After his own hit minister was reportedly intercepted sexual employees without their consent, New Zealand’s prime minister on Thursday floated new privacy laws. After a local news outlet claimed he had secretly recorded voice of sexual encounters with sexual workers and photographed people at the gym, top aide Michael Forbes resigned. Although it was unclear whether Forbes had broken the law, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said he was” shocked.” He told reporters on Thursday,” If you’re a New Zealander, you ask rather legitimate concerns about how does this behavior occur, and is it legal or illegal.” ” I have that same effect to it as well,” I said. To clear up the constitutional gray area, Luxon suggested that new privacy rules might be drafted. Luxon’s assistant chief press secretary, Forbes, apologized in a statement sent to the internet. He said,” I want to make my deepest apologies to the women I have harmed.”
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