Pauline Thurston
Pauline joined the New Zealand Police in 1974.
She spent five years in Palmerston North before moving to Auckland, serving in Otahuhu and then at the airport. She spent a harrowing few months at Auckland hospital mortuary as part of the team tasked with the identification of victims of the Erebus disaster. Taking leave without pay Pauline spent some months in Australia. On her return to Police she was sent to Tauranga, where she spent the next five years.
By 1989, as a competent and experienced police officer, she was selected along with two other policewomen to join the team of 32 police members selected to go to Namibia. This was the first time New Zealand policewomen had served overseas.
In Namibia fierce fighting between the local police and guerrillas had threatened the United Nations (UN) mission. The New Zealand police were there in a peacekeeping capacity but that did not lessen the dangers of working there, where the possibility of military or guerrilla action was very high. Their principal task was to observe the work of the South West African Police and accompany them as they discharged their duties, as well as to attend all political meetings and rallies. Pauline found it interesting working with police of other nationalities especially noting their reaction to working with women. Of the 1500 international police there, only 18 were female.
The Namibian people were pleased to see the New Zealand contingent. Some 70% of the population was illiterate and many lived in poverty. Pauline said that people had so little that the police contingents would take fruit for the children when they visited settlements - a positive relationship building exercise.
Namibian Independence Day was declared on 21 March 1990 and ended one of the largest and most complex UN operations in the field. The three policewomen who participated in the exercise were posted to different areas and did not see much of each until the presentation of the United Nations medal. The women thought they had done a good job and that the experience would be a highlight of their careers.
