Destiny Church leader Brian Tamaki has told a public meeting that he instructed his followers to vandalise a rainbow pedestrian crossing.
Church members have recently been charged for painting over rainbow crossings in Gisborne and Auckland, and were blamed for the cancellation of drag events at public libraries.
Speaking to his faithful in Whanganui on Tuesday night, Tamaki openly claimed responsibility for the Gisborne crossing being covered in paint.
“I said to the boys ‘Get the paint out, we’ll hit this’. I didn’t expect we’d get the reaction that we we did when we painted it over. I think that’s the record time that police have responded to any incident,” he said to laughter from the audience.
“People were aghast in the community. Ssome have been waiting for a police visit because they got robbed, mugged, in one case a very bad beating — six weeks waiting for police to come to their home.
“But they sent 25 cops there (to the crossing).”
Six people aged 45 to 54 have pleaded not guilty to a range of charges in relation to the Gisborne vandalism.
Tamaki said they had tried to raise their concerns directly with councils about the “millions being spent to support the gay pride movement” and the threat to children’s innocence, but were told to “buzz off”.
He said his granddaughter’s husband, Ford O’Connor, who pleaded guilty last month to a charge of intention of damaging the Karangahape Road rainbow crossing, was acting to protect his children.
He was showing his opposition to the relationship and sexuality curriculum in schools, which included instructions for girls about “how to stimulate themselves” and told children as young as 5 they could choose their gender, Tamaki said.
Tamaki was travelling and not available for an interview with RNZ.
However, in a written response to questions, he said Destiny Church had always been “upfront and open and issued press releases stating clearly that the church organised the painting over the Gisborne rainbow crossing as a political protest”. RNZ
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