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A REFORM WANTED THIS SESSION.

(To the Editor.)

Sir. —One canupt help being alarmed by the number of. assaults on women, and especially young female children, which are constantly being recorded in our newspapers. In Wellington recently I noticed that at the Supreme Court there were four separate cases of indecent assault on children; the ages of these little girl victims (one was just out of babyhood) were 4)4 years, 8 years, n years and 13 years. Their assailants were convicted, and sent to gaol; but they will all be free men in about six years’ time. One of the men had been convicted before for the same offence, his second victim being the little girl aged 4)4 years—and this man will be free again ! In a splendid country like oms, populated by a superior class ot people, aud noted for its advanced legislation, the increase in the number of these assaults is a bad feature, and a reflection on our laws for the protection of womanhood and future womanhood. Without a doubt, our laws for their protection are obsolete when compared with the laws of other countries ; even the English law is in advance of ours. In certain States in America, Australia, aud South Africa (and it is also recorded in the laws of Moses), the punishment for indecent assault on females is the death penally. He of Nazareth also seems to have inferred that the penalty lor offending children was death.' It the severity of the laws in the above countries is causing the scum of their population to drift to New Zealand, it is plainly our duty to place our laws for these cases on a par with the laws of those countries by urging our legislators to make the death penalty the punishment for these horrible, inhuman and unnatural assaults which were commented on in our Parliament a few years back. It is said that children assaulted are physically, and in some cases mentally, ruined for life, apart from their innocence being blighted, and perhaps left with a loathsome disease. Then there are many cases of assault not reported, as the victim’s parents, through family pride, shrink from publicity and police court proceedings. In one New Zealand city, I am told, a Mission Sister who keeps a day school lor little children, had to get the police to order away low fellows who came round with lollies when the school came out. Long sentences harden prisoners; flogging is a dead letter, owing to “health reasons." Abolish the death sentence for murder, if you wish, as it was abolished for robbery ; but those crimes are not on the same plane as brutal attacks by these human ghouls on defenceless children ot the poorer classes, who are lured away with a few lollies. Womanhood was unsafe in New South Wales until capital punishment was brought in. During the South African War capital punishment prevailed. Juries on these cases would perform a real benefit if they recommended capital punishment to be placed on the . Statute Book, because a brutal crime deserves brutal punishment. When visiting America recently, I inquired if there were many of these assaults recorded, and I was informed that such cases were rare. Should the Government refuse to consent to the death penalty for such crimiuals, they should at least be declared habitual criminals.—Yours, etc., A New Zeaeander. Wellington, March 9th, 1914.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19140312.2.14.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXVI, Issue 1219, 12 March 1914, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
566

A REFORM WANTED THIS SESSION. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXVI, Issue 1219, 12 March 1914, Page 3

A REFORM WANTED THIS SESSION. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXVI, Issue 1219, 12 March 1914, Page 3

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