N. Zealand PM floats the privacy law after the accused of filming women

The New Zealand Prime Minister on Thursday instigated new secrecy laws when his own press secretary was caught tapping sex workers without alleged consent.Senior colleague Michael Forbes resigned after a local news outlet, alleging that he recorded the audio of sessions with sex workers and secretly photographed women in the gym.Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said he was “surprised”, but it was not clear whether Forbes broke the law. He told reporters on Thursday, “If you are a new enthusiast, you ask quite a valid question about how this behavior is, and is it legal or illegal.” “I have the same reaction.” Luxon marked new privacy laws, which can be drafted to clean the legal gray area. Forbes, who was the Deputy Chief Press Secretary of Luxon, apologized in a statement sent to the media. He said, “I want to apologize to my honesty to the women I have harmed.”