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  1. Ross, what an insightful commentary. I was not born during those times but what strikes me the most about your life in the Police and over that relevant period of time is how you evolved to understand how you were thrust into an extraordinary environment for the time and used (and probably abused) by the political dictates of that era. I have seen the film Breaker Morant and I agree with your analogy.

    I also detect in you a sense of social justice and a level of integrity not often seen then nor today – especially when you refused to change your evidence in relation to the Arthur Allan Thomas enquiry. I was not born then but I have read about that case.

    Merry Christmas

  2. I have a copy of “Red Squad Story” on my bookshelf to this day, to remind me what arseholes the NZ Police and state forces were over the 1981 tour

    and I have a copy of Tom Newnham’s “By Batons and Barbed Wire” reminding of the superb organisation of ordinary New Zealanders in solidarity with others thousands of miles away

    I was at the Eden Park final test protests, never forget Peter Gabriel’s “Biko” in Fowlds park prior, and got helmet dents from Police batons on Sandringham Rd near some skip bins, but no serious injuries unlike too many others, spent that whole winter training, protesting and keeping an eye on dodgy coppers–those were the days alright, but really…Meurant’s reflections may impress some, but he has never fully recanted, the past cannot be undone

  3. Meurant was an arsehole then and he hasn’t changed. He has changed much of history to try and redeem the police reputation. I remember the party in Wellington the Red Squad crashed in full riot gear prior to the game to use their new techniques. The fact was without the police spies in the protest organization there would have been no games played!
    No police were ever charged for their many illegal acts because no police are ever charged.
    He and his ilk have fundamentally changed the way New Zealanders look at police and they broke the social contract with their response.

    1. I’m not convinced Ross is an arsehole per se, that is to say I don’t sense any sadistic or sociopathic overtones in his account and am confident his intentions, well-founded or not, are genuinely in the interest of a respectfully functioning society.
      Nevertheless I agree with your assessment of the implication that no Red Squad members being charged is ‘the facts [speaking] for themselves’. In fact that seems uncharacteristically dense of him to see the lack of charges as satisfactory evidence of no legal transgressions to a society who have throughout history watched countless abhorrent blatant crimes go uncharged.

  4. In my view the Governor General Sir David Beattie should have enjoined the Police not to intervene in those protests, as Muldoon was in breach of the Gleneagles Agreement. Muldoon betrayed the country and the crown/commonwealth by doing so, he also refused all petitions and refused to meet with Sir David at all about it.

    Due to the NZ Police being the ROYAL New Zealand Police, Beattie should have made an interdiction at that point yet failed to do so, possibly as he was patron of the NZRFU, possibly he was too busy saving up for his Mercedes collection. Muldoon was a boorish oaf. He should have left to be torn apart by the protesters all by his lonesome! Instead he hid behind the Police and used them, he put them at mortal risk to defend the indefensible, and in a position to be vilified and scapegoated. That was the essence of the poison chalice situation.

    What do you reckon, Ross?

    1. I totally blame Muldoon for that winter.
      That article tells me History will teach us nothing.
      We can be on the right side of it but when people like Meurant call the tune it will repeat.

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