Lisa Owen interviews Rupert Soames
Lisa Owen interviews Rupert Soames Rupert Soames
says Mt Eden allegations are a “a major issue” for Serco
and “need to be taken very seriously” Serco
wants to be a “good citizen” in New Zealand and
confirms it is interested in expanding into rail and other
opportunities, such as state housing services Says he’s
“absolutely certain” that whatever comes out of the Mt
Eden investigation “they are going to show up failings;
things that we could have done better”. Fight clubs,
smoking and drinking “shouldn’t happen”. Describes the ‘fight club’ video as “shocking”
and says violence in Mt Eden is rising after previous
drop-off and Serco needs to find out why. “It is
shocking that fighting is going on inside the prison. It is
also shocking that there are mobile phones in the
prison.” Soames describes allegations that Serco has
been mis-reporting Mt Eden prison incidents as “incredibly
serious” and taxpayers have the right to know the numbers
are correct. However says under Serco, Mt Eden has gone
from being “being one of the worst-rated prisons in New
Zealand to being one of the best”, citing lower drug
dependency and contraband rates. “Either Mt Eden has
improved greatly under our ownership [sic], or it hasn’t.
If it has, okay, then I think Serco should be should praised
and say, ‘Well done, Serco.’ If it hasn’t, then we
will have to bear the consequences of it” Hesitates in
declaring confidence in Mt Eden management.
Owen: You
can’t express confidence in your own senior staff—your
own senior management at the prison?
Soames: I have
confidence in the way they have been running the prison,
subject to—we need to see the results of these serious
allegations.
Lisa Owen: Now, they used
to be the biggest company no one had ever heard of, but
it’s fair to say that’s no longer true for troubled
outsourcing giant Serco. It’s being investigated over a
raft of allegations at Mt Eden Prison, including fight
clubs, contraband and underreporting of prisoner violence,
and last week we revealed their interest in providing
back-room services to those buying state houses. Now, we
have repeatedly asked Serco for an interview this year, and
each time we’ve been turned down, so hearing that the
global CEO, Rupert Soames, was in New Zealand, we decided to
track him down instead. Now, Mr Soames had a very busy day
yesterday. He told me he met with Corrections Minister Sam
Lotu-Iiga, Corrections boss Ray Smith and that he visited
both Mt Eden and the new Serco-run prison at
Wiri.
Rupert Soames: Clearly this is a major
issue for Serco and for Mt Eden Prison, so I want to make
that we are cooperating fully with all the investigations
and making sure that people are getting all the information
that they need. Some of the allegations are very serious and
need to be taken very seriously.
What makes
you think you should keep your
contract?
Well, that will not be for us to
decide. It’s going to be— clearly, there’s an
investigation going on at the moment. There are, it has to
be said, many good things that have happened at Mt Eden over
the last four years. If you go and look at the rate of drug
dependency, it is far lower—
But, Mr Soames,
with the greatest of respect, there is video circulating
showing serious fight clubs at that prison. A number of
officers have been stood down in recent times for
inappropriate behaviour. What is going on
there?
Well, there is a full-scale
investigation going on, being led independently by the Chief
Inspector, overseen by the Ombudsman, with which we are
cooperating in ourselves. We also have our own investigation
going on, and we take these very
seriously.
How can the New Zealand taxpayer
trust your company?
I suggest what should
happen is that we let the investigation run its
course.
Given the breadth and volume of
allegations – serious allegations – involving Mt Eden
Prison, it’s got to be one of two things, doesn’t it?
It’s got to be that there is incompetence in that prison
on the part of your company, or you’re being wilfully
blind and your employees have been wilfully
blind?
I don’t think either of those two
conclusions are the case. What I do know is the case is that
as is entirely appropriate when serious allegations which we
care about very much, let me just— just remind ourselves
of the facts, okay, is that Mt Eden Prison under our
ownership— sorry, ownership is the wrong word – under
our direction of managing the prison has gone from being one
of the worst-rated prisons in New Zealand to being one of
the best.
It’s certainly not one of the
best.
No, no, no, no, no. Okay, so there are
now questions saying what’s going on? There’s serious
allegations which we take really seriously, which is one of
the reasons that I’m here, and there is a proper
investigation going on.
So how does your
staff—?
And there
are—
Sorry to interrupt you, but this is
really important.
Of course it’s
important.
How could your staff not know what
was going on there when prisoners seem to have been
willy-nilly filming themselves in fight clubs, dealing in
contraband, smoking and drinking? How could this happen
under the nose of your staff?
Well, it
shouldn’t happen. There is contraband in prisons. I have
to say that the rate of contraband in prisons in Mt Eden is
actually pretty low.
