(Picture caption: The review was headed by Mike Heron KC.)
The head of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) has committed to continuing a pause on out of hours visits to residential addresses by compliance officers for deportation purposes following the release of an independent review into the practice.
Carolyn Tremain announced the review following concerns raised by the Pacific community about the practice in the wake of the Government’s Dawn Raids apology in August 2021 and after an out of hours visit to the Auckland home of a Tongan national in April this year.
Leaders and members of the Pacific, Indian and Chinese communities were interviewed for the Review, along with immigration lawyers and advisers and representatives nominated by the Ministry for Ethnic Communities.
There were also six online fono for the wider Pacific, Indian, Chinese and Latin American communities.
About 100 responses were received to an online survey so members of the public who were unable to attend the fono could also make contributions.
The review, led by Mike Heron KC, has made five recommendations:
The Chief Executive adds any decision to review or change the existing legislation is a matter for the Government, but MBIE is already working on updating SOPs and guidance for compliance officers to reflect the Government’s Dawn Raids apology.
“I do want to again acknowledge the impact the Dawn Raids of the 1970s had on the Pacific community and that the trauma from those remains today,” Carolyn says.
“We know we have more to do as we learn from the past to shape the future.
“We accept that we should have reflected the Government’s apology in our guidance sooner and are prioritising putting this right.
“The new guidance will specify when and how out of hours visits to residential addresses should take place and make it clearer that they should only be carried out as a last resort when all other alternatives have been considered.
“We are working on this as a matter of priority but we will continue our pause on out of hours compliance visits to residential addresses until the guidance is updated.”
She explains this means visits will only take place between 8am and 6pm Monday to Friday.
“I do want to stress that out of hours visits are rare and only make up around three per cent of compliance visits.
“But we recognise the impact they can cause and acknowledge we have work to do to ensure they are only carried out as a matter of last resort under strict guidelines when all other options have been exhausted.”
Visit the MBIE website to review the report.