Photo: RNZ / Gill Bonnett
Warning: this story contains details that may disturb some readers.
Moeaia Tuai will be sentenced next month for enslaving a young woman who he forced to work and sexually abused. Two victims broke free from the Auckland man's control in harrowing echoes of New Zealand's most infamous slavery trial, but such prosecutions remain rare. Gill Bonnett reports.
Slavemaster Moeaia Tuai is a Samoan chief or matai, who took possession of his victims' lives and raped one victim, who had been forced to pay him her wages for four years.
At the 63-year-old's trial, his own diaries were used to document the hours the young woman worked, her pay and when she was punished with beatings.
"Treating a person as if they were owned" was the legal description given to the jury.
"Restricting freedom of movement - where a person can go, restricting freedom of association - who they can spend time with, restricting freedom of communication - who they can contact and talk to - using actu
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