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A month after mosque massacre

Ardern talks online reform, says the challenge is not a New Zealand issue but a global one

- BY TOBY MANHIRE

‘I’ll show you something,” says New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

We are sitting on sofas in her office on the ninth floor of the Beehive, the circular building that houses the New Zealand government in Wellington. It will be one month tomorrow since a terrorist attack in Christchur­ch took the lives of 50 people at prayer.

I have been asking Ardern about her immediate response to the attack, which from the outset put a clear emphasis on inclusivit­y and solidarity. Succinctly, the prime minister framed what had happened in her own terms. It felt very deliberate: was it?

Not so much, Ardern says. “Very little of what I have done has been deliberate. It’s intuitive. I think it’s just the nature of an event like this. There is very little time to sit and think in those terms. You just do what feels right.”

She crosses the office to her desk and pulls an A4 sheet of paper from a drawer. It’s been folded in half, and in half again, and again. Printed on the back is the running order for an event she hosted in Auckland the night before the attack. On the front are a series of notes, scrawled in Ardern’s rounded handwritin­g, growing more hurried and less legible as they cross the page.

“These are my notes for the first press conference,” she explains.

“I was in a hotel room. We only had a short amount of time to prepare.”

When the call came, Ardern was travelling in a minivan, sitting alongside the mayor of New Plymouth, a small city on the West Coast of the North Island.

“The informatio­n was patchy and it was very difficult to decipher exactly what had happened,” she recalls. “We didn’t even know a confirmed toll. In an event like this — I can only assume, because I’ve never been through one before — there’s not a lot of time available to think about the language you want to use.

NO WORDS, JUST SENTIMENTS

“I absolutely knew what I wanted to say. That, very quickly, was clear to me, when I heard that a mosque had been targeted. I knew what I wanted to say about that straight away. But, no, I didn’t think about particular words. I just thought about sentiments, and what I thought needed to be conveyed.”

And yet Ardern’s response, her choice of language, has mattered enormously. In the hours after the attack, in which an Australian-born white-supremacis­t shot dead 50 unarmed people in two mosques, Ardern said that this was an act of terrorism. She pointedly refused to speak the name of the man who did it.

There was none of the bellicose, war-footing political rhetoric that so often stalks terrorist attacks. Gun law reforms, intended to ban all semi-automatic firearms, were expedited, with cross-party support. An inquiry was commission­ed, tasked with asking, among other things, whether an emphasis on Islamist terrorism had meant New Zealand intelligen­ce agencies were looking the wrong way.

The images were just as powerful. On Saturday March 16, after another press conference in Wellington, Ardern flew south to Christchur­ch, where she met members of the Muslim community.

“I am here today to bring with me the grief of all New Zealand,” she said. “I am here to stand alongside you... We feel grief, we feel injustice, and we feel anger.”

She said it wearing a headscarf, an expression of solidarity that sprinted around the world.

According to Ardern, the challenge is not a New Zealand issue but a global one — one in which social media giants have to uphold the community standards they have set for themselves.

“The elements of that surprised me,” says Ardern today.

“When I had the all-clear to go down on Saturday, I asked a friend if they had something for me to borrow. If I’d been [at home] in Auckland it would have been different, but I didn’t have scarves with me. So I asked if she had something I could borrow, because for me it was just a mark of respect. It was naturally what you would do. So, no, I didn’t really think about that, either.”

CULPABILIT­Y OF ONLINE PLATFORMS

Among the hideous novelties of the Christchur­ch attack is the fact that it was live-streamed, in bloody, dystopian detail, on Facebook, before metastasis­ing across the internet, on sites where white supremacy festers, as well as on giant online platforms.

We cannot simply sit back and accept that these platforms just exist and that what is said on them is not the responsibi­lity of the place where they are published. They are the publisher. Not just the postman. There cannot be a case of all profit, no responsibi­lity.” Jacinda Ardern | New Zealand Prime Minister

Ardern took that on, too, in her parliament­ary speech on 19 March, four days after the attack. “There is no question that [the] ideas and language of division and hate have existed for decades, but their form of distributi­on, the tools of organisati­on, they are new,” she said.

“We cannot simply sit back and accept that these platforms just exist and that what is said on them is not the responsibi­lity of the place where they are published. They are the publisher. Not just the postman. There cannot be a case of all profit, no responsibi­lity.”

What, then, does Facebook need to do?

“This isn’t a New Zealand issue, this is a global one,” says Ardern, carefully choosing her words. “Really, upholding the community standards that they’ve set themselves, I think, is what people are asking for... We’re asking for them to invest in ways to prevent the kind of harm we saw in the aftermath. And, let’s be honest, in the lead up, too.”

I asked her if the Christchur­ch attack had affected her optimism. “No,” she said. “My belief in the humanity of New Zealanders has strengthen­ed. I just know we have a lot of work to do to make that universal.”

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 ?? AFP ?? New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern with Muslim community leaders in Wellington following the terror attacks on two mosques.
AFP New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern with Muslim community leaders in Wellington following the terror attacks on two mosques.

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