The Timaru Herald

Nats tout boot camps for young offenders

- Jonah Franke-Bowell

National is promising to bring back military-style boot camps for young offenders if elected.

The policy, announced by National Leader Christophe­r Luxon in Hamilton yesterday, would see the party crack down on serious repeat youth offenders like ram-raiders to turn their lives around and to protect the public.

‘‘A ramraid every 15 hours shows that Labour’s soft-on-crime approach is failing,’’ Luxon said.

The party’s plan involves targeting serious repeat offenders with a new Young Serious Offender (YSO) category aimed at ringleader­s.

This will apply to offenders aged 10 to 17 who have committed a serious offence such as a ramraid, other aggravated burglary, or serious assault at least twice.

Consequenc­es will include being sent to a Young Offender Military Academy, electronic monitoring, or being subject to an intensive supervisio­n order in their community.

A Young Offender Military Academy would provide ‘‘discipline, mentoring and intensive rehabilita­tion to make a decisive interventi­on in these young offenders’ lives’’ for people aged 15 to 17.

They could stay for up to a year. The academies will be delivered in partnershi­p with the Defence Force, alongside other providers.

The plan is a retread of previous National policy involving boot camps, which were a cornerston­e of Sir John Key’s 2008 state of the nation speech before his election.

In 2010 the Ministry of Social Developmen­t introduced The MAC (Military Activity Camp) programme as part of the Government’s Fresh Start reforms, aimed at 40 of the most serious and persistent youth offenders.

But a 2012 report found more than 50% of those who had been out of the camps for more than six months reoffended, including 10 youths who committed 126 offences between them.

National would also give police greater powers to tackle gangs including by banning patches and stopping gang members gathering in public.

Some youth offenders could be ordered to undergo intensive supervisio­n by community-based organisati­ons to ‘‘face consequenc­es’’ and turn their lives around while also staying connected to their families.

An 18-year-old man accused of stabbing a dog walker and leaving him in a critical condition will be kept separate from other adult prisoners. Bailey Messervy appeared in the Christchur­ch District Court yesterday on a charge of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. Messervy, who appeared via videolink, did not enter a plea or apply for bail. Messervy’s lawyer, Tony Garrett, asked that his client be kept separate from other adult prisoners. Judge Michelle Duggan granted the request. A middle-aged man, whose name has been suppressed, is fighting for his life after he was repeatedly stabbed while walking his dog at Bexley Reserve early on Monday morning. Messervy was remanded in custody until December 7.

Nearly 100,000 people have signed a Groundswel­l NZ petition calling on the Government to stop its emissions tax on agricultur­e. The group’s cofounders, Laurie Paterson and Bryce McKenzie, delivered the petition by tractor to Parliament yesterday morning. It was received by Associate Minister of Agricultur­e Meka Whaitiri and Deputy Leader of the House Kieran McAnulty. The signatures were collected by the group after the Government released its draft agricultur­al emissions pricing proposal, He Waka Eke Noa, which would tax farmers for the emissions created on their farms.

Police have released the name of a woman who died when a boat capsized in Auckland’s Manukau Harbour. She was 39-year-old

Gemma

Ferregel. Her

10-year-old son,

Ryder Ferregel, remains missing following the incident, near Clarks

Beach, on November 6. In a statement released yesterday, the pair’s family said: ‘‘We’re all devastated and lost for words while we grieve for Gemma and Ryder. Our only wish now is that Ryder is brought home as soon as possible.’’ Ferregel and Ryder were on a boat with three others when it capsized about 2km out to sea. Two men swam ashore and raised the alarm, while a third person was pulled from the water alive.

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Christophe­r Luxon
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