31 January 2016
The Waitangi Industry
There are few futuristic ideas that have lost their sheen as quickly as the notion that settlements of Maori grievances would improve New Zealand’s race relations. Our ancestors were sceptical. There were inquiries into grievances in 1921 and 1927, and Prime Minister Peter Fraser told Maori in the 1940s that he would settle the eleven sets of identifiable grievance that Maori had against the Crown. Several “full and final settlements” were made between 1943 and 1947. But most of the money paid to Maori trust boards was wasted.
Instead of learning from this experience, liberally-inclined politicians gradually convinced themselves that the complaints of those who had missed out on the 1940s settlements ought to be thoroughly investigated. Norman Kirk’s Minister of Maori Affairs, Matiu Rata, was opposed; the Waitangi Tribunal erected in 1975 was to look at the Treaty of Waitangi and to ensure that its “principles” were applied to future public policy. No provision was made for delving into past history. Young, vocal Maori radicals protested. Eventually they convinced a later Labour deputy leader, Geoffrey Palmer, and a Maori Affairs spokesperson, Koro Wetere, to promise to introduce a mechanism for examining historical grievances.
These had expanded in number since the first settlements. The Lange Labour government in which I was a minister was sceptical about whether the exercise would do anything useful for Maori, but in 1985 we allowed the Waitangi Tribunal to be expanded. As in 1975, no effort was made to determine what the so-called “principles” of the Treaty were that should guide the investigation process. In 1987 this omission enabled the Court of Appeal to produce a highly coloured version of what the Treaty meant, and before long several Maori radicals sought to drive a horse and cart through government policy. They succeeded, because neither Labour nor National has been prepared to define in legislation what the Treaty meant……
Continue reading Michael Bassett's article HERE
April 19, 2008
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
30 January 2016
A Taranaki hapu's
belief that a Te Atiawa ancestor is buried near a proposed well site
is not enough to stop its construction, a court has ruled.
Following a hearing in
September, Environment Court Judge Brian Dwyer released his finding
on Friday in favour of Greymouth Petroleum's appeal against a
Heritage New Zealand decision to decline an authority, which would
have allowed the oil company to begin earthworks at its Kowhai D site
near Tikorangi.
As part of the
project,Greymouth wanted to establish a well site, access way and an
underground pipeline in the area but Heritage New Zealand said the
land involved was of cultural significance to Maori and required
protection.
Part of this claim
related to information Otaraua hapu member Rawiri Doorbar had
provided to the agency about Te Atiawa ancestor Wiremu Kingi Te
Rangitaake being buried near the well site. Te Rangitaake
was a renowned Te Atiawa chief who peacefully opposed land sales. He
was also a signatory to the Treaty of Waitangi.
While the grave itself
was not going to be disturbed, the wider cultural values of tangata
whenua would have been affected by the project, the agency claimed…..
See full article HERE
‘Put Iwi First’
Advisor Tells Failing Charter School
New Zealand First is
astonished the Education Minister’s advisor told failed Whangaruru
charter school to “put iwi first” and hold on to a
taxpayer-funded farm that cost nearly a million dollars, says New
Zealand First Education Spokesperson Tracey Martin.
“The incompetence of
Education Minister Hekia Parata is astonishing – she even signed
the original contract basically ‘gifting’ the farm to the trust
running the school.
“We have previously
pointed out that the Minister’s lack of business nous led to a
failure in the contract to require the school to return taxpayer
purchased assets in the event of the school shutting down, as it has.
“Official Information
Act documents obtained by New Zealand First show that as the Minister
was trying to rescue this failed experiment she recommended an
advisor to the school’s Nga Parirau Matauranga Trust board. The
advisor told them to keep the land for part of a Ngati Wai treaty
settlement.
“The 81 hectares in
Northland was purchased out of the original $1.6 million
establishment funding. Total funding for the school reached $4.9
million.
“In 2013 in
Parliament New Zealand First questioned the ‘gifting’ of the farm
to the trust. It was obvious that the Minister had given away
millions of dollars of land and assets to a private trust….
See full article HERE
National must listen
to Maori TPPA concerns
The National Government
must listen to the widespread opposition to the Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement (TPPA) if it is to retain credibility with
Māori, says Labour’s Maori Development spokesperson Kelvin Davis.
“The Iwi Leaders
Forum met face to face with Trade Minister Todd McClay and added
their voice to the chorus of opposition against the TPPA.
“The Iwi Leaders
Forum have sent a loud and clear message to the Government: say ‘No’
to the TPPA until you can provide assurances that Treaty of Waitangi
obligations, our environment and the rights of hapū, iwi and Māori
will be protected under this deal.
“Māori opposition to
the TPPA is growing by the day. Māori leaders, academics,
clinicians, the CTU Runanga and the Maori Women’s Welfare League
are firmly against the deal. Ngāti Whātua, Ngāti Pāoa, Ngāti Te
Ata and Ngāti Whanaunga each confirmed they would not perform the
pōwhiri for the signing of the TPPA.
“If this Government
was to honour its relationship and obligations to Māori it would
consult properly and in good faith with iwi before even considering
signing….
See full article HERE
29 January 2016
Maori Party
threatens to 'walk away' from RMA
The
Māori Party is warning it will withdraw its support for proposed
changes to the Resource Management Act (RMA) if the government
backtracks on its promises.
Last year, the party
agreed to support the government's bill if Māori were given more say
over how resources were managed.
New Zealand First
leader Winston Peters said on Tuesday the government's concessions to
the Māori Party were racist and should be thrown out.
Mr Peters argued the
bill in its current form would take the country down a separatism
track.
He singled out a clause
in the bill that would require councils to hold discussions and form
agreements with local iwi on the management of natural resources,
including in freshwater management plans.
He said he would move
amendments to remove that clause, and any references to the
principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, from the final legislation.
When asked if he would consider that, Prime Minister John Key did not rule it out......
See full article HERE
Winston Peters wants
Treaty principles scrapped from RMA
Winston Peters has
called for the scrapping of Treaty references in the RMA. The
leader of NZ First said last night in his State of the Nation speech,
that the laws encourage separatism, but the Māori Party says Peters
comments are a joke.
Winston Peters is at it again. He says, "Māori are a part of the community not separate from the community, and when you make that mistake you're segmenting people off on the basis of race."….
Winston Peters is at it again. He says, "Māori are a part of the community not separate from the community, and when you make that mistake you're segmenting people off on the basis of race."….
See full article HERE
Ngati Whatua says it
will refuse to take part in any powhiri for international trade
ministers when they visit New Zealand to sign the Trans-Pacific
Partnership on February 4 because it opposes the agreement……
See full article HERE
28 January 2016
Changes to the Resource
Management Act are the result of the Maori Party "brownmailing"
National and will take New Zealand down the path of separatism, New
Zealand First leader Winston Peters says.
The NZ First leader
said that under the new RMA bill, every council would be required by
law to invite local iwi to participate in the formulation of policy
plans, including water management plans.
"This is just the
starting point," Mr Peters told the audience. "Iwi really
want much, much more."
He said the Freshwater
Iwi Leaders Group had stated goals including ownership of all
Crown-owned river and lake beds and the water column.
"The proposed
changes to the RMA are a signal flare to the entire country that the
two parties are taking us down the track of separatism. We are no
longer one people. We are moving towards two separate groups with
separate rights."….
See full article HERE
Business,
Property And Planning Groups Should Support Peters on Rma Reform
The Taxpayers’ Union
is calling on business, property and planning industry groups to
support Winston Peters’ proposed way forward for Resource
Management Act reform. Reacting to Mr Peters’ state of the nation
speech delivered last night, Jordan Williams, Executive Director of
the Taxpayers’ Union, says:
“In
our report on the Auckland Council’s mana whenua provisions,
we exposed the extent to which Auckland Council now require costly
iwi consultation on matters entirely of Maori spiritual or
make-believe factors. It appears that Mr Peters wants to curtail the
Maori Party’s radical proposals for separate iwi consenting bodies
which would spread similar requirements throughout the country.”
“If there is anyone
that can stand up to the trend toward race-based rights under the RMA
it is Mr Peters. Groups who have been pushing for sensible reform of
the RMA should welcome Mr Peters’ comments and be relieved that
John Key now appears to have a sensible way forward without the Maori
Party’s rent-seeking concessions.”…
See full article HERE
Prime Minister John
Key opens door to deal with Winston Peters over RMA
Prime Minister John Key
has opened the door to a deal with NZ First leader Winston Peters
over reform of the Resource Management Act - even if it means winding
back concessions to the Maori Party.
Last year, the
Government backed off planned changes to the RMA that would have
altered its key definitions, giving the economy greater weight
alongside environmental issues.
But it made several
concessions to the Maori Party to gain its support - although only to
the select committee stage.
Peters said NZ First
would move amendments to cut red tape and bring common sense to the
RMA.
"We will do so on
one condition, that National will drop all provisions in the bill
that provide separate rights based on race," he said.
Key said National had
always been searching for partners to pass its RMA changes and there
was no guarantee that the reforms would get out of the select
committee.
Asked if he would be
prepared to wind back the concessions to the Maori Party to get that
support, Key responded by saying, "what we need is 61-plus votes
to get that out of select committee. We are happy to work with any
political party to make that happen."…
See full article HERE
27 January 2016
Ngāpuhi to decide on Govt ban from Waitangi
Divided
Ngāpuhi leaders will gather next week to decide if the Government
will be blocked from going on to Te Tii Marae on Waitangi Day.
Last week, iwi kaumatua
Kingi Taurua threatened to block the Government from Waitangi's only
marae if it signed the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA).
But Mr Taurua says not
everyone agrees with his stance.
"The idea is we
need to talk to the tribe, bring the tribe together, and see if we
can come to some common agreement," he says. "There are
some who think the Prime Minister should come on and there are some
who say no. The whole idea of the hui is I want to get a consensus."
Mr Taurua says he won't
be changing his mind, despite opposition from some iwi leaders.
"I will be there
and I will be on the other side if they want the Prime Minister to
come on," he says. "There's a possibility that I will be
with the protest group who will try and stop them from coming on. I
am not going to change my stance…..
See full article HERE
Otago Polytechnic
establishes Māori Centre
Māori students at
Otago Polytechnic will soon have their own place where they can “work
and learn as Māori” following the announcement of the
establishment of a Māori Centre in the Forth Street campus and the
appointment of its Tumuaki (Manager) Rebecca Williams.
Some of the services to
be offered at the Māori Centre include:
• Pastoral care for
Māori students
• Māori research centre
• Teaching space for Māori electives
• Workspace for Māori staff to access as and when needed
• Support for Māori staff
• Māori research centre
• Teaching space for Māori electives
• Workspace for Māori staff to access as and when needed
• Support for Māori staff
“Our aim is to go
beyond simply a support centre for Māori students and rather to
create a holistic environment where a range of activities can take
place – from teaching, to support, to research.”…
See full article HERE
Māori economy in
'strong' position
The Māori economy is
doing well. It's estimated to have a shared wealth of $40 billion,
with the biggest investments in the fishing, forestry and farming
industries.
"Overall it's
pretty good news," said Mr Barry. "Six of the seven iwi are
doing really well in terms of their financial investments
performance. Ngai Tahu and Ngati Whatua ki Orakei stand out in the
last couple of years, but generally it's been a good solid
performance."
Ngati Whātua ki Ōrākei
- which settled with the government just four years ago for $18
million - now has an asset base worth $767m, after earlier having
$500 million in land assets.
Waikato-Tainui, which
settled with the Crown in 1995 for $170m, now has an asset base of
$1.1bn. Mr Barry said the tribe had traditional investments along
with commercial ones such as Hamilton's The Base - New Zealand's
largest shopping centre.
According to the Office
of Treaty Settlements website, more than 50
groups or iwi have settled their grievances with the Crown. About 14
more have signed a deed and another 15 are in negotiations. The
remainder have yet to begin the process….
See full article HERE
26 January 2016
Maori leaders have
laughed off Northland Regional Council claims that the way water is
managed in the region is working well, amid councillor fears iwi will
soon be granted special rights to fresh water.
Northland Regional
Council held an emergency meeting on Friday, establishing its stance
against Maori fresh water rights, in what one councillor termed "the
next foreshore and seabed debate".
Councillor John Bain
said the worst-case scenario was the "commercialisation of water
by any special interest group".
NRC chairman Bill
Shepherd said a paper put to Cabinet early last year indicated the
Government's position was that no one owned fresh water….
See full article HERE
Petition To Stop
Māori Land “Confiscations” – Green Party
The Green Party has
launched a petition to stop the taking of Māori land under the
Public Works Act.
“This is a real
opportunity to stop any more unfair confiscations of what is left of
whenua Māori,” Green Party Co-leader James Shaw says.
The Bill would amend
the Public Works Act and put a stop to Māori land being acquired by
a minister or local authority for public works.
The Bill would amend
the Public Works Act to specifically protect Māori freehold and
Māori customary land from being acquired. This would mean that no
Māori land can be taken without consent…..
See full article HERE
Massey signs
sponsorship deal for Ngapuhi Festival
Massey University has
signaled its commitment to the North, signing up as a major sponsor
of the NgÄpuhi Festival this weekend. The new deal will see the
University sponsoring the main performance stage at the biennial
festival…..
See full article HERE
24 January 2016
A
former Western Bay District councillor is demanding answers on why a
key decision on the proposal to transfer ownership of Matakana
Island's Panepane Point back to Maori was taken in secret.
"Why was the
discussion not held in the open meeting so the ideologies of the
mayor and councillors could be fully understood by ratepayers,"
Mike Lally said.
He was referring to the
December 17 council meeting which unanimously supported commencing
work on a Local Act of Parliament to provide for the transfer of the
200ha block at the southern tip of Matakana back to the island's five
hapu…..
See full article HERE
Offenders
on bracelets to return to prison if no cellphone coverage
Labour
MP Kelvin Davis is concerned offenders with electronic bracelets who
live outside cellphone coverage areas will be sent to prison. The
Department of Corrections says, if an offender proposes an address
where there is no cell phone coverage, it will be deemed as
unsuitable.
MP
Tai Tokerau Kelvin Davis says, "We will see more Māori
going to jail due to these types of laws. I think it needs to
be reversed to accommodate for those who only have landlines."
In
a statement to Kelvin Davis, Corrections said there remains some
areas of the country (such as the far north) where the lack of cell
phone coverage continues to be an issue. In
these locations it is unable to operate a home detention scheme.
Corrections says it has
always been their practice to encourage staff to work with offenders
to come up with alternative addresses…..
See full article HERE
Maori Party
co-leaders support call for justice system review
The Law Society says
the cost of legal representation is a primary reason for the rise in
self-representation.
The MÄori Party says
a review would also be an opportunity to consider incorporating
tikanga MÄori into the way our legal structure operates.
It believes a more
restorative process across the justice system, particularly in the
family court, is needed. The plan is to introduce WhÄnau
Facilitators who will work closely with hapū and iwi, and will
support families throughout the family court system…..
See full article HERE
Iwi leaders hui
Freshwater,
conservation and Te Ture Whenua Maori will be the topics reported on
by members of the Iwi Leaders Group at a hui in Tikitiki on Tuesday.
The meeting at Rahui
Marae is one of a series around the country.
The freshwater
committee will present an update on its engagement with the Crown on
addressing iwi hapu rights and interests…..
See full article HERE
23 January 2016
Clarity Needed on Freshwater Responsibilities; NRC
The
Northland Regional Council is calling on central government to reveal
more about its plans for any future freshwater reform, including how
it proposes to tackle Maori rights and interests.
Chairman Bill Shepherd
says a paper put to Cabinet early last year indicated the
Government’s position at that time was that no-one owned
freshwater, no generic share of freshwater resources would be
provided to iwi and there would be no national settlement of iwi/hapu
claims to freshwater resources.
However, he says the government’s current position on addressing iwi/hapu rights and interests in the context of any freshwater reform – including any deviation from that outlined to Cabinet last year – is unclear, frustrating his fellow councillors.
However, he says the government’s current position on addressing iwi/hapu rights and interests in the context of any freshwater reform – including any deviation from that outlined to Cabinet last year – is unclear, frustrating his fellow councillors.
Councillor Shepherd
says the council’s collective position at today’s meeting was
that it wished to see the Crown continue to act as kaitiaki of the
nation’s freshwater on behalf of all New Zealanders.
Similarly, councillors reaffirmed their support for the regional council sector’s continued role of managing freshwater under the current statutory processes, which include involving community participation…..
Similarly, councillors reaffirmed their support for the regional council sector’s continued role of managing freshwater under the current statutory processes, which include involving community participation…..
See
full article HERE
An
historic agreement has been reached for the Western Bay of Plenty
District Council to begin the process of returning Panepane Point to
Matakana Island's five hapu.
It follows years of
requests because of the cultural and heritage significance to Maori
of the 200-hectare block at the southern tip of the forested part of
the island.
If successful, it would
mean that both sides of the city entrance to Tauranga Harbour were
owned by Maori. The Crown relinquished ownership of the landmark of
Mauao in 2008 to Tauranga Moana's three iwi……
See full article HERE
Government
says TPPA deal won't undermine Treaty
of Waitangi
rights for Maori
The
Government has rebuffed claims the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement will undermine the rights of Maori under the Treaty of
Waitangi, saying it has secured protections in the controversial
deal.
Trade Minister Todd
McClay announced the release of a Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
Trade (Mfat) fact sheet about the TPPA and the Treaty, following
suggestions the deal breached the Crown's obligations to Maori.
The document says the
TPPA agreement includes a specific provision "preserving the
pre-eminence of the Treaty of Waitangi".
See full article HERE
Te Whaioranga -
Māori responsiveness strategies
As a Government agency,
PHARMAC has a commitment to upholding the articles and the principles
of the Treaty of Waitangi. PHARMAC’s Māori Responsiveness Strategy
provides a framework for ensuring that PHARMAC responds to the
particular need of Māori in relation to medicines.
See the yearly
schedules HERE
22 January 2016
A
Ngapuhi elder is threatening to block the Government from Te Tii
Marae on Waitangi Day if the Trans Pacific Partnership is signed,
saying the signing is a breach of the Treaty of Waitangi.
The Trans Pacific
Partnership (TPP) will be reportedly signed in New Zealand on
February 4. Andres Rebolledo, director general of Chile's
International Economic Relations Bureau, reportedly confirmed the
date in a meeting with the country's National Human Rights Institute,
before officials were ready for the announcement. The Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and Trade has confirmed an event will be held in
Auckland in early February. Prime Minister John Key was unavailable
to comment on Mr Taurua's threat at edition time yesterday.
Kingi Taurua, Ngapuhi
kaumatua, said, if the document was signed it would be wrong if the
Government turned up to Waitangi Day a few days later, and is
considering blocking them from Te Tii Marae……
See full article HERE
Contact
Energy switches on Maori world
Former
Taupo Primary School teacher Awhina Eru has swapped the classroom for
the capital, taking up a position at Contact Energy's head office in
Wellington
Since November, Eru, of
Ngati Tahu descent, has been teaching staff at the head office about
marae protocol and "te ao Maori" – the Maori world.
"I'm getting them
to understand, when they have a hui with tangata whenua, some of the
protocols and processes of how Maori operate."….
See full article HERE
Māori lawyer warns
belittling of Māori women not on
A Māori lawyer has
taken offence after being cursed at by a representative of the Iwi
Leaders' Group.
Annette Sykes says
Willie Te Aho swore at her while running a consultation meeting with
the group last night in Rotorua.
She says, "Willie
swore at me, but after he thought about it, he knew it was wrong."
"We were debating,
but a word of warning not to discriminate women," she says.
Last week the Iwi
Leaders' Group began a series of consultation meetings throughout the
country regarding Te Ture Whenua reform and water rights. Sykes
says Māori rights are being tested.
"Don't belittle
Māori women. We have our thoughts and views on issues. Māori
men shouldn't criticise us just because they don't agree with our
views," says Sykes…..
See full article HERE
Wanganui iwi expect
the title of Pakaitore/Moutoa Gardens to come back to them,
Mariana Waitai told a
group yesterday.
She expected the title
of the land to come back to the tribe, and for it to be managed by
the new Nga Tangata Tiaki Trust.
"We are still
looking at shutting the road down so that this whole area can be a
walking space and show the connection across the road to the river."
The concrete strip in
the grass at the gardens was used to check the length of chain
measures used to survey land before it was sold.
Ms Waitai said the
measure was "the worst symbol of oppression" that she knew.
"The only ones
that benefited were tauiwi (non-Maori)."
The "stolen"
land destroyed the tribe's infrastructure and its people lost their
economic base, creating generations of mamae (pain), she said……
See full article HERE
TPPA casts shadow
over Waitangi
Labour’s Te Tai
Tokerau MP Kelvin Davis says the Government has set the scene for a
showdown with Ngapuhi at Waitangi over the Trans Pacific Partnership
Agreement.
Mr Davis says it has
failed to inform Maori about the implications of the deal.
“In true Ngapuhi
style Kingi Taurua is using the political platform that Waitangi
provides to highlight Maori discontent about the Government’s lack
of consultation and information…..
See full article HERE
21 January 2016
Plans
for a beachfront restaurant at one of Auckland's most scenic spots
have been abandoned indefinitely, following the discovery of Maori
bones and artefacts.
After a more than
two-year saga the popular restaurant at Long Bay Regional Park north
of the city will now not be rebuilt.
The decision to halt
all work follows two discoveries of koiwi or pre-European bones and
another of bone awls (tools) and shell beads, all of which delayed
the planned refurbishment.
Auckland Council, local
iwi, Heritage New Zealand and the existing restaurant licensee have
reached the agreement out of respect for the cultural significance of
the site….
See full article HERE
Work
already underway to block Mt Eden's summit road to cars before ban in
place
Road
works at the base of the popular tourist destination were blocking
the one-way road to the summit on Saturday morning.
Vehicles will be banned
from the top of Mt Eden from January 20, but roadworks cut access
four days early.
The ban from the tihi,
or summit, applies to all motor vehicles, including motorbikes and
scooters.
Heavy vehicles
including buses were banned from the summit of Maungawhau/Mt Eden in
2011 over concerns they were damaging the cone's archaeological
heritage.
Paul Majurey, chair of
the Tupuna Maunga o Tamaki Makaurau Authority which looks after
Auckland's volcanic cones, said the ban respected the spiritual and
cultural significance of the summit to Mana Whenua, as well as the
community's aspirations.
"Motor vehicle
restriction on the tihi of Maungawhau was signalled many years ago as
a key measure to protect this taonga, and to reflect the Mana Whenua
and community aspirations of their living connections with this
taonga. It is very pleasing to have reached this point."…..
See full article HERE
Maori
women viewed as 'inferior' by settlers
The
way early settlers documented Māori women is disturbing and has had
a damaging impact on how wahine are viewed today, an emerging health
researcher says.
Ngahuia Murphy has
received $110,000 from the Health Research Council to complete her
PhD studies into Māori beliefs of the womb or whare tangata.
"I am looking at
some of the pre-colonial ceremonies and ritual knowledge traditions
around the whare tangata and I'm going to be tracing those ceremonial
practices into the context of today."
"What is really
disturbing is what they wrote 150 years ago has been reproduced
across history up until contemporary times, creating these really
oppressive, really powerful narratives about the inferiority of Māori
women in our culture."
A total of $1.8 million
was given to 21 emerging Māori health researchers in the Māori
Career Development Awards last year.
Over 40 applications
for funding were made, which is the largest number received in one
year.
Health Research Council
project co-ordinator Lady Pokai said there were a lot of research
areas that weren't being tapped into especially when it came to
Māori.
"It will build
more understanding around why things are happening and helping our
whanau Māori to overcome what is happening."
Ms Murphy said the
council's support affirms the importance of reclaiming Māori women's
sacred knowledge…..
See full article HERE
Course will look at
environmental issues for hapu
A NEW marae-based
course gives students the opportunity to learn about environmental
issues relevant to their hapu.
More than half of the
40 spaces have been filled for the free course led by Te Wananga o
Aotearoa teacher Tina Ngata.
Areas within the Waiapu
catchment will be studied and she hopes students can help Ngati Porou
and Gisborne District Council address issues on the land and
waterways…..
See full article HERE
Ngapuhi
"crying wolf" over Marae Ban
Threats
by self-appointed Waitangi Marae caretaker and cleaner Kingi Taurua
to ban politicians from the marae on Waitangi Day are empty and a
case of Mr Taurua "crying wolf" says Ngapuhi kaumatua David
Rankin.
"Mr Taurua has a
long history of hating. This time, he has turned his attention to the
TPPA, and without understanding the benefits it will bring to our
people, is trying to organise a ban of politicians at the Te Tii
Marae at Waitangi," says Mr Rankin.
Mr Rankin, who is a
descendant of the famous Ngapuhi chief Hone Heke, says that Taurua
criticising the TPPA "because it has become fashionable for
left-wing types to do this." He challenges Mr Taurua to identify
how Maori interests will be harmed by the agreement.
"All I see,"
says Mr Rankin, "are opportunities for us to benefit through
greater employment education, and intellectual property
opportunities. This is what the TPPS will bring to Maori. It's just
that a few people don't want us to prosper because they will have
less to complain about."
Mr Rankin has praised
Mr Taurua for his work as a caretaker and cleaner at Te Tii Marae,
but says that does not qualify him as an expert on international
trade agreements.
See full article HERE
20 January 2016
Iwi want access to waterways on Maori land
A group representing
many iwi around the country say Māori must be given the right to
freely use the water on their land.
Te Tumu Paeroa chief executive Jamie Tuuta said in the 1970's, rural water schemes in Taranaki were funded by the government and local council rate payers.
He said in the past five years, the government has given the rights of two of those rural water schemes to the occupiers of Māori land, which includes lease land that Parininihi Ki Waitotara owns and other Maori trustee land.
"Those water rights have basically been handed for nothing to the occupier, the tenant, the leasee, and they [the rights] have now been separated from the particular parcel of land."
Rongowhakaata iwi lead negotiator Willie Te Aho said the Crown needed to prioritise tribes concerns.
"We got back a farm outside Manutuke and we didn't get the water that goes with that farm. We just got the farm. The leasee owns the water that services that farm….
