Loud Rally Outside Corrections Offices
Press Release - [12:00pm 22/04/2016] - For Immediate Use
PRESS RELEASE: No Pride in Prisons
No Pride in Prisons Holds Loud Rally Outside Corrections Offices in Auckland and Wellington
Activists and members of No
Pride in Prisons held pickets today outside Department
of Corrections offices in Wellington and Auckland.
Approximately 80 protesters joined the prisoner advocacy group for a picket of the Department of Corrections’ Northern Regional Office in Auckland today. For approximately three hours, the group of protesters shouted chants at the building and sang songs.
No Pride In Prisons’ spokesperson, Ti Lamusse, says “We held the picket in response to recent allegations from an incarcerated transgender woman. She alleges that she was raped by prison staff in Whanganui Men’s Prison.”
“We also met with a representative of the Department of Corrections who told us that Corrections would ‘look into it’.”
Outside the Department of Corrections’ on The Terrace in Wellington, 45 protesters held a solidarity picket for approximately an hour. According to a passerby, their chants could be heard through the office.
According to No Pride in Prisons, the woman says that she was sexually assaulted by two Corrections Officers shortly after her transfer from another facility last year. “She told us that she tried to report the incident to prison staff at the time, but never heard anything further from the complaint.”
In March, the woman made contact with No Pride in Prisons again, informing the group that she had been raped by a third prison officer in a gymnasium stairwell. “We immediately filed a formal complaint with prison management on her behalf,” says Lamusse.
“The woman says that Corrections didn’t bother to act on the complaint that she made following the first incident. If action had been taken, perhaps she would not have been raped again.”
According to the group, Corrections still
hasn’t taken steps to ensure the safety of this woman.
“The men who she said raped her still work at Whanganui
Men’s Prison. Her requests to transfer to another facility
have also been ignored.”
“Corrections has
deliberately kept information from No Pride in
Prisons, despite the woman naming us as her advocates.
Corrections is clearly more concerned about the way this
will look in the media than for the safety of incarcerated
people.”
No Pride in Prisons says that this case
is representative of a wider problem. “Rape is a systemic
issue in New Zealand prisons. We have now heard from
multiple transgender women who have been raped while in
Corrections’ custody.”
“According to a 2007 US study, trans women in men’s
prisons are 13 times more likely to be sexually assaulted
than the men they are imprisoned with.”
“A 2015 survey of incarcerated LGBTIQ
people found that 12% of respondents had been raped
by staff. The rape of prisoners by their jailers is
an all-too-common event.”
“Trans women incarcerated
in men’s prisons are, from the outset, put at considerable
risk of assault and rape. It is supposedly the job of prison
staff to prevent this kind of violence, not to enact
it.”
“No Pride in Prisons is demanding that a
full and thorough investigation into both instances of
alleged sexual assault take place by an independent
authority.”
“In the interim, the officers in
question must be immediately suspended so as to prevent any
potential backlash against the woman.”
The picket
follows a “Call-in to Call Out Corrections” in
March where hundreds of members and supporters of No
Pride in Prisons emailed, called, faxed and wrote
letters to Corrections, demanding action to ensure the
safety of the woman.
No Pride in Prisons held the picket to make it clear that Corrections can no longer ignore this woman’s safety.
“If after today, Corrections fails to act, we will take further action to ensure her safety.”
ENDS