Pitcairn: The Turbulent Island

Anyone who is interested in islands, or geography, psychological, sociology, biology or history for that matter has probably, at least in passing heard of Pitcairn Island. The Independent recently came out with this in depth article about Pitcairn and its troubled past and present. I have attached the whole article, its quite long but worth the read.

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Author Unknown

The Independent

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The island has been devastated by a mass trial for child rape. As several men start sentences in a jail they helped to build, Ed Caesar explores the future for this troubled outpost of empire

 

Jacqui Christian grew up on an island paradise in the Pacific. The childhood she describes sounds like every over-stressed family’s fantasy in her adopted city, London: a serene tropical haven, with no cars, little contact with the outside world, where everyone is a neighbour, or family. “After school we could go riding our bikes or kite-flying anywhere on the island and not worry about being mugged,” she says.

But that wasn’t the whole story. “There was this other side that we never talked about, where being a girl you always tried to avoid being anywhere with an adult male on your own. The older you got, the smarter you got about who was safe to be around and who wasn’t.” Her first memory of being sexually abused was when she was three years old.

Jacqui grew up on Pitcairn, two miles by one mile of volcanic British rock in the Pacific Ocean. The island, where at the time of the trial just 47 people lived, is 3,000 miles from Chile in one direction and 3,000 miles from New Zealand in the other. There is no airstrip, nor a regular boat service to the island. Until very recently, it had no internet or television. For most of its 200-year history as a settled colony - since 1790, when Pitcairn was first settled by Fletcher Christian and his fellow mutineers on the Bounty - the world had done little to trouble Pitcairn, and Pitcairn had done little to interest the world.

But, two years ago, Pitcairn stumbled into the spotlight, when its child sex abuse scandal made waves across the world. In the past fortnight, following a failed appeal to the Privy Council, two Pitcairners, Steve Christian - the one-time mayor of Pitcairn, and a descendant of Fletcher Christian - and his son, Randy, started three- and six-year prison sentences respectively for rape in HM Prison Pitcairn, a new chalet-style pinewood prison they helped to build. They will be guarded by seven New Zealand prison guards, shipped in especially for the purpose.

In 2004, half the island’s adult males, direct descendants of Christian and the mutineers, were charged with the rape, indecent assault of underage girls and, in one case, incest. After a five-year investigation by British detectives, during which every woman who grew up on the island since 1950 was questioned, 32 women said they had been abused. Thirty-one men were implicated in the crimes, some of which occurred at least 40 years earlier. Of those 31, many now dead, seven men were tried in a court presided over by three New Zealand judges. Only one was acquitted.

Jacqui is the first victim to give an interview, to the film-maker Nick Godwin. One year after the trial, Godwin arrived on the island to conduct a series of interviews with the sentenced men - at the time still free to move around Pitcairn because of their pending appeal - and other islanders. The results of Godwin’s investigation, due to be shown this week in a Channel 4 film, Trouble in Paradise: The Pitcairn Story, reveal an island ripped in two.

Meralda Warren, a woman in her forties, whose brother, Jay, had been the only man acquitted in the 2004 trial, sprang to the defence of the island’s men. It was quite normal for girls in Pitcairn, she said, to start having sex “at about 12 or 13″. Moreover, it was usually with boys of their own age or slightly older. There was, she insisted, no culture of rape or paedophilia on the island.

“We are Polynesians,” she said. “Only in Britain is this underage sex, but not in Polynesia… I first [had sex] at 12. My partner was only a couple of years older. I was never raped and I don’t believe other Pitcairn women were raped either.”

But this account, conjuring images of innocent assignations behind the bike shed, was not the experience of the island’s other women. Stories emerged of men in groups pinning down girls, some as young as eight, and raping them. Like the other girls, Jacqui told no one what was going on. “I don’t know whether it was fear or something I just didn’t want to face. I knew it was wrong. It felt wrong. It felt uncomfortable, and there are men telling you not to tell anyone else.”