See full article HERE
Te Tumu Paeroa chief executive Jamie Tuuta said in the 1970's, rural water schemes in Taranaki were funded by the government and local council rate payers.
He said in the past five years, the government has given the rights of two of those rural water schemes to the occupiers of Māori land, which includes lease land that Parininihi Ki Waitotara owns and other Maori trustee land.
"Those water rights have basically been handed for nothing to the occupier, the tenant, the leasee, and they [the rights] have now been separated from the particular parcel of land."
Rongowhakaata iwi lead negotiator Willie Te Aho said the Crown needed to prioritise tribes concerns.
"We got back a farm outside Manutuke and we didn't get the water that goes with that farm. We just got the farm. The leasee owns the water that services that farm….
See full article HERE
Scholarship for womb
studies
University of Waikato
PhD student Ngahuia Murphy has been awarded a $109,700 PhD
Scholarship from the Health Research Council of New Zealand.
Ngahuia is one of 21
emerging Māori health researchers to receive an HRC Māori Career
Development Award in 2015 with a combined total of $1.8 million
awarded.
Her PhD is entitled
Investigating customary Māori philosophies regarding the whare
tangata (womb) and examines censored and marginalised ceremonial
traditions related to Māori women through a mana wahine theoretical
framework. Theories of mana wahine are concerned with the way Māori
women’s knowledge, ceremonies, roles, status, and stories have been
corrupted and re-defined through the Victorian interpretative lens of
many of the colonial ethnographers…..
See
full article HERE
Kotahitanga study
gets history grant
A project to write a
history of the Maori Parliament that met in the late 19th century has
got a $12,000 boost from this year’s New Zealand History Trust Fund
Awards administered by the Ministry for Culture and Heritage.
Basil Keane worked
previously as the director of the ministry’s Maori digital projects
and as a senior in-house historian, he is now at the New Zealand
Council for Educational Research…..
See full article HERE
Objections to Marine
Protected Areas Act changes continue to mount
Objections regarding
the proposed changes to the Marine Protected Areas Act continue
to mount. The Government has identified two areas it hopes to
set aside for recreational fishing only.
One is in the Hauraki
Gulf. The other is in the Marlborough Sounds.
Local iwi say if the
Government's plan goes ahead, they're worried about job cuts and
losses to commercial fishing revenue that supports iwi services.
The Govt says it has
set aside $20mil to compensate the commercial sector which will be
affected. Te Ātiawa says the social impact on the entire iwi must be
remembered, given the revenue from its commercial fishing helps
support iwi services…..
See full article HERE
Maori rights ditched
for Auckland boaties
Environment Minister
Nick Smith’s plan to turn the inner Hauraki Gulf into a
recreational fishing park has been slammed as an attack on the Maori
fisheries settlement.
It will directly
establish large “recreational fishing parks” in the Hauraki Gulf
and the Marlborough Sounds.
Mr Tuuta says that will
prevent adjacent iwi from exercising customary commercial fishing
rights, agreed under the 1992 Deed of Settlement between Māori and
the Crown.
He says if ministers
want to provide greater levels of protection, they should do so in a
manner that is aligned with their duties to actively protect treaty
settlements. …….
See full article HERE
Maori youth and
children make up 88 per cent of the 317 kids in state care in
Northland, and Te Tai Tokerau MP Kelvin Davis says it's because
parents are not doing their job.
The Northern Advocate
asked Child Youth and Family for the number of children and youth in
CYF care in the region, After a four-month wait, our enquiry
revealed, of the 317 in CYF care, a whopping 279 identified as Maori
- a number that did not shock Maori leaders.
"It's parents not
doing their part," said Mr Davis "They are failing in their
roles and there needs to be an intensive intervention in the kids'
lives."…
See full article HERE
Climbers told to
carry 'poo pots' on New Zealand's famous Mount Taranaki after using
its sacred summit as a toilet
Climbers are being
encouraged to carry ‘poo pots’ when they scale one of New
Zealand’s famous peaks after officials grew
tired of its trails and sacred summit being used as toilets.
Human waste has become
such a problem on Mount Taranaki that the Department of Conservation
and Maori people want a law that forces visitors to bag their own
waste and carry it down with them.
Mount Taranaki has
cultural significance for Maori people, who regard it as a living
ancestor and consider its summit to be sacred, 3News
reported. ….
See full article HERE
Group takes a stand
against land sale
Iwi
members upset at their trust's plans to sell its Wellington
waterfront property to developers have occupied the land and plan to
spend the night there.
Port Nicholson Block
Settlement Trust bought the land for $13 million in 2008 after a
treaty settlement, but trustees say it has been a drain on the iwi
ever since and they want to sell it.
Trust member Andrew
Mepham said only 19 percent of the trust's 18,000 members have had
the chance to vote and he is angry with the lack of democracy.
The group erected
pouwhenua, or wooden posts, on the land today, which symbolised land,
democracy and guardianship…..
See full article HERE
An indigenous South
African king learning about Maori culture made his first trip to
Northland where he was "taken aback" by the region's
history.
Basil Coetzee, a king
of the Khoisan tribe in South Africa, was invited to New Zealand by a
South African music group - The Auckland City Dukes - and has been in
the country since November.
On Thursday, Mr Coetzee
ended up in Whangarei at Pehiaweri Marae after kaumatua Bill
Tangariki invited the king and other indigenous South Africans to
Northland.…
See full article HERE
The New Zealand
Transport Agency has begun engaging local iwi while work pending
redesignation of Mangakahia Rd as a state highway is under way.
A powhiri will be held
at the Poroti Marae today for NZTA officials and other stakeholders
before a meeting to discuss the redesignation, including an open
discussion….
See full article HERE
19 January 2016
Iwi
interests in freshwater and Maori land will be highlighted in a
series of meetings over the next fortnight.
The first of seventeen
consultation hui is being held in Wellington today.
Members of the Iwi
Leaders Group will report on their work around freshwater, the
Resource Management Act (RMA) and Maori land laws.
The hui aim to update
iwi and hapu on ways to have their rights recognised in these areas.
A special presentation
about Marine Protected Areas will be delivered at nine of the hui…
See full article HERE
Government trades
Māori Treaty rights for Auckland votes
The National-led
Government’s first major announcement of 2016 is to trade Māori
Treaty rights for Auckland votes in its bid to progress a
recreational fishing park say the iwi of Tikapa Moana / Hauraki Gulf.
The Auckland fishing
park is planned to be established through a fast track process
piggy-backing on a fundamental revamp of the marine reserves
legislation.
Hauraki Māori Trust
Board chairman David Taipari, Ngāti Whātua Rūnanga chairman
Russell Kemp and Ngātiwai Trust Board chairman Haydn Edmonds have
jointly expressed opposition by all the iwi to the Crown’s proposed
forced taking of Treaty rights which were in turn small compensation
for the actual losses suffered under Treaty breaches by former
Governments….
See full article HERE
Old names return to
official maps
If you’re driving
from Wellington over the hill to the Wairarapa this summer, mind your
E.
The unnamed pass that
separates the Rimutaka and Tararua Ranges is now officially called
Remutaka Pass, in keeping with the heritage and place-naming
traditions of local iwi.
Names and spellings
have also changed in Marlborough under the terms of the region’s
historic treaty settlements…..
See full article HERE
Scattering
human ashes on Mt Taranaki a no-no without consent
People
wanting to scatter their loved one's ashes on Mt Taranaki must
consult with the Department of Conservation or local iwi before doing
so.
Poutu
said there were strong guidelines in DOC's management plan about
engaging with tangata whenua before scattering any ashes.
"The scattering of
ashes conflicts with our cultural values on the mountain.
"For Maori when
someone passes away there's a level of tapu placed over them….
See full article HERE
RMA: Nothing to
fear, Smith says
LAWS on the use of
freshwater will be strengthened this year with the Government
signalling tighter controls and iwi promised greater oversight on its
management.
Proposed changes to the
Resource Management Act would give iwi a greater say on resource
consent applications and water quality, but Environment Minister Nick
Smith also announced the Government would release a discussion
document on freshwater management in the first half of this year.
Smith said the document
would outline “further steps to improve the environmental
management and economic opportunities” of freshwater resources…..
See full article HERE
Cultural taboos on
Mt Taranaki often ignored
Standing on the
mountain's highest point in order to fully conquer it appears to be a
frequent occurence among climbers
The act is deeply
offensive to Maori, who regard the mountain as a living ancestor,
said Department of Conservation senior ranger Dave Rogers.
Rogers said New
Zealanders were breaking the rules more frequently than foreigners,
despite knowing what was and was not appropriate…..
See full article HERE
Proposed Law
Threatens Māori Fishing Rights
Proposed legislation
for establishing marine protected areas in territorial waters will
undermine Māori fishing rights under the Treaty of Waitangi and
erode the value of the Māori Fisheries Settlement.
The Government’s
consultation document released yesterday says the proposed
legislation will provide a framework for the creation of recreational
fishing parks, as well as marine and seabed reserves and
species-specific sanctuaries.
“The Māori Fisheries
Settlement agreed ongoing access to and participation in all
fisheries for iwi and Māori. The Government’s announcement rides
roughshod over that agreement by proposing to take away iwi fishing
rights and take back the recognition of Māori rights that were made
a quarter of a century ago,” Mr Tuuta said….
See
full article HERE
A further link HERE
Funding secured to
help restore Lake Tūtira, Hawke's Bay
Maungaharuru-Tangitu
Trust (MTT) in Hawke's Bay has secured a total of $600,000 in funding
to help restore the quality of one of its most treasured tāonga,
Lake Tūtira, a lake that is full of dying fish and eels.
Lake Tūtira is a
sacred lake to the hapū under the Maungaharuru-Tangitū Trust, but
it's sick.
Shayne Walker
says, "It's extremely concerning with the mate of our tuna
and the trout and we're really keen to understand more of why that is
occurring and working closely with regional council to understand
that."…
See
full article HERE
18 January 2016
The names of nearly 30
natural geographical features in Marlborough have been changed to
their Maori name.
As part of the Treaty of Waitangi Settlement, iwi in Marlborough sought cultural redress to areas of special significance.
Blenheim historian John
Orchard said natural features including mountains, peaks, valleys,
rivers and lakes had their names changed under the treaty settlement.
Some would have dual names, using both European and Maori.
"Maori attitude is
the last tribe to win a territory have the first right to name a
place. The British, German and French behaved the same way when they
won a battle."
See full article HERE
Final Part of
Waitangi Tribunal’s Te Urewera Report Released
The shocking poverty
experienced by Te Urewera Māori was in large part caused by the
Crown’s many breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi, the Waitangi
Tribunal has found in the sixth and final volume of its Te Urewera
district inquiry report.
In the environmental
chapter, the Tribunal concluded that the Crown’s Treaty promise to
protect Māori forests included all the forest flora and fauna. They
found that it failed in this duty, in particular by allowing the bird
life of Te Urewera to be ravaged by introduced species. The Crown
also failed to recognise the tino rangatiratanga of Te Urewera hapu
in relation to conservation management, and failed to adequately
protect the wahi tapu (sacred places) in the Whirinaki Forest…...
See full article HERE
The full report can be
downloaded HERE:
Mana whenua disputes
Matakana island treaty claims
Ngāi Te Rangi is
disputing a treaty claim by Hauraki iwi which includes Matakana
island.
Hauata Palmer of Ngāi
Te Rangi says they are the mana whenua of the island and Hauraki iwi
have no right to claim any part of it.
He says, “They say
that their region extends from Matakana to Matakana, but to me that
is not right, it's rubbish, so this Matakana is not region.”
However, the
Hauraki.iwi.nz website clearly states, Mai Matakana ki
Matakana. From Matakana in the south to Matakana in the
north...…
See full article
HERE
The new Te Oneroa a
Tohe (90 Mile Beach) Board got off to what Te Rarawa representative
Haami Piripi described as an auspicious start on Tuesday morning,
with a special gathering and karakia on the beach at Ahipara.
Mr Piripi said the
application of tikanga Maori alongside the statutory functions of the
local councils would provide a new approach to understanding the
beach in an authentic way, while incorporating Maori history and
knowledge into practical environmental management..…
See full article HERE
More Maori landowners
in Northland will receive compensation for the use of their land by a
lines company.
The Maori Land Court in
June ordered lines operator Top Energy to pay $105,000 for easement
on four blocks of multiple-owned Maori land over which a 110,000-volt
electricity transmission line and power pylons from Kaikohe to
Kaitaia will run to improve consistency of power supply in the Far
North.
Top Energy applied to
the court for easements over the blocks, known as Whakataha Z1C,
Paparimurimu B, Paparimurimu A3 and Part Tapapanui B4D2.
Last week, the court
ordered a further $30,000 be paid for capital works on just over 31
hectares of land known as Taheke 2 situated on Peria Rd, east of
Kaitaia. The land is owned by multiple owners…..
See full article HERE
Maori Party backs
call to change 'racist' law
The 1962 Māori
Community Development Act makes it an offence to serve alcohol at a
gathering of Māori people, and also gives Māori wardens the right
to confiscate car keys or throw Māori out of bars.
Wellington-based lawyer
Graeme Edgeler said the provisions were racist and should not exist
at all.
"I was
particularly concerned that there were criminal offences still in New
Zealand that only applied to Maori."
Maori Party co-leader
Te Ururoa Flavell agreed the legislation was outdated…..
See full article HERE
Maori trust brings
in Chinese partners
Waituhi Kuratau Trust,
the Turangi-based Maori land trust, has teamed up with Chinese
interests to develop its sheep-milking interests as part of a plan to
sell into the world's most-populous nation.
The trust sold a
leasehold interest in 490 hectares of land in Kuratau to Maui Milk
for $1.2 million, which has been slated for development into a sheep
dairy farm, according to the Overseas Investment Office summary
approving the transaction.
The trust owns 40
percent of Maui Milk, with the remainder held by four Chinese
nationals…..
See full article HERE
Exploring our joint
intellectual heritage
A new grant will
assist a team of researchers to shine light on the interweaving of
Maori and European ideas, institutions and technologies, and how that
changed the country.
GISBORNE-raised
Professor Dame Anne Salmond will receive funding of $685,000 over the
next three years from the Marsden Fund to explore the intellectual
history of Maori from 1900 to 1950.
Professor Salmond, of
the University of Auckland, will lead a team of researchers who will
investigate how the interweaving of Maori and European ideas,
institutions and technologies generated ground-breaking programmes in
the arts, sciences, law and economy….
See full article HERE
Scrap Maori wardens'
powers over drunken Maori but keep the wardens themselves
It's easy to laugh at a
law that allows Maori wardens to order "quarrelsome" Maori
to leave a pub. It seems even dafter that the same law allows wardens
to order bars to stop serving "drunk or quarrelsome" Maori,
and even permits them to confiscate car keys.
Lawyer Graeme Edgeler
says this is the country's "most racist law" and has
drafted a law change. The changes are supported by politicians from
Labour, the Maori Party and the Greens, and on the face of it reform
is a no-brainer.
In fact, this issue is
a bit more complex than it looks. The objectionable part of the law
has long since fallen out of use, but the wardens perform many
valuable services for Maori. It's important not to throw the baby out
with the bathwater…..
See full article HERE
23 December 2015
A new study will investigate why
Māori are over-represented in the national drowning statistics
despite having a strong cultural connection to the water.
Physical education graduate Chanel
Phillips (Ngāpuhi, Ngāti Hine) from the University of Otago says
that although Māori make up about 15 per cent of New Zealand’s
population, they account for 22 per cent of our national drowning
statistics. She plans to get to the bottom of this anomaly with the
support of a Health Research Council of New Zealand Māori PhD
Scholarship worth $120,000.
One of the few reports on this topic
suggests that the high number of Māori drowning fatalities may be
because Māori no longer have access to traditional knowledge and
tikanga associated with water safety. Another suggests it
may reflect the greater exposure of Māori to lakes, rivers and seas,
particularly as revered sources of food.
Health Research Council Chief
Executive Professor Kath McPherson says Miss Phillips is one of 21
emerging Māori health researchers to receive an HRC Māori career
development award this year, with a combined total of $1.8 million
awarded.
“Our sustained investment in Māori
health researchers over the past 25 years means that New Zealand now
leads the world in indigenous health research. It’s only by
supporting high-quality research, which uses and advances Māori
knowledge, resources and people, that we can significantly improve
Māori health outcomes,” says Professor McPherson....
See full article HERE
Crown–Māori engagement and
statistical information needs
This chapter considers what we might do as a result of learning more
about how government agencies are engaging with Māori, and the
nature of the Māori entities and organisations they are engaging
with.....
See full article HERE
* * * CHRISTMAS MESSAGE * * *
The Mole thanks all for their support and following during the year it has been a busy year with notably New Zealand's Freshwater hijack and unelected Maori appointments onto local governments being the big issues.
The Mole thanks all for their support and following during the year it has been a busy year with notably New Zealand's Freshwater hijack and unelected Maori appointments onto local governments being the big issues.
The Mole will now be taking a break
until around mid January 2016 and would like to wish you and your
loved ones a very Merry Christmas and happy and prosperous New Year -
take care.
22 December 2015
Dispute over access to Parimahu
Today the hapū of Ngāti Kere in
Porangahau Central Hawke's Bay, has taken action to regain access to
their customary food source. Access that has been cut off by one
Porangahau farmer who has tried to keep them locked out for the last
20 years.
A concrete blockade put here by farmer
Frank Gordon stopping Ngāti Kere from going through his farm to
Parimahu (Blackhead Point).
According to local resident Don Huata “
Ngāti Kere's stance today is to achieve what we always want and that
is to gain access to Parimahu, an ancient site of our ancestors, and
also reinforce the efforts and grief of those passed on.
After many years of trying to find a
resolution but to no avail, the hapū began building the original
paper road through his farm, a road that takes them directly to
Parimahu.
“We've had several attempts to broker
an arrangement whereby the farmer will give us access through a road,
in exchange the council would give him the paper road” says Jim
Hitcheson, chairman for the Parimahu Access Group.
However, it's a difficult task ahead
with the hapū building a pontoon as a temporary way to cross the
Waikaraka Stream before a permanent bridge is signed off by council.
Mr Houkamau told Te Kāea, all the
materials will be donated by hapū members from around the country,
there is a bill for the council to build it at $300,000 but they
don't need it.
Today marks a historic day for Ngāti
Kere as they take back the customary food rights as mana whenua that
their ancestors had accessed for hundreds of years....
See full article HERE
Science academy to open for Maori
students
A science academy focusing on Maori
secondary school students is set to launch next year.....
See full article HERE
Iwi remain firm over Rena wreck
removal
Ngai Te Rangi have always held the
position that the RENA wreck must be removed from Otaiti. But Ngai Te
Rangi Chairman, Charlie Tawhiao warns the BOP Regional Council may
not rule in their favour.
He says, “It looks as though they
will agree to leave it there, that's because some Iwi have also
agreed to that.”
“If they agree to leave it there Ngai
Te Rangi will have to meet to discuss the way forward.”
A decision from the Bay of Plenty
Regional Council is expected on the 26th of February next year.....
See full article HERE
Rotorua council deal a model for
others
Waiariki MP and Maori Development
Minister Te Ururoa Flavell hopes other centres will emulate the
partnership agreement signed between Rotorua Lakes Council and Te
Arawa.
In the New Year the newly elected Te
Arawa partnership board, Te Tatau o Te Arawa, will appoint two iwi
representatives to two of the main council committees.
Mr Flavell says the debate over the
agreement has been heated, but it sets the scene for tangata whenua
to have more of a say in the region.
He says it’s in contrast to places
like New Plymouth, Tauranga and Whangarei, which have resisted Maori
involvement in forming policy....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
21 December 2015
From the NZCPR archives by Dr Muriel Newman
Will the claims ever end?
Revelations that the Maori Council has
lodged a new Waitangi Tribunal claim for the ownership of the
country’s fresh water supplies has been greeted with widespread
concern. At a time when no new historic Treaty grievances are meant
to be able to be lodged, the public are asking whether such claims
will ever stop.
The answer of course is “no” –
not unless our politicians find the intestinal fortitude to end the
sort of blatant opportunism that this demand for water represents. In
other words, radical demands for public wealth and resources will
keep on coming as long as tribal leaders are allowed to get their
way. It is only when the government takes a stand and stops the rorts
that things will change and Maori leaders will realise that their
future is what they make of it, not what they can fleece off a
gullible public.
Even a cursory glance at our history
reveals that Maori sovereignty activists have been offered a treasure
chest of benefits over the years by politicians eager to avoid
conflict. The benefits they have received far outweigh the
legitimacy of any claims they might have had, since historic
grievances emerging from settler times had been properly dealt with
before 1950. In fact, in some cases these claims had been dealt with
numerous times even back then. But the settling of claims has not
stopped Maori activists from campaigning for more. Nor has it stopped
politicians from bending over backwards to give them what they have
wanted.
The main reason we are facing such
claims goes back to 1975 when the Kirk Labour Government passed the
Treaty of Waitangi Act to establish the Waitangi Tribunal as a
permanent commission of inquiry into modern-day Treaty grievances
against the Crown. This was not enough for Maori sovereignty
activists at the time – they wanted the Tribunal to cover historic
claims as well, and so in 1985 the Lange Labour Government extended
the Tribunal’s mandate back to 1840.
During the Parliamentary debates on
these Bills, the Right Hon Sir Robert Muldoon raised concerns about
the divisive nature of the 1975 Bill, “It must be emphasised that
we are in fact one people and the question can be asked whether
special legislation of this type makes us one people or two peoples”.
And the MP for Tarawera, Ian McLean raised the alarm over the 1985
Bill, calling it “dangerous” – it had “the potential to
trigger disastrous tensions between Maori and Pakeha” – and
warning that the future of Maori would not be assisted by “looking
backwards rather than forwards; they should be looking forward to
their future and to the future of their children”.
Their foreboding proved
prophetic.......
Continue reading Dr Muriel Newman's
article HERE
February 12, 2012 Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
19 December 2015
Auckland housing changes need iwi's nod
If you are
in Auckland and thinking of buying a house, you will want to watch
this story or if you are somewhere else in New Zealand and like to
indulge in a bit of schadenfreude in regards to the Auckland housing
market, you will also want to know this.
New rules mean thousands of houses in
Auckland City will need permission from an iwi to make big changes.
One house for sale with four bedrooms,
three bathrooms and two garages would have to consult up to thirteen
different iwi.
Anything which requires a resource
consent would have to go through the council and then to iwi.
This is because the house next door is
culturally significant and may include a burial site.
Due to this burial site, any house
within 100m needs iwi approval for structural changes which affects
around 40 properties.
Story went to investigate these new
rules which may affect more than 13,000 properties around the city.
Watch
the video for the full Story report by Heather du
Plessis-Allan HERE
Charter school experiment costing
Maori in mainstream
New Zealand First’s education
spokesperson says Maori and Pasifika children are missing out
because charter schools are being held up as the sole solution to
educational under-achievement.
Tracey Martin says the decision to
close Te Pumanawa o te Wairua at Whangaruru was entirely
predictable, as the minister was advised in 2013 it wasn’t ready
and it should never have opened.
She says it means a vulnerable group
of students have had their education disrupted for two years....
See full article HERE
Councillors have approved a partnership
agreement between Rotorua Lakes Council and Te Arawa.
The agreement is expected to be signed
tomorrow [Friday 18 December] at the inauguration of the recently
elected Te Arawa partnership board - Te Tatau o Te Arawa.
Approved at today’s [Thursday 17
December] full Council meeting, it will be signed on behalf of
Rotorua Lakes Council by Mayor Steve Chadwick and Councillor Merepeka
Raukawa-Tait....
See full article HERE
'Remutaka Pass' now official
The unnamed pass that separates the
Rimutaka and Tararua Ranges will today be officially named 'Remutaka
Pass', in keeping with the heritage and place-naming traditions of
local iwi......
See full article HERE
Move to ban powerboats from Kai Iwi
Lakes
A ban on powerboats on all of the
Taharoa Domain lakes by 2018 has been mooted in recommendations for
the area's draft reserve management plan.
Other recommendations by the Taharoa
Domain governance committee include ceasing to restock the lakes with
trout, closing Promenade Point to campers, increasing pest and weed
control and including Northland Regional Council on the governance
committee.
The introduced rainbow trout are not
native to the lake and the protection of wahi tapu is cited as the
reason for closing the campground at Promenade Point.
The Taharoa Domain is legally held as
Crown land with its administration vested to Kaipara District
Council. The exception is Lake Kai Iwi which has been returned to Te
Roroa as part of the iwi's treaty settlement.
A popular recreation destination,
these "outstanding" lakes are home to some nationally rare
ecosystems and also hold cultural values.....
See full article HERE
President looks to Maori Party’s
‘energised leap’ in 2016
For the Maori Party, 2015 has been a
year of careful consolidation, in preparation for an “energised
leap” in 2016, says President Rangimarie Naida Glavish. “I am
delighted with the new spirit of kotahitanga and the renewed resolve
to re-establish our party as the one, true political voice for te iwi
Maori, as well as our contribution to maintaining stable, progressive
government of Aotearoa.”
Ms Glavish said her focus as President
in 2016 will include:
- More effective communication to both
Maori and non-Maori to greatly improve our Party List vote.
- Supporting the position taken by our
MPs to ensure that environmental protections are not overshadowed by
economic development imperatives in the RMA Amendment Bill.
- Assisting Marama Fox MP’s focus,
and indeed the Party’s focus, to reducing poverty and putting ora
back into whanau, starting in Ikaroa Rawhiti.
- And out reach through social media
platforms to rangatahi Maori and young people across the country.....
See full article HERE
18 December 2015
Don’t We All Own The Rivers?
the
future of fishing in our country in the light of impending handover
of rivers to Iwi.
It
is handing over exclusive rights to public assets in the form of the
nation’s coasts to a new nobility – a race-based hierarchy that
serves only its own narrow interests.
This is not the end of it.
There
are now moves to hand over freshwater to Maori. Already,
Gisborne Council has signed a formal agreement with Ngati Porou
which will ultimately give them control of water and the catchment of
the Waiapu.
