Darfuri diaspora – grief and hope from afar

Source: Radio New Zealand

Displaced Sudanese who fled El-Fasher after the city fell to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), arrive in the town of Tawila in war-torn Sudan’s western Darfur region on 28 October, 2025. AFP

Kadambari Raghukumar produces and presents Here Now, RNZ’s weekly series on people from various global backgrounds living in Aotearoa. Her work in media has taken her from Kenya, to Sudan and across Asia.

Since April 2023, Sudan has been gripped by a brutal civil war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary group, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

What began as a power struggle between two generals has devolved into a horrific humanitarian crisis.

More than 40,000 people have been killed and nearly 12 million people have been displaced.

In 2019 I spent time in Khartoum just days after President Omar Al Bashir’s 30 year authoritarian regime ended, and before the transitional government was put in place.

I distinctly recall a sense of optimism on the streets during the revolution and people saying how it felt like a “freedom festival”.

How did such a hopeful time, seemingly the start of a transition to democracy, turn into the unimaginable violence we are seeing now?

In this week’s episode of RNZ’s Here Now podcast, I speak to Darfuri Aucklanders Fathima Sanussi, Izzadine Abdallah, Hassaballah Hamid and Kaltam Hassan.

Hassaballah Hamid came to New Zealand a year ago through the UN refugee pathway. He’s from Darfur, where in the past few weeks, death and destruction is everywhere.

On Oct 26, the RSF took over Al-Fasher, the last major city of Darfur held by the Sudanese army.

The RSF have killed nearly 2000 people there, while tens of thousands are still stranded the city as the militia seize more territory from the army in the south-west and center.

“This is now beyond tribalism, this is a proxy war on Sudan,” Hamid said.

(L to R) Kaltam Hassan, Fathima Sanussi and Izzadine Abdallah. Supplied

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) is widely accused of providing military support to the RSF, but UAE officials deny the allegations despite evidence presented in UN reports and international media investigations.

Famine has gripped the region, a once fertile part of the country known for growing food and pasture lands. While hospitals and schools have been destroyed across the Darfur region.

Over the weekend, Fathima Sanussi, an activist and former refugee from Sudan, organised a solidarity rally in Auckland, calling for an end to the violence.

“I’m from Darfur, it’s more of a reason why this work is so important to me,” she said.

“Right now, with everything that’s happening and being away from home, it allows us to kind of understand the functionality of the way the world works.

“My parents were forcibly displaced. More than ever now, as a Sudanese person and someone that’s particularly from Darfur, I want to be able to go back home one day.”

Darfur is a complex and diverse region where the Fur people, the Masalit and Arab Sudanese have lived for centuries – some semi-nomadic, pastoral communities, others, indigenous to those lands.

Ethnic tensions between what are called Arab and non-Arab groups have simmered for decades in these parts.

Kaltam Hassan and her son Izzadine are Masalit, from Al Genina in Darfur. It’s a region that is familiar with conflict.

In 2003, the Darfur Civil War brought extensive violence to the people of Al Genina, many of whom fled.

Sudan’s vast natural reserves – gold, copper, iron ore, while not the only reason, are said to be one of the major reasons this war has been prolonged and attracted support from external players.

Sudan is Africa’s 3rd largest gold producer and has reserves of iron, uranium ad copper across the country, particularly Darfur and Kordofan.

Fathima said: “It’s not fair that our people have to bear the burden of it all, meanwhile feeding the rest of the world and giving the world luxury goods at the expense of their death.

“The violence in Darfur is a modern-day colonial project. And I think once we start reframing the language of how we start speaking about Sudan is when we’re going to see effective conflict resolution.”

Kaltam Hassan recalls a peaceful childhood and past life in the region, until ethnic tensions spilled over and the Janjaweed militia (from whom the RSF were formed) unleashed violence.

But like others, she also sees external support to the RSF amplifiying the scale of this current conflict.

“What happened in the past, it’s already happened,” Kaltam said.

“But once those people stop funding the RSF, the Janjaweed, then we can figure out how to stop the fighting. But with other people from outside us funding them, giving them more power, it doesn’t matter how much our people are fighting, the problem won’t stop because it’s not just our problem anymore.”

