It is widely believed that Waitangi
Tribunal Reports issue only after rigorous historical investigation of Treaty
claims.
These findings then make their way into
media reports, onto Government websites, and percolate throughout our education
system as apparently authoritative, objective information.
But what if Tribunal Reports were one-eyed
rewrites of New Zealand history and not worth the paper they are printed on?
According to the Waitangi Tribunal’s
website:
“The Tribunal consists of a chairperson and
up to 20 members that may be appointed at any one time. The chairperson may
also appoint a Maori Land Court judge to the position of deputy chairperson.
The total membership reflects the partnership [sic] of the Treaty of Waitangi
through an approximately equal representation of Maori and Pakeha.
“Tribunal members are appointed … by the
Governor-General on the recommendation of the Minister of Maori Affairs in
consultation with the Minister of Justice.
“Members constitute a pool from which
tribunals of between three and seven members are drawn to hear claims. The term
'Waitangi Tribunal' is used to refer both to the total membership and to the
individual Tribunals. Members are appointed to a Tribunal by direction of the
chairperson and remain members until the inquiry is completed or they resign.
“Each Tribunal has to have at least one
Maori member, although generally around half the members are Maori. Usually, a
Tribunal has a kaumatua member and, where it is inquiring into historical
matters, at least one historian [sic].”
From this information we can deduce that:
1. The Tribunal’s underlying premise before
it even hears a single claim is that the Treaty of Waitangi created an ongoing
racial partnership.
2. Tribunal members are appointed on the
recommendation of the Minister of Maori Affairs, so we can safely assume that
both Maori and non-Maori members will be Treatyists, and likely to come to the
table with strong priors rather than being impartial defenders of the public
interest.
3. It is theoretically possible for all
Tribunal members hearing a particular claim to be Maori [by which I mean New
Zealanders of mixed European-Maori descent who have chosen to identify
monoculturally as "Maori"]. More commonly, Maori may be a majority of
those hearing a particular claim.
4. Many Maori have multiple hapu and iwi
affiliations, making it quite possible for a Tribunal member hearing a
particular claim to have direct links to the claimant group.
Indeed, three years into the hearing of the
East Coast claim, presiding Judge Stephanie Milroy was obliged to disqualify
herself, but only after lawyers for competing claimant groups pointed out that
through her Ngati Porou connections, she had interests in five landblocks that
were subject to the claim.
We can only speculate as to how many other
instances of this kind never came to light.
This directly contravenes the legal
principle that "no man shall be the judge of his own case."
5. Given that 50 percent of Tribunal
members are Treatyist Maori and the claims process is in a broader sense
between the Crown and Maori, this marginally more indirectly contravenes the
legal principle that "no man shall be the judge of his own case."
Let's now examine how the Tribunal works:
1. Claims are typically heard on the marae
of the claimant tribe, hardly a neutral venue. Deliberations are conducted
according to Maori protocol. This is likely to prove highly intimidating to
non-Maori interested parties seeking to make a representation.
2. Since the claims process is seen as
being between the Crown and Maori, third parties have no automatic right to be
heard. They can only be heard with permission, which the Tribunal rarely
grants, particularly if opposed by the claimant group.
3. Evidence is often given in Maori, with
no requirement to provide a translation. As well as being a deliberate act of
cultural arrogance, this makes it difficult for non-Maori speakers to have
input into the hearing process.
4. Oral evidence is given the same weight
as written evidence and is not subject to cross-examination, since according to
Maori protocol this is highly disrespectful to a kaumatua. The Tribunal
justifies this by asserting that since it is a Tribunal rather than a Court,
rigorous evidential standards need not apply.
5. Claimants are legally aided to the tune
of millions of dollars from taxpayers, with no requirement to pay this back if
successful in achieving multi-million dollar settlements. This encourages what
economists call rent-seeking behaviour, also known as “trying it on because
there’s a huge upside if successful and no price paid for being wrong,” not
that I can recall a single Tribunal Report finding against the claimants.
6. Claimant groups have forced historians
they have employed to go away under threat of non-payment and sanitise reports
of facts that undermine their case.