Iwi are very powerful in Maori society
Though we have all, Maori and
European, lived together on this land for more than 200 years, many
New Zealanders do not seem to realise that Maori society is
intensely hierarchical
There are the Iwi elders with their
affiliates – the Maori nobility, and the rest. Of the whole massive
transfer of wealth from treaty settlements to Maori, there has been
little or no trickle down to the Maori masses of South Auckland,
Northland, the East Coast and elsewhere. We are giving our nation’s
wealth and commons to a racially-selected nobility.
By Bill Benfield, Co-Chair, Council
of Outdoor Recreation Associations of New Zealand
See full article HERE
Youthful Tainui population looking
for economic leg up
Parekawhia
McLean is also deputy chair of Waikato Means Business, a steering
group of business, education, community and civic leaders that is
looking at ways to increase living standards across the region.
The group has put $30,000 into
exploring Maori development options.
Ms McLean says there is more than $6
billion in Maori assets in the region, which stretches from Taupo to
Port Waikato and across the Hauraki.
"Our population, we're about 22
percent of the Waikato region and of that population almost 60
percent here are under of the age of 30 so it's certainly in the
interests of the region to support the initiatives that are
happening," she says....
See full article HERE
17 December 2015
Action must be taken to address the
factors contributing to an unhealthy Māori population, the NZ
College of Public Health Medicine (NZCPHM) urges Government.
The NZCPHM have just released their
Māori Health Policy, which states the health inequities between
Māori and non-Māori New Zealanders are large, pervasive, and
persist across the lifespan and over time.
“We recognise that Māori have lesser
access to the vital resources that support health and wellbeing, and
that this occurs because of how these resources are distributed in
the first place.”
Dr King also says professional
development programmes in the health system must have a focus on
cultural competence and health literacy.
“This is about people receiving high
quality healthcare no matter what their culture,” she says.
Health professionals must be responsive
to the health needs and aspirations of their patients. This requires
understanding and knowledge about their patients, their culture and
about the things that matter to them....
See full article HERE
Funding for Maori current affairs
show
A new current affairs show on TV3
billing itself as a "bold voice in Maori current affairs"
has received funding from NZ on Air.
The producers have promised "current
affairs investigations, arts and culture stories seen through an
indigenous lens". ....
See full article HERE
Sport Gisborne Tairawhiti calls for
regional approach
Following the introduction of a new
contestable funding structure for Regional Sports Trusts, Sport NZ
announced it would provide $1.62 million to this region’s RST over
a four-year period.
Sport NZ will provide $405,000 a year
in funding, $30,000 of which will be used for initiatives that
specifically target Maori participation in sport.
“This includes specific investment in
coaching, talent development, targeted Auckland initiatives and Maori
participation.”.....
See full article HERE
Landcorp inks agreement with iwi for
Sweetwater farm in Northland
Landcorp Farming, New Zealand's largest
corporate farmer, will continue to be involved in the management of
Northland farm Sweetwater after iwi take ownership of the property
under a Treaty of Waitangi settlement.
Northland iwi Te Rarawa and Ngai Takoto
will take ownership of the 2,480 hectare property near Kaitaia
tomorrow, as part of a 2010 settlement. Landcorp, which has been
managing Sweetwater in consultation with the iwi, will continue to
provide farm management expertise, livestock and technology under a
new joint-management and profit-sharing arrangement, the
Wellington-based state-owned enterprise said in a statement.
“This agreement deepens what has
already been an excellent relationship between Landcorp and both
iwi," said Landcorp chair Traci Houpapa. "Through it, we’ve
created some very well-performing dairy farms and created more
training and employment opportunities for Maori."
"It’s a model for a successful
business partnership and we’re actively exploring more of these
sorts of productive partnerships with iwi.".....
See full article HERE
Compliance to the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi for BFCI
The Principles of the Treaty of
Waitangi for protection, partnership and participation must be
included in a Breastfeeding Policy offered by an accredited Baby
Friendly Community Initiative (BFCI) health service. How these
principles are incorporated should be clearly identifiable.
Level 3 Workers in the service must
complete the module Breastfeeding for Maori Women, as stipulated in
Point Two of The Seven Point Plan and this education should
incorporate the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi.
Access to a Maori health worker,
kaumatua support or culturally appropriate support (if required) must
be provided by a service worker or client of the service to create an
environment that is supportive and culturally appropriate.
The Breastfeeding Policy (or an
abridged version) must be available in Maori, and the Maori
translation of the abridged Policy must be on display in all areas
accessible by pregnant women, mothers and their whanau......
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
16 December 2015
The Mental Health Foundation has
released what they are calling a 'ground-breaking' resource that will
offer information about suicide prevention, identity and well-being
for takatāpui.
Takatāpui: Part of the Whānau is a collaboration between the Mental Health Foundation of New Zealand and Wellington based organisation, Tīwhanawhana. It is written by Trust Chair, Elizabeth Kerekere and funded through the Waka Hourua Fund.
Kerekere says, “Takatāpui is a traditional Māori word meaning ‘intimate companion of the same sex.’ It has been adapted to embrace all Māori with diverse genders and sexualities. Claiming takatāpui shows our pride in being Māori; connects us to our whakapapa and culture; and to our rainbow counterparts.”
The resource aims to reduce the myths
about takatāpui and prevent their experience of discrimination
through increased understanding.....
See full article HERE
Public satisfaction with Police
remains high
“We also acknowledge that trust and
confidence in Māori is lower than we would like it to be.
However, it is interesting to note that
Māori in general trust the police and health system more than other
institutions according to Statistics New Zealand research.....
See full article HERE
Sharples to advise ATEED on Maori
strategy
Former Maori Affairs Minister Sir Pita
Sharples joined Auckland Tourism, Events and Economic Development to
advise the board on strategies for economic transformation.
ATEED chair David McConnell says the
organization is stepping up its response to the unique needs of
Tamaki Makaurau mana whenua and mataawaka - including programmes
which address youth employment issues, and encourage innovation and
Maori business ventures....
See full article HERE
IHC's potential state housing deal
sparks protest
A group opposing the sale of state
houses in Tauranga says iwi should stay away from purchasing the
government stock.
“They are planning on buying around
1000 state houses in Tauranga so that’s almost the entire stock in
Tauranga, we are saying that we don't want them to collude in
Nationals policies, there's a national housing crisis at the moment,”
said Paretutanganui-Tamati.
Paretutanganui-Tamati says, “Aren't
we the best people though to take care of our own people? Well yes
and that’s why the government should go into partnership with Iwi
to build more houses.” ..
See full article HERE
River buy sweetens profit for
Tuwharetoa trust
At its annual meeting in Taupo on the
weekend, the trust reported a net after tax profit of $11.6 million
to June 30, $10 million up on the previous year.
Rakeipoho Taiaroa says the highlight
was buying the last of the deferred settlement properties, including
the 8500 hectare Hautu Rangipo block with the Rangipo prison and
forest on it.
"Tuwharetoa Settlement Trust
didn't have the cash to purchase everything so through advice,
through good management and collaboration with other Tuwharetoa
economic authorities we were able to get the major milestone over the
line and not only the prison land which is historically our property,
we were also able to return 8km of the Tongariro River, one of the
most iconic rivers in Aotearoa," he says.....
See full article HERE
Maori voice weakened in RMA reforms
When the Maori Party struck a deal
allowing the Government to introduce the RMA amendment bill, it
claimed it would not damage the rights of iwi and hapu and should
enhance them.
But Mr Henare says the detail indicates
otherwise.
"How do iwi facilitate the
opportunity to speak out on things to protect significant waahi tapu
or places of significance when actually, what the council and RMA
will do too is to lessen the number of sites of significance and
that's a concern for me," says Mr Henare.....
See full article HERE
Waitangi Tribunal asked to review
Auckland SHA
An application for an urgent inquiry
into the Special Housing Area (SHA) at Ihumātao, Māngere and into
the Special Housing Area Act itself was filed with the Waitangi
Tribunal week.
SOUL’s Counsel Cameron Hockly advised
today that the Tribunal have registered the claim as Wai 2547 and the
Crown now has until 11 January 2016 to respond.....
See full article HERE
A further link on the above HERE
Marae plans move forward
Residents trying to secure land for a
marae say the suburb they love is missing one thing – a place to be
Maori.
Attempts over 50 years by Beach Haven
Maori to have a marae have reached a stalemate, which means
tangihanga (funerals) have to be held in
their own homes.
With a newly formed marae committee,
Uruamo Maranga Ake, their mission is more organised.
Uruamo Maranga Ake say they speak for
"the whanau in Beach Haven" – 50 of which huddled into
the Kaipatiki Local Board community forum meeting in Glenfield on
November 25.
Members Frances Waaka and Murray
Painting presented their marae dreams and location for the first time
at the forum
Shepherds Park is the desired site,
which houses the Beach Haven Bowling Club, Birkenhead United AFC and
the Beach Haven Tennis Club.
"We want this to start the
normalisation of Maori. ...
See full article HERE
Iwi ready to move forward with Crown
after 150 years
But
the tribe is now ready to move forward and settle its Treaty of
Waitangi claims, having signed an Agreement in Principal with the
Crown on Saturday.
Dubbed bush warfare, in 1867 Crown
forces pursued Ngati Hinerangi descendants through the Kaimai Ranges,
and iwi negotiator Morehu McDonald said it has had lasting effects.
"Our people were subjected to the
scorched earth tactics of being chased through our whenua and
expelled from our lands at the barrell of the gun."
He said villages and crops were
destroyed along with the tribes means to support itself.
"It had a devastating effect on
our people and our psyche which has taken all this time, 150 odd
years, to recover from," he said.....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the
on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes
tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
14 December 2015
Maori TV boss spends $40,000 refurbishing office
Maori Television chief executive Paora
Maxwell spent $40,000 this year refurbishing his office, according to
documents received under the Official Information Act.
Labour's Maori Broadcasting spokesman
Peeni Henare labelled the cost of the renovation "bloody
ridiculous and obscene".
"There was nothing wrong with the
office the way it was."
Henare, who worked at the station
before becoming an MP, put in eight Official Information Act requests
about different aspects of the public broadcaster's finances but
received just one response back. It said Maxwell had spent $40,000 on
an office refurbishment but gave no details on how the money had been
spent.....
See full article HERE
Crown agrees in principle to settle
Treaty claim
The
Crown has agreed to settle its historical Treaty of Waitangi claims
with a Tainui iwi, in principle.
The Ngaati Hinerangi's interests extend
from Matamata to the Western Bay of Plenty.
Treaty Negotiations Minister Chris
Finlayson said the agreement included the transfer of sites in the
Kaimai Range, as well as an apology from the Crown.
He said the public would continue to
have access to all sites being transferred, bar one of high cultural
significance to the iwi......
See full article HERE
Petty crime offenders get to front
Maori panel and potentially avoid conviction
Small-time offenders are dodging the
courtroom in favour of being judged by a panel of Maori elders at a
South Auckland marae.
And, if the offenders do what they're
told they avoid conviction.
The process so far has a 90 per cent
success rate, and Maori are keen to have it rolled out across the
country.
The community justice panel sits twice
a month at Te Whare Waatea Marae in Mangere and gives offenders a
chance to address the panel about what has happened.
The aim is to reach an agreement which
is then sent to authorities for the charge to be removed from the
national database.
About 150 people have faced the panel
in the past 18 months and only one person has been referred back to
the courts.....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the
on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes
tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
13 December 2015
A misunderstanding between the Maori
Trustee and a court led to a Whangarei law firm being directed to
hold more than $100,000 in compensation payment by Top Energy to
landowners in the Far North.
The Maori Land Court in June ordered
lines operator Top Energy to pay $105,000 for easement on four blocks
of multiple-owned Maori land over which a 110,000-volt electricity
transmission line and power pylons from Kaikohe to Kaitaia will run
to improve consistency of power supply in the Far North....
See full article HEREMole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
12 December 2015
Māori
tertiary education providers are frustrated their performance is
measured in the same way as universities and polytechs.
The wānanga say that the system does
not take into account the fact they teach a completely different
group of people.
A new Ministry of Education report shows wānanga students are mostly female and Māori, are middle aged, have families, study part-time and live in some of the most deprived neighbourhoods.
Between TWOR and TWOA, 8000 students
are studying, mostly part-time. As many as 32,000 students are
enrolled with Te Wānanga o Aotearoa.
"Unless some solutions are found
for the poor situation educationally that Maori have found themselves
in for some time and that gap that's been talked about for some
time...then the future for our general populace as it browns up
should be a big worry to us." ...
See full article HERE
11 December 2015
Christchurch council considers greater Maori representation
Hot
on the heels of a call for Auckland Council's Maori Advisory Board to
be scrapped, Christchurch City Council is considering setting up a
committee to boost Maori representation.
Christchurch City Council will today
vote on whether to set up its own committee, made up of the chairs of
six local rununga, the mayor and the chairs of five council
committees.
Council director of community and
democracy services Mary Richardson said the purpose of the committee
was to strengthen the council's relationship with local Maori.
Ms Richardson said matters such as
whether runanga representatives on the Christchurch City Council
committee would have voting rights or whether they would be paid had
yet to be decided.....
See full article HEREMole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
10 December 2015
Te Kuiti kura gets $6m rebuild, Te Awamutu's seeks new site
The Government has announced funding
for a revamp of Te Wharekura o Maniapoto, near Te Kuiti, which will
take it from 1920s buildings and prefabs to the latest designs.
It has about 100 students but hoped to
get up to 150 after the rebuild, Te Rire said.
The major change would be a two-storey
building replacing the wharekura's current buildings, she said in a
statement.
"A new multipurpose space,
containing specialist learning spaces and a covered, all-weather
outdoor playing area will also be built," she said.
"There will also be an improved
site layout, with an upgraded car park and drop-off area, paved play
areas and improved drainage and playing fields."....
See full article HERE
Strong iwi support for Partnership
Schools expansion
Today Sir Toby Curtis reiterated the
Iwi Chairs Forum’s support for the continued expansion of the
Partnership Schools | Kura Hourua policy.
“Sir Toby confirmed to me, the Minister of Education, and the Minister of Finance this morning that iwi leaders continue to support Partnership Schools,” Under-Secretary to the Minister of Education David Seymour says.....
See full artice HERE
Programme cut-back latest blow
for Māori Television
News that beleaguered current affairs
programme, Native Affairs, will only get a half hour slot next year
is another slap in the face for the staff at Māori Television, says
Labour’s Māori Broadcasting spokesperson, Peeni Henare.
“It sad to see the unravelling of
such an important taonga, and it is time the Minster responsible for
the broadcaster, Te Ururoa Flavell, began doing just that - taking
some responsibility for protecting our language and people,” says
Peeni Henare. .....
See full article HERE
9 December 2015
Federated Farmers also have
reservations relating to iwi rights and interests - not that they
were included but how they might be interpreted by local councils.
The draft report suggests potential
options around this but would rather they were not interpreted as
giving specific direction to the Government.
There is concern that some local
regions may 'pre-empt negotiations' between iwi and central
government by unreasonably locking up water creating a gridlock on
its management.
Meanwhile, the vast majority of
councils nationwide have or will be embarking upon water management
plans.....
See full article HERE
Government record "worst ever"
- Davis
Labour's new Maori Development
spokesperson says the Government has failed to deliver for Maori
where it counts.
On Radio Waatea this morning, host and
former National MP Claudette Hauiti told Kelvin Davis he would
struggle to find ways to attack Minister Te Ururoa Flavell, given the
Government's progress in settling treaty claims and the continued
growth of the Maori economy.
But Mr Davis says he has plenty to work
on.
"Well let's start with Maori
unemployment, it's the worst it has ever been. Let's start with Maori
housing, it's the worst it has ever been. Let's start with Maori
education, that's pretty poor. Maori health, that's pretty poor.
Claudette, you can sit there and say this Government has done more
than any Government for Maori, I'm saying it's the opposite. The
things that really matter, are still as bad and in fact have got
worse under this Government," he says......
See full article HERE
Banning power boats from the water and
vehicles from the margins are two immediate steps that have been
taken in a bid to save the best known of the very Far North's dune
lakes.
The first step would be to ban power
boats and install bollards at current public access points, and in
areas where people had created their own access to keep vehicles away
from the margins.
Mr Marsden said elimination of
motorised craft would reduce prop wash, which would stir up the
nutrients locked into the thick layer of sediment on the bottom of a
very shallow lake, with disastrous results. With the expected strong
El Nino summer further reducing the currently low water levels, those
nutrients would feed algae, potentially causing a bloom.
Te Runanga o Ngai Takoto had convened a
meeting with representatives from the Department of Conservation, the
Far North District and Northland Regional councils, seeking support
for the immediate measures while the longer-term strategy was rolled
out in two more planned stages.
The vesting of the lake bed in Ngai
Takoto as part of the cultural redress within the iwi's Treaty
settlement process now gave it the ability to lead and participate
with others in determining the future welfare of the lake, as opposed
to the lesser role it had played in the past, effectively "watching
from the sidelines."...
See full article HERE
Waipareira Trust board elections
show enthusiam for future
Both Harawira and Rocky Tahuri have
been re-elected back onto the board for another three year term.
Tahuri has sat on the board for the
past two terms and has been treasurer for five years.
She is particularly excited for the
future of the Wai-Research programmes and what she describes as "us
looking at us" .
"It allows us, as Maori, to
research our own – about Maori, for Maori, by Maori."
The risk of a pakeha lens to research
is minimised through this approach, she says.
"We are a million dollar
organisation," Harawira says. ....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
8 December 2015
College site in private hands
The site of the controversial proposed
Thurston Place College in Bucklands Beach has passed into Maori
ownership, but plans for its future use are still unknown.
It was offered to Whenua Haumi Roroa o
Tamaki Makaurau Limited Partnership earlier this year under the Right
of First Refusal (RFR) provisions of the Nga Mana Whenua o Tamaki
Makaurau Collective Redress Act 2014, he says. The partnership
purchased the property last August 26.
Moving the second reading of the
redress bill, Chris Finlayson, Minister for Treaty of Waitangi
Negotiations, said it differed from other Treaty bills, in that it
did not settle historical claims or provide financial redress.
“Rather it takes an innovative
approach by providing to the iwi and the hapu in the Tamaki region
collective redress that recognises their complex interconnected
interests.”...
See full article HERE
Not one more Maori college must be
allowed to close
“There should be no need for
political or iwi intervention into what is essentially, and should
continue to be, korero between a church and its followers, but if it
comes to a need for action to support those of our Maori people who
wish for their children to attend Maori boarding schools, then we
cannot and will not stand aside, said Ms Glavish.....
See full article HERE
7 December 2015
National
Party MP Judith Collins has called the Auckland Council's Maori
advisory board an "unaccountable monster" that thinks it's
"outside the law".
Ms Collins made the remarks in a speech
to the ACT Party's Auckland South annual regional conference on
Saturday afternoon.
In her address as guest speaker at the
conference, the Papakura MP said the Independent Maori Statutory
Board (IMSB) was neither elected nor accountable, and should be
dumped.
"The Maori statutory board is an
unaccountable monster. It believes it is outside the law," she
said in her speech.
"I recall my experience trying to
get some basic information about its members. The IMSB ignored the
request and ultimately I had to get the Office of the Ombudsman
involved."
Even under instruction from the
Ombudsman, the board still refused to comply, she said.....
See full article HERE
Maori TV receptionists to file
grievances after being laid off for not speaking Maori
Two Maori TV receptionists sacked for
not speaking te reo have been asked to stay on until their
replacements are found.
Both women have since sought legal
advice and are expected to file employment grievances. They are
expected to argue the publicly-funded broadcaster has double
standards, and that up to half of Maori Television's executive team
do not speak Maori.
Maori Television chief executive Paora
Maxwell said the new requirement for receptionists to be bi-lingual
was part of a structural change in the organisation
But it is understood neither of the
women's employment contracts specified a requirement to speak te reo.
Henare said only three of the network's
six executives spoke te reo themselves which made the situation more
outrageous. "They're a bunch of bloody hypocrites." ....
See full article HERE
6 December 2015
Maori show mooted for TV3
Taxpayers would provide all the funding
for a "unique" new Maori current affairs programme to
screen on TV3.
TV3 confirmed that, subject to NZ On
Air's decision, the show would be 100 per cent taxpayer funded.
Attached to the project are two former
leading lights from the Maori TV programme Native Affairs: Annabelle
Lee and presenter Mihi Forbes, who is now with Radio New Zealand....
See full article HERE
New Rangatahi Court for Taupō
Justice and Courts Minister Amy Adams
has welcomed the launch of New Zealand’s fourteenth Rangatahi Court
in Taupō today.
Te Kooti Rangatahi ki Tūwharetoa was
launched at Rauhoto Marae, Taupō.
Ms Adams says the Rangatahi Courts are
focused on addressing offending by young Māori by involving
communities in the youth justice process and encouraging strong
cultural links.
“The courts do this by taking the
cases away from the adversarial environment of the traditional court
setting, and creates one where, with the support of whānau, kuia and
kaumātua, a young person can take ownership of their
offending.”.....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
5 December 2015
Another Flip Flop by a National Minister – Smith Bows to ‘Brownmail’’
Environment Minister Nick Smith has
bowed to “brownmail” over council planning decisions under the
RMA.
“In 2004 Dr Smith warned that giving
iwi greater powers under the RMA was ‘a revolutionary
constitutional change’,” says New Zealand First Leader and Member
of Parliament for Northland Rt Hon Winston Peters.
He warned that Maori were holding the
country to ransom and effectively asking for ‘brownmail’ (his
term) in order for projects to proceed, says Mr Peters.
“Now, in a desperate bid to get RMA
changes through, Dr Smith has conveniently changed his tune.
“He has bowed to the demands of the
government’s partner, the Maori Party, in giving Maori privileges
in planning decisions denied to everyone else.
“This is not what most New Zealanders
want but the government is too focused on token progress in the
‘reform’ of the RMA to care.
“Instead of reforming the RMA the
government has now saddled councils and communities with a future of
acrimonious planning decisions.”...
See full article HERE
Māori heavily concerned about
climate change
Protests and encouragement to reduce
the effects of climate change is being heavily urged by Māori.
Teanau Tuiono says, "If we don't
sort out climate change, our coastal communities and our island
communities, they are going to be under water."....
See full article HERE
4 December 2015
Green Party Bill to stop Māori land confiscations under the Public Works Act
Parliament will get the opportunity to
make the Treaty of Waitangi a stronger part of our nation’s laws
with a Members’ Bill drawn today, the Green Party said today.
“This is a real opportunity to stop
any more unfair confiscations of what is left of whenua Māori,”
Green Party Te Tiriti o Waitangi spokesperson Catherine Delahunty
said.
“Compulsory acquisition in the Public
Works Act has cut across Article Two of the Treaty of Waitangi, which
guarantees rangatiratanga.....
See full article HERE
Māori Party looks forward to
ongoing negotiations on RMA reforms
“We’re happy with progress we’ve
made to date including the provisions for better engagement between
iwi and all local councils,” she says.
“As manawhenua and kaitiaki of
natural resources in their local regions, hapū and iwi have a vital
role to play in keeping the balance between the protection and
development of the environment.”
The Bill will require all local
authorities around the country to enter into iwi partnership
agreements.
“These new provisions will have
iwi involved at the front-end of the planning process rather than
reacting at the end. They will not override existing arrangements as
outline in Treaty settlements or iwi management plans,” says Mrs
Fox....
See full article HERE
ACT will not support National-Maori
RMA tinkering
ACT will not be voting for National’s
weakened RMA reform legislation.
“New Zealanders were promised RMA
reform. What National has worked out with the Maori Party is
tinkering,” says ACT Leader David Seymour....
See full article HERE
Little aims to build Labour Party
relationship with Rātana
Andrew Little is hoping his party can
grow stronger ties to the followers of Rātana.....
See full article HERE
Government fails to address high
rates of Maori SUDI
“The good news is that over the last
five years there has been a 30 percent reduction in New Zealand’s
SUDI rates, and the reduction has been almost entirely amongst Maori
infants,” Dr Tipene-Leach says.
“This recently released Ministry of
Health report shows that a whopping 40 percent of Maori newborns are
not seen by health professionals within the first few weeks of birth
– and this is something they are entitled to. Whanau Maori are also
least likely of any group to be briefed about safe sleep practices.”
“Maori SUDI rates are still very
concerning. Research is showing that the safe sleep devices are in
fact safe, that families use them appropriately and there is obvious
support from DHBs. With increased national and regional support to
implement safe sleep programmes we should see an even greater
reduction in Maori SUDI rates.
“I am concerned, however, that there
is no guarantee that the provision of safe sleep devices will
continue under current funding regimes.”...
See full article HERE
Nelson Street Cycleway opened
to the public for first time
Auckland’s newest and highly
anticipated piece of cycling infrastructure, the Nelson Street
Cycleway, is now open to the public for the first time after a ribbon
cutting ceremony earlier this morning.
The project team worked with Maori
artist Katz Maihi and Iwi throughout the urban design stages to
include Maori designs and ensure the path has a distinctly New
Zealand identity. The design includes a large koru pattern. Following
a recommendation from iwi the section of the cycleway which
incorporates the Canada Street Bridge as well as the old Nelson
Street motorway off-ramp will be called “Te Ara I Whiti”, which
translates as the Lightpath.....
See full article HERE
3 December 2015
Maori Santa comes by waka, not sleigh
In Northern Europe he arrives on a
sleigh drawn by reindeer.
But in Northland snow, reindeer and
sleighs are in short supply, so Hana Koko - that's Santa Claus in
Maori - has come up with a present distribution system better suited
to local conditions.
That's why he arrived at Ti Beach in
Waitangi yesterday in a waka paddled by young kaihoe (paddlers) amid
cries of Meri Kirihimete! (Merry Christmas!) and Ho Ho Ho! (that's
the same in Maori and te reo Pakeha).....
See full article HERE
Māori newspaper Māngai Nui moves
to digital platform
Launched late last year, the Te Arawa
based Māori newspaper, Māngai Nui- Voices of Te Arawa has
now made the move to a fully digital platform.
The monthly newspaper, which was a part
of the Rotorua Daily Post, aimed to give whānau, hapū and iwi
the opportunity to tell their stories.
Recently, it was announced that
the newspaper has now developed into a brand new website, which
will enable Te Arawa kaupapa to reach out even further
to descendants living in Aotearoa and abroad....
