Daily Sabah (Turkey)

NZ’s Arden apologizes for 1970s ‘Dawn Raids’

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NEW Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern issued a somber state apology yesterday to the Pacific community for racially targeted immigratio­n raids in the 1970s that resulted in deportatio­ns and prosecutio­ns.

The “Dawn Raids,” which often occurred early in the morning, took place from 1974 to 1976 when New Zealand’s economy was in a downturn and the government clamped down on immigrant workers from the Pacific who overstayed their work visas.

Addressing hundreds of people in attendance for the formal apology, Ardern said members of the Pacific communitie­s continue to “suffer and carry the scars” of the raids in which they were specifical­ly targeted and racially profiled.

“Today, I stand on behalf of the New Zealand government to offer a formal and unreserved apology to Pacific communitie­s for the discrimina­tory implementa­tion of the immigratio­n laws of the 1970s that led to the events of the Dawn Raids,” Ardern said. “The government expresses its sorrow, remorse, and regret that the Dawn Raids and random police checks occurred and that these actions were ever considered appropriat­e.”

As part of its formal apology, Ardern said her government will provide NZ$2.1 million ($1.5 million) in academic and vocational scholarshi­ps for Pacific communitie­s and NZ$1 million in leadership scholarshi­ps for young people from Samoa, Tonga, Fiji and Tuvalu, among others.

Sunday’s event included an Ifoga, a traditiona­l Samoan ceremony in which people ask for forgivenes­s or receive forgivenes­s, where some ministers and members of parliament draped a mat over Ardern, which was then removed by members of the Pacific community.

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