Sudanese across the diaspora wait and watch for the viciousness of this war to end, continuing to wish for a return to how things used to be.

“People in Darfur are agricultural people. If the war stops, all the people even in the refugee camps, they will all go back to Darfur because there’s nowhere like home and they will start growing again.

“And that’s the one thing I want to see, our people going back home and building what’s already been broken down, growing our own food and just living the life that we used to live before all this started” Kaltam said.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Te Pāti Māori purge fails to end the party war

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi. RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

Analysis: As the Iwi Chairs Forum fought fruitlessly to keep Te Pāti Māori together last week, spokesperson Bayden Barber offered a warning: a split tōtara is only good for the fire.

Now Te Pāti Māori finds itself in an inferno.

The slow-burn conflagration has been smouldering for so long, it’s easy to miss the magnitude. But this is no small matter.

This is a party ousting a third of its caucus, citing “irreconcilable differences” and “serious breaches” of its constitution.

Fronting reporters on Monday morning, co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi wished their former colleagues “all the best of luck” and waved them on their way.

“We had to bring this to a close, and we must move on.”

But that seems overly hopeful. Both Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris were quick to declare the move “unconstitutional” and are threatening to challenge it “in all respects”.

The party’s National Council has also yet to consider whether to invoke the waka-jumping provision and eject the MPs from Parliament altogether.

That would require agreement of the two other remaining MPs – Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke and Oriini Kaipara. It’s unclear yet where they stand in all this.

Either outcome is ugly. If the “rogue” MPs remain, they will serve as a constant reminder of division. If they’re booted, two by-elections loom, sure to be bitter and bruising.

At least a public contest might shed more clarity on what’s behind the weeks of infighting, with voters so far largely left in a cloud of smoke.

Asked to clarify on Monday exactly what the MPs had done to deserve expulsion, the co-leaders refused: “You’re not going to get that detail here in this press conference.”

From what has dripped out over the past six weeks, it seems the feud is driven more by personality than principle.

Party president John Tamihere has accused the two MPs of plotting a failed coup. Kapa-Kingi and Ferris have declared no confidence in Tamihere, with their supporters decrying toxic dictatorial leadership.

Supporters are right to feel aggrieved. A year ago, Te Pāti Māori was riding a wave of unity and purpose, as a driving force behind the historic Toitū Te Tiriti hikoi.

Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris. RNZ/Liam K. Swiggs

It boasted its largest-ever caucus, having swept six of the seven Māori electorates in a dominant 2023 result.

Ironically, the roots of the recent crisis lie in that rapid expansion.

The co-leaders went from being a dynamic duo to overseeing a more assertive caucus and competing egos.

Tamihere, Ngarewa-Packer and Waititi are all dominant personalities, used to steering their own course.

But both Kapa-Kingi and Ferris regard themselves as electorate MPs first, answerable to their own people, not to the central hierarchy.

Add in the whānau ties on either side, and the conflict shifts from political to personal.

The co-leaders admit the recent disunity has damaged the party’s brand. The enthusiasm of a year ago has turned to disillusionment, with voters now forced to pick sides or to look elsewhere.

When Hone Harawira split from the Māori Party in 2011 to form Mana, both sides eventually vanished. Harawira was sent packing by voters in 2014, and the rest of the Māori Party followed in 2017.

For the wider opposition, there is good and bad here.

The Labour Party will see an opportunity to win over those disenchanted voters and to retake the Māori electorates amidst a more divided race.

But the wider picture is riskier. Centrist voters may well look at the turmoil on the left and decide to stick with the status quo.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins has yet to publicly declare whether he would welcome Te Pāti Māori as part of a future Cabinet.

Those questions will only grow louder now – expanding to include the “rogues”. Where do they stand in any coalition calculation?

The Iwi Chairs Forum had arranged “peace talks” this week, bringing together the two factions at a Wellington marae.

Bayden Barber still thinks that would be beneficial and the co-leaders agree it could still go ahead. But few expect much to come of it now.

The next moment of reckoning may come on 7 December, when members gather in Rotorua for the party’s AGM – and confront how Te Pāti Māori can piece itself together from the ashes.

