Diplomatic support for New Zealanders in jail or hospital overseas may end, with private sector companies hired to provide those services under plans to reduce costs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Ministry chief executive John Allen yesterday confirmed the idea was under consideration as part of restructuring that may cut more than 200 jobs, reduce New Zealand's presence at the United Nations, close embassies and have ambassadors to some countries based in Wellington and merely visiting the countries in which they represent New Zealand.
Labour foreign affairs spokesman Phil Goff said he had been told cost cutting measures being investigated included cutting some diplomatic services and reducing New Zealand's UN presence - at a time the country is trying to secure at spot on the Security Council in 2015 and 2016 - along with embassy closures and the cutting of staff numbers by one-fifth.
A former Foreign Affairs Minister, Mr Goff said he had been told the ministry was considering changes to how diplomatic services were delivered.
"If you're hospitalised or imprisoned overseas, you're in a situation of absolute trauma but instead of having a member of the New Zealand mission come to see you, they're going to now contract this work out to a private company.