Pitcairn, partly because of its geographical position, and partly because of its wilful insularity, has always been a closed environment. The occasional visiting school teacher or social worker apart, outsiders rarely visit. But it was just such an outsider, PC Gail Cox, a British policewoman on a secondment to Pitcairn, who, in 1999, first raised the alarm about a child sex pandemic. A teenage girl told the officer that young girls were frequently having sex with older men. Appalled, PC Cox reported back to her superiors in London, sparking an investigation by two British detectives, Rob Vinson and Peter George.

The man at the centre of the allegations in the 2004 trial was the island’s one-time mayor, Steve Christian, who still vociferously denies that he has been involved in any wrongdoing. He admitted having sex with underage girls, but said that, according to Pitcairn law, it was only sex with girls under 12 that was illegal - and even that was only punishable by 100 days’ imprisonment. Rape, he believed, took place between strangers.

But, again, the evidence heard in the trial gave a different picture. Two of Christian’s victims, appearing by video link from New Zealand, told of vicious rapes. One said that she had been seized by him and by two of his friends, dragged into the woods and forced to have sex. She was 11 at the time and he was 13 . Another said that, when she was 12 and Steve Christian 21, he had taken her up into the mountains on his bicycle and raped her under a bush.

The two detectives who were assigned to Pitcairn under an investigation named Operation Unique, tried to make sense of what had been going on. They came to the conclusion that, because of an apparent lack of law and order, the adult men on the island felt it was their right to do whatever they wished. One man, said George, had admitted that he tried to get girls of 10 or under, because Christian “got them when they were 12, so he had to go younger”.

Godwin has his own theory. “Women were certainly complicit in this,” he says. “Although we didn’t have time to go into it fully in a one-hour documentary, there was certainly evidence that women not only turned a blind eye, but offered up their daughters to older men in some cases.

“The widespread nature of this kind of activity, in my view, goes back to the island’s origins, to the mutineers. We know that some of those women [they took] from Tahiti were very young, and I suspect many of those women may not have come of their own accord. We certainly have documentary evidence of men having sex with very young girls in Polynesia in that time. It was very much part of the culture then …. All those things feed into the situation today.”

Last month, for the first time in the island’s history, a case from Pitcairn arrived at Britain’s highest court of appeal for Commonwealth countries, the Privy Council. Four out of the six men found guilty were seeking to have their convictions overturned. They argued that, because of their isolation, Pitcairn law, rather than British law, applied on the island. The Privy counsellors disagreed.

With their appeal crushed, two of those six men have begun their prison sentences. Another islander, Terry Young, will start his five-year term when a relative arrives on the island to look after his ageing mother. Of the three others convicted in the 2004 trial, one, Len Brown, has been granted two years of home detention, on the grounds of his age, and two others have hundreds of hours of community sentences awaiting them.

The situation on Pitcairn has changed already. Most of the island’s children have now been shipped off to relatives in Australia and New Zealand. The British government, meanwhile, has poured money into Pitcairn in an effort to develop one of the last bastions of the Empire. Social workers, doctors, and, now, seven police officers have arrived on the island. Pitcairn’s first road has just been built, as has its first guest house.

But it may already be too late to save Pitcairn. With half the native adult male workforce imprisoned or under supervision for the crimes that have made Pitcairn infamous, it is going to be hard for the island to soldier on. And the contention of some islanders that “tourism is the future” seems to be an optimistic one, given this scandal.

“I think [the islanders] are hoping that people come back to the island,” says Godwin. “It had to happen anyway. It’s an ageing population, so they need some young blood. It has been clear for a long time that women were leaving Pitcairn and never coming back, and now, of course, we know why.”

Jacqui’s story, though, gives the island a strange hope. Despite all that she has experienced, Jacqui still has “a dream” to go home and live in the tiny community where she grew up.