7. Those charged with presenting the
Crown's case are supine to say the least. For example, claimants who didn't
sign the Treaty, such as Tainui, Tuhoe, and Tuwharetoa, should have been
immediately shown the door. Groups such as Ngai Tahu, Tainui, and Te Atiawa,
who'd already received full and final settlements (some, like Ngai Tahu,
several times over) legislated for in Acts of Parliament the preambles of which
include the words "full and final settlement" should also have been
told to talk to the hand.
The Tribunal's recent assertion that
contrary to primary source accounts of what the chiefs said on the lawn at
Waitangi, Ngapuhi never ceded sovereignty to the Crown, is the latest in a long
line of egregious tommyrot to exit this body via the fundament.
Who can forget the Tribunal’s
"Holocaust of Taranaki" press release likening the closing down of
the Parihaka Commune (in which not a single person lost their life) with the
state-sponsored Nazi slaughter of millions of Jews during WWII?
Legendary media critic Brian Priestley MBE,
who acted as media adviser for Ngai Tahu when that the tribe’s claim was before
the Waitangi Tribunal, had this to say about the Tribunal process:
“Years ago I attended several sessions
while advising the Ngai Tahu on public relations for their claims.
“It would be hard to imagine any public
body less well-organised to get at the truth.
“There was no cross-examination.
“Witnesses were treating with sympathetic
deference.
“The people putting the Crown’s side of
things seemed equally anxious not to offend.
“In three months I don’t think I was asked
a single intelligent, awkward question.
“I should have been.”
A number of reputable historians, including
Keith Sorrenson, Michael Belgrave and Bill Oliver have voiced concerns that the
Waitangi Tribunal has become a self-referencing echo chamber for re-writing New
Zealand history.
In “The Waitangi Tribunal and New Zealand
History,” published in 2004, Victoria University historian Dr Giselle Byrnes
lays damning charges against the Tribunal, describing its attempts to write
history as a “noble, but ultimately flawed experiment.”
According to Dr Byrnes, the Tribunal is not
writing “objective history.” Rather, the reports it produces are deeply
political and overwhelmingly focused on the present, in that the Tribunal
invariably judges the past by today’s standards rather than those prevailing at
the time under scrutiny.
Tribunal history also has a strong Maori
bias, Dr Byrnes says. Maori characters and stories are given much more emphasis
and weight than Pakeha characters and stories. “The reports increasingly
champion or advocate the Maori cause.”
Other academics share this unease, but
reluctant to say anything publicly, Dr Byrnes points out.
“I know that many historians have felt some
kind of disquiet about the sort of history the Tribunal has been producing over
the past few years. They haven’t spoken out about it because most historians
have liberal political leanings and they don’t want to be seen as undermining
or criticising the whole process.”
Dr Byrnes also reveals significant concerns
about the mass consumption of Tribunal reports by the media and general public.
She believes the Tribunal should clearly state its pro-claimant bias, lest lay
people reading Tribunal reports be misled.
Ngapuhi kaumatua, David Rankin, a direct
descendant of Hone Heke, more recently had this to say about the Tribunal as a
nursery for the re-writing of New Zealand history:
“The Tribunal makes up history as it goes
along. A growing number of New Zealand historians are pointing this out,
although most of them are labelled as racist for doing so. Facts are
omitted in Tribunal reports, and evidence is shaped in some cases to fit
predetermined outcomes. The bias is so obvious, but most historians
are too scared for their careers to question the tribunal’s findings.
“[T]he Tribunal … has turned out to be a
body that is bringing in apartheid to New Zealand. This sounds dramatic,
until you see how it advocates for race-based access to certain areas, and
race-based management policies for Crown land, and now, twin sovereignty, which
constitutionally is worse than anything that happened in South Africa during
the apartheid era.
“The Tribunal is a bully. Go against
it, and you will be labelled a racist or worse.”
Clearly, any thinking New Zealander should have
absolutely no confidence in anything that comes out of this body.
1 comment:
This scenario has been going on for years. While one might not be surprised at the antics of a left wing government one might have hoped that a National government would have insisted that the Tribunal action in a more responsible fashion.
But didn't National want Maori Party support to form a government?
If anything the Maori activists have become even more strident and demanding in their claims for money and racial preference. This does not seem to bother the politicians who are supposed to represent the wishes, values, rights and perspectives of all New Zealanders - irrespective of race, class or religion.
It is situations like this that indicate that we have a pretend as opposed to a genuine democracy.
Post a Comment