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What happens next for Te Pāti Māori and expelled MPs Mariameno Kapa-Kingi, Tākuta Ferris

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Pāti Māori co leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi announce the MPs’ expulsion. RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

Te Pāti Māori’s decision to expel two of its MPs leaves it with further decisions to be made.

The decision taken by the party’s National Council overnight means Mariameno Kapa-Kingi will remain as MP for Te Tai Tokerau, and Tākuta Ferris remains for Te Tai Tonga – both as independents with no party affiliation.

Appeals

Under the party’s constitution, the MPs can appeal the decision to end their membership.

The Constitution sets out that the National Council can cancel any membership if it no longer believes the person meets its requirements of:

  • Working to support Te Pāti Māori kaupapa and tikanga
  • Acting within the party’s constitution
  • Abiding by decisions made under the constitution
  • Completing official membership forms and paying the appropriate membership fee
  • Not being a member of a competing political party or organisation determined to be incompatible with the party

The decision is officially made final at the party’s next national hui – its AGM set down for 7 December – which is also where the MPs can seek to have the decision appealed.

File photo. Mariameno Kapa-Kingi, who will remain as MP for Te Tai Tokerau, confirmed she would appeal the expulsion. VNP / Phil Smith

Kapa-Kingi on social media confirmed her intention to appeal. Ferris called the decisions “illegal” and said he rejected them “in the strongest possible terms”.

Also worth noting: co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer confirmed leaking of details to the media was being investigated.

Members found to have broken a ban on sharing information with the media relating to a party dispute process can also be found to have brought the party into disrepute.

A member found guilty off misusing party funds could also be immediately expelled.

‘Waka-jumping’

The party could also seek to invoke the so-called “waka-jumping” or “party hopping” legislation to have Kapa-Kingi and Ferris removed from Parliament entirely.

The leaders on Monday said using the provision had not yet been considered.

Doing so would require the party leaders to write to Parliament’s Speaker Gerry Brownlee to say they believed the MPs were distorting the proportionality of Parliament.

They would need to provide reasoning to justify their claim about the distortion, as well as getting at least two-thirds of the party’s MPs to agree and giving the rogue MPs 21 days to respond – as well as following any relevant party rules.

Because the party’s constitution sets out the process for members’ removal, the requirement to get two-thirds of the party’s MPs to agree to sending the letter does not include Kapa-Kingi or Ferris.

File photo. Tākuta Ferris, MP for Te Tai Tonga, called the decisions “illegal”. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

This means – presuming the MPs are ejected at the AGM – the party would be able to use the waka-jumping provisions with support from just three of its four remaining MPs.

Alternatively, Kapa-Kingi or Ferris could choose to invoke the legislation themselves, by writing to the Speaker to notify him of their resignation from the party.

The waka-jumping law was most recently used by the Green Party to eject their former MP Darleen Tana last year.

But it was not used in the case of Meka Whaitiri in 2023 after the then-Labour MP quit the party, because her email of resignation to Parliament’s Speaker was judged not to meet the threshold in the law.

Whaitiri retained her seat as an independent despite announcing her intentions to support Te Pāti Māori. She subsequently lost her Ikaroa-Rāwhiti seat to Labour’s Cushla Tangaere-Manual in the 2023 election.

Ejecting Kapa-Kingi and Ferris would trigger a by-election for the MPs’ electorates.

A by-election would not be held if the MPs are removed less than six months ahead of a general election (or of Parliament’s three-year term ending), but this also requires three quarters of all Parliament’s MPs to agree not to hold the by-election.

If the by-elections went ahead, any party could contest the MPs’ seats.

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Te Pāti Māori expels Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Pāti Māori’s national council has voted to expel MPs Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris, after a period of internal conflict.

The National Iwi Chairs Forum had been hopeful the party’s two factions could patch things up at a hui at a Wellington marae this week.

That plan has been scuppered, after the co-leaders on Monday announced the party’s council – made up of electorate representatives – met on Sunday night and voted “without opposition” to expel Kapa-Kingi and Ferris, with immediate effect.

In response to news of his expulsion, Te Pāti Māori MP Tākuta Ferris has issued a statement, saying the decision “is plainly unconstitutional”.