See full article HERE
More new Māori doctors graduating
The
number of Māori doctors entering the workforce is continuing to
grow.
Otago University said results were
starting show from Ministry of Health initiatives, started in 2008,
to get more Māori studying medicine.
On Saturday, 25 Māori students will
graduate from the Dunedin Medical School.
That alone is a huge increase since the
early 1990s when between four and eight new Māori doctors entered
the workforce each year.
The class of 2016 is expecting 45 Māori
to graduate.
Dunedin Medical School says its goal is
for at least one in five of its new doctors to be Māori.....
See full article HERE
Maori trust million dollar legal
blow out
Labour is calling for an immediate
review of the trustee appointment process at the Crown Forestry
Rental Trust, says Labour’s Maori Development spokesperson Kelvin
Davis.
“The recently released Court of
Appeal judgement shows CFRT has reimbursed more than $2 million of
legal costs to both the New Zealand Maori Council and the Federation
of Maori Authorities who are embroiled in a legal battle that’s
festered for more than five years.
“The Minister of Maori Development
needs to review this situation as questions must be asked about the
trustee appointment process and the ongoing costs which could be more
than $5 million.
“CFRT funds are supposed to support
claims processes rather than legal costs so a review must happen as
soon as possible.....
See full article HERE
Raukawa buy half stake in major farming
operation
South Waikato based Iwi, Raukawa have
purchased a 47.5 per cent stake in 2,500ha Ranginui Station.
Ranginui Station is a major farming
operation made up of three dairy farms, forestry and dry stock
located on Ranginui Rd in the Otorohanga District, around 15kms West
of Mangakino...
See full article HERE
NZ Wars petition ready for delivery
Students from Otorohanga College hope
to present a petition to parliament next week calling for a national
day to remember those who lost their lives in the New Zealand Wars of
the 19th Century.
The petition was sparked by a school
trip to battle sites at Orakau and Rangiaowhia, where some of the
students' tupuna fought and died.
The petition now has more than 10,000
signatures.....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
2 December 2015
From the NZCPR archives (By Dr Muriel Newman)
Are we one or two?
If we look ahead, judging by the
present tribal protest action over exploration rights for minerals,
and oil and gas, corporate iwi are no doubt readying themselves for
new claims. This time it will be for the ownership of all of New
Zealand’s minerals, along with another attempt to gain control of
the country’s reserves of oil and gas.
And let’s not forget what could be
regarded as one of the tribal elite’s greatest victories – the
Maori Party’s success in persuading John Key’s government that
secretly signing New Zealand up to the United Nations’ Declaration
on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples to potentially give self-defined
“indigenous” groups special governance powers and rights above
those of every other citizen, was in the best interest of New
Zealand. To her credit, then Prime Minister Helen Clark stood her
ground and rejected all such advances a few years earlier. She could
see the inevitable consequences.
It is not beyond the bounds of
comprehension that there will be a claim for the ownership of the air
we all breathe, and perhaps there will even be a proposed levy on all
citizens who cannot claim Maori heritage – for the privilege of
living in “their” country.
Are such things as claims for the air
we breathe fanciful? Not if politicians continue to put the interests
of an ill-defined racial group ahead of the rights of all New
Zealanders. The fact is that if the wider public continues to
sheepishly accept these outrageous race-based deals by the ruling
party, then our rights as New Zealand citizens will continue to be
trampled by self-serving deal-making politicians.
It appears that the New Zealand public
has been somewhat conditioned into acquiescence by the tactics of the
iwi elite. Firstly they use the publicly funded and outrageously
biased Waitangi Tribunal to deliver favourable decisions based on
their fabricated versions of history – complete, as we are now
hearing, with evidence based on taniwhas and other forms of pagan
spiritualty. If the government refuses to accept the Tribunal’s
resolutions – which, fortunately, are not binding – the demands
are then transferred into the court system using legal aid to fight
any opposition to the highest level. In doing this they rely on
eventually striking activist Judges who support the elevation of
Maori rights. Going by past history, there now seems to be no lack of
such advocates.
The public of course, find such tactics
bewildering. It is difficult to understand some judicial decisions,
let alone have the confidence to criticise them. Those that do speak
out against Maori rights arguments are usually accused of racism. As
a result, the public has been increasingly cowed into silence and
opposition to outrageous developments is now muted.....
Read Dr Muriel Newman's full article
HERE
July 23, 2012
1 December 2015
Who will own NZ's water?
Pure
sparkling fresh water – turn on the tap and there it is. It's our
God given right, the lifeblood, the new oil it seems, even here in
New Zealand.
But
who owns the water, and are the government about to surrender control
of the nation's fresh water to Maori?
But
David Round of the NZCPR says we should be concerned, very concerned.
“Maori, who at other times go on
about how no-one can own the water, would accept privatisation if
they knew the private hands into which it was going to fall, were
theirs.”
But David insists Maori will want water
for themselves. “If they are involved in managing water, they will
make decisions that are going to favour them,” he says.
“If it involves granting water rights
to other people, it will involve Maori clipping the ticket.
“Pardon my cynicism, but it seems to
be a very real possibility.”
David says at present, water is not
owned by anyone and is administered by democratically-elected
councils responsible to the public and administered for the public
benefit.
“But what is being proposed here,
inevitably, is that Maori are going to have a greater share in the
administration of water than their population and interests entitles
them to.”....
See full article HERE
Labour MP
Kelvin Davis is set to replace Nanaia Mahuta as Labour's Maori
Affairs spokesperson and move up the rankings in Labour leader Andrew
Little's reshuffle......
See full article HERE
Maori youth
are not speaking in Te Reo Maori because it lacks the "cool"
factor and expressions for social media, a Massey University study
has found.....
See full article HERE
A second Northland treaty authority
challenged
An
urgent Waitangi Tribunal Claim has been lodged, challenging yet
another Northland mandated treaty authority and calling for a halt in
negotiations.
Hot on the heels of the Tūhoronuku
mandate woes, yet another Northland iwi is facing a similar
challenge.
A family claimant group, Ngā Uri o
Whangaruru, has taken an urgent claim challenging the Ngātiwai
mandate.
Ngā Uri o Whangaruru spokesperson
Huhana Seve is asking for the process to be halted immediately.....
See full article HERE
A wise investment made by a Rotorua
Maori trust is having huge spinoffs for local marae that will soon
enjoy significant cash injections.
Te Kotahitanga o Ngati Whakaue Assets
Trust has made $3.2 million in just four years on a single
investment. The trust recently cashed out of the investment and will
now pay each of its six marae a bonus payment of $100,000.....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
30 November 2015
With National, Maori Party defining iwi participation
Bill English gave an important speech
at Parliament this week about Maori, the state and
self-determination.
But he should know because while Prime
Minister John Key is the figurehead, Mr English manages it through
its various strands, be it social service delivery through Whanau
Ora, constitutional aspirations, parameters of Treaty of Waitangi
settlements or Maori participation in freshwater management.
One of the reasons Mr English has been
willing to embrace managed extensions of rangatiratanga is because he
sees the alternative as being worse - a sense of victimhood and
reliance on the state.
The Maori Party, which sees itself as
the representative of the Treaty partner in Parliament, has been
working closely with the Iwi Leaders Group on the Bill and made a
joint submission to National on what it wanted.....
See full article HERE
Govt told to stamp out police racism
The Government's being told to stamp
out racism in the Police force, following an admission of bias
against Maori.
Police Commissioner Mike Bush has
admitted some Maori have faced discrimination at the hands of Police.
Labour Police spokesman Kelvin Davis
said it's something many Maori have known for years.
He's calling for the the Waitangi
Tribunal to consider Police bias in its investigation of Maori
offending rates.....
See full article HERE
28 November 2015
“However, it is blatantly apparent
that they are taking a giant step towards separatist government by
caving in to the Maori Party, which has minimal support, even in the
Maori world.
“It is clear that behind closed doors
they are negotiating away fundamental rights that should be the same
for all New Zealanders.
“National’s separatist approach
will do nothing for Maori, and even less for the country.
“It’s a tragedy how far John Key
has taken public policy in that direction in seven years...
See full article HERE
Water is not for profit
That makes putting water into Iwi hands
just another step towards selling off New Zealand's assets. Iwi would
be able to sell our water to the highest, foreign bidder and, under
the TPPA, the Government would be unable to intervene.
We cannot allow water to become a
tradeable commodity. There are countless horrific stories of
exploitation where countries have privatised water. When Bolivia
privatised their water, the corporate owners fined residents who
collected rain water. Water prices became exorbitantly high. Access
to water was no longer within the reach of many. And many died in the
struggle to renationalise their water.
Government is best placed to steward
our water, because government is where all New Zealanders have a say.
And it is certainly time for us to have a say, now and again in the
next election, against the privatisation of water. It's time for a
government that understands stewardship.
New Zealand First understands that
water is our most precious resource. Water is a common good that
cannot be owned.
Priorities for granting water rights
must place public benefits before private benefits.
And while the Treaty of Waitangi does
not confer rights to fresh water upon Māori which are greater or
lesser than the rights of any other New Zealander,.....
See full article HERE
Fourth Report on Water Management
“We strongly urge the Government to
implement all of our recommendations without delay. Consensus will
hold only if what is recommended is substantially put in place.
“The resolution of iwi rights and
interests in fresh water is essential to an enduring system of
freshwater management in New Zealand,” Mr Bisley added.
“The responsibility for resolving iwi
rights resides with the Crown and iwi as Treaty partners. In this
report, we have suggested some ways in which this could be done. We
have also been clear that the Crown should protect existing rights
and ensure costs are not to be transferred to other parties.....
See full article HERE
Strategy to get Aucklanders speaking
three languages launched
A ratepayer-funded agency wants all
Aucklanders to speak both English and Maori, plus one other language.
This is the ambitious aim of education
think-tank COMET, as it launches the Auckland Languages Strategy.
COMET gets two-thirds of its funding
from Auckland Council – around $580,000 a year – and
has been instrumental in developing the strategy, which is being
presented at a languages conference in Auckland on Friday.
COMET's position was that all Kiwis
should speak the two national languages, English and Te Reo Maori,
Warren said.
Speaking Te Reo would give New
Zealanders a better picture of the relationship between Maori and
non-Maori under the Treaty, Warren said.
"Te Reo is actually our language
and our heritage, and we can't truly know ourselves as Kiwis until we
know the language."....
See full article HERE
27 November 2015
Govt reaches agreement on RMA overhaul
The Government will introduce
significant changes to the Resource Management Act (RMA) following
"intensive" negotiations with the Maori Party.
The Bill will be introduced for its
first reading next Thursday and has the numbers to pass following an
agreement reached with the Maori Party, who had been against the
proposals.
The Maori Party had also wanted to
ensure early involvement of iwi in council planning development so
they can come to an agreement on how they can be included.
Co-leader Te Ururoa Flavell says it was
important to keep the environmental protection in the RMA.
"Kaitiakitanga or the protection
and enhancement of our environment must remain central to the RMA. We
will remain vigilant during the progress of this Bill to ensure it
remains so."
Co-leader Marama Fox says while the
party was staunchly opposed to changes, it had worked with the
Government for nine months on the issue.
"The Bill is a compromise,"
Dr Smith says.....
See full article HERE
Muttonbird islands 'essential' to
Maori life, High Court told
One of Southland's most respected Maori
leaders has described the importance of the muttonbird islands and
the water around them at a High Court hearing.
Jane Davis, a descendant of Rakiura
Maori, has been a muttonbirder all her life, involved with the
Waitangi Tribunal, a member of the Ngai Tahu Maori Trust board, a
member of the Southland Conservation board, is a kaumatua for Oraka
Aparima Runanga, and advocated for the return of crown muttonbird
islands to Rakiura Maori.
Davis gave evidence during the third
day of the hearing for Denis Tipene's application for a coastal
marine title to cover an area near two muttonbird islands on behalf
of Rakiura Maori, before Justice Jillian Mallon in the High Court at
Invercargill on Wednesday.
The title would apply to a 200-metre
area around a rock between Tamaitemioka and Pohowaitai islands, and
includes the landing area for the islands...
See full article HERE
New Waitara roads to take colonial
names
Waitara's newest streets will be named
after a developer's family instead of Maori heritage.
The streets which are part of developer
Richard Dreaver's subdivision in Waitara, will be named after his
relatives who died in World War I.
However, last month local hapu made a
recommendation that the street names should reflect the area's Maori
history....
See full article HERE
Full Environment Canterbury
democracy 'a step backwards' - Ngai Tahu
Restoring full democratic elections
would be a "step backwards" for Canterbury, Ngai Tahu says.
Eight MPs heard public submissions on
the Environment Canterbury (Transitional Governance Arrangements)
Bill, which would introduce a mixture of elected councillors and
government appointed commissioners from 2016.
The proposed bill provides for, but
does not guarantee, a return to full democratic elections in 2019 –
six years later than originally expected.
"The proposal to return to a fully
democratically elected model does not provide sufficient recognition
towards the Treaty partnership," its submission says....
See full article HERE
A secondary school for Maori girls will
be closed after 110 years because of concerns about its debt and
governance.
Education Minister Hekia Parata
confirmed this morning that Turakina Maori Girls College in Marton,
40km north-west of Palmerston North, would close in January.
Ms Parata said there was "a great
deal of goodwill" towards the Decile 3, state-integrated
Presbyterian boarding school and she was saddened to have to close it
down.
"However, the financial
information provided ... doesn't give me confidence that the
proprietor is able to clear its debt and become financially viable,"
she said....
See full article HERE
$3m fish factory major Chatham
investment
A
brand new fish factory in the Chatham Islands is easing local
frustrations about a lack of investment in the remote community.
The islands' largest employer,
Māori-owned Aotearoa Fisheries, is putting the final touches on its
new $3 million factory in the main centre of Waitangi.....
See full article HERE
Freshwater Iwi Leaders Group
welcomes introduction of Bill
The Freshwater Iwi Leaders Group (ILG)
today welcomes the introduction of the Resource Legislation Amendment
Bill.
“The introduction of the Bill is a
positive first step in advancing our objectives of better
environmental outcomes and improving Māori participation in resource
management processes,” said Freshwater ILG spokesperson, Rahui
Papa.
The Freshwater ILG has been engaged
with the Crown since 2009 on the issue of freshwater reforms and
these RMA amendments have an important relationship with that wider
reform process. The ILG has also worked closely with the Māori Party
over the last two years to progress the issue of iwi and hapū rights
and interests in this area. Throughout these discussions, the ILG has
made it clear that the role of iwi and hapū as kaitiaki and also as
responsible developers of our land, waters and other resources is of
the utmost importance.....
See full article HERE
26 November 2015
Three Northlanders have been found
guilty by a jury of failing to pay more than $800,000 in taxes.
All five traded under the name Nga Uri
o Tupoto which, according to the Inland Revenue Department, received
just over $3.6 million in its bank account during the period they did
not pay taxes.
IRD investigator Ian McLisky told the
court the defendants did not pay one cent in tax and his checks with
the Maori Land Court and other government departments revealed the
society was not registered.
Karl mentioned the Declaration of
Independence and the Treaty of Waitangi and said they simply followed
the rules and regulations of the society....
See full article HERE
Call to bring back Maori soldiers
buried in Malaysia
Ms Glavish said that failure to heed
calls for repatriation were deeply disappointing to whanau of fallen
Maori servicemen. “It may be difficult for non-Maori to understand
and appreciate, but for our people there is a keen and intense
spiritual connection between the tupapaku (remains) of our dead and
those of us who are left behind. It is why we invariably return our
dead for burial in their home urupa (cemeteries) and why we place so
much emphasis on the ceremony of unveiling headstones on the first
anniversary of burial.
“Maori attachment to our land, and
particularly our personal turangawaewae, is surely well known, and is
something that endures beyond this life. We take not just comfort,
but inspiration and strength from having our dead close to us. For us
to be able to stand at their graves gives us a deep feeling of
connectedness with their spirits from whom we still hear messages of
encouragement and advice.
“We don’t expect non-Maori to share
this wairua of ours, but we would hope that they would appreciate its
significance to us. It is in that spirit that I make this personal
appeal to the Prime Minister and his government to reconsider the
heartfelt calls from whanau for the repatriation of the remains of
those of our Maori men who fell in wars South East Asia after January
1948....
See full article HERE
Forget the Christmas straw man, Dame
Susan Devoy. Tackle a real problem
It would be great to see Human Rights
Commissioner Susan Devoy take on a real problem, instead of wasting
time on hoary old sillinesses like dropping the word Christmas from
our summer vocabulary.
I began by suggesting Dame Susan take
on a real problem. Here's one I've raised in the past, one that her
predecessors and politicians alike have studiously ignored.
It's the weird Christian custom of
"karakia at dawn" that has been adopted by Auckland Council
- and government departments - to precede the opening or launch of
just about anything. Books, art galleries, wharf extensions, nothing
is safe.
A couple of months ago, council
worthies were traipsing around Wynyard Quarter development sites at
6am, while Maori kaumatua intoned Christian blessings for an hour and
a half.
We live in a secular society, proudly
supporting the right for everyone to follow their own religion - or
have none. At the last census, the majority religion was "No
Religion". But instead of standing up for our secularism,
government officials are busy thrusting religion down our throats.
They wrap it in a Maori cloak, and if
anyone complains, they mutter biculturalism and Treaty of Waitangi.
Yet in reality, they're just imposing one religion on the rest of us
by stealth. Forget the Christmas straw man, Dame Susan, and tackle a
real problem...
Full opinion piece by Brian Rudman HERE
Share sales boost Te Huarahi Trust
result
The auditors of the Maori spectrum
trust say Te Huarahi Tika is only a going concern if its sells more
of its shares in third mobile operator Two Degrees.
The trust held its annual meeting in
Wellington yesterday, reporting an increase in capital from $6
million to $9.5 million.
But it was not able to say when it
expected it investment to make a profit.
The deal was done after more than 70
Maori entities turned down an offer to buy in.
The debt was taken on in an effort to
stop the Maori stake being diluted while the company was expanding
its capital to build its network.....
See full article HERE
25 November 2015
Lincoln University crucial to meeting Māori aspirations
Newly appointed Deputy Vice-Chancellor
(DVC) Māori and Communities, Dr Charlotte Severne, says Lincoln has
a crucial role in meeting Māori development aspirations.
Her role at Lincoln involves overall
responsibility for advancing the Māori development interests of the
University, and optimising outputs for Māori achievement and
success.
She will also seek opportunities to
further grow and develop Lincoln, through partnering with Iwi and
Māori on commercial and research opportunities.
She sees one of her priorities as being
to operationalise the Whenua Strategy, the University’s overall
Māori strategy informing Lincoln’s internal and external
strategies for education, research and relationships with Māori
communities.
Dr Severne has also authored a number
of reports dealing with the impact on iwi and cultural values of
environmental projects, as well as looking at Māori research
strategies....
See full article HERE
More Maori in tech a $30m priority
Maori involved in information and
communications technology are looking for ways to bring more Maori
into the sector.
That was the main priority emerging
from a series of hui over the past week about how a new $30 million
ICT development fund should be spent.
The fund was set aside almost three
years ago as a sweetener after Communications Minister Amy Adams
refused to set aside for Maori any of the spectrum freed up by the
shift to digital television....
See full article HERE
24 November 2015
The Centre for Political Research says
the move to place water usage rights with local government hands the
ownership of water over to iwi.
The group has placed an emotive ad in
major newspapers opposing the move.
Spokesman Don Brash, says there's clear
evidence the Government's been in discussions with The Fresh Water
Iwi Leaders Group, and he says if the plan goes ahead, it'll be a
breach of the Treaty of Waitangi.
He says the Treaty doesn't give any
racial priority to any group and this move would depart from that.
Listen
to Leighton Smith's full interview with Dr Don Brash
HERE
Muttonbird island application
hearing begins in High Court at Invercargill
An application to protect paua fishing
beds near two muttonbird islands is being heard at the High Court in
Invercargill.
Denis Wiremu Tipene, of Christchurch,
has applied for a customary marine title on behalf of Rakiura Maori.
The hearing for his application before
Justice Jillian Mallon began Monday and is expected to continue for
most of the week.
The title would apply to a 200-metre
area around a rock near Tamaitemioka and Pohowaitai Islands, which
covers the landing area for the islands.
A customary marine title recognises
property rights of indigenous people that have continued since or
before acquisition of Crown sovereignty to the present day....
See full article HERE
The kura has received its official
"wharekura status" from the Minister of Education, Hekia
Parata, which means the kura can expand from a primary school to a
high school.
Some believe that with such a small
Maori population, Havelock North is not a suitable location.
Statistically the village has a far
less diverse population than other areas of the Bay.
A whopping 84.2 per cent of Havelock
North's population are European.
Just 3.5 per cent of Havelock North
residents are Maori....
See full article HERE
22 November 2015
Iwi and
councils work towards settlement
Four councils are looking to formalise
their relationship in preparation for Treaty negotiations between the
Crown and Ngati Whatua which will have a strong impact on the Kaipara
Harbour.
The Kaipara Harbour and its catchments
are currently part of a Ngati Whatua Treaty settlement. While most of
the iwi's historical claims have been settled, the remaining claims
and redress over Kaipara Moana are yet to be finalised.
The MOU has not yet been signed by the
council but Mr Ramsey said it was likely the Northland Regional
Council would sign it. The MOU would include establishing a Kaipara
Moana Negotiations Working Party comprising at least one elected
representative from each council.....
See full article HERE
'Who runs the council?'
THE latest development in Gisborne
District Council’s handling of the resource consent for the large
Hawaiki Turanga sculpture proposed for near the Waikanae Stream mouth
is “a disgrace and unprofessional” says Harbourview body
corporate chairman Ian Graham.
The Gisborne Herald reported in 2013
the estimated cost of the sculpture was $355,000 and the council
would contribute $100,000.....
See full article HERE
21 November 2015
Sanford leaves partnership with Iwi collective
New Zealand's largest fishing quota
holder, Sanford, has split from a cooperation which saw it fishing
quota belonging to companies owned by Iwi peoples.
In its recent annual report it revealed
that the Iwi Collective Partnership (ICP), representing 14 tribes and
16,000 metric tons of catch annually, had walked away from the deal
after five years of working together.
"The Iwi Collective Partnership
was an important relationship for Sanford," the company wrote.
"For the last five years we fished their deepwater catching
rights while supporting them to grow industry capability and
capacity."...
See full article HERE
Fast track tribunals threat to iwi
interests
Tamaki Makaurau MP says the interests
of Maori and the public in Auckland in protecting their physical and
cultural landscape are threatened by legislation rammed through under
urgency this week.
Amendments to the supercity legislation
include dropping the number of commissioners on environmental
hearings from three to two.
Mr Henare says the intention is to
speed up development consents, and it’s at the expense of local
input....
See full article HERE
Tuhoe social plan gets Fox backing
Maori Party co-leader Marama Fox says
Tuhoe would have the party’s support if it pursues a bid to take
over government services for its people within its rohe.
"I have no doubt they could do a
better job. Our people have always said we would rather be the
determinants of our own destiny, the managers of our people, that by
Maori for Maori has been the call for a long time including health
organisations, I applaud Tuhoe for taking that initiative," she
says....
See full article HERE
20 November 2015
Tūhoe negotiator Tamati Kruger
predicts that by 2045, Tūhoe will no longer be dependent on
government policies. This is part of the 40-year plan promised
in the Tūhoe Settlement.
Around 5000 Tūhoe who live in their
region engage in services of government agencies.
It's a statistic that Kruger hopes to
change. He says, “It's an enormous task but we believe we
will see the fruits in 40 years.”
Tūhoe wants control of their welfare,
schools, health care and housing within Te Urewera which covers
Ruatoki, Waimana, Waiohau, Ruatāhuna and Waikaremoana.
Kruger says, “There may be some Tūhoe
who don't believe we can achieve this. There may also be a generation
who has grown up and doesn't know their tribe and that the hapū have
the power.”
Kruger says it's the start of the
decolonisation of his people. “We can grow a generation who
knows the strength of their tribe that is now taking ownership of the
well-being of its people, taking it away from the Crown and the
government,” explains Kruger....
See full article HERE
Call for national day to mark land
wars
Māori
leaders are calling for a national day to commemorate New Zealand's
land wars - and say if it's good enough to pause for Anzac Day, those
killed during wars in New Zealand should be paid the same respect.
At the peak of the wars in the late
1800s, British troops - outnumbered but heavily-armed - battled Māori
including women and children, who were often just defending their pā
sites.
Waikato-Tainui spokesman Tukoroirangi
Morgan said his iwi lived with the earlier settlers quite
comfortably.
"In the Waikato itself, we had
thousands of acres of produce which our people grew, we had our own
trading ships - in fact we had 27 sailing ships that supplied the
waters between here Australia, Asia and the Americas selling produce,
flax and flour," he said.
"The commemorative day is about
changing the narrative, our understanding as a nation of our earliest
history when our people were murdered by the colonials and our lands
were taken."
"We need to start embracing our
New Zealand history as a whole, warts and all. It will be a great
opportunity to bring people together and I'd love to lead that in
Parliament," she said.
Mr Morgan said Māori leaders would
push ahead with the idea, and try and find a date of significance for
all Māori....
See full article HERE
The trial of three Northlanders charged
with failing to pay more than $800,000 in taxes had to be adjourned
yet again after one of the defendants collapsed outside the
courtroom.
All five traded under the name Nga Uri
o Tupoto which, according to the Inland Revenue Department, received
just over $3.6 million in its bank account during the period they
allegedly did not pay their taxes. The five had, in earlier court
appearances, challenged the district court's jurisdiction to hear
their case and claimed they have been acquitted of wrongdoing by the
Ngai Tupoto Native Council in Hokianga. The council's mana superseded
that of a court of law.....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
19 November 2015
Tuhoe: Let us run schools, healthcare, welfare, housing
One of New Zealand's most famous Maori
tribes, Tuhoe, is negotiating to take over social services for its
people in an ambitious bid to end welfare "dependency".
The iwi wants to take over welfare
payments, schools, healthcare and housing within its Urewera tribal
area from Whakatane south to Lake Waikaremoana.
Mr Kruger said Tuhoe had put a
proposition to the Government to make better use of the $55 million a
year that taxpayers spend on welfare benefits for 4934 Maori
beneficiaries around the Tuhoe tribal area.