You’re trying to
justify the videos that we’ve
seen…
I’m not trying to
justify—
…or minimise? Because that sort
of sounds like that.
I’m not trying to
minimise it in the slightest at all. That's one of the
reasons why I've come here — to make sure that the
investigations that the Chief Inspector and the Ombudsman
are doing; that we are fully cooperating with them. We have
our own investigations going on. We take it very seriously.
Can I just say that we don't fire people on the basis of
allegations. You know, I don't know which bit of the Magna
Carta says that you go and fire people. You properly
investigate. There's a professional investigation going on
to sort those which are wild allegations from those which
are truthful allegations.
The mere existence
of the video shows…
It's
shocking.
Yeah. How would you describe
it?
Oh, shocking. Two things are shocking.
It is shocking that fighting is going on inside the prison.
It is also shocking that there are mobile phones in the
prison. I have to say I don't believe that Mt Eden is the
only prison in New Zealand or, indeed, in the world where
mobile phones are.
But that in of itself, the
existence of the video, in and of itself, shows that you've
failed in your duties to properly manage that prison,
doesn't it?
But I have to say that we live
in a real world here in which, let me tell you, that you are
going to put a lot of often very violent men together, there
is fighting. I don't justify it. I don't condone it. I think
that the idea... I'm very worried about the idea of the
existence of fight clubs, and, clearly, there is too much
violence. In fact, in Mt Eden the level of violence has in
the past few years it has dropped a lot. It has now picked
up, and one of our issues there is to find out why and what
we can do, and more importantly, what we should be doing
better to run that prison. You ask who is responsible. I am
responsible. I am the chief executive of Serco, therefore,
the buck stops with me. But I would say to the taxpayers of
New Zealand is that what the facts that we know show, and it
may turn out that the reporting has been wrong, that there
is something going on, if the reporting has been correct,
that what the taxpayers had in New Zealand is a situation
where one of the worst-rated prisons has become one of the
best-rated prisons. It's been rated exceptional. Now, there
may questions about that. And it has also been done at a
cost that is substantially lower...
I think
the thing is, also, opposition politicians have said you're
at the top of the league table because you are cooking the
books. What is your response to that allegation, because
it's a serious one?
It's an incredibly
serious allegation. Incredibly serious. I mean, the citizens
of New Zealand and our customers have the right to expect
that the numbers and the issues that we are reporting to
them are correct. When I say correct, I don’t mean
completely error-free, but we have been properly reporting.
Can I remind you also that since we’ve had this contract,
we’ve been closely monitored by the Department of
Corrections. There are four monitors on site. This is not
something that’s operating in an island in itself. I
personally—that’s why I want to get to the bottom of
these allegations. Either Mt Eden has improved greatly under
our ownership, or it hasn’t. If it has, okay, then I think
Serco should be should praised and say, ‘Well done,
Serco.’ If it hasn’t, then we will have to bear the
consequences of it. I’m completely clear about this, and
people have to be able trust that we are reporting what is
actually going on.
What level of confidence
can you express in your senior staff at the prison? Can you
say you are 100% confident that the senior staff in your
prison have behaved appropriately and administered the
contract as they should?
Look, I think what
we need to see is to see the results of the investigations.
Staff are experienced. They have been working very closely
with the Department of Corrections. These are serious
allegations. Saying that I have confidence or no confidence
doesn’t actually help anything.
You can’t
express confidence in your own senior staff—your own
senior management at the prison?
I have
confidence in the way they have been running the prison,
subject to—we need to see the results of these serious
allegations. I have to say, prison are places that
allegations get made about, and quite rightly, they should
be investigated properly, but it is not necessarily the case
that each one of them is true.
Serco runs a
lot of services overseas outside of prison services. So what
interest do you have in expanding the services that you
offer in New Zealand? Because I understand that you have
been looking at the state housing
situation.
Yes, and other opportunities
here. We are committed to New Zealand. We wish to be good
citizens here. We are often—We are active in the area of
government services, and part of what—the reason I want to
be here is to make sure that we are dealing and responding
appropriately here so that if the Government, at the end, is
going to go, ‘actually, we think you’ve done it
okay’—can I just say one thing that’s absolutely
certain is that whatever comes out of this report, they are
going to show up failings; things that we could have done
better. I absolutely know that. We are working already to go
and improve what we do.
Are you looking at
youth justice?
No. We are look—we are
looking at rail services in particular, and also other
opportunities, but we’ll see. Let’s just get through
this thing, because there is an issue of trust, and we have
to go and satisfy people that we have responded
correctly.
Okay.
Okay, so,
thank you.
I really do appreciate your
frankness and your time.
Transcript
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