Greens strengthen New Zealand’s first ever stalking law

The Green Party’s successful amendment to New Zealand’s first ever stalking law will better protect victims of stalking and harassment.  

“Late last night, the Green Party joined with all parties across Parliament to welcome a long-overdue bill that addresses a longstanding gap in our legislation which focuses on stalking and harassment” says Green Party Police spokesperson, Tamatha Paul.

“To everyone who got involved and made their voices heard; thank you. Today’s decision shows what’s possible when people organise around a vision for their communities.

“Survivors and advocates told us that they were worried that when Police notify the perpetrator that they are breaking the law, that the victim would not be notified and that the victim could be retaliated against. 

“Last night, the Government agreed to support our amendment to the Crimes Legislation (Stalking and Harassment) Amendment Bill to ensure Police inform victims before they serve a notice to perpetrators. We are proud to have made this law more victim focussed.

“It’s not every day that we can work alongside government parties to make history, but yesterday we did - and for no worthier cause than for the prevention of violence, stalking and harassment.”

“The Greens will continue to fight for justice and the safety of all communities across Aotearoa,” says Tamatha Paul.

 

Amendment paper:

Crimes Legislation (Stalking and Harassment) Amendment Bill 

Tabled amendment 

 

Tamatha Paul, in Committee, to move the following amendment: 

Clause 4 

After clause 4, new section 216O(3) (page 3, after line 27), insert:

(3A) A constable must inform person B before providing a notice under subsection (3). 

Explanatory note This Amendment Paper amends the Crimes Legislation (Stalking and Harassment) Amendment Bill. It would ensure that police inform victims/survivors before issuing offenders with a formal notice for specified offending. This will ensure that victim/ survivor safety is prioritised in the event that notification may increase the risk of reprisal

Supported by: New Zealand National Party, New Zealand Labour Party, Green Party Aotearoa New Zealand, ACT Party New Zealand, New Zealand First, Te Pāti Māori, Mariameno Kapa-Kingi MP, Tākuta Ferris MP

Latest Police Announcements

Story

Gang policy setting communities up for failure

The Green Party says the Government’s misguided policy on gangs will fail, following the announcement of the establishment of a national gang unit ...
Read More

Story

Minister Hipkins way off the mark on unlawful Police action

The Green Party is calling on Minister Hipkins to address the underlying causes of crime, rather than to allow for abusive, American-style policing...
Read More

Story

Government must focus on the underlying causes of crime to combat gang violence

We need action to address the underlying causes of crime, not more of the same simplistic solutions that we know do not work and risk harming commu...
Read More

Story

Māori children are not the cause of crime

The Green party do not support the Police approaching and photographing rangatahi Māori to already assume them as criminals.
Read More

Story

Greens welcome police ruling out of Armed Response Teams

The Green Party is welcoming the police’s decision to rule out any extended use of the Armed Response Teams (ARTs) which were recently trialled in ...
Read More

Story

Greens urge police to rule out armed police patrols following George Floyd’s death

The Green Party is urging the New Zealand Police to rule out the use of Armed Response Teams, following their recent trial in communities around Ao...
Read More