Tempers flare as Dunedin siege unfolds

Armed police at the cordon in Neidpath Rd with the man at the centre of the siege on the roof in...
Armed police at the cordon in Neidpath Rd with the man at the centre of the siege on the roof in the background. Photo: Stephen Jaquiery
A Dunedin teenager home alone was told to get out of her house by armed police as a rooftop siege unfolded next door.

Emotions boiled over during the eight hour standoff involving a barefoot man who climbed onto the roof of a multi-unit house in Neidpath Rd yesterday afternoon.

Police had to calm angry confrontations at the cordon between neighbours and friends of the man before he eventually came down and was taken into custody around midnight.

The drama began when officers were called to Neidpath Rd about 3.55pm. 

It is understood that threats involving a firearm had been made.

A neighbour said her 17-year-old daughter was home alone at the time of the incident.

She heard a smashing sound from downstairs and found herself face to face with an armed police officer who told her to get out of the house.

Armed police cordoned off the street and by 9pm, about a dozen people from the surrounding streets had gathered in Glenfield Ave.

Some were residents from the building where the man was on the roof. They had to find alternative places to stay.

As darkness fell, a spotlight was used to illuminate the man and police could be heard negotiating with him.

One of the neighbours at the cordon said he was messaged by a resident trapped inside a house in the cordon, who told him the man on the roof was asking police for a cheeseburger, cigarettes and his girlfriend.

About 9.10pm, firefighters brought in a ladder and a stretcher to the cordon, but they were stood down.

Two woman at the cordon, one of whom said she was the man’s sister, told the ODT they were disappointed police were not letting them help negotiate with the man.

Another friend, a young man, was confronted by police after yelling out to the man on the roof. He ran off and jumped in a car and pulled a U-turn, causing the three officers walking swiftly towards him to pull back as he screeched up Glenfield Ave.

The incident sparked a confrontation between the assembled neighbours and the two women.

One had earlier taken exception to a comment made by a child about police shooting the man.

Heavily armed officers had to intervene in the shouting match that ensued.

“This is the last thing we need, if you want to go to our cells, carry on,” one officer said.

A grandmother who yelled at the women to leave and said her daughter had narrowly missed being home when the events unfolded.

“If she hadn’t come to see me today, her kids would have been in that backyard,” she said.

They had told the police about various comings, goings and fence-jumpings from the property, but nothing had been done, she said.

“It’s quite terrifying,” the grandmother said.

The siege was resolved around midnight, after police successfully negotiated with the man.

A police spokesman said the man has been remanded in custody on existing warrants.

oscar.francis@odt.co.nz

 

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