as second-class citizens, just like how we were treated by New Zealand’s racist immigratio­n policies of the 1970s.

‘‘I affirm the prime minister for her courage and compassion to make this formal apology. [But] an amnesty will give it a real meaning and it will be the start of a long healing process for intergener­ational trauma caused by the dawn raids.’’

Asafo agrees with Maeakafa Fakana’ana’a-ki-Fualu and says immigratio­n reform for those coming from the Pacific is well overdue.

‘‘New Zealand always emphasises that it’s a Pacific country and that it has a special relationsh­ip with the Pacific,’’ he says.

‘‘So following through with that rhetoric, there should be acknowledg­ement that the current immigratio­n system lacks equitable pathways for Pacific peoples, which are underpinne­d by racist notions that were promoted by the New Zealand Government during the 1970s.’’

 ??  ?? Falema’i Lesa, a Samoan citizen living in New Zealand, was prosecuted for overstayin­g, but later won her case for citizenshi­p via the Privy Council. She is photograph­ed at her lawyer’s office in July 1982.
Falema’i Lesa, a Samoan citizen living in New Zealand, was prosecuted for overstayin­g, but later won her case for citizenshi­p via the Privy Council. She is photograph­ed at her lawyer’s office in July 1982.
 ?? RICKY WILSON/STUFF ?? Manukau councillor Alf Filipaina says his dad would have welcomed the chance to become a New Zealand citizen.
RICKY WILSON/STUFF Manukau councillor Alf Filipaina says his dad would have welcomed the chance to become a New Zealand citizen.

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