At the last Census, the tribe had
35,000 members.
Consultants have told the Government
that Maori who received benefits in Tuhoe's area in 2012-13 would
cost it $735.4 million in their lifetimes under current policies.
The tribe employs 36 of the 40
Conservation Department staff who formerly worked in the old Urewera
National Park.
The iwi has set up its own doctors'
clinic in Taneatua, without state funding. More than 500 of its 884
enrolled patients were not previously enrolled at any clinic in the
Bay of Plenty.
Tuhoe is now negotiating with the
Education Ministry to share control of the 15 schools in its area and
use them as hubs to develop health services, skills training and
jobs.
A spokeswoman for Treaty Negotiations
Minister Chris Finlayson said officials were "working with Tuhoe
representatives on the practical implementation of these aspirations
... Research has been undertaken to assist in the development of
potential initiatives.".....
See full article HERE
A further
article > Tuhoe takes its own path
Treaty settlement refreshes Auckland
place names
In the bill's first reading, Minister
for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations Christopher Finlayson
acknowledged mana whenua and the importance of Maori place names.
"The historical place names that
are still shared in traditional Maori schools of learning are finally
coming to the light of public knowledge," Finlayson said.
Changes also include the addition of
the Maori name Te Toka-Tapu-a-Kupe to Ninepin Rock at the mouth
of the Manukau Harbour.
Te Atatu MP Phil Twyford confirmed
the name changes in Parliament as many affected geographical points
in his electorate.In the bill's first reading, Twyford called the
Maori names "an important daily reminder of Te Kawerau a Maki's
mana whenua and as guardians of our place", New or changed
geographic names:
Karangahape Peninsula - previously
unnamed
Te Ihu-a-Mataoho Beach - previously
unnamed
Te Onekiritea Point - previously
unnamed
Kauri Point Birkenhead / Te
Mata-rae-o-Mana - previous Kauri Point
Manutewhau Creek - previously Lawsons
Creek and Manutewhau Stream
Motumanawa / Pollen Island - previously
Pollen Island
Ngongetepara Creek -
previously Ngongetepara Stream
Paratahi Island - previously Panatahi
Island
Tahingamanu Bay - previously Bomb Bay
Tahoro / Union Bay - previously Union
Bay
Te Ka-a-Maki / Jackie Hill - previously
Jackie Hill
Te Rau-o-te-Huia / Mount Donald McLean
- previously Mount Donald McLean
Te Toka-Tapu-a-Kupe / Ninepin Rock -
previous Ninepin Rock
Te Unuhanga-a-Rangitoto / Mercer Bay
- previously Mercer Bay
Te Wai-o-Pareira / Henderson Creek -
previously Henderson Creek
Wai-o-Parekura Stream - previously Te
Aute Stream
Watchman Island / Te Kakawhakaara -
previously Watchman Island
See full article HERE
Mayor unhappy with committee
confusion
Auckland Mayor Len Brown sees a council
committee’s recommendation on Maori heritage sites as a step
backwards, and he wants the full council to make a better show of the
question.
The Auckland Development Committee last
week attempted to shrink a list of 3600 places of value to tangata
whenua on private land where a cultural assessment is needed before
any development.
Mr Brown says the debate was untidy,
and he has since asked councilors to reflect on the city’s history
and their obligations under the Treaty of Waitangi.
"The history of Tamaki Makaurau
goes back 900 years. It is critical for us to embrace all tat
history, the archaeology of the land, the cultural and historical
significance of some of those old residential sites and to embrace
those as strongly as we do some of those sites that are 100 years old
in Auckland," he says.....
See full article HERE
18 November 2015
Ngaruahine settlement legislation heads to select committee
Another to lodge its opposition is
Democracy Action, a not-for-profit group which advocates for equal
citizenship.
Founder Lee Short said it had
particular concerns about the clause in the legislation which would
see Ngaruahine, along with representatives from two other iwi groups
Te Atiawa and Taranaki, given representation on Taranaki Regional
Council committees.
Short said this intention bypassed the
rights of ratepayers to choose the people they want to represent
them, as the iwi representatives would not be elected but appointed
instead....
See full article HERE
Ngati
Whatua Orakei Whai Rawa turned around from a loss last year of
$304,773 to $2.2 million profit in the latest period.
Accounts out for the year to June 30
show that although revenue was relatively static, pre-tax
pre-revaluation profit dropped from $5.5 million last year to $2.7
million this year but total net assets rose from $390 million to $458
million....
See full article HERE
Three partnership schools proposed
for Hamilton
Te reo Maori is a focus for three
groups who want to set up partnership schools in the Waikato.
Te Kohao Health and Whakawatea
Kaporeihana are making their third bids, while Kia Ata Mai
Educational Trust is trying for the first time.....
See full article HERE
Māori doctors want answers over TPP
It
is not too late to take a stand against the Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP), Māori doctors say.
The government had said Māori rights
would be protected under the TPP signed in September, but many Māori
doctors and medical students were not convinced.
He said the other main concern was
bigger than health but encompassed health - and that was the Treaty
of Waitangi.
"To be able to keep the Treaty of
Waitangi to the fore of documents like this."....
See full article HERE
Māori war veterans still seeking
justice
Eric Albert says, "In Matauri
Bay, 27 Māori from that area went to war. One got a returned
serviceman’s farm and then conscientious objectors tauiwi got the
returned serviceman’s farms and it’s those anomalies that I'm
disappointed with the government and with successive governments."
It’s alleged that Government made
serious transgressions against the Treaty rights of Māori in the
armed forces while they were in action overseas.
Pita Tipene says, "The soldiers
knew they were fighting for King and Country, but while in action
overseas their own lands at home were being swindled."
"Some returned from war to find
their lands had be sold or given to non-Māori soldiers while in
comparison Māori soldiers received next to nothing, so we're probing
these issues," Tipene added....
See full article HERE
‘H’ to be added to Wanganui
District name
The spelling of Wanganui District will
be corrected to ‘Whanganui District’ – reflecting the views of
the Wanganui District Council (WDC), local iwi and public submitters,
Land Information Minister Louise Upston said today.
“Having reviewed the WDC’s
proposal, all public submissions and other materials I’ve agreed
that the spelling of the local authority district name should be
corrected,” Ms Upston says.
“The Governor-General has now made an
Order in Council to change the local authority name under the Local
Government Act 2002 so that the change to the district name can
occur.”
The move to amend the district name is
supported by local and neighbouring iwi, and the Minister’s
decision confirms the New Zealand Geographic Board Ngā Pou Taunaha o
Aotearoa’s recommendation.
“This decision recognises that
‘Wanganui’ has no meaning in te reo Māori, and that ‘Whanganui’
has a number of traditions in Māori oral history. It will also
ensure the district name is consistent with the official names of the
river and town.....
See full article HERE
Concerns of community to be heard at
Fletchers AGM
SOUL members will make their presence
felt outside the entry to the Sky City Convention Centre, where
Fletcher Building is holding its AGM from 10:00 am this Tuesday 17
November.
The peaceful and highly-visible
presence of SOUL outside the Fletcher Building AGM has only one
purpose: to encourage Fletchers not to build 500 houses on one of New
Zealand’s most significant landscapes and to protect Ihumātao and
the Ōtuataua Stonefields for future generations.
The local iwi have also been treated
unfairly with regards to the proposed development land. It was
confiscated in 1863 in the land wars and shortly afterwards gifted by
The Crown to its current owners.
SOUL insists that the spiritual and
heritage values of this particular land at Ihumātao, which includes
wāhi tapu burial caves and the sacred maunga Te Puketaapapatanga a
Hape/Pukeiti, need not be destroyed to meet the city’s housing
shortfall....
See full article HERE
Maori war
veterans and their whanau were called to Northland to talk about
mistreatment they faced when they came home from war in preparation
for a Waitangi Tribunal hearing.
Some veterans were not allowed into the
RSA and some returned to find their family land had been taken, said
Northland war veteran Hirini Henare.
Mr Henare said Maori who went to war
also had to deal with returning home to find their land had been
taken by the Government.
"When I came back it was all
gone," he said. Mr Henare said yesterday's hui was open to both
Maori and non-Maori veterans and their families, as they fought
together in war and both suffered returning home.....
See full article HERE
Leading Maori join Superdiversity
Council
Ngai Tahu elder Sir Tipene O’Regan,
Waikato Tainui chief executive Parekawhia McLean and Atihau Whanganui
Incorporation chair Mavis Mullins are among the high flyers on the
board of the new Superdiversity Leadership Council.
Superdiversity Centre chair Mai Chen
says the 12 members embody the future face of business leadership in
ethnically superdiverse New Zealand.
The council is expected to guide the
work of the Superdiversity Centre and serve as a forum through which
members can provide leadership on ethnic superdiversity issues.
Other members include real estate
innovator Mike Pero, insurance industry veteran Naomi Ballantyne,
professional directors Mark Tume and Graeme Wong, New Zealand
Superannuation Fund chief executive Adrian Orr, China Travel Service
cief executive Lisa Li, Bank of India founding director Tarun Kanji,
technology entrepreneur Mitchell Pham, and Pacifica national
president Caren Rangi....
See full article HERE
17 November 2015
Corporate iwi get rich at your
expense
....In other words, corporate iwi, with
their traditional focus on privatising public property under the
guise of putting right Treaty wrongs – and their new focus on
claiming the indigenous rights promised by the government’s newly
signed United Nations Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
– are driving the agenda of the Maori Party and the National Party.
That means that all public property is under attack from these
powerful iwi corporations – and the government is opening the gate
to their advances.
A number of Iwi Leaders Groups operate
under the auspices of the Iwi Chairs Forum with well organised and
resourced strategies aimed at extending iwi power and control. A
prime target is the ownership and control of freshwater, with claims
on behalf of several iwi having already been lodged with the Waitangi
Tribunal. In addition, special iwi rights and privileges are being
pushed at a series of Freshwater Forums that are presently being held
to develop a national freshwater strategy. In addition, advances
have been made regarding Public Private Partnerships, where plans to
build schools and bid on State Owned Enterprises are already in the
pipeline. Whnau Ora is expected to provide a wide range of lucrative
opportunities for iwi to contract out service provision in social
areas including Housing and Corrections....
Read Dr Muriel Newman's full article
HERE
March 14, 2011 Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
16 November 2015
After
almost 60 years of local authority ownership Taniwha Springs will be
returned to Te Arawa hapu Ngati Rangiwewehi.
The springs were taken without
negotiation under the Public Works Act in 1966 for public water
purposes and were vested in the then Rotorua County Council. In
August this year Rotorua councillors voted unanimously to return
ownership of Taniwha Springs to hapu.
The springs feeding the Awahou Stream
are considered by Ngati Rangiwewehi to be a life source and are the
home of the taniwha Pekehaua, stories of whom are central to the
iwi's traditions and identity.
The return of the springs is subject to
an easement which will allow council to continue taking water until
the current resource consent expires in 2018.
The council and Ngati Rangiwewehi –
who earlier this year signed a Memorandum of Understanding setting
out a protocol for collaboration – are now working together to
assess the possibility of continuing to use the springs as a water
supply, in a way that aligns with cultural and spiritual values and
the aspirations of the iwi. Alternative water supply options are also
being explored.....
See full article HERE
Waahi tapu list whittled down
Tamaki Makaurau MP Peeni Henare says
yesterday’s Auckland Council decision to drop several hundred sites
off a register of sites of significance to mana whenua iwi and hapu
is a step backwards.
Officials suggested the proposed
unitary plan drop almost 1400 of the 3600 sites where a cultural
assessment was needed before development.
The Development Committee yesterday
passed a recommendation to remove the sites and places of value
overlay on private land until all sites and places have been
accurately identified and mapped.
That includes 552 sites that did not
have a confirmed location and 73 sites which were non-Maori or
duplicates, as well as 10 sites where there was uncertainty whether
the object of value was a natural or archaeological feature.
Mr Henare says the council should avoid
a monocultural approach to history.....
See full article HERE
Deed of settlement signed
The
Crown has signed a deed of settlement with Rangitane o Manawatu
settling the iwi's outstanding historical Treaty of Waitangi claims,
Minister for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations Christopher Finlayson
announced today.
Rangitane o Manawatu receives financial
redress of $13.5 million as well as the transfer of and right of
first refusal over specified Crown properties and land. Cultural
redress includes the vesting of 11 Crown-owned sites, statutory
acknowledgements and protocols with Crown agencies....
See full article HERE
No Treaty for Ak Pride yet, but it's
coming
Although the principles of the Treaty
of Waitangi have yet to be re-introduced into the Auckland Pride
Festival Inc. constitution as signaled in June the matter will be
addressed when the forthcoming 2016 Festival is over.
"The Treaty will go back into the
constitution as part of our determination to reach out and support
minorities more," she said, describing its disappearance as
being "lost in translation" between the two
organisations....
See full article HERE
Pipeline hui at Matapihi
Matapihi
land owners are meeting with city council staff over the weekend to
discuss resuming the construction of the Southern Pipeline project
across Maori land.
Garry denies the accusation made to
SunLive the council is going to be negotiating by chequebook.
“No. We don't need to take a cheque
book. We need to sort out where the pipes are going and what is the
impact of the pipes, and talk to the adjoining property owners,
etcetera,” says Garry.
Maori land owners locked their orchard
gates against the $102 million project in July, after learning the
council intended cutting 12 avocado trees from the easement of the
disputed paper road....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
15 November 2015
$75 mil for Western Springs College redevelopment
Western Springs College based in
Auckland has received the biggest cash injection given by the
government to a secondary school. The school's principal
believes this will allow them to shape their building facilities to
their academic needs.
Paraone Tai Tin, (Head of Te Reo Māori
Department, Ngā Puna o Waiorea Immersion Unit) says, “It will have
many benefits. The announcement will enable us to create better
Māori spaces and facilities.”
$75mil will be used to redevelop
Western Springs College's building facilities which stand on a former
land fill area. The Māori immersion unit, Ngā Puna o Waiōrea
based at the Ngā Oho meeting house will also be revamped.
What is unique about the school is
that it operates in accordance with the Treaty of Waitangi.....
See full article HERE
Stats show Maori unfairly treated
Ministry
of Health statistics show Maori are almost three times as likely as
non-Maori to have experienced unfair treatment on the basis of
ethnicity.
The Ministry of Health has released its
2015 Maori Health Chartbook, Tatau Kahukura, which shows 12.4 per
cent of Maori reported unfair treatment in the areas of health care,
housing or work between 2011 and 2012, compared to 4.2 per cent of
non-Maori.
The Chartbook used data from the
Ministry of Health's 2011/12 New Zealand Health Survey.....
See full article HERE
14 November 2015
Maori Party co-leader Marama Fox has
had her first bill drawn from the ballot, and she rates its chances.
The Oaths and Declarations (Endorsing
the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi) Amendment bill gives people
taking official oaths - MPs, lawyers, police, new citizens, and
others - the option to add a statement affirming their commitment to
the principles of the Treaty of the Waitangi.
"People are already required as
parts of different government roles to acknowledge different parts of
the Treaty - this is just an extension of what is already there,"
Fox said.
"It also provides a place for new
New Zealanders who would like to recognise the treaty as fundamental
to the foundations of this country the opportunity to uphold that."
The affirmant would be entirely
optional, and would consist of the phrase "I will perform my
duties in accordance with the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi"
or "E ai ki nga matapono o Te Tiriti o Waitangi ka whakatutuki
ahau i oku mahi." ......
See full article HERE
Staff rally around sacked Māori TV
receptionists
More
than 100 people have gathered to show their support for two Māori
Television receptionists who are being sacked because they can't
speak fluent Te Reo Māori.
Staff members have held a karakia at
the station's reception area, standing alongside their two
colleagues, who are both still answering the phones there.
"These are kuia who have been part
of a generation of New Zealanders and Māori who had their language
stolen from them so they're been unfairly prejudiced against,
something that has happened to all Māori," said Ms Fox....
See full article HERE
Less than
two years after an NZQA review praised it for achieving "excellent
educational outcomes" and "consistently exceeding
expectations", a Rotorua-based performing arts college has been
stripped of its registration and ordered to repay $2.6 million in
taxpayer funding it wasn't entitled to.
Manaakitanga Aotearoa Charitable Trust
(MACT) - a private training establishment that offers courses in
Maori performing arts - delivered less than half of the teaching
hours for which it was funded in 2013/14 and significantly
over-reported student achievement, investigations by forensic
accountants Deloitte and NZQA found....
See full article HERE
Shotover Jet golden investment for
iwi
A Shotover Jet executive says ownership
by Ngai Tahu has been a win for both the company and the iwi.
The iconic tourism company is
celebrating 50 years since brothers Harold and Alan Melhop and Herm
Palmer first started taking commercial sightseers up Queenstown's
Shotover River in a Hamilton Jet 30 boat.
"Over that time the tribe has
owned Shotover Jet, it's been the linchpin to their whole tourism
portfolio and it's a really good brand to bring out wherever you are
in the world it ignites. You can open a lot of doors with the
Shotover Jet to let all your other products go through," he
says...
See full article HERE
Ancient settlement uncovered at
overpass roadworks in Normanby
A major road project has once again
uncovered an archaeological site in Taranaki.
A pa or marae have been found during
earthworks on the Normanby overpass realignment project north of
Hawera.
The find has not stopped work on the
whole realignment project but no construction is taking place around
the archaeological site.
"All parties are working through
the processes required for that to happen," she said. "This
can be a little time consuming."...
See full article HERE
13 November 2015
Auckland Council has removed around 600
sites from its long list of places of value to Maori, but has fallen
short of removing the 1300 originally proposed.
The list of 3600 locations around the
region registered as holding value for Mana Whenua has been
controversial, with landowners forced to apply for resource consent
to do anything within 50 metres of the sites.
Officials advised the council that it
should remove 1373 sites from Auckland's proposed unitary plan,
because they were either duplicates, not of Maori origin, not of
value to mana whenua or without an accurate location.
Even Maori groups had said the current
mana whenua process was too heavy-handed.
Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei Trust said the
process of Cultural Impact Assessments needed to be made clear for
property owners and iwi. In some cases up to 15 iwi had to be
consulted before work could be carried out near Mana Whenua sites.
"This is not right, in both a
planning and tikanga Māori sense. The relevant iwi to be consulted
in each part of Tāmaki Makaurau needs to be clearly identified,"
a Trust spokesman said.
Democracy Action Group chairman Lee
Short said the group was calling for all of the 3600 sites to be
removed until they had been verified.
Tthe way the council went about
verifying sites was not up to par, he said.
"I think that the council has
shown incompetence in this area."...
See full article HERE
Māori TV in Breach of Treaty Over
Firing Receptionists
Māori Television’s decision to fire
two receptionists for not speaking te reo is a violation of the
Treaty of Waitangi, says New Zealand First.
“To be fired for not speaking te reo
fluently when no other staff face the same language requirements is
unequal treatment and a clear abuse of the principles of the Treaty,”
says Spokesperson for Māori Affairs and Treaty of Waitangi Issues
Pita Paraone,
“Encouraging all staff to be
bilingual is an admirable goal but not at the expense of the rights
of all New Zealanders to equal treatment - no matter their te reo
fluency.....
See full article HERE
Taniwha tax an essential protection
Tamaki Makaurau MP Peeni Henare is
concerned at any moves by the Auckland council to reduce protection
of Maori heritage sites.
The council is moving to purge a list
of 3600 sites where a cultural assessment is needed from iwi before
development is approved.
Auckland Mayor Len Brown says it’s
being done after consultation with iwi, and is tidying up lists
inherited from the previous councils.
Mr Henare says he hopes the council is
not influenced by critics who call the protection mechanism a taniwha
tax.
"It’s not just about taniwha or
deity, it's about the impact on the environment which many of our iwi
and hapu are kaitiaki for, and it's important they get the cultural
buy in and the cultural agreement when they do these developments and
I think it's really flagging the intention of not only this
Government but local government in just forcing through housing
developments and I don't think that's a good move," he says.....
See full article HERE
A claim alleging the Crown has
failed to do enough to reduce the number of Maori in prison will be
heard next year by the Waitangi Tribunal.
The Waitangi Tribunal will hear with
urgency a claim alleging the Crown has failed to do enough to reduce
the number of Maori in prison and slash high reoffending rates.
Retired probation officer Tom Hemopo is
taking the claim on behalf of himself and his iwi.
"I asked the tribunal to consider
this claim urgently because too many Maori are suffering right now
while the Crown ignores its failure to reduce the numbers of Maori in
prison and reoffending on release.....
See full article HERE
Hui tomorrow on Maori digital
The hui is a result of a Budget 2014
announcement that the Government would allocate $30 million to
support Maori economic development by encouraging Maori participation
in the ICT sector and accessing Maori language and culture through
ICT and digital literacy initiatives.
Gisborne has now become one of four
places nationwide to shape how the Government will spend its $30
million Maori ICT Development Fund....
See full article HERE
Funding for Lake Horowhenua clean-up
The Government is to provide $980,000
in funding from the Te Mana o Te Wai Fund to restore the health of
Lake Horowhenua, Environment Minister Dr Nick Smith and Maori Party
co-leader Marama Fox announced today.
“The Government is committed to
turning around the poor water quality of Lake Horowhenua. This
funding will go towards a $1.2 million project that will involve a
scientific assessment of the lakebed sedimentation and native fish
populations, community planting days, an education programme,
development of a plant nursery, completion of stormwater treatment
upgrades and the repairing of fish barriers,” Dr Smith says.
“The balance of the funding for the
project will come from Horizons Regional Council and Horowhenua
District Council, with support from the Department of Conservation
and the Lake Domain Board. This joint commitment to restoring the
health of Lake Horowhenua will complement the Lake Accord restoration
work currently underway.”
“The Government believes iwi and hapū
have an important role to play as active partners in improving our
country’s freshwater, and that partnership and collaboration is key
in ensuring positive and lasting gains,” Dr Smith says...
See full article HERE
Former National MP Tau Henare has
picked up a Government-appointed job at Housing New Zealand.
The former Maori Affairs Minister would
join the corporation's board of directors, it was confirmed this
morning.
Housing New Zealand Minister Bill
English said Mr Henare would bring a community-based perspective to
the board.
"His understanding of iwi, hapu,
and whanau dynamics will be of particular value," Mr English
said....
See full article HERE
Ngapuhi elder Sonny Tau has pleaded
guilty to a charge of hunting a protected bird.
It comes after he had earlier admitted
possession of five Kereru.
He was today convicted in the Auckland
District Court on both charges.
A new charge, of conspiring to
perverting the course of justice, was also brought by the police....
See full article HERE
Onehunga foreshore set to open
The Onehunga foreshore is set to open
on Saturday morning after years of work on the $30 million
development.
The reserve will be opened by the local
board, Auckland Mayor Len Brown and the New Zealand Transport Agency
at 11am with a ceremony from Mana Whenua.
Mana Whenua, who have had an ongoing
interest in the governance and management of the park, will reveal a
new name for the foreshore, and Māori artworks such as carving and
bridge panelling....
See full article HERE
New fellowship awarded to top Maori
health researchers: Dr Leonie Pihama Dr Mihi Ratima
Two of New Zealand’s leading Māori
health researchers have been awarded the inaugural Ngā Pou Senior
Fellowship worth $300,000 each from the Health Research Council of
New Zealand (HRC).
Fellowship recipients Dr Leonie Pihama
(Te Ātiawa, Ngā Māhanga a Tairi, Ngāti Māhanga), Director of the
Te Kotahi Research Institute at the University of Waikato, and Dr
Mihi Ratima (Whakatōhea, Ngāti Awa) from Te Pou Tiringa
Incorporated in New Plymouth, both have 20-plus years’ experience
in Māori health research.
“Indigenous research highlights
emotional well-being as essential to well-being and healthy
relationships. As high levels of family violence are experienced
within our communities, research on cultural expressions of emotions
provides much needed baseline knowledge for those working to
transform those experiences,” says Dr Pihama.
“Both researchers have clearly
demonstrated a commitment to kaupapa Māori and its important
contribution to the health and well-being of whānau, hapū, and iwi.
Their programmes will build a knowledge base that will have a
significant influence on health and social service delivery to
Māori,” says Ms Wehipeihana....
See full article HERE
12 November 2015
Auckland Council is moving to cut red
tape around developments near culturally protected areas, but local
Maori warn there could be repercussions.
There are 3600 Sites of Value to Mana
Whenua in the unitary plan, and the council wants to get rid of 1373
of them.
Work within 50m of the sites needs
resource consent, and potentially consultation with local iwi.
The council said cutting the number of
sites was urgently needed to ease the burden of resource consent on
landowners and developers.
Independent Maori Statutory Board chair
David Taipari said it could cause future planning problems instead.
In making the recommendation, the
council said its own audit had found the 1373 sites were duplicates,
at an unconfirmed location or had not been assigned value by Mana
Whenua......
See full article HERE
150 years of the Māori Land Court
recognised
Māori Development Minister Te Ururoa
Flavell and Justice and Courts Minister Amy Adams have marked 150
years of Te Kooti Whenua Māori, the Māori Land Court.
Established in 1865 as the Native Land
Court, the name was later changed in 1947 under the Māori Purposes
Act 1947. It was set up to translate customary Māori land claims
into legal land titles recognisable under English Law.
Minister Adams says "The Māori
Land Court is New Zealand’s oldest and longest established
specialist court. It holds a special place in New Zealand and is one
of a few courts of its kind in the world so it’s important we
recognise this significant milestone."
She adds that the Māori Land Court has
played an important role in New Zealand's justice system.
“Around five per cent of all land in
New Zealand is Maori freehold land which is about 1.42 million
hectares – thirteen times the size of Auckland. On average, the
Court processes around 3000 ownership applications a year which is a
significant amount of work.”.....
See full article HERE
Speaking out against dodgy Auckland
Council and their Maori pandering
David Rankin speaks out against the
council’s mana whenua sites policies:
Aucklander and Ngapuhi cultural expert,
David Rankin, who will be standing for the Auckland Council in 2016
election, has lashed out at the latest Council moves affecting ‘sites
of cultural value’ in the city.
Mr Rankin says that the Council’s
recent decision to remove 1373 locations from the list of supposedly
culturally significant sites shows that the process has been what he
describes as “a farce from the outset”.....
