Former New Zealand lawmaker, Golriz Ghahraman pleaded guilty to shoplifting on Wednesday, a scandal that has derailed the centre-left politician’s once-promising career.
Ghahraman, the first refugee elected to New Zealand’s parliament, stepped down from her political duties on January 16, citing the need to address her mental health.
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Soon after, police charged the rising star of the Green Party with shoplifting from boutique clothing stores.
The 43-year-old, who previously served as her party’s justice spokeswoman, pleaded guilty on Wednesday at Auckland District Court to four counts of shoplifting, an official told AFP.
A former human rights lawyer, Ghahraman said at the time of her resignation that work-related stress had led her to “act in ways that are completely out of character.
“I am not trying to excuse my actions, but I do want to explain them. I have let down a lot of people,” she said at the time.
Iran-born Ghahraman moved to New Zealand as a child with her family when they were granted political asylum.
After studying law, she became a United Nations human rights lawyer working on international criminal tribunals before entering parliament in 2017.
Prior to the allegations becoming public, Ghahraman had been criticised for her prominent involvement in a string of pro-Palestine protests.
Former Green Party co-leader James Shaw has said Ghahraman suffered “continuous threats” since the day she entered parliament and that pressure had intensified before her offences.
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