5 Responses »

  1. As a small child in New Zealand, I, as had many others, thought the story of the Mutiny on the Bounty to be the ultimate South Sea adventure.I even met a woman who was a Fletcher Christian descendant and I thought she was exotic and mysterious. Now I know life must have been hell for children on that island. Colleen McCullough the author should hang her head in shame for defending the reprehensible behaviour of adult males, by saying”It’s Polynesian to break in young girls at twelve.” Cannibalism was once a common practice but the human race has evolved.

  2. McCullough’s comments are a disgrace to herself. Also deeply ironic, given her previous comments on Australia being ‘a man’s world’, and how dreadful it was that women earned half men’s wages, etc etc.

    But it’s apparantly AOK for twelve year old girls to be raped, as long as its part of a ‘custom’. Maybe one day we’ll find a group whose tribal custom is the rape of foolish elderly female authors - will McCullough defend that, too?

    One wonders how she’d have coped, being raped at twelve. I doubt she’d have written it off as being ‘broken in’ (what an obscene phrase that is.)

    To defend the rape of children on the basis of ‘cultural differences’ is to show a lack of judgement, empathy, compassion and basic humanity, that beggars belief. A complete ignorance of the fact that it has to be the act, and its consequences, in such cases, which are judged: not the cultural context.

    Otherwise, we revert back to a primitive state, where might equals right, objectivity is nowhere in sight, and ‘justice’ belongs only to the thugs who are physically strong enough to enforce it. A ‘Lord of the Flies’ situation - which is what Pitcairn seems to have been for centuries.

    There’s something wrong with a woman who can defend the rape of twelve year olds. Maybe, given who her husband is, she’s just too scared to look the whole thing squarely in the eye … in which case, she should look to her own conscience, and keep her mouth shut.

    Poppy

  3. Recently, here in Texas, the State Child Protective Services removed over 400 children from a religious compound run by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus and the Latter Day Saints, an offshoot from the Mormons. This was done because of charges of polygamy and forced marriages of underage women (in Texas that’s under 17). It was charged that some girls as young as 12 were being married to older group members in plural marriages. Of course, it is implicit that these girls were being sexually abused due to their age.

    The result was a bit of an uproar and a black eye for the State. After a few weeks all but a handful of the children were returned to their parents by the State Supreme Court because there were no individual charges of rape or polygamy, just charges against the group as a whole. There was also a lot of soul searching in the press and on the Internet regarding this situation.

    There is no question that the group practices polygamy, they are hold up in their closed compound just for that reason, and the underage marriages have happened in the past but we are not sure now (this will come out in some future trials). A big part of the problem that prosecutors have in pursuing these cases is that they cannot find witnesses—women raised in this culture are unwilling to testify against their husbands because they don’t feel that anything wrong was committed. If you were raised in a plural family, and you were married at age 14 to a man who already had 2 wives, it’s normal to raise your daughter with the same expectations.

    Seems to me that there are parallels here. And, it seems to me that the government should tread lightly when it goes into closed communities that have been living by their own customs. Simply, it is inappropriate for the police from London, or Austin, to break down the doors of a community and apply, retroactively, laws and standards that have not been part of that community, even if those standards were legally enforceable but have never been enforced due to distance, geographical or social.

    From my reading of this article, and some other research about Pitcairn Island and its history, I believe that the British police and courts are out of line. Should the practice of older men having sex with early teen and even preteen girls be stopped—certainly. But, because it has been the norm within that community (what we in the US call ‘community standards’), applying the law retroactively and putting people in prison is an overreach of government power. A more appropriate course would be to ‘read them the Riot Act’ (to use a delightfully British expression) and put the community under a measure of supervision and observation.

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  5. Steve Christian is a coward, his male offspring are a bunch of cowards. To pick on a bunch of defenseless girls and then have the balls to not stand up and accept responsibility. I have a daughter and if he did what he did to my daughter, we / I would show him a little Southwest Philly Street justice. What a total and complete COWARD!

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