A Hawke's Bay MP has hit out at criticism of Oranga Tamariki's handling of a boy brutally beaten in his Flaxmere home saying they are "damned if they do and damned if they don't".
The ministry, which last year had to apologise for the handling of an attempted uplift of a baby at Hawke's Bay Hospital, now finds itself in the eye of another storm for returning the boy to Ramsey Cres.
The boy, who had been previously injured in what some family claimed was a bouncy castle fall, was returned to immediate family and then seriously injured again on January 29.
Newsroom reported OT allegedly allowed the boy's return without full consultation with the wider family, with some opposed to it.
Oranga Tamariki spokeswoman Alison McDonald said the agency's priority now was to focus on the boy and his recovery.
"Because of that, our comments will be limited to protect his privacy and to acknowledge the sensitivity of the ongoing police investigation," McDonald said.
"In January this year, following extensive work with the family over many months, Oranga Tamariki was satisfied there were sufficient supports from wider whanau and professionals for the boy to be at home.
"By then, his family had actively engaged in a range of services. Decisions like this are never made in isolation," she said.
National MP for Tukituki Lawrence Yule said it was a tough situation for the agency to find themselves in.
"We shouldn't kid ourselves into thinking Oranga Tamariki can keep all children safe. They can't," Yule said.
"Oranga Tamariki is involved in situations when sadly the rightful carers are either incapable, or have ignored or walked away from their fundamental responsibility for looking after children in their care," he said.
The 4-year-old boy who remains in Starship Hospital in a stable condition more than three weeks after the incident suffered the worst injuries Detective Inspector Mike Foster has seen in his 30 years of policing.
Yule said Oranga Tamariki had to maintain a "very difficult" balance in allowing children to be with their family versus the risk the same family could be to the child.
"We wouldn't need Oranga Tamariki if all people took their parenting responsibility seriously from conception to adulthood," he said.
"The responsibility that rests with other people including Oranga Tamariki, in terms of decisions made by the whānau which weren't followed through by Oranga Tamariki.
"As a result, the baby was placed back into a dangerous situation which whānau whanui had warned that they should not be.
"I think that there still is a lot of concerns about the conduct of social practice and the ability to listen to what whānau whānui are saying in terms of responsibility, but also to the point where everybody wants good outcomes but only one organisation has the power in that, and that is Oranga Tamariki."
Ratima told RNZ he was not absolving anyone from what happened and said it was a devastating situation.
But he said authorities also needed to be held accountable and had remained unfairly tight-lipped.