A composite image of Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. RNZ/Liam K. Swiggs

“I do not acknowledge the decisions and illegal resolutions made through unilateral measures.”

In a statement posted on social media, Kapa-Kingi also called the decision unconstitutional and said she intended to appeal it “in all respects”.

“In the meantime, I remain the duly elected Member of Parliament for Te Tai Tokerau and will continue to stand for, and show up for the people of Te Tai Tokerau to do the job I was elected to do.”

The MPs’ statements confirmed Te Tai Tokerau had been excluded from the votes, and Te Tai Tonga abstained.

Co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The affiliation of Ferris and Kapa-Kingi – whose son Eru has also been scathing of party president John Tamihere – has been in question as the stoush in the party escalated.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi confirmed last Tuesday the party was considering explusion.

Co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer said it was the result of “serious breaches” of the party’s consistution, and followed six weeks of rigourous debate across electorates and branches – and hui with external groups including the Iwi Chairs Forum.

“Irreconcilable differences remained. The resolution takes effect today.

“This decision was not taken lightly. Many hoped the end would be reconciliation – it could not be achieved. We acknowledge the mamae our people have felt.

“This internal matter should never have played out in public. It has been an unnecessary distraction at a dark time for our country as this government continues its relentless attacks on our people.”

Waititi said they would continue to refocus the party.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

“Our job is to make this a one-term government. That will require structure, fortitude and unity.”

He said the party had begun “serious conversations” with Labour and the Greens and the party would not comment further on “this internal matter” from today.

“I have absolute confidence in the forefathers who wrote that constitution to bring us to, I think, the right decision made by the council last night.

“This is difficult and this was always going to be a difficult pathway, but as the leaders of this party it is our job to ensure that we bring stability back to the waka and we step up where we need to step up.”

He said the relationships that led to the stoush “extend long before Parliament”.

Whether to entirely expel the MPs from Parliament using the waka-jumping provisions had not yet been a consideration, the leaders said.

RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

Ngarewa-Packer said Tamihere had not been present at the previous night’s vote.

She said there were disciplinary processes being undertaken in relation to leaking of information about the stoush to the media.

Waititi said they would have preferred to deal with the matter inside of the caucus.

“That was out of our control. It was taken to the media before we even had an opportunity to speak about that and I must say that the media have enjoyed it over the last six weeks.

“It had to come to an end, and so we’ve brought it to an end, we must move on. And I wish both Mariameno and Tākuta all the best of luck as we head forward but we had to bring this to a close.”

He said the MPs could legally challenge their explusion through an appeal process.

Ngarewa-Packer said the dispute had damaged the party and those who believed in it.

Tamihere last week urged the MPs to quit after the National Council voted to suspend Kapa-Kingi over office overspending accusations.

That followed a vote of no confidence in Tamihere from Ferris’ Te Tai Tonga electorate branch, which also called for his immediate resignation.

Tamihere accused them of plotting a coup against the co-leaders and said their behaviour was based on “greed, avarice and entitlement”.

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Watch live: Te Pāti Māori expels Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi

Source: Radio New Zealand

A composite image of Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. RNZ/Liam K. Swiggs

Te Pāti Māori’s national council has voted to expel MPs Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris, after a period of internal conflict.

The National Iwi Chairs Forum had been hopeful the party’s two factions could patch things up at a hui at a Wellington marae this week.

That plan has been scuppered, after the co-leaders on Monday announced the party’s council – made up of electorate representatives – met on Sunday night and voted “without opposition” to expel Kapa-Kingi and Ferris, with immediate effect.

In response to news of his expulsion, Te Pāti Māori MP Tākuta Ferris has issued a statement, saying the decision “is plainly unconstitutional”.

RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

“I do not acknowledge the decisions and illegal resolutions made through unilateral measures.”

The affiliation of the Ferris and Kapa-Kingi – whose son Eru has also been scathing of party president John Tamihere – has been in question as the stoush in the party escalated.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi confirmed last Tuesday the party was considering explusion.

Tamihere last week urged them to quit after the National Council voted to suspend Kapa-Kingi over office overspending accusations.

That followed a vote of no confidence in Tamihere from Ferris’ Te Tai Tonga electorate branch, which also called for his immediate resignation.