See full article HERE
11 November 2015
Māori Development Minister Te Ururoa
Flavell has announced New Zealand Trade and Enterprise is committing
an extra $1.6 million to support Māori businesses wanting to grow
internationally.
As a result of NZTE’s increased
commitment, five new positions dedicated to Māori business will be
created across the NZTE network over the next 6-12 months, increasing
the number of New Zealand based customer managers from three to five
and creating a new Business Development Manager in China focused on
growing Māori businesses.
“Māori economic development is a key
theme of the Government’s Growth Agenda which will help boost the
Māori economy that is valued at over $40 billion,” he says....
See full article HERE
Hirschfeld challenged on Maori
bulletin cuts
Radio New Zealand’s head of content
has rejected any suggestion the public broadcaster is cutting down on
reporting of Maori issues.
Carol Hirschfeld went head to head
today on Radio Waatea’s Paakiwaha programme with host Willie
Jackson, who chairs Maori radio umbrella group Whakaruruhau.
Mr Jackson said Radio New Zealand
traditionally has not reflected the Maori perspective well.
Ms Hirschfeld said she is also looking
at ways to make Maori content more accessible on the Radio New
Zealand website, and to create more opportunities for Maori
staff......
See full article HERE
Too little to avoid liability, but
enough to delay Court action?
We have advised a public
spirited group called Democracy Action on the unlawfulness of
Auckland Council’s ‘Mana Whenua’ provisions.
We have lately been investigating the prospects for a class action against the Council. In our opinion there are strong grounds for liability, but so far there may not have been enough evidence of realised loss to justify the costs of action. Today’s Herald reports that the Council will shortly vote on a proposal to remove 1,373 of the 3,600 ‘sites of significance’:
That removal could delay the time when it would be economic to launch a class action.....
We have lately been investigating the prospects for a class action against the Council. In our opinion there are strong grounds for liability, but so far there may not have been enough evidence of realised loss to justify the costs of action. Today’s Herald reports that the Council will shortly vote on a proposal to remove 1,373 of the 3,600 ‘sites of significance’:
That removal could delay the time when it would be economic to launch a class action.....
See full article
HERE
Union leader calls for AFFCO boycott
The Vice-President Māori of the New
Zealand Council of Trade Unions (CTU) is asking iwi farming
corporations and other Māori farmers to consider withholding stock
from AFFCO meat processing plants until the company returns to
bargaining and settles a collective agreement with the Meat Workers’
Union.
“The lockout is causing immense
hardship for many Māori, their whānau and their communities. People
have the right to earn enough to cover the rent, pay the power bill
and put food on the table.”
“As an act of solidarity and
manaakitanga I’m asking iwi farming corporations and all other
Māori farmers to consider withholding stock from AFFCO plants until
the company agrees to treat the workers with dignity and respect and
returns to the bargaining table,” says Keepa....
See full article HERE
10 November 2015
Maori Television is reportedly making
two staff members redundant after changing the scope of their roles
to include Te Reo fluency.
According to reports, the move was one
based on a "structural change in the organisation".
"The Finance and Administration
team are undergoing some structural changes," said
Simmons-Donaldson. "Part of this change will see a requirement
for the two receptionist roles, which are one of our most important
public-facing positions, to be fluent in both te reo Maori and
English."
When asked if further staff changes
were to be expected, Simmons-Donaldson said the current changes
underway were "a reflection of Māori Television's commitment to
increasing the status and visibility of te reo Maori"....
See full article HERE
Iwi eyes council freeloaders
The Auckland Council is in the sights
of Ngai Tai ki Tamaki now the iwi has settled its historic claims
with the crown.
The deed of settlement signed by Treaty
Negotiations Minister Christopher Finlayson at Umupuia Marae on
Saturday gives the iwi 16 sites of cultural redress, including
reserves on several Hauraki Gulf Islands and Hunua Falls, as well as
almost $13 million in commercial redress.
Negotiator James Brown says it was a
long fight for the iwi to achieve recognition, and the battle
continues.
The former Auckland Independent Maori
Statutory Board member says the council can’t prove it owns Hunua.
"Now those sites today are the
home and the economies of the ilk of folk like Watercare. So Saturday
was to reconcile our issues we have with the crown but effective as
of business this morning we are now after Len Brown and his mates
about the stolen property that they continue to live on and profit
from" says James Brown from Ngai Tai ki Tamaki....
See article HERE
Auckland
Council looks set to reduce the number of sites requiring owners to
seek iwi approval for work on their land.
Councillors will vote on Thursday to
remove 1373 of the 3600 sites of value from the proposed Unitary
Plan, or new planning rulebook for the Super City.
The requirement to obtain a "cultural
impact assessment" has been controversial, with an organisation,
Democracy Action, formed last year to oppose the new rule.
Property magnate Sir Bob Jones slammed
the rule after his company had to contact 13 iwi before it could
remove an 11m concrete block wall and a window and replace it with a
glass frontage for a ground-floor restaurant.
One iwi, Ngai Tai Ki Tamaki, said
permission was not required for the work, but asked Robt Jones
Holdings to consider it because their ancestors, centuries ago,
gathered in the vicinity in the area, Sir Bob said.
A report for Thursday's Auckland
development committee said a desktop archaeology data audit and an
assessment by mana whenua found that 1373 sites of value had
insufficient information to support their retention.
The report said there was some urgency
on council's part to consider removing the sites from the proposed
Unitary Plan given the rules came into effect in September 2013.
Democracy Action spokesman Lee Short
said the 3600 sites of value had not gone through a rigid process,
nor did they have the support of the Archaeological Association.
He welcomed the recommendation by
officers to remove 1373 sites, but said more work was needed to
assess the remaining 2227 sites....
See article HERE
Maori returning to collective land
management
More
and more whanau are trying to fix the inequities of Maori land
ownership by creating collectives to manage it, Waitangi Tribunal
claimant Piripi Moore says.
The Tribunal has heard that Ngapuhi
women who held land were sidelined in favour of their husbands when
the Crown first issued titles to Maori land in the 1860s.
It's the first time the issue has been
raised in the Tribunal's long-running inquiry into the historic
grievances of Ngapuhi and other northern iwi.
Mr Moore, a Hokianga claimant, said
junior branches of whanau and people who did not make it to the land
court hearings also missed out on being named as shareholders.
However, he said court archives
contained a lot information about those people, making it possible to
include their descendants in new structures that would reflect the
original customary interests.
The Crown system of creating individual
shares in Maori land had made the process dysfunctional for
generations, but Mr Moore said the proposed review of Te Ture Whenua
Act might make it easier.....
See full article HERE
Significant changes made to draft Te
Ture Whenua Māori Bill
Māori Development Minister Te Ururoa
Flavell says changes made to the draft Te Ture Whenua Māori Bill are
a result of extensive consultation with Māori land owners and
affected stakeholders.
Cabinet signed off on a number of
changes to the draft Bill today which will make it easier for Māori
land owners to better utilise their land while protecting the
retention of Māori land in Māori ownership
The key changes to the draft Bill are:
* The managing kaiwhakarite proposal
has been removed;
* The purpose and principles sections
have been revised to more clearly reflect features of the preamble of
Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993;
* Whānau will have the option for
individuals to obtain succession to land instead of having to form a
whānau trust on intestate succession;
* The Māori Land Court will be given
greater discretion when considering applications to remove the status
of Māori freehold land...
See full article HERE
Maori workforce boosting
conservation effort
It’s also the 25th anniversary of Nga
Whenua Rahui, a scheme to help Maori owners protect land with high
conservation values and keep it pest free.
Joe Harawira, DOC’s kaihautu or
manager of strategic partnerships, says the value of the work can be
seen in places like Motatau Forest in Northland, which is now largely
predator free because of a collaboration with its Ngati Hine owners.
He says about 15 percent of DOC’s
workforce is now Maori, and there are also opportunities in Nga
Whenua Rahui
"The Nga Whenua Rahui kaupapa have
their own set of Maori rangers that they are training up in all
fields of biodiversity and conservation, they're the ringa raupa, I
suppose that go out onto the Maori land rather than the DOC
administered land to support those Maori land owners," says Joe
Harawira....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
9 November 2015
Iwi to receive nearly $13m in Treaty settlement
An
Auckland iwi will receive close to $13 million from the Crown as part
of a Treaty settlement.
The Crown has signed a deed of
settlement with Ngai Tai ki Tamaki at Umupuia Marae today.
Mr Finlayson said Ngai Tai ki Tamaki
was being given a Crown apology, financial redress of $12.7 million
and cultural redress of $50,000 together with the vesting of 16
properties of cultural and historical significance.
He said the iwi would also get two
commercial properties and joint ownership of another.
See full article HERE
Principal helps kura get back its
mana
Minister of Education Hekia Parata said
kuras were whanau-focused and were an important part of Maori
education.
''It is clear to me that when children
and young people are in an environment that helps them be confident
in their identity, language and culture, they have a much better
chance of success. For many Maori [children], that environment is a
kura.''...
See full article HERE
'Ghost' drives students out of
private girls' school
Two boarders at the troubled Turakina
Maori Girls' College have left the school saying they have been
threatened by a resident ghost.
Parents of the girls are angry that the
Rangitikei school - which faces closure by Education Minister Hekia
Parata - has accused them of exaggerating or fabricating the ghost
story.
The ghost, or kehua, is said to take
the shape of a man in a black cape and hat and has been seen in the
boarders' hostel.
"The site needs to be blessed and
it also needs consistent follow-up to ensure the girls are kept
spiritually safe."
Asked about the kehua, Parata said:
"Students' cultural values are important. How schools
acknowledge them is a matter for schools and parents." ....
See full article HERE
8 November 2015
THE signing of a historic Joint
Management Agreement (JMA) between Gisborne District Council and Te
Runanganui o Ngati Porou took place at Tikapa Marae today.
“Ngati Porou have always sought an
active role in the management of natural resources within their
rohe,” said Mr Foon.
“With this agreement and effective
implementation of it, that’s a reality now.”
The JMA is the first of its kind in New
Zealand. It is the first use of section 36B of the Resource
Management Act 1991, giving regional councils the ability to jointly
manage natural resources with an iwi authority.
The JMA includes all land and water
resources within or affecting the Waiapu catchment.
“We are privileged to now be able to
jointly share the functions, powers and duties under the RMA with
Ngati Porou as kaitiaki of the Waiapu,” the Mayor said.
A Waiapu catchment plan for managing
freshwater will be co-developed under this agreement. A copy of the
signed Joint Management Agreement will be available on the council’s
website from Wednesday.....
See full article HERE
Ministry of Education rejects zone
redraft
Another concern around suitability came
from the ERO reports of the three alternate schools and the strong
emphasis on te reo Maori, which they said may not be a good fit for
non-Maori children.
“Tikanga Maori is great, we need that
in a community like Gisborne,” said a parent.
“It is not that I do not want that
for my child. Exposure is good. But in terms of it being in context
for my children’s overall educational needs, I have to do what is
right for my family.”....
See full article HERE
Maori economy 'big driver'
The
Maori economy will be a big driver of work changes and must be in a
strong position to reap the benefits of new opportunities, says
Labour's Chair of the Future of Work Commission Grant Robertson.
Grant
and Maori Development spokesperson Nanaia Mahuta today released three
papers written by independent experts on the Maori Economy,
Waikato-Tainui's skill development partnerships and a South Auckland
case study, as part of the Future of Work programme.
“The Maori economy is now worth $39
billion. It has a young workforce and a long-term inter-generational
approach. Access to Treaty settlements capital puts Maori in an
excellent position to benefit from the changes to the workforce over
coming years,” says Grant....
See full article HERE
6 November 2015
Mark Parihaka Day not Guy Fawkes,
say Maori Party
The
Maori Party has renewed its call for 5 November to be recognised as
Parihaka Day to commemorate the sacking of the pacifist settlement in
Taranaki by government troops and militia in 1881.
Caritas, the Catholic Church's agency
for justice, peace and development has also been exploring the idea
of Parihaka Day with the settlement.
"We know that plenty of people in
our community will be remembering the invasion of Parihaka on the
fifth of November. We support the commemoration of this day as an
example of a Maori community that led the way in non-violent
resistance and continues to represent efforts at reconciliation
between Maori and pakeha."....
See full article HERE
New Zealand's Maori-owned seafood
companies are looking for more collaboration with Chinese partners to
enter the Chinese market, Maori Development Minister Te Ururoa
Flavell said Wednesday.....
See full article HERE
Maori Party Silent on Māori
Broadcasting Issues
The Māori Party as a partner in
government is doing nothing to protect Māori broadcasting and they
are failing the Māori language, says New Zealand First.
“The Māori Party boasts about being
at the table of government yet funding for Māori broadcasting has
been frozen for seven years, working conditions for Māori in the
broadcasting industry have worsened significantly, and last month
Radio New Zealand announced it was getting rid of dedicated Māori
content.
“With the number of speakers of te
reo continuing to decline it is time for Māori to ask some hard
questions about who in Parliament really supports Māori language,”
says Mr Paraone....
See full article HERE
5 November 2015
Council Maori advisory wrangle costs Auckland ratepayers $110k
Legal action over the selection of
Maori advisers to Auckland Council has cost the city's ratepayers
$110,000.
The wrangle over how representatives to
Auckland's Independent Maori Statutory Board (IMSB) are appointed
went to the High Court and then the Court of Appeal, racking up a
legal bill of $93,000 plus costs.
Mayor Len Brown said Aucklanders had no
choice but to fund the court action, as the council was legally
obliged to meet the cost of selecting IMSB members.
The IMSB was set up in 2010 to advise
the newly merged Auckland Council on issues affecting Maori after the
government rejected the idea of separate Maori seats.
The nine-member board is appointed by a
selection panel chosen by iwi groups.
The costs would have been higher but
law firm Buddle Findlay represented the selection body at the High
Court on a pro bono (free) basis.....
See full article HERE
Future for reo in core government
funding
The new chief executive of the Maori
Language Commission wants to see te reo Maori made a core subject in
primary school.
"Should Maori be a core subject in
primary schools? If I had the opportunity to promote that I believe
it could have a bigger impact on te reo Maori than any other thing we
could do with the $7.3 million we have for community funding,"
Mr Apanui says.
He’s also looking to build
partnerships with the private sector to promote Maori language
initiatives....
See full article HERE
The son of late Te Arawa leader
Mauriora Kingi has been voted onto the Te Arawa Partnership Board,
which will work alongside the Rotorua Lakes Council.
The results of the election were
announced yesterday, revealing the 14 people who will make up the
board......
See full article HERE
$1 million marae upgrade programme
for Te Matatini launched in Hastings
More than $1million will be spent
upgrading 16 marae in Hastings to ensure they are ready for when the
region hosts the 2017 Te Matatini kapa haka festival in 18 months'
time.
Funding for the project has come from
marae ($244,000 collectively), Hastings District Council ($325,000)
and the Hawke’s Bay Funders’ Forum, ($591,000). Members of the
funders' forum are Eastern & Central Community Trust, Lottery
Grants Board, Flaxmere Licensing Trust, Endeavour Community
Foundation, Hastings District Council, and Hawke’s Bay
Foundation....
See full article HERE
Auckland a priority for reo efforts
The new chief executive of Te Taura
Whiri would like to see more resources for Maori language
regeneration going into Auckland.
Ngahiwi Apanui says a lot of the funds
for community projects have gone to iwi around the regions.
Auckland, which is the largest centre
of Maori population, seems to have missed out.....
See full article HERE
Trust wants Waipiro Bay school
returned
WAIPIRO Bay Whanau Charitable Trust and
Te Runanganui o Ngati Porou are working together to have the land and
four classes of their former school returned to the community.
The trust believes the land was given
to the Government for educational purposes and now wants the property
returned at no charge.....
See full article HERE
Ngati Whatua assets up 22 percent in
year
Galloping Auckland property values
have boosted the wealth of the city’s mana whenua iwi, with Ngati
Whatua Orakei Trust reporting a 22 percent increase in the value of
its assets to $767 million.....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
4 November 2015
Calls for a Maori community board to be
set up have been quashed as legally impossible by New Plymouth mayor
Andrew Judd.
Ratepayers have taken the New Plymouth
District Council's representation review on Wednesday as a chance to
question what the council is doing to represent Maori.
You can have a working group or
committee, which is what we had with komiti Maori, but it was
rejected, in a sense, from Maori as not being serious.
"You can have representation on
our standing committees. That's with voting rights and this was
rejected by our councillors.
"Or the only other option is Maori
wards, which of course was rejected by the community." ...
See full article HERE
Cash injection helps Maori school
stay afloat
One
of the few remaining Maori boarding schools, Te Aute College in
Hawkes' Bay, is making plans for a multi-million dollar cash
injection by the local iwi.
Mr Hiha said he and some Board of
Trustees members wanted the Ministry of Education and the Anglican
Church to also invest $5m each, to grow the funding pool....
See full article HERE
New Green MP welcomed to Parliament
The
Green Party has sworn in its newest MP, Marama Davidson, who will
take on the Māori development portfolio and sit as the fourth member
of the party's Māori caucus.
Ms Davidson, who worked for the Human
Rights Commission for 10 years, is known as a progressive voice for
Māori aspirations.
Ms Davidson is from Ngāpuhi, Te Rarawa
and Ngāti Porou and her arrival in Parliament means at least 25 of
Parliament's 121 MPs are Māori. (nearly 21%).....
See full article
HERE
3 November 2015
The
Maori Party says border control officers in Australia are victimising
Maori people and deporting them on flimsy reasons.
People who looked like they were Maori
were being picked out by border control officers in Australia, she
said.
"Border control forces [are]
currently standing on the street corners in Melbourne and they are
targeting brown looking people, people with ta moko, Kiwis, they are
taking them off for questioning.
"If they consider you to have
questionable character, you can be deported - you don't even have to
have committed a crime."....
See full article HERE
Tribunal rejects gag on judges
The Waitangi Tribunal has rejected the
Crown’s attempt to suppress the Maori Land Court judges’
submission on a new Maori land law, and it’s ordered it to hand
over the 163 page document by noon.
The tribunal will hold a hearing next
week on claims some of the proposed reforms could breach the
principles of the treaty of Waitangi.
Crown Law argued the release of the
submission on the so called exposure draft of te Ture Whenua Maori
Bill would breach constitutional conventions about relations between
the judiciary and the executive.
Tribunal panel chair Ron Crosby says
the submission was made at the request of the Ministerial Advisory
Group overseeing the rewrite of the bill, which was set up to be
independent of the executive....
See full article HERE
2 November 2015
Maori Claim to Water
The claim by some Maori for ownership
of freshwater cannot stand – regardless of any Waitangi tribunal
ruling in their favour. Maori especially understand the principle of
communal ownership and that nobody owns an un-alienated public
resource that is shared “in common”. Even feral pigs or deer on
private or public land are not “owned” until the hunter actually
bags the animal. Ownership then applies to the resource
(pig/deer/water) but not unless or until the point of “capture”.
Water is a prime example of an
un-owned, uncontrolled public asset, held “in common” until the
point of “capture” whether by a dam, diversion race, water pipe
or some other device that denotes possession.
Maori claimants appear to base their
claim to all fresh water based on the age old method of establishing
a property right – namely – “first possession”. The ancients
believed that those things which belong to no one became the property
of the first taker. Indeed “first possession” has been widely
applied in both common and statute law.
The expression - first come, first
served - is accepted as being a fair basis of allocation of a
particular (unclaimed) resource. The same principle applies to a
“first on last off” basis to employment and to other facets of
our society. That simple distribution of an unallocated (property)
right to any public resource has existed and worked well for years
where competing interests don’t exist.
With the advent of a commercial value
soon to be placed on fresh water, the claims to actual ownership of
water for rent seeking purposes as distinct from payment for
commercial use has given rise to the Maori and Green parties seeking
to apply a commercial value to water -something that until very
recently they thought was offensive. The incentive to apply financial
and political values to manage rivers for a shorter term private,
financial and political reasons versus the longer term wider public
good - is obvious.
The reason why the Maori claimants have
no basis to demand ownership of water is that for the first
possession rationale to stand they must have first demonstrated
possession, continuing use and control. Possession is vital to any
claim of ownership. This has simply not occurred. An association with
water -
Maori have failed to show any on going
relationship beyond that of expressing their respect and
understanding of the life giving qualities of water. That particular
belief is far from being unique to any race of people let alone
Maori. There will be no net gain to society from any redistribution
of ownership of water (other than a political gain) should a decision
be made by the Key Government to acquiesce to this demand. Maori
claimants to fresh water are not correct in their assertion that they
have historically owned fresh water. They have not shown activity
that has been consistent with continuous ownership from the time of
“first possession.” Nor have they demonstrated defense /
enforcement or intent to the claim to water. The occasional visit or
use is no different from any other association any natural person can
exercise with impunity.
The courts must recognize “first
possession” rights of the Crown on behalf of all New Zealanders.
Only the Crown has fully exercised defense of fresh water by a
delegated system of permitted use rights. It is those permitted use
rights that has allowed the fixed assets associated with water such
as dams, intake races, bores etc to be developed for both private and
public benefit.
Are Maori claimants seeking to acquire
these assets as well or is it merely the rental capacity that is
sought under this claim? The claimants would be able to extract any
price from the electricity generating plants on the rivers as well as
seeking a rental from all other users including town water supply
where applicable.
We now have a rather perverse situation
where Maori claimants want to privatize (rent seeking) fresh water
but are totally opposed to the Crown selling / privatizing assets.
Maori claimants must explain what they intend to do with (their)
flood waters which inundate private property. Currently floods are
referred to as an act of God so that no public agency can be assigned
responsibility for damage done by this public resource. That cannot
be the case when rent is achieved by the “owner” from the
beneficial use of water but is exonerated of all responsibility
during a flood event.
The ownership of fresh water is an
issue that will define the John Key Government. Mr Key has yet to
learn how to say - no - in unequivocal terms. Key’s choice is to
decide whether to write to a sentinel page in our history or be
assigned to the foot notes of expediency.
http://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.co.nz/2012/07/gerry-eckhoff-maori-claim-to-water.html
July 22, 2012
1 November 2015
Matariki
Court defers chase driver's sentencing
Sentencing
of a Whangarei man who led police on a 54km high-speed chase has been
put off while he completes a detox programme and "addresses his
demons".
He was charged with dangerous driving,
failing to stop and driving while forbidden. He also faces two
charges of male assaults female relating to a domestic incident last
December.
Kopa earlier pleaded guilty to all
charges and had been due to be sentenced in the Matariki Court at
Kaikohe earlier this month.
Kopa was sentenced to five years' jail
for aggravated robbery in 2008 - and sending him back to jail would
do little to help him, his family or society in the long term.
"We are better off as a society
with you addressing the drivers of your behaviour and addressing your
demons ... We've chucked you in jail every other time you've got in
trouble and it hasn't worked," Judge Davis said.....
See full article HERE
After three
years dedicated to preparing for treaty settlement, Ngatiwai are
finally on track after their mandate was given the thumbs-up from the
Crown.
Sacred lands and forest blocks are just
some things Ngatiwai Trust Board chairman Haydn Edmonds says will
hopefully be returned to iwi upon settlement....
See full article HERE
Ngati Kahu
are pointing fingers at the Minister of Treaty Negotiations, saying
he is the reason the iwi have not yet settled Treaty claims.
The comments come after minister Chris
Finlayson told media Ngati Kahu needed to take a look at their
current leadership if they wanted to progress their claims.
Timoti Flavell, head claimant for Ngati
Kahu, was doubtful the iwi would receive a fair settlement.
"Ngati Kahu will never receive a
fair offer to settle claims under the current Government and not with
the current minister for Treaty negotiations."....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
31 October 2015
The Minister for Māori Development
warns that if the number of Māori language users continues to
decline he will be making key changes to the current Māori Language
Strategy.
According to Te Te Ururoa Flavell, “If
the statistics relating to language speakers are declining, I plan to
look into the Māori Language Strategy for the next coming years as
well as all operational language sectors.”
Labour Party Spokesperson for Te Reo
Māori, Peeni Henare says, “We will soon be reviewing and analysing
aspects of the bill. I think that's just a waste of time and
money.”
“In my capacity as a minister I don't
want to be of no use if the statistics of language users continue to
decline,” added Flavell.
While the Māori Language Commission is
facing a $7mil cut in funding that will go to Te Mātāwai, Flavell
insists he will still make key changes if need be....
See full article HERE
Hui Ngapuhi sends sturdy
message of condemnation to government
Rihari Dargaville of
the Kahui Taumata o Waitangi, says that yesterday’s 28th Oct 2015
hui of 750-800 Ngapuhi held at Te Tii Waitangi to Commemorate the
180th year of the signing of the He Whakaputanga / Declaration of
Independence 1835, were unanimous in their condemnation of the Crown
and their imposed policies on Ngapuhi, the biggest nation of
subtribes in New Zealand 126,000 as at the 2013 census.
It is without doubt that this is the
biggest ever turnout of Ngapuhi and other tribes affiliated to He
Whakaputanga 1835 in recent years. The spirit of unity was imminently
obvious.
Many sceptics would have expected this
to be an internal brawl of words. The key resolution towards the end
of the day was:
THAT
the mana
of Ngapuhi would not bend to the will of the Crown.
The whole whare stood in support of
this resolution.
This clears the way for Ngapuhi to
acknowledge the findings of the Tribunal Report November 2014,
stating:
THAT
Ngapuhi
did not cede sovereignty.
No longer can the Minister make
statements like government is sovereign, especially when dealing with
Ngapuhi.
Rihari Dargaville says it is obvious
that the direct Negotiations model with the Crown, is not working in
the best interests of the Crown, therefore the Government will inject
more funding to get the model it is seeking, over the line.
Until such time as this question of
rangatiratanga is addressed between the Government and Ngapuhi there
will be no enduring settlement....
See full article HERE
Northland hapū seek mandate to
settle their own treaty claims
A group of hapū from Northland are
hoping to get the mandate to undertake their own treaty claims. Te
Kotahitanga o Ngā Hapū o Ngāpuhi met with the Minister of Treaty
Negotiations, Chris Finlayson to move forward in having their claims
settled....
