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Home / Northern Advocate

Covid 19 Delta outbreak: 'I did nothing wrong' - Auckland woman at centre of Northland border breach allegations speaks out

Anna Leask
By Anna Leask
Senior Journalist - crime and justice·NZ Herald·
21 Oct, 2021 04:00 PM6 mins to read

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October 22 2021 New Zealand will move to a new "traffic light" system to manage Covid-19 when district health boards have 90 per cent of their eligible population vaccinated.

One of the Auckland women accused of travelling to Northland without a legitimate travel exemption and later testing positive for Covid-19 has rejected claims she lied, withheld information and tried to avoid authorities.

She has spoken to the Herald, wanting to shut down rumours she and her friend are sex workers or connected to gangs and said she had done "nothing wrong" and was "confident" she would not face charges.

The woman is currently in the Jet Park Hotel managed isolation facility.

She will be released next week after spending her mandatory time in quarantine.

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On October 8, Northland moved back into alert level 3, after it was revealed an Auckland woman travelling in the area had returned a positive Covid-19 test result.

The woman returned to Auckland and was put straight in MIQ but was "refusing to co-operate with officials on her movements".

Days later it was revealed police were hunting for her travel companion.

They said authorities had contacted her but did not know her location.

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Speculation grew that the women were prostitutes connected to a gang who were plying their trade in Northland - and that was why they were refusing to tell public health officials where they had been and who they had contact with.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern appealed for the second woman to "come forward" and said health officials and police were "really pulling out all the stops" to find the traveller.

"I feel the same frustration that everyone else feels," she said at the time.

"They are refusing to co-operate, it is beyond irresponsible, it is dangerous."

The second woman was located at a New Lynn address hours later and also taken to MIQ.

She told the Herald today that much of the information released about her was not true - nor were the rumours.

Even former deputy prime minister Winston Peters was discussing the case, alleging one of the women was a sex worker who was assisted by Mongrel Mob leader Harry Tam to obtain travel documentation.

Tam denied this and later threatened legal action against Peters.

"If Winston said it, he needs to prove it … If he's not going to apologise, we will need to look at legal action," Tam said.

The woman the Herald spoke to also rejected the claim.

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She explained that her friend had started a new business in the building and in-home services space shortly before lockdown and had set up a number of "networking" meetings in Northland in the hopes of getting contracted for work.

"She requested travel exemptions and gave them reasons we were going ... she had me down as an employee or assistant," said her travel companion.

"We had more meetings in Waikato planned for the next week ... I was assisting her."

A Covid-19 testing station in Auckland. Photo / Alex Burton
A Covid-19 testing station in Auckland. Photo / Alex Burton

They were in Whangārei when the business owner received the news her Covid test was positive.

"We made our way back to Auckland," the other woman said.

"All I knew was that I didn't want to go home to my place - my family were all there and I didn't want them to get Covid.

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"My family were waiting to get their vaccinations and I had a friend whose house was not being used so ... I went there."

The woman started to feel unwell and knew - given she had been in a car with a positive case for days - that she had Covid-19.

She didn't want to expose anyone to it, so stayed put and self-isolated at the house in New Lynn.

She claimed she was in daily contact with a public health nurse and was not hiding from authorities.

She believed they knew where she was and what her plan was, and could not understand what the fuss was about.

"I felt it made sense to self-isolate," she said.

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"I wasn't hiding, I fully informed them where I was."

The woman told the Herald she knew that people with Covid had to go into MIQ but she had "pretty bad" symptoms and did not want to infect anyone else.

She said she had been co-operating and had given the locations of all five places she and her friend visited in Northland.

"There were only five places: the motel, the dairy beside the motel, the gas station to get food, the gas station to get petrol and the public toilet," she said.

"That's it - we're not leaving anything out, we're not hiding anything.

"I have been co-operating ... my friend may not have been more forthcoming because ... she felt like she was in trouble."

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A woman accused of breaching Auckland's northern border has spoken to the Herald from her quarantine room. Photo / Sylvie Whinray
A woman accused of breaching Auckland's northern border has spoken to the Herald from her quarantine room. Photo / Sylvie Whinray

She said the insinuation the pair were prostitutes or gang associates was "funny".

"It's not true, we have no link to gangs and I'd quite like to know where that information came from," she said.

"I don't even have a criminal history, aside from something back when I was 15 and that was 30 years ago."

She was not bothered what the general public thought of her reasons for travelling but was angry at any suggestion she had stonewalled officials.

Police have said their investigation into whether the women breached the Covid-19 restrictions was ongoing and both would be spoken to after they left MIQ.

When asked about the handling of the women, police referred the Herald to the Ministry of Health.

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"We only assisted health to locate her and our investigation is ongoing," they said.

A Ministry of Health spokesperson said the agency stood by "its previous comments in relation to these cases and has nothing further to add".

The woman was keen to "initiate a meeting" with authorities when she got out of MIQ to "clear up" what she felt was false information about her travel and actions.

"I have no fear, I will initiate that - I want to make it all clear," she said.

"I am confident I won't [face charges], I am confident I did nothing wrong - I have all the texts and emails and proof.

"There is nothing to hide, there is nothing to challenge ... I was trying to be responsible.

"This makes no sense. They're not going to charge me, because there's nothing to charge me with."

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She said she "feels for the people of Northland" for their additional time in level 3 but reiterated she did not believe she had breached the health order.

"I could apologise but I am not sure what I am apologising for. I did not break any rules and I didn't try to hang around when I knew I had Covid.

"We stayed away from people and no one contracted Covid from us ... I can apologise for getting Covid ... that we were unlucky enough to get it."

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