Tamihere accused them of plotting a coup against the co-leaders and said their behaviour was based on “greed, avarice and entitlement”.

The MPs have not been speaking to media but in a statement Kapa-Kingi said she was not going anywhere, and Tamihere did not speak for Te Tai Tokerau.

The council has been examining the party constitution to come to a decision on how it would handle the MPs, who met with the co-leaders last week.

More to come…

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Watch live: Te Pāti Māori reveals fate of MPs amid turmoil

Source: Radio New Zealand

The press conference will be livestreamed from about 10am at the top of this page. This is a breaking story and will be updated.

Te Pāti Māori is set to reveal an update on the fate of two MPs who have been critical of the party leadership.

The affiliation of the MPs Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi – whose son Eru has also been scathing of party president John Tamihere – to the party has been in question as the stoush has escalated.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi confirmed last Tuesday the party was considering explusion.

Te Pāti Māori MPs Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. RNZ

Tamihere last week urged them to quit after the National Council voted to suspend Kapa-Kingi over office overspending accusations.

That followed a vote of no confidence in Tamihere from Ferris’ Te Tai Tonga electorate branch, which also called for his immediate resignation.

Tamihere accused them of plotting a coup against the co-leaders and said their behaviour was based on “greed, avarice and entitlement”.

Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The MPs have not been speaking to media but in a statement Kapa-Kingi said she was not going anywhere, and Tamihere did not speak for Te Tai Tokerau.

The council has been examining the party constitution to come to a decision on how it would handle the MPs, who met with the co-leaders last week.

More to come…

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National to mull asset sales as part of next election, Christopher Luxon says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says the government will “think about” possible sales of government assets.

While Luxon has ruled out an asset sales this term, he told Morning Report on Monday that governments needed to be able to “recycle” assets.

He said he is up for a conversation on whether there should be sales with the money redeployed to creating new ones.

His comments come after he was questioned about a Treasury Report last week which raised whether the government should sell state assets that are under-performing or no longer needed.

Treasury said there needed to be better asset management, that some assets were under-performing or poorly maintained.

“A formal capital recycling programme may be useful where government reallocates or reinvests capital from existing assets or infrastructure projects into new opportunities or projects to meet policy objectives,” the report said.

Luxon said New Zealand did need need a “more mature conversation” about asset sales.

“Owning everything we own forever is not the right thing to do, I suspect.”

He said governments have huge money tied up in assets and governments needed to refresh or recycle their holdings.

“To be able to sell an asst in order to buy or create a new asset is a good thing. Governments own a lot of stuff – there’s obviously some we must own. But over time you want to cycle assets in and out of a portfolio and that is a good conversation to have.”

Luxon said he suspects National would go into the election with policies in this space.

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Prime Minister Christopher Luxon ‘deeply supportive’ of social media ban for under 16s

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. Nick Monro

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is “deeply supportive” of protecting young people by restricting social media use under 16 and will introduce a bill before next year’s election to enable it.

Speaking to Morning Report, the National Party leader said society imposes restrictions on teens in the physical world and should do it in the online space too to keep them safe.

Earlier this year, National MP Catherine Wedd put forward a member’s bill to restrict social media access for under 16s.

The government then picked up the work and said it will introduce a bill raising the age limit for New Zealanders accessing social media to 16.

He told Morning Report’s Ingrid Hipkiss that the Australian model was “of interest” to the government.

From next month, the Australian government can impose fines on social media companies if they fail to prevent people under 16 having accounts on their platforms.

Luxon said the government is looking at the model and other bans with a view to introducing legislation before next year’s election – “or certainly within this term”.

He said Education Minister Erica Stanford is leading the investigation.

Last week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he was confident the social media age limit would be a success when it comes into force on 10 December, and he believed people would voluntarily comply over time.

Critics had worried that Australian parents would be left to enforce or explain a ban to their children on their own, but the Australian government has said it would put resources into schools and its eSafety Commission for the change.

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New Zealand ‘reluctantly’ extends pause in Cook Islands funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ Foreign Minister Winston Peters announced the pause after Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown signed a partnership with China. RNZ/Pacific Islands Forum/123RF

New Zealand has extended its pause on direct payments to the Cook Islands government, after it signed partnership agreements with China earlier this year.

A Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson said the total amount of paused funding was NZ$29.8 million and covered two financial years.

“We took this step reluctantly and after careful consideration.

“Direct funding to another government relies on a high degree of trust. The Cook Islands government breached New Zealand’s trust through a series of actions that are well known.”

The spokesperson said New Zealand’s concerns about the Cook Islands actions “need to be addressed and trust restored, before we can release this funding”.

“Significant development assistance to the Cook Islands continues, including in areas such as health, education, governance, security and humanitarian support. This is being delivered through New Zealand agencies and regional programmes.

“New Zealand remains deeply committed to the Cook Islands and its people. We share a unique constitutional relationship and the people of the Cook Islands are New Zealand citizens.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters informed the Cook Islands government of the initial decision to pause funding in early June.

The Cook Islands operates in free association with New Zealand. It governs its own affairs, but New Zealand provides assistance with foreign affairs (upon request), disaster relief, and defence.

The 2001 Joint Centenary Declaration signed between the two nations requires them to consult each other on defence and security, which Peters said had not been lived up to.

In February, Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown signed a “comprehensive strategic partnership” with China.

New Zealand reviewed its development programme in the Cook Islands as a result, and in early June informed Brown the funding would be paused.

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Rough sleepers fear being pushed to unfamiliar suburbs as government considers central Auckland ban

Source: Radio New Zealand

General vision of homelessness in Auckland central city.

Auckland CBD’s rough sleepers worry they will be kicked out of the city. (File photo) RNZ / Luke McPake

A tougher stance on rough sleepers in Auckland’s central city has some homeless people fearing they will be pushed out to unfamiliar suburbs where they could struggle to survive.

Earlier this week, the government confirmed it was considering new measures that could see people living on Auckland’s city streets forcibly removed.

Opposition parties and housing advocates raised alarm over the prospect of an effective ban on homeless people in CBD’s, warning such an approach only displaced the problem and caused more harm.

Along Queen St and the surrounding blocks, people were still bedding down in shopfronts, bus shelters, and on building steps.

Earlier in the year, an Auckland Council committee declared homelessness a crisis, with support teams working with more than 800 people sleeping rough. Police Minister Mark Mitchell said he supported giving officers more powers to move people on from public spaces.

Outside the Auckland Central City Library on Thursday, 27-year-old Jae sat with his puppy Snoop and said the solution was straightforward: put more money into housing.

“Instead of putting new stuff in the middle of the street, decorations and all, they should put their money into putting us somewhere, instead of kicking us out of the city. That’s the only place we know.”

Jae said forcing people into unfamiliar suburbs risked driving some into criminal activity.

“They’ve already tried to trespass us from the library and that’s, this is where most of the free dinners come. If you get trespassed and you can’t really eat. If they kick us out of the city, then how are we going to eat?

“It’s going to result to other things, like crime.”

Further along the street, 21-year-old Angela said crime might be her only way to survive. She had been in and out of jail for petty offending since she was a teenager.

“If I get moved on from the streets, I will go back to jail. [The government] has been trying, but I would just go back to prison again because of the things I do to survive.”

Nearby, 60-year-old Tane – who had spent decades sleeping rough – agreed moving people on would only make things worse.

General vision of homelessness in Auckland central city.

Auckland Council has declared homelessness a crisis. (File photo) RNZ / Luke McPake

“This is our home, the streets. If it gets taken away from us, homeless people will probably break into things, they’ll start turning into criminals. They’ll move away from begging and go into criminal world.”

Another man, who had lived on the streets for more than 30 years and asked not to be identified, said shifting people away from the city centre would not solve the problem.

“There’s always places to go, you know, there’s… the country’s quite big. And there’s other streets, there’s other parks, there’s other hills, tracks.”

A few blocks away, John, 71, said the government seemed more focused on appearances than addressing the root causes of homelessness.

“We is what [the government] don’t want the tourists to see. And yet, in their countries, they have the same problem with homeless people. And I’m sure they don’t go around putting them into mental institutions.”

The government said details of its plan to crack down on rough sleeping would be released soon.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said any move-on orders would need to be paired with proper housing and support.

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