Home ENGLISH ARTICLES New Zealand’s First Authoritarian Lockdown by TRANNY “Jacinda” Ruled UNLAWFUL by High Court

New Zealand’s First Authoritarian Lockdown by TRANNY “Jacinda” Ruled UNLAWFUL by High Court

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New Zealand’s First Authoritarian Lockdown Ruled UNLAWFUL by High Court


GreekNewsOnDemand.com comments: Before you read the following article, watch the following videos on just what kind of PM New Zealand has…


New Zealand’s High Court has ruled that the country’s authoritarian lockdown was unlawful during the first nine days of its implementation.

The High Court of New Zealand ruled on Wednesday that the March 26 – April 3 stay-at-home orders were in breach of civil liberties after lawyer Andrew Borrowdale sued the government in July.

Three high court judges admitted that the New Zealand government should have written the order into law before threatening the population with police detention to keep them inside.

“While there is no question that the requirement was a necessary, reasonable and proportionate response to the Covid-19 crisis at the time, the requirement was not prescribed by law and was therefore contrary to section 5 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act,” the ruling read.

Rt.com reports: The panels added that the initial lockdown curtailed “certain rights and freedoms affirmed by the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990” including, but not limited to, “freedom of movement, peaceful assembly and association.”

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern ordered the citizenry to remain in their homes on March 23 but the legislation reportedly wasn’t written into law until April 3.

Attorney General David Parker attempted to downplay the significance of the ruling, saying: “We always thought we were acting legally all of the way through.” 

However, despite Parker and Ardern’s attempt to put a brave face on things, the situation may cause issues, as anyone arrested or detained from March 26 to April 3 as a result of the lockdown orders may make a claim.

“Even arrests after April 3 will have been improper,” Auckland University of Technology Professor of Law Kris Gledhill wrote in May.

Meanwhile, New Zealand has delayed its general election, passed a law allowing for warrantless property searches by police, and Prime Minister Ardern has said openly that people will be forced to remain indefinitely in military-guarded “isolation hotels” unless they consent to Covid-19 testing.

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