Watch the Prime Minister smile and grin when asked about Rael Kwasnik’s case, where he has spent almost a week battling to get home from Sydney to see his 87-year-old father Sam, after finding out he had just two days to live:

Disgusting.

A litany of failures at the border meant a Kiwi returning from Australia missed out on saying goodbye to his dying father – and now, because of further delays, he may not even be able to leave isolation to attend his funeral. 

Rael Kwasnik has spent almost a week battling to get home from Sydney to see his 87-year-old father Sam, after finding out he had just two days to live.

“I would move in mountains with a mask on and PPE to get to the funeral tomorrow,” he told Newshub. 

On March 17, Kwasnik applied for an emergency spot in managed isolation and quarantine (MIQ), and sent a doctor’s letter as proof, two days later. But he didn’t hear back.

“Everyone will do everything except for the ones with the power to make the decisions,” he says. 

Getting desperate, he booked a flight home just in case, and followed up with three urgent emails. 

He begged officials: “You can chain the door, provide me with an ankle tracker, whatever it takes.”

He told them he’d provided more than enough evidence and not received any update.

“In every email I attached the letter from the doctor saying he’s got two days to live,” he told Newshub. “What do you do? What do you do?”

Three days later, his application was finally approved. He landed in Auckland where his parents live. But despite MIQ records showing there were 172 free rooms there at the time, he was taken to the Grand Mercure in Wellington.

National’s COVID-19 spokesperson Chris Bishop says it’s not good enough. 

“Really we should be making the system as easy as possible to operate – not making it as difficult as possible,” he said. 

While waiting to hear if he could leave MIQ early, Kwasnik’s mum rang to tell him his dad had died. Being Jewish, his dad needs to be buried within 48 hours. But his application to go to the funeral was rejected on Wednesday afternoon.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern doesn’t think the Government is being too hard-nosed when it comes to compassionate exemptions. 

“No, I don’t think so,” she said. 

So much for kindness.

This woman has gone mad with power.

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As much at home writing editorials as being the subject of them, Cam has won awards, including the Canon Media Award for his work on the Len Brown/Bevan Chuang story. When he’s not creating the news,...