FREEDOM OF SPEECH
Government Has no Desire to Impose Restrictions COMPLAINTS TO MINISTER TREATMENT BY POLICE (By Telegraph—Press Association.) WELLINGTON, March 6.
A statement that there is no desire on the part of the Government to, restrict free speech provided the speeches were* made in a proper manner was made by tne minister of Justice, Hon. J. G. Cobbe, in replying to a deputation asking that the sentences imposed as the result of street speeches at Auckland last July should he reviewed. He did not know of any objection provided meetings were held where traffic was not obstructed and the freedom of people engaged on legitimate business was not interfered with, said the Minister. The deputation was Introduced by Mr W. E. (Parry, ALP., who stated that the Free Speech Council was representative of all walks of life and was a non-political body. The Alinister said llie /understood there were places in Auckland, where people could gather and speak. The Government did not wish to curtail the freedom of speech.
Mr H. M. Smith, delegate filom the Auckland Free Speech Council, saicl sites should be made available for meetings where there would be no obstruction of traffic.
The Minister: Is not that the position at present? Mr Smith said sites had been given but only as t'he result of representations made in response to public opinion. The Alinister: Still you have places now.
Air Smith said the fact that there was now the right to speak should demonstrate to the Alinister that the sentences imposed had been harsh. They had been actuated by political motives. The Alinister: That is absolutelytmcorrect. You stick to the truth. Dealing with his own case, Mr Smith said that ho had been batoned by the police in the fire station.
STORY DISBELIEVED.
The Alinister: You can’t expect me to believe that. It’s no use you coming here now and saying that the policemen battered you about. Air Smith said that the policemen stopped only as the result of remarks made bv the firemen.
The Minister: AVhat were the sentences on you? Three months hard labour?—That’s true.
The Alinister: Two year’s probation and you had to stay in at night?— Including six months’ curfew. The Alinister: Did the police look very closely into the curfew? Did anybody try to make you stay in ?—I don’t think they would be so foolish. The Alinister: Was any attempt made to keep you in your house at night?—l don’t know, but it was on my probation papers. The Alinister: You have nothing to complain about?—l have . The Alinister: That you are being kept in?—lt is there. The others can be picked up at any time on the other charges. The Alinister: So long as they behave nobody will interfere.—Yes, according to how you administer the law in the interests of the capitalist classes of the country. Air C. Smith, representing the Wellington Seamen’s Union, said, that it seemed ridiculous that a. man should bo given a sentence for a right which the city council now allowed. Mr Al. Ormerod, representing the Communist Party of New- Zealand, contended that the restrictions were part of the Government’s action in suppressing the working class movement. “A week ago, I was in the Wellington central station taking out a short term for a fine and. a police officer came in and used disgusting and very provocative language against me,” he said. “He was trying to provoke me into trying to hit him to give him an opportunity to beat me up.” Air W. G. Wohlmann (Commissioner of Police): Have you made any complaint?
PUT IN PADDED CELL. . Mr Ormerod: No. I was transferred to a padded cell. That’s a question that need's investigation. Mr Parry: In the Wellington Central police station ? Mr Ormerod: A week last Friday. I was locked there till I was taken out to Mount Crawford.
The Minister: There is no good in talking nonsense. You can’t expect me to believe that the police treat any man in that manner. We don’t stand for anybody being treated unfairly by the police. Mr Ormerod: It’s a common practice of the police to do that. Mr Wo'hlmann: Did you complain to any prison officials or to any justice of the peace when you came out?
The Minister said, he understood that the portion of the sentence requiring Mr H. M. Smith to be at home by 7 p.m. had nearly expired. It was a difficult matter to interfere with a probationary sentence, but if representations were made after half the term had expired he would consider the case.
Mr Wohlmann (to Mr Smith): You claim to represent the working class of New Zealand and that when the offences occurred you were representing the Seamen’s Union. I am informed that you have been expelled from the Seamen’s Union because yon caused disruption and that you and others do not represent the working class at all. You claim that you have been punished for breaking a- by-law. You have been punished for inciting and obstructing the police and other matters under t'he Police Offences Act.
"The Allegations made against- the police have not been substantiated, by any evidence. You had the opportunities to make official complaints.. “Mr Ormerod has made a statement and I would lie glad if he were prepared to make a statutory declaration before a justice to inquire into it.” Mr H. M. Smith said it was untrue that he was an expelled member of the
Seamen’s Union and that lie caused disruption. “I attended a meeting of 'the Seamen’s Union this morning,” he said. Mr Wohlmann: You are not a number of the Seamen’s Union now. Mr Smith: I am a member of the Seamen’s Union.
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Bibliographic details
Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 7 March 1935, Page 4
Word Count
956FREEDOM OF SPEECH Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 7 March 1935, Page 4
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