New Zealand will apologize to Pacific Islanders for ‘dehumanizing’ dawn immigration raids, Ardern says
New Zealand’s plan to formally apologize for immigration raids in the 1970s that targeted Pacific Islanders is being hailed as a long-overdue gesture, though some activists say it is not enough.
The unexpected Monday announcement from Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern,
who characterized the raids as “dehumanizing,” left some Pacific Islanders in
tears. “I felt there was a chance this might happen but I never thought it
would happen so quickly,” Josiah Tualamali’i, who had started a letter-writing
campaign to request the apology, told Stuff.co.nz.
The “Dawn Raids,” so named because they often occurred early in the
morning, took place from 1974 to 1976 after New Zealand’s economy crashed.
Samoans, Tongans and other Pacific Islanders who had come to the country as
desperately needed migrant laborers were suddenly accused of taking jobs away
from New Zealanders, prompting a crackdown on those suspected of overstaying
their visas.
Armed police officers would wake up families in the middle of the night
to demand proof of citizenship, while people who did not look White were told
to carry identification at all times and would be randomly stopped on the
street. Churches, schools and workplaces were routinely raided.
There is “clear evidence” that the raids were discriminatory, Ardern
said Monday. When computerized immigration records were introduced in New
Zealand in 1977, they showed that 40 percent of people who overstayed their
visas were British or American. But those immigrants, who were largely White,
evaded scrutiny and were rarely targeted for deportation. Meanwhile, New
Zealand’s native Maori people frequently faced harassment because they were
mistaken for migrants.
At a Monday news conference, Aupito William Sio, New Zealand’s minister
for Pacific peoples, tearfully recalled how officers showed up at his family’s
home early one morning with a “frothing” police dog. He described a sense of
helplessness as officers shined flashlights in his father’s face, then took
away two family members whose visas had expired. He said they had been
preparing to go home to Samoa and wanted to do a few more overtime shifts
before they left.
The experience was “traumatizing” for his entire family, Sio said.
“We felt as a community we
were invited to come to New Zealand. We responded to the call to fill the labor
that was needed,” he said. “When the country felt they no longer needed us,
they turned on us.”
Calling the raids a “defining moment” in New Zealand’s history, Ardern
said she plans to deliver a formal apology at a commemoration later this month.
New Zealand’s government has issued similar apologies for discriminatory
policies that targeted Chinese immigrants in the 19th century and injustices
carried out during the colonial administration of Samoa, she noted.
“While we cannot change our
history, we can acknowledge it, and we can seek to right a wrong,” Ardern said.
The Polynesian Panthers, a New Zealand-based organization advocating for
the rights of Pacific Islanders and the native Maori population, had campaigned
for the apology. But in the wake of Ardern’s announcement, some activists said
they wanted concrete policy actions.
Will 'Ilolahia, a co-founder of the group, told Newshub that roughly
10,000 Pacific Islanders living in New Zealand today have overstayed their
visas and should be given a pathway to permanent residency. Many have been
living in the country and paying taxes for well over a decade, he noted.
“This is a good chance to show
the rest of the world that this is how we treat people,” he said.
New Zealand has not indicated whether it plans to compensate Pacific
Islanders who were affected by the raids. Manase Lua, another co-founder of the
group, said he feared doing so would only spark division. “You cannot
compensate my family, my dad’s already passed away,” he told Radio New Zealand.
A better response, he said, would be to create a pathway to citizenship
for Pacific Islanders with expired visas so such injustices do not recur.