In the same way an ex-tobacco lobbyist wouldn't get away with describing themselves as a public health advocate, newly elected Green MP Golriz Ghahraman looks to have more than gilded the lily in selling herself as a 'human rights lawyer' in relation to her work defending war criminals.
Her former clients, Simon Bikindi – sentenced to 15 years in prison by the International Criminal Tribunal for incitement of genocide in Rwanda – and the "Butcher of Bosnia" - responsible for the worst atrocities in post-war Europe - seem odd picks for the then 27-year-old to pause her career as an Auckland barrister to defend.
We're all for sticking up for the downtrodden, respecting the cab rank rule (all lawyers have had to defend the odd client they'd rather have avoided), but the rule does not apply to international engagements. Ghahraman was a volunteer – that raises questions about her character.
The most obvious: how hard would it have been to have come to New Zealand as a refugee escaping a war zone, only to get a law degree and use it to defend a man who sang songs on Rwandan radio with the primary goal of invoking genocidal frenzy?
And why the selfies, combined with the apparent downplaying of the role to both her colleagues and the public? Seizing the moral high ground on the basis of half-truths in order to advance her political career comes across as distasteful.