See full article HERE
Finding a solution for mortuary
water
GISBORNE District Council has started
work on the culturally sensitive problem of disposing of mortuary
water, and is exploring a land-based system as a possible solution.
There are two drivers for this work.
The iwi view is that it is culturally insensitive for mortuary water
to be disposed into the bay because bodily parts are viewed as tapu.
In 2009 the independent commissioners
granted the resource consents to continue discharging wastewater into
the bay, making it clear that the effects of the system on tangata
whenua had been a paramount consideration. It was made clear at all
times that the continued discharge violated Maori tikanga and had a
major effect on the cultural and spiritual sensitivities of tangata
whenua....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
30 October 2015
Maori making grab for water and Nick
Smith & Bill English appear to be helping them
Maori are going to go after water as
the next grievance claim….and it appears that Bill English and Nick
Smith are entertaining their claims and negotiating with them instead
of telling them to piss off.
"Maori
leaders have mounted a bid for effective ownership of a share of the
country’s freshwater.
This would
allow them, and other with water rights, to onsell it to those who
need water for irrigation, hydropower and other commercial uses.
Talks between
the powerful Iwi Leaders Group and the Government, fronted by Deputy
Prime Minister Bill English and Environment Minister Nick Smith, are
at a critical stage after ministers rejected a nationwide
‘Waterlords’ settlement along the lines of the Sealords deal
over Maori commercial fishing claims.
The Government
is adamant it will not hand over rights in perpetuity
to Maori – but it may compromise by allowing regional
councils to do local deals with Maori.
Farmers are
worried that there will not be enough water to go around if
significant quantities of freshwater are set aside
for Maori.
In a
Cabinet paper, Smith points to possible “catchment by catchment”
deals at a regional government level. The Crown has
acknowledged Maori interests and rights in freshwater but
their extent and nature is at issue. The Government may set criteria
by which local iwi can get preferential access to water, catchment by
catchment, Smith says.
Ministers and
iwi leaders held a summit at Waitangi during the February 6
commemorations, in a swift response to an iwi- commissioned
report proposing radical ways to deal
with freshwater and Maori claims. The report, by
research group Sapere, proposed a nationwide settlement, an end to
35-year renewals of water consents. and a move to permanent rights
and a market in tradable water rights.
It argued the
regime would not only be a boon for Maori but would add $2
billion to the value of power-generating assets, $5.5b to the primary
sector and boost the overall economy, while helping reduce the
effects of drought through more efficient use of water. It would also
open the way for the Government to levy resource taxes on income from
using the water."
If National
wants to lose more than just Northland they will keep on going with
this process under the control of Bill English and Nick Smith.
At least one National MP is against
this though…Judith Collins used her column in the Sunday Star-Times
to vociferously oppose the plans.
"I think
all New Zealanders would agree with me when I say our abundant supply
of freshwater is the lifeblood of our nation. It is a critical
resource underpinning our economy, our environment and our way of
life.
That’s why I
was extremely concerned to read a report by Sapere Research Group,
commissioned by the powerful Iwi Leaders Group, suggesting a dramatic
change to the way our freshwater resources are managed.
The report
provides an economic rationale for changing our current resource
consent system to a rights-based regime. Granting permanent (in
perpetuity) rights to freshwater, the report argues, would put a
commercial value on this freely given natural resource, creating a
market for water to be transferred and traded among rights owners.
The rules of supply and demand would ensure water is accurately
priced and most efficiently used at its highest value.
The report goes
on to say the costs of resolving conflicts around water rights –
that’s the part called democracy where we get to have a say about
how water is managed in our local areas – would dramatically
reduce. Really.
Commoditising
our freshwater supply is a grave concern for several reasons.
Freshwater is a freely given resource belonging to us all. We all
have a stake in ensuring our freshwater supply is healthy and
sustainable."
The Iwi Leaders
Group should have been told to sling their hooks, that National would
make this an election issue and take it tot he people instead of a
stupid flag referendum.
"Although
the report claims a rights-based regime will be better in times of
drought it is hard to imagine this being so, especially for
drought-hit farmers and consumers.
The Californian
electricity crisis in 2000 and 2001 gives us a shocking example of
what can happen when profit is put before people. A combination of
increased demand due to drought and electricity market manipulation
led to rolling blackouts, bankrupted supply companies and consumers
ultimately paying the price. Nearly 15 years on, consumers there are
still paying 30-40 percent more for their power.
The report
gives our fisheries Quota Management System as an example of where a
commercial value has been successfully placed on a natural resource.
It doesn’t mention the fundamental difference between freshwater
and fish. We can all choose if we want to buy fish or go catch some
ourselves. We cannot choose to be without water.
We cannot live
without it. No one owns it and no one should."
Spot on, and the more Judith Collins
says this the more traction she will get.
"The
report relies heavily on a 2012 Waitangi Tribunal report finding that
Maori had “…Treaty rights of a residual proprietary nature” in
freshwater. I say everyone has a residual right to fresh water.
It is
disappointing to see iwi leaders attempting to use this non-binding
finding like a Trojan horse for their real goal to create a massive
profit generating market at the expense of New Zealanders.
The report
shows the cost of commoditisation would be huge for consumers –
over $110million to establish and $30million annually – and those
who have these rights would use them to make money off the rest of
us.
The Ministry
for the Environment estimates the total value of water to New Zealand
to be $34.85 billion per year. With numbers like this floating around
it is plain to see the motive for those involved in this cash-grab.
Managing our
life giving freshwater resource is a privilege we hold in trust for
future generations, it is not a right. It is utterly irresponsible to
use it for short-term gain."
Take note Bill English and Nick Smith,
your usual tactics of negotiating in secret and then presenting
cabinet and caucus with a fait accompli won’t work this
time.
This is a massive issue and one that
will see anyone pushing this naked grab for cash getting run
over politically.
If National was squeamish over the
snapper debacle wait until the public wakes up to this one.
By Cameron Slater - April 12, 2015
29 October 2015
Govt funding to resolve Ngapuhi settlement
The
government has offered funding to hapu opposed to the Tuhoronuku
mandate in a bid to resolve conflict over the Ngapuhi Treaty of
Waitangi settlement.
A number of substantial hapu have long
disputed the right of the board, known as Tuhoronuku to negotiate on
their behalf, and their objections were recently endorsed by the
Waitangi Tribunal.
Hapu alliance Te Kotahitanga has
suggested to Minister for Treaty Negotiations Chris Finlayson that
they hold a series of intensive hui over the next two months with
Tuhoronuku and the Crown, with the aim of sorting out their
differences by next Waitangi Day.
Mr Finlayson said in a letter to the
hapu alliance the hapu approach was helpful and constructive, and the
Crown was willing to make $106,000 available to fund the engagement
work....
See full article HERE
Te Kotahitanga 'overjoyed' at Crown
offer
Mr Finlayson has praised the offer as
helpful and constructive, and offered the group $106,000 to fund the
work - small kumara compared to the several million it has pumped
into Tūhoronuku.
But a Ngāti Hine leader, Willow-Jean
Prime, said it was a good start.
She said the minister was also open to
the tribunal's suggestion there could be several settlements within
Ngāpuhi rather than one for the whole iwi......
See full article HERE
Cost counted of failed claim
negotiations
A Ngati Kahu elder says the far north
tribe’s runanga should get back to the negotiating table or step
aside and give the job to someone else in the iwi.
But Haititaimarangai Marae kaumatua
Atihana Johns, who has been involved with the claim since it was
lodged 30 years ago, says the runanga has shown it is just not good
at negotiating.
He says Professor Mutu’s demand for a
$200 million plus settlement is totally unrealistic, and she should
have stayed with the other Muriwhenua iwi to secure a settlement
covering the whole region.....
See full article HERE
28 October 2015
Ngatiwai keen to have say on coastal management
The relationship between Ngatiwai and
the sea will loom large as the Norhtland iwi enters negotiations on
its historic claims.
The crown on Friday recognised the
mandate of the Ngatiwai Trust Board to move straight to negotiations,
bypassing a Waitangi Tribunal inquiry.
He says the mana of Ngatiwai comes from
the sea, which sustains its marae from Rakaumangamanga Cape Brett in
the north to Tawharanui Peninsula and out to Aotea Great Barrier.
"Our hapu are looking for autonomy
to act and to make responsible choices in their tribal base. We have
a long coastline. It has not been left by our people so that
continuous ownership of the coast is something we feel is an
opportunity for us to settle with the crown," Mr Edmonds
says....
See full article HERE
A petition has been launched opposing
the Port of Tauranga's $150 million-plan to position the port for a
new generation of mega container ships.
The online petition, which has gained
more than 400 signatures, was started three weeks ago by Tauranga man
Drew Tata, who said the "impact on the tangata whenua [people of
the land] and residents of Tauranga will be detrimental not only to
our customary rights to gather food, but the displacement of our
pipi, paddle crabs, paua, mussel, cockle and ika (fish)".
Justice Priestley said the Environment
Court had carefully and correctly weighed the adverse cultural
effects and balanced them against the national and regional
significance of the Port of Tauranga...
See full article HERE
Marae link important to Māori in
advanced age
Māori in advanced age living in areas
of higher socio-economic deprivation were significantly more likely
to attend a marae, according to new research from the University of
Auckland.
This research looked at participation
in Māori society in advanced age including attendance at marae and
understanding tikanga (correct procedure or protocol within a Māori
cultural context).....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
27 October 2015
Maori Land Court rules it has no jurisdiction over RMA
An application for injunction on Lake
Horowhenua consents has been dismissed due to the Maori Land Court
not holding jurisdiction over the Resource Management Act.
A resource consent hearing on the lake
is due to be held on Tuesday, October 27, in Levin.
Horizons Regional Council and Horowhenua District Council have applied for three consents for the lake to do with a sediment trap, fish pass and weed harvester.
Hokio A Land trustee Eugene Henare
filed an application with the Maori Land Court for an interlocking
injunction on the councils.
Henare has also filed a submission
opposing the consent applications.
However, the Maori Land Court ruled it
does not have jurisdiction to prevent local authorities undertaking
due process.
In his ruling Judge Michael Doogan
found the court's jurisdiction did not extend "so far as to
prevent a local authority undertaking due process pursuant to the
RMA, or acting pursuant to a consent lawfully obtained".
Doogan said the RMA covered regulation
on "all land within New Zealand whether or not it has status as
Maori land"....
See full article HERE
Bullets Fired At Disputed Lake
Horowhenua Rowing Club
Bullets have been fired at a Lake
Horowhenua building less than 24 hours after several police officers
were forced to restrain a rowing club member who was threatening to
kill a Lake owner and female supporter. One of the bullets penetrated
a heavy-gauge roller door.
Members of the Horowhenua Rowing Club
were yesterday given seven days to remove their equipment from the
northern Domain building they neither own nor lease.
The club has continued to occupy this
building despite being given notice to vacate the building by the
Lake Domain Board Chairman in 2012. That year, the Court of Appeal
established that the Domain Board had no power to effectively roll
over a lease that had expired in 2007. The following year, the
Supreme Court agreed the club does not have any legal right to occupy
the building.
Since taking over the empty southern
building last month, these owners have been subjected to death
threats and vandalism.
Philip Taueki, an owner who lives at
the lake was forced to barricade himself in his home when a rower and
two accomplices were outside threatening to kill him. The offenders
have not yet been arrested......
See full article HERE
Hawke's Bay Maori are more than two and
a half times more likely than non-Maori to die of treatable
illnesses, according to a comprehensive new report.
"So you might have one person in
the house who is very sick but it [household] has a history.
"Therefore treating the individual
doesn't actually address the issue, you have got to treat the wider
family.
"And the system isn't set up to
deal with the dad, the grandchildren ... we have got a very
individualistic approach to healthcare.".....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
26 October 2015
From the NZCPR archives By Dr Muriel Newman
Time to face the truth
Ironically it has taken the South
African Rugby Union (SARU) to expose the fact that racism exists in
New Zealand. Sadly, in these politically correct times, anyone who
dares to comment on this dark national secret risks being attacked as
a racist. With successive governments entrenching racism under the
guise of cultural sensitivity and bogus Treaty partnerships, it is
indeed a tragic indictment of our society that it has been left to
South Africa to expose the truth.
This issue has arisen because the New
Zealand Rugby Union has requested that SARU agree to a visit by the
New Zealand Maori team. While the request is presently being
considered, it presents SARU with a major problem. Given South
Africa’s history of apartheid, the South African President’s
Council has a long-established ruling which forbids SARU from
allowing South African national teams to play against opponents that
have been selected along racial lines.[1]
The issue has sparked a heated debate
about whether or not the nationally selected New Zealand Maori rugby
squad is a racist team. With a key selection criteria being whether
or not players identify as Maori, there is no doubt that this is a
racist team. Players who do not identify as Maori are not eligible
for selection – in other words non-Maori are not eligible.
Those who have been asked whether
limiting selection to a particular race is racial have replied that
such selections are not racial but are based on “ethnicity and
diversity”. This is the argument being advanced by the Race
Relations Commissioner, who in a letter to SARU acknowledges that
while racial discrimination in sport existed in South Africa under
apartheid, “there is no such discrimination in New Zealand: people
of all ethnic backgrounds are eligible to play in New Zealand’s
national, regional and local representative teams, and alongside
that, consistent with the principle of freedom of association, people
are free to play together in any other combination”.[2]
Joris de Bres goes on to state, “As
Race Relations Commissioner, I have no problem with the concept of a
Maori rugby team, or a European rugby team, or a Chinese rugby team,
as long as our national, regional and local representative teams are
open to people of all ethnicities. This is ethnic diversity, not
racial discrimination”.
The Minister of Maori Affairs puts it
this way, “The New Zealand Maori team does not claim to be a
national team representing people who have been excluded on the basis
of race. They represent New Zealand Maori as a matter of indigenous
identity and pride”.[3]
These weasel words are designed to
confuse in order to conceal a big lie: New Zealand is a country where
race has increasingly become the basis of civil, political and
democratic rights.......
Continue reading HERE
Continue reading HERE
February 22, 2009
25 October 2015
New Zealand have received permission
from Maori elders to perform the controversial throat-slitting
gesture during the haka on their tour of Britain, according to
co-captain Issac Luke.
The Kiwis unveiled the haka before a
34-16 win over Leeds at Headingley in which co-captain Adam Blair
(calf) and centre Jordan Kahu (groin) were injured and new halves
Peta Hiku and Tui Lolohea opened their tenures tentatively.
The thumb-to-the throat gesture at the
end of the haka was abandoned by the All Blacks in recent years after
attracting international criticism.
"That's the All Blacks, that's
different from us," Luke told NRL.com.
"The elders got into it (then) but
we were able to explain it to them. And too right, they have every
right (to have a say).
"You have to run a lot of things
by them, especially being able to explain people's ethnicities. We
had someone come across and we sat down and explained it.....
See full article HERE
In 2002, the
Government amended the HSNO Act to better reflect the Treaty
relationship following a recommendation of the Royal Commission on
Genetic Modification. A Māori Reference Group was set up to assist
with this.
The HSNO Act provides for a Māori
Advisory Committee, Nga Kaihautu Taiao, to advise the Environmental
Protection Authority on decisions about new organisms. Māori are
also represented on the Institutional Biological Safety Committees.
The Environmental Protection Authority delegates decisions on
applications involving certain low-risk GMOs in containment to these
committees....
See full article HERE
24 October 2015
The New Zealand Geographic Board Ngā
Pou Taunaha o Aotearoa (NZGB) wants to hear people’s views on
proposals to correct the spelling of three unofficial recorded
geographic names in South Otago.
The correction would see the features
named ‘Tokomairiro’ revert back to the original, and correctly
spelled, ‘Tokomairaro’ – ‘Tokomairaro River’, ‘Tokomairaro
River East Branch’, and ‘Tokomairaro River West Branch’.
“While both spellings were used from
the mid-1800s, the NZGB accepts that ‘Tokomairaro’ is correct and
describes the method of pushing waka (canoes) or mōkihi (rafts)
along the river with a pole,” says NZGB Secretary Wendy Shaw.
“The NZGB made the proposal after
investigation by its Māori Names Committee. Through the proposal
NZGB aims to fulfil its role to correct spelling, and collect and
encourage the use, of original Māori place names.”....
See full article HERE
Native plant near extinction to be
returned to iwi
A native plant brought back from the
brink of extinction at Scion is being returned to iwi at an official
ceremony today in Rotorua.
A rare white-flowered version of the
usually red ngutukākā was last seen growing in the wild in the
1950s at Tiniroto cliffs near Wairoa on the East Coast of the North
Island and was considered extinct.
General Manager Forest Science, Scion,
Brian Richardson, says, “A chance discovery of a bag of
seeds stored in a member of the public’s garden shed, has led to
the recovery of the native plant.
Karen Te Kani who led the project
says “The white ngutuk ākā is considered precious
taonga to East Coast iwi. About one hundred plants are being
gifted back to Ngati Kohatu and Ngati Hinehika iwi to be planted back
on their ancestral land......
See full article HERE
Offensive place names could soon be
replaced
Proposals being considered by the New
Zealand Geographic Board Ngā Pou Taunaha o Aotearoa could mean three
offensive names in North Canterbury may soon be replaced.
Public views are being sought on these
proposals to replace the current unofficial recorded names 'Nigger
Hill' and 'Nigger Stream'.
NZGB Secretary Wendy Shaw says, “The
proposals – from a member of the public – are based on these
names being in poor taste, offensive, discriminatory and
derogatory,”
“Under the proposals, ‘Niggerhead’
and ‘Nigger Hill’ would become ‘Tawhai Hill’ and ‘Kānuka
Hills’ respectively – named after native trees – and ‘Nigger
Stream’ would become ‘Steelhead Stream’ after the local trout
species."....
See full article HERE
23 October 2015
Cabinet approves Maori Language Bill amendments
Māori Development Minister Te Ururoa
Flavell says today, "Cabinet has approved amendments be made to
the Māori Language (Te Reo Māori) Bill."
"I am pleased that Cabinet has
agreed to the landmark decision to enact the Bill in dual languages
and that will mean the reo Māori text will prevail in law", he
says.
The key proposals approved by Cabinet
include:
- giving legislative status to two
Māori Language Strategies, one the responsibility of the Crown,
which will focus on national-level issues and the other strategy the
responsibility of tāngata whenua that will focus on matters at an
iwi and community level;
- that the primary responsibilities of
Te Mātāwai is to support whānau, hapū, iwi and communities, but
also enabling it to influence central government efforts.
- adjusting the membership of Te
Mātāwai to ensure representation for Urban Māori and providing for
Te Puni Kōkiri to facilitate the selection process;
- maintaining Te Taura Whiri and Te
Māngai Pāho as Crown Entities and;
- establishing two governance and
engagement forums between Te Mātāwai and the Crown
"These Cabinet decisions will be
incorporated into the departmental report for consideration by the
Māori Affairs Committee. These proposals further support the goal of
strengthening a strong Crown and Māori partnership for coordinating
efforts to revitalise te reo Māori," says Minister Flavell.....
See full article HERE
Minister can't manipulate me - Mutu
Ngati Kahu chair Margaret Mutu has hit
back at the Treaty Negotiations Minister ‘s questioning of her
runanga’s mandate to settle treaty claims.
Christopher Finlayson says the far
north iwi needs to look at changing its leadership so fresh eyes can
be brought to its stalled negotiations.
Professor Mutu has chaired the runanga
since 2001.
She says Minister Finlayson thinks
wrongly that she is the problem, but she is just doing what she is
told to by whanau, hapu and marae.
"What Chris Finlayson hates is
that he cannot manipulate me in order to dictate to Ngati Kahu what
Finlayson wants, in other words he cannot coopt me into being a crown
servant or a crown lackey, he has found it impossible and he wants to
get rid of me so he can to find a crown lackey who will do what he
wants in Ngati Kahu," Professor Mutu says.....
See full article HERE
Māori Broadcaster calls for iwi
radio to air on RNZ
Veteran Māori broadcaster Willie
Jackson says Iwi radio stations should be considered to air Māori
programming at Radio New Zealand.
Jackson made the call after changes to
Māori programming at Radio NZ were announced.
He says, “We’ve spoken to them in
the past about the possibility of iwi radio stations broadcasting on
Radio NZ, but they didn’t agree.”
Jackson is also the chairman of Te
Whakaruruhau o ngā Reo Irirangi o Aotearoa, and suggests the
government step in to question Radio NZ.
“This is a big issue for Māori. $36
million dollars of taxpayer’s money goes towards Radio NZ, so the
government should step in and see what they’re doing.”.....
See full article HERE
The Waitangi Tribunal has called for
a Treaty settlement with Whanganui iwi which makes the H compulsory
and returns the national park to local Maori.
Whanganui Maori want the area's name to
be spelt exclusively with an H, among calls for Treaty settlements
made in a damning report into the Crown's history with local iwi.
A Waitangi Tribunal report released on
Thursday into the area's 83 Treaty claims has found Whanganui Maori
historically suffered from lack of input into politics and were still
held back by a lack of control over their own affairs.....
See full article HERE
Iwi due redress for Crown abuse:
Tribunal report
A damning report today has addressed
the Crown's mistreatment of Whanganui Maori since the Treaty of
Waitangi.
The Waitangi Tribunal report explains
the Crown has caused local Maori substantial harm.
It points to extensive land purchases
where the Crown deliberately deceived Tangata Whenua over how much
land it was purchasing.
The report also refers to current
issues, with the tribunal stating local Maori continue to live in a
deprived state, have little control over issues that matter them, and
that Maori should have a more appropriate role in local
government.....
See full article HERE
Students get second chance at
education
An alternative education centre is
giving troubled youth another chance at education. Its students have
been affected by all types of social issues, but director Shane
Coleman says his students are resilient.
Despite those concerning factors, 3 out
of 4 students received their levels 1 and 2 NCEA last year.
Coleman believes the Māori aspect of learning plays a big
part.
“We use whare tapawhā as a model,
even though it's a health model it fits very nicely into education
and its actually good for all kids, the majority of our kids are
Pākeha,” said Coleman....
See full article HERE
Researcher says cancer inequalities
in Māori must be addressed
Dr Lis Ellison-Loschmann, from Massey
University's Centre for Public Health Research says underlying
factors that drive cancer inequalities in Māori, such as poverty,
must be addressed immediately.
An international study highlights the
gap in cancer incidence between Māori and other New Zealanders is a
lot higher than for other indigenous populations.
Key findings from the study:
- Lung cancer rates were four times
higher among Māori woman and 2.5 times higher among Māori men
- Stomach and liver cancer rates were
more than double among Māori
- Smoking was the biggest determinant
of lung cancer
- Smoking rates among Māori women were
the highest in the study
- Overall Māori die eight years
earlier than non- Māori
- Childhood poverty increased the
likelihood of cancer in adult Māori....
See full article HERE
A group of
teenagers have struck fear into a 23-year-old shopkeeper after a
targeted attack on his shop.
Gaurav Dewitt was set upon by the
youths late on Tuesday evening at his takeaway shop, Taste of the
Island.
The three offenders abused the
shopkeeper, tried to provoke him into a fight and finally threw a
bike at him.
"It was closing time so I was just
mopping the floors. I tried to scare them off with the mop but they
kept wanting to fight me," Mr Dewitt said.
He managed to shield himself with the
mop and was uninjured during the altercation.
Maraenui ward councillor Maxine Boag
said she agreed there is a youth problem in the suburb.
She said there was a high population of
Maori and Pacific Island youth who were not in employment, education
or training.
"It's an indictment of the central
government's ability to support our youth.
"This latest incident is typical
of a systemic problem across New Zealand."
The councillor will facilitate a
meeting today between Mr Dewitt and the local Maori warden to ensure
he feels safe in his shop.....
See full article HERE
22 October 2015
Maori in Northland are threatening to
protest after Archives New Zealand refused to allow the Waitangi
Museum to display the original copy of the Treaty of Waitangi on
February 6 next year.
"I am going to bring this up as a
Waitangi issue and if they don't listen I'm going to close – I'm
going to do my best to close the Waitangi doors to the Crown,"
Kingi Taurua, a local chief for Waitangi's lower marae Te Tii told
the radio station.
Chairman of the Waitangi National Trust
Pita Paraone said Archives New Zealand had refused the request
because of how fragile the document was....
See full article HERE
Churches, government fight over
funding
The
churches said they wanted to have a meeting with the government to
discuss the schools' future.
Ministry of Education's deputy
secretary for education system performance Andrea Schollman said
state-integrated schools received funding that closely matched that
received by state schools, and most state-integrated schools managed
well on their budgets.
She said Te Aute and Turakina College's
financial difficulties were due to the small number of students each
school had.
"Both schools are appropriately
funded. In the case of Te Aute and Turakina college, in 2014 the
schools were funded at a rate of approximately $18,000 per student.
"In comparison, the average across
across all state and state integrated secondary schools for
operational funding and payment of teacher salaries was $7,600 per
student.
"The key difference in the funding
arrangements is that the Proprietors of integrated schools are
responsible for the provision of school property and own the
property."....
See full article HERE
Hawke's Bay Airport pushes ahead
with name change despite council dissent
Malcolm Dixon was one of two Hastings
councillors to criticise the board's decision at Tuesday's meeting,
saying it went against the wishes of a shareholder.
Simon Nixon went further, calling the
planned name "inappropriate" and describing it as
"pandering" to Mana Ahuriri......
See full article HERE
Former AB pushes for more sports
academies for tamariki Māori
Former All Black forward Billy Bush has
come out saying that iwi in general should invest in establishing an
institution for Māori children in all sports.
Bush says, “I think a lot of iwi have
been paid out their settlement so I think it’s up to the iwi to
start academies. Not only in rugby but right across the
board."....
See full article HERE
Last week,
I visited Lakeview Kindergarten at Waipukurau to listen to and talk
to 20 or so kindergarten teachers about the history of the area and
the telling of our stories.
The three stories told about ancient
ancestors, their works of manaaki, of hunting and gathering, of
fishing, of preservation, of jealousy, of combat and of murder.
Told through a pre-5-year-old lens, in
simple language, the stories were riveting, even to my trained ear,
having been brought up on such stories.
So although some communities are trying
to keep Maori teaching and learning mediums out of communities, other
communities, such as Lakeview Kindergarten and its sister
kindergartens, are actively encouraging and promoting Maori history,
Maori language and Maori thinking as part of their everyday mahi.
Congratulations to those groups. The iwi will support this drive
wherever there is an appetite. ....
See full article HERE
Support service warns Māori
education under threat if it's closed
A
whānau support group at Victoria University says it's under threat.
The mentoring programme, Te Rōpū
Āwhina, started in 1999 and aims to raise academic achievement of
Māori and Pasifika students studying science, engineering,
architecture and design.....
See full article HERE
Rotorua voters now have four possible
candidates for mayor with 2013 mayoral challenger RangiMarie
Bosma-Robson announcing she intends to stand in next year's council
elections.
Ms Bosma-Robson joins incumbent mayor
Steve Chadwick, Dr Reynold Macpherson and district councillor Rob
Kent as candidates for Rotorua mayor.
Ms Bosma-Robson told the Rotorua Daily
Post she intended to replace Queen Elizabeth II as New Zealand's
official head of state and set up a local Maori tribal council in
Rotorua to replace the Rotorua Lakes Council.
She said she wanted to see a true
democracy for New Zealand, and to encourage more people to vote,
wanted to see the voting age lowered to include children from the age
of 5....
See full article HERE
21 October 2015
Three Tauranga iwi authorities are
coming together to bid for the transfer of social housing in the
Tauranga area.
A formal Heads of Agreement was signed
today between the Tauranga Moana and Te Puke Housing Consortium and
the Masterton Trust House Community Enterprise.
The Tauranga Consortium is made of
three Bay of Plenty Treaty settlement tribes - Nga Potiki a
Tamapahore Trust, Tapuika Iwi Authority and Nga Hapu o Ngati Ranginui
Settlement Trust - established to bid for the transfer of social
housing in the Tauranga area.....
See full article HERE
Broadcaster Willie Jackson has
successfully challenged the selection process of an Auckland Maori
board he sought to join - alongside his old talkback radio partner.
Mr Jackson mounted legal action in 2013
when he was not chosen as one of the Auckland Independent Maori
Statutory Board's two mataawaka (urban) representatives....
See full article HERE
Further
link on the above article HERE
Urban Maori want to pick own reps
The chair of the National Urban Maori
Authority, Willie Jackson says a Court of Appeal decision on
appointments to Auckland's Independent Maori Statutory Board is a
victory for urban Maori.
The court upheld a High Court decision
the Papakura Marae chief executive Tony Kake could not stay on the
board because the appointment panel failed to properly consider all
applications, including that of Mr Jackson.
He says the case wasn't a personal
attack on Mr Kake.
Rather it was a challenge to a system
where representatives of Auckland iwi, who make up just 11 percent of
Maori in the super city, get to choose who will represent mataawaka
or Maori from iwi outside Auckland....
See full article HERE
The region's airport will be
officially renamed Ahuriri Airport Hawke’s Bay by 2017.
The Hawke's Bay Airport company board
says it is looking forward to "embracing" the name
change, requested by Treaty of Waitangi claimant group Mana Ahuriri,
which represents seven hapu.
This year the group has successfully
applied to have prominent landmark Napier Hill
renamed Mataruahou under a Treaty of Waitangi
claim nearing completion, but failed to have Perfume Point in
Napier renamed Te Karaka, after a Maori chief.....
See full article HERE
20 October 2015
There's hope the country's biggest
Treaty deal can move ahead quickly now a three-way settlement is
being proposed to break the Ngapuhi deadlock.
The Waitangi Tribunal recommended the
Crown should stop negotiations amid concerns about mandate holders
Tuhoronuku.
Tuhoronuku have been shaken by
questions about their finances and a Waitangi Tribunal finding about
how the mandate was given.
Many hapu claimed they had been left
out of the process and formed a rival group, Kotahitanga.
Co-chair Rudy Taylor has met Treaty
Negotiations Minister Chris Finlayson and says if they work hard,
things can move forward.
"I think now this minister is
really taking in what we've been saying. It's a three-way engagement,
and he's the first to look at that in a positive way.".....
See full article HERE
A Maori trust is appealing against
plans to expand Ngawha power station.
Far North power company Top Energy was
last month granted a raft of consents allowing it to build two more
geothermal power plants near Ngawha Springs, east of Kaikohe,
boosting the power station's total output from 25 to 75MW. That would
be enough to turn the Far North into an exporter of electricity.
The Parahirahi C1 Trust, however, has
since lodged an appeal in the Environment Court against the Northland
Regional and Far North District council consents.
The trust is the kaitiaki (guardian) of
the nearby Waiariki hot springs and manages a hot pool complex on
trust-owned land and Crown land the Waitangi Tribunal has recommended
be returned to Maori.
During the hearings in Kerikeri in
August, trustee Amokura Kawharu said the expansion could threaten hot
springs which had been used for their curative powers, cooking and
heating since the 16th century. No natural resource had greater
significance to Ngapuhi, she said.
If the consents were granted the trust
wanted full membership of the peer review panel overseeing the
project and a five-year gap between the expansion's two stages to
allow monitoring of any effects on the springs. The trust also wanted
"material cultural benefits" to balance the negative
effects of exploiting the geothermal field, suggesting Top Energy pay
for a $2.5 million upgrade of the Waiariki hot pools.....
See full article HERE
19 October 2015
The idea of whether the party could
merge with another has been floated today at its Annual General
Meeting in Huntly, and at a hui at Ohaaki marae.
Māori Party President Naida Glavish
states that they have made their decision.
Ms Glavish has said the Maori party is
willing to work with any political movement, but will not be merging
with any other party.....
See full article HERE
Schism within Presbyterian church
over funding of school
The
Presbyterian Church's Māori division has rounded on its General
Assembly, accusing it of walking away from its partnership to fund
and support Turakina Māori Girls' College.
A schism has formed in the church with
the Reverend Wayne Te Kaawa saying that since appealing to the church
for more funds the silence has been deafening.
"The Pākehā side of the church
sort of became quiet... silent, non-involved and we were basically
left holding the can, and so we've done the best we can knowing that
in the Māori part of the church we simply do not have the funds."
The school's Board of Trustees is also
challenging the Presbyterian Church and said it could not help wonder
how it was that the church held approximately $180 million in the
Presbyterian Investment Fund and yet had allowed the school to
deteriorate.....
See full article HERE
Youth Court no 'Kumbaya-singing, milo-drinking affair,' says judge
And thirdly, while Maori offending is
dropping, crucially, it’s not dropping at nearly the same rate as
non-Maori youth offending. So the disproportionality of Maori in the
Youth Court has gone from about 45% to 65%. In about 20 courts, more
than 75% of those appearing are Maori. So that’s the caution in the
otherwise very good news that we never hear in the media.....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
18 October 2015
Rena salvage hearings conclude
The hearing of an application for the
wreck of box ship Rena to be left on New Zealand's Astrolabe Reef off
the port of Tauranga concluded on 9 October, with lawyers for the
Crown and shipowner at odds.
The New Zealand Government has opposed
the application by the Astrolabe Community Trust, representing Daina
Shipping and its insurer, to leave the bulk of the 47,000-tonne
container vessel, which ran aground, split in two, and sank in 2011,
on the reef.
The Crown, however, has argued for
Rena's bow, which lies just over a metre below the surface, to be
removed and insists that no wreckage above 30 m remains. It also
wants more rigorous monitoring measures and the removal of
contaminants at debris hot spots.
Compensation to local Maori communities
and residents amounted to NZD3 million, and a contribution of
NZD440,000 to the surf lifesaving clubs within the Bay of Plenty area
whose members helped with the oil spill clean-up. ....
See full article HERE
The Maori
Party will hold its annual conference on Saturday in a time Maori
Party President Naida Glavish says it is crucial for it to rebuild
after its poorest polling result ever.
The party will also consider standing
candidates in local body elections and a remit to make Maori
representation on local councils a bottom line for any future
coalition arrangements....
See full article HERE
Māori Party looking at standing in
council elections
The Maori Party is pushing forward
former co-leader, Sir Pita Sharples, as a possible candidate for the
Auckland Mayoralty.
Members of the party met at Te Ohāki
Marae in Huntly for their Annual General Meeting.
Māori Party President Naida Glavish
has said she would back the former party co-leader if he decided to
run....
See full article HERE
17 October 2015
More post-graduate qualifications for teachers
For the first time trainee teachers are
to be offered the opportunity to earn post-graduate qualifications in
Māori medium and Early Childhood Education (ECE) teaching, Education
Minister Hekia Parata announced today.
From next year up to 85 post-graduate
positions will be available for Māori medium teachers and 90
positions for ECE teachers in initial teacher education programmes.
The post-graduate diplomas and master’s
degrees will be for teachers intending to work in Māori medium
schooling, or in early learning in either English, English/Māori
medium or full immersion Maori medium settings.
“These new qualifications will have a
positive impact on the quality of new teachers entering the workforce
and will raise achievement for our children and young people in early
learning and Māori medium settings,” says Ms Parata.....
See full article HERE
Anglican church rejects school
funding criticism
The
Anglican Church said it is doing enough to ensure the survival of the
kura it runs, contrary to criticisms made by the Minister of Maori
Development, Te Ururoa Flavell.
Mr Flavell said that the churches
running Māori boarding schools were not fulfilling their obligations
by upgrading them and making a bigger financial contribution.
But the Anglican church's Te Aute Trust
Board chairperson Stephen Jacobi said while there have been problems
in the past, those had now been resolved.
"Over the last two years the
Anglican church through the Te Aute Trust Board and the St John's
College Trust Board, has put in considerable resources coming close
to $15 million to secure the future of Te Aute and Hukarere, the two
iconic Māori Anglican boarding schools in the Hawke's Bay, and
thanks to the investment and involvement by the church the future of
those schools has been secured," he said.
Chair of the Presbyterian Church's
Māori Synod and the school's Board of Proprietors is Reverend Wayne
Te Kaawa.
He agrees with both her and Mr Flavell,
but he said the Pākehā side of the church has not been supportive
enough.
"In the case of Turakina two of
the partners walked away over the last couple of years and left the
Māori side of the church holding the school and of course we simply
just don't have the funds."...
See full article HERE
16 October 2015
Ministry
of Health statistics show Māori are almost three times as likely as
non-Māori to have experienced unfair treatment on the basis of
ethnicity.
The Race Relations Commissioner says
statistics revealing Māori are almost three times as likely as
non-Māori to have experienced unfair treatment on the basis of
ethnicity show agencies need to do more to respond to racial
discrimination.
"Sometimes it's not even done
intentionally, you know the care and treatment that's offered to
Māori is different to non-Māori.
Statistics in the Chartbook also showed
that Māori were more than 1.5 times more likely to have ever
experienced ethnically motivated physical or verbal attacks, with
more than a quarter of Māori men, or 26.9 percent, having
experienced such attacks.
Dame Susan said she congratulated Māori
who had reported discrimination and urged more people to come forward
as the Human Rights Commission could not take action if people did
not complain.....
See full article HERE
Churches blamed for demise of Māori
boarding schools
The
Minister of Māori Development has come out swinging at the churches
that run Māori boarding schools, following the Minister of
Education's interim
decision to close Turakina Māori Girls' College.
Ms Parata's announcement prompted Māori
Development Minister Te Ururoa Flavell to accuse the churches of not
fulfilling their obligations to the kura.
"They have not supported and
fulfilled their obligation to those schools by not upgrading the
facilities that are sorely needed and created a good, positive
working environment with the board of trustees," Mr Flavell
said.
Mr Flavell said, if the churches wanted
the schools to flourish, they had to make more of a financial
contribution - and the best case scenario was that the churches would
get far more heavily involved.
"If they really want those schools
to flourish they've got to kick in with some financial contribution,
can't leave it to the state because the state is actually providing
the resource to allow the teaching of education to happen.....
See full article HERE
Higher rates of Maori deaths on NZ
roads
Māori make up just under 15 percent of
the population, yet accounted for about half the number of road
fatalities in the past 10 years where alcohol or speed were involved.
About 840 Māori were killed in crashes
between 2004 and 2014, where alcohol or speed were a factor. In that
same period 1673 non-Māori died.
The authority's chairman Willie Jackson
said the statistics came at no surprise to him, and the government
should take action.
"It almost goes into the too hard
basket for the government and governments are getting more and more
nervous about providing specialised funding, or having specific
targeting around Māori for fear of being called racist and
separatists," he said.
"The reality is that too many of
our people are dying on the roads. We've known this now for over a
decade. What's the government response to that?"
He acknowledged the socio-economic
conditions may also play a part in the statistics. "The reality
is that the majority of those poor are Māori."
"I've seen, particularly in South
Auckland, literally hundreds of Māori drivers who won't go and get
their licence because its always too expensive," he said.
Mr Jackson said to address the Māori
road toll, the government must roll out consistent education messages
targeting Māori.
National road policing operations
manager Peter McKennie said the factors contributing to serious
crashes were common to all people in society.
The Transport Agency has no official
Māori road toll, and the statistics available were based on police
assumptions on race.....
See full article HERE
Māori men four times more likely to
die from violence
The
rate of hospitalisation as a result of assault or attempted homicide
was nearly six times higher for Māori women than non-Māori women
over the past three years.
Hospitalisation rates for Māori men as
a result of assault or attempted homicide were nearly three times
higher than non-Māori men between 2012 and 2014.
Death rates from assault or homicide,
meanwhile, were nearly four times as high for Māori men as non-Māori
men between 2010 and 2012, while death rates from assault or homicide
for Māori women were 1.6 times higher than non-Māori women.
National Network of Stopping Violence
kaiarahi Trevor Wilson said the figures should be seen in the context
of a lack of access to housing, income, education, and a fair and
just legal system.
"However when you look at the
response from government agencies in regards to that, it tells a much
bigger story about the needs of Māori not being met."....
See full article HERE
15 October 2015
Communications Minister Amy Adams and
MÄori Development Minister Te Ururoa Flavell have announced eight
appointees to the MÄori ICT Development Fund Expert Advisory
Group.
In Budget 2014, the Government
allocated $30 million for a MÄori ICT Development Fund to support
MÄori economic development and support access to MÄori language
and culture through digital literacy initiatives.
The group will provide advice about how
the fund will work including its objectives and the design of an
operational framework. It will also make recommendations to the
Ministers’ about how the grant should be spent.....
The five MÄori ICT and Business
members are:
- Antony Royal (Chair)
- George Reedy
- Vanessa Clark
- Ian Taylor
- Warren Williams
Three ex-officio members are:
- Di Grennell - Te Puni KÅkiri
- Paul Alexander - Ministry of
Business, Innovation and Employment
- Georgina Whata - Callaghan
Innovation...
See full article HERE
Crown tries to silence Maori judges
The crown doesn’t want the Waitangi
Tribunal to read what Maori Land Court judges have to say about a
major rewrite of Maori land law.
The tribunal asked to formally see the
judges’ 163-page demolition of the draft Te Ture Whenua Maori Bill
after a copy posted on the Waatenews.com website was discussed at
pre-hearing conference.
As part of the preparations for next
month’s urgent hearing of a claim against the reform process, Crown
Law has given the tribunal copies of the other submissions on the so
called exposure draft.
But it wants more time to argue against
the judges’ submission becoming part of the official record.
It says there are issues conflict of
interest and bias, in that the tribunal panel would need to weight
the evidence of judges who would preside over other inquiries that
members are part of.
It also claims it could be
inappropriate for claimant lawyers to cross-examine judges....
See full article HERE
Call from Ngāpuhi matriarch for
Māori to fight current issues that affect Māori rights
Cyril Chapman carried the flag from Te
Hapua. He believes Māori today face bigger challenges.
Chapman says, "Is it truly
the words of our ancestors who said not one more acre. You know,
where are we now? I know that thousands of acres of land have
been lost since then through legislation and through rates and lots
of other means so it's a time to reflect and time to think about,
okay, what are our strategies ahead?"
This renowned elder says the government
continues to trample on the Treaty of Waitangi.
Titewhai says, "Now they gone away
and signed the TPPA another agreement that's not only going to do
away with our Treaty rights, it's going to do away with us as Māori.
We need to wake up and stand up and get back on the road and make our
feelings heard and seen to be heard."
She says Māori should continue to
fight for their rights....
See full article HERE
'Kids
round here have nothing to do' - Iwi leader hits out after boy, 12,
tried to rob dairy with gun
An iwi
leader says the armed robbery of a Kaitaia dairy on Sunday by two
teenagers was a direct result of the "limited windows of
opportunity" young people have in the Far North.
North Road Dairy owner Dipika Patel was
in the store when an armed 12-year-old boy, who police believe was on
methamphetamine, entered demanding money at 8.35pm on Sunday.
But Te Rarawa iwi leader Haami Piripi
told Newstalk ZB, while the images were "shocking", people
shouldn't be too quick to demonise the teenagers.
He said it was an "economic
phenomenon" that was being seen around the world and stemmed
from a lack of basic needs such as healthcare, education and
housing....
See full article HERE
Language key to health approach
A leading Auckland nursing educator
says the language used in healthcare needs to change if there are to
be improvement in Maori health.
Auckland University school of nursing
Barbara Docherty says mainstream health professionals tend not to
listen to their patients, especially Maori, so don’t have the
conversations needed to work out what is the most important to them.
"Participation, partnership,
protection. If we just kept those three principles in our mind in
general practice primary healthcare, we would be doing the right
thing by everybody. Not participation inviting Maori to a meeting and
saying ‘We are here to help you.’ Allowing them to tell us what
they want. Partnership, working together, but Maori telling us how we
can assist them rather than us putting it on them. And then
protection, they need protection from us," she says.....
See full article HERE
14 October 2015
The route of the expressway will see a
60 metre deep pass through the Taupiri Range and will require more
than 1 million cubic metres of soil to be moved.
NZ Transport Agency contractors Fulton
Hogan HEB can use the soil as fill along other parts of the section
but are not allowed to truck the material away from the project site.
Raymond (Moko) Kumar, Waikato Tainui
project manager, said the consent condition was common for any site
identified as waahi tapu.
A waahi tapu site is
identified by iwi/hapu as a place that is spiritually and culturally
important.
Taupiri urupa (cemetery) is located on
Taupiri Mountain at the southern end of the range.
"In any waahi tapu site where the
landscape of that particular site is destined to be changed forever,
one of the key practices that iwi like developers to follow as part
of their work is that the soil is retained in that area for cultural
reasons," Kumar said.
"Taupiri urupa is Waikato Tainui's
most significant landmark, it defines who we are as a tribe."....
See full article HERE
Waipareira Trust wins major research
grant
An
Urban Maori Authority has won a major research grant that will allow
it to talk directly with whānau to find out what has helped them
improve their health.
Te Whānau O Waipareira Trust says it
wants to look backwards and talk to kuia and kaumatua and find out
what's worked for them and use that information to improve its health
services to the community.
The funding from the Health Research
Council provides the trust's research arm, Wai-Research, with
$200,000.....
See full article HERE
Wakatu Maori to argue for property
rights
Wakatu
Maori are heading to the Supreme Court to argue they have the same
property rights as other New Zealanders and should not be prevented
from protecting them in the courts.
The Nelson-based group of five hapu
became an incorporated family in 1977, and for the past 30 years it
has unsuccessfully sought compensation for alienation from its land.
Chairman Paul Morgan said it would cite
an 1841 agreement in which Pakeha settlers promised to put 10 percent
of Nelson lands aside for local Maori...
See full article HERE
League ready to yell louder
The Maori Women’s Welfare League has
agreed it needs to get more vocal about advocating for Maori women
and whanau.
President Prue Kapua says a new open
forum at the league’s annual conference in Whangarei went well,
with the wahine expressing a strong desire to be involved in issues
such as the reform of Child, Youth and Family.
She says for some it meant getting over
a fear of looking political, as most political decisions will affect
whanau Maori.....
See full article HERE
13 October 2015
Maori authorities are gathering in
Wellington to discuss their investments, with diversifying beyond
primary industries high on the agenda.
Leaders from throughout the
country will meet on Saturday at the Federation Of Maori Affairs
(FOMA) conference to discuss their collective asset base of $9
billion - the majority of the overall $12b Maori asset base.
FOMA chairwoman Traci Houpapa said its
150 members held assets in commercial property, energy, and tourism
but many were heavily invested in commodity driven primary
industries, and were looking to diversify.....
See full article HERE
Tuhoronuku on notice from Crown
The
Minister of Treaty Negotiations has warned the troubled body
negotiating Ngapuhi's treaty settlement that it might lose its
authority to talk to the Crown.
In a letter obtained under the Official
Information Act the Minister Chris Finlayson told Tuhoronuku's new
chairman, Hone Sadler his board must gain the support of hapu who
have rejected his organisation's authority.
Unless that is done the Crown could
decide not to recognise the board's authority....
See full article HERE
Cultural exchange between Saudis and
Māori
A contingent of dignitaries and
diplomats representing the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia were welcomed
on to a Waikato marae this weekend, in the hopes of
creating ties between the Māori and Saudi people.
The home people of Paaraawera Marae in
Te Awamutu were treated to a display of sword dancing and
fine cotton dress in a cultural exchange that began on Saturday.
The NZ-based group of Saudi were
welcomed by famous sea voyager Hoturoa Kerr, who said the
similarities between the two cultures were
remarkable, “They picked up the hongi easily because it's a
custom of their own and so is standing to do a whai kōrero, singing,
socialising, it's was second nature to them.”....
See full article HERE
Māori encouraged into the digital
world to benefit Maōri economy
The digital world is changing the
traditional business landscape, but now it's enticing Māori
innovators. "DigMyIdea" is a contest that encourages
Māori entrepreneur to share their digital ideas to benefit Māori....
See full article HERE
11 October 2015
Ngati Porou welcome council’s agreement
The council’s decision is historic in
that this JMA is a first for the country.
The Ngati Porou - Gisborne District Council JMA differs from other JMAs, in that it applies to all the freshwater and land within the Waiapu catchment.
The Ngati Porou - Gisborne District Council JMA differs from other JMAs, in that it applies to all the freshwater and land within the Waiapu catchment.
This JMA will provide a model for the recognition of iwi rights and interests in freshwater, as well as provide a practical ‘collaboration vehicle’ to enable effective, inclusive and robust management of freshwater and land resources within the Waiapu catchment.
“To quote Councillor Wilson, ‘true democracy isn’t just about 14 people sitting around a table making decisions, true democracy is when you involve the people that are directly affected by those decisions in the decision-making process’,” Mr Parata said....
See full article HERE
Whanau Ora fails Maori
Whanau Ora isn’t working and nor is
it saving lives judging by tragic statistics released today by the
Ministry of Health, says Labour’s Maori Development spokesperson
Nanaia Mahuta.
“Whanau Ora is the Maori Party’s
flagship health programme, yet these newly released statics show
Maori are still suffering the most in almost every health category.
“It’s time for the Maori Party to
admit Whanau Ora isn’t anchored on solid foundations and has failed
to bring fresh health opportunities for Maori,” says Nanaia
Mahuta.....
See full article HERE
Napier Hill to be renamed Mataruahou
under Mana Ahuriri treaty settlement
Prominent Hawke's Bay landmark Napier
Hill will be officially renamed Mataruahou under a Treaty of Waitangi
claim that is nearing completion.
Mataruahou is the historic Maori name
for the hill, one of Napier's higher-value residential areas, which
sits between the city's port and CBD shopping district.
It was named Scinde Island by European
settlers and was mostly surrounded by water before the 1931 Hawke's
Bay earthquake raised additional land on Napier's shoreline.
The planned official geographic name
change is included in a deed of settlement agreed between the Crown
and Mana Ahuriri, a claimant group representing seven Napier
hapu.....
See full article HERE
THE historic joint management agreement
for the Waiapu River catchment between Gisborne District Council and
Te Runanganui o Ngati Porou won clear support when it came before
Gisborne District Council yesterday.
The recommendation that the council sign the agreement was carried by 11 votes to one with the only vocal opponent, Roger Haisman, recording a vote against the motion when a division was called.
Votes in favour were recorded by Meredith Akuhata-Brown, Bill Burdett, Andy Cranston, Amber Dunn, Alan Davidson, Mayor Meng Foon, Larry Foster, Brian Wilson, Pat Seymour, Rehette Stoltz and Josh Wharehinga. Graeme Thomson abstained and Craig Bauld was not present....
The recommendation that the council sign the agreement was carried by 11 votes to one with the only vocal opponent, Roger Haisman, recording a vote against the motion when a division was called.
Votes in favour were recorded by Meredith Akuhata-Brown, Bill Burdett, Andy Cranston, Amber Dunn, Alan Davidson, Mayor Meng Foon, Larry Foster, Brian Wilson, Pat Seymour, Rehette Stoltz and Josh Wharehinga. Graeme Thomson abstained and Craig Bauld was not present....
See full article HERE
Ngati Porou welcome council’s
agreement
The council’s decision is historic in
that this JMA is a first for the country.
The Ngati Porou - Gisborne District Council JMA differs from other JMAs, in that it applies to all the freshwater and land within the Waiapu catchment.
This JMA will provide a model for the recognition of iwi rights and interests in freshwater, as well as provide a practical ‘collaboration vehicle’ to enable effective, inclusive and robust management of freshwater and land resources within the Waiapu catchment.
“To quote Councillor Wilson, ‘true democracy isn’t just about 14 people sitting around a table making decisions, true democracy is when you involve the people that are directly affected by those decisions in the decision-making process’,” Mr Parata said....
The Ngati Porou - Gisborne District Council JMA differs from other JMAs, in that it applies to all the freshwater and land within the Waiapu catchment.
This JMA will provide a model for the recognition of iwi rights and interests in freshwater, as well as provide a practical ‘collaboration vehicle’ to enable effective, inclusive and robust management of freshwater and land resources within the Waiapu catchment.
“To quote Councillor Wilson, ‘true democracy isn’t just about 14 people sitting around a table making decisions, true democracy is when you involve the people that are directly affected by those decisions in the decision-making process’,” Mr Parata said....
See full article HERE
Rowing club vows to stay put
A
rowing club in Levin is refusing to be "bullied" out of its
building next to Lake Horowhenua by local Māori who want the club to
leave.
The rowing club building is padlocked
up, its windows covered with corrugated iron.
"When we come down here,
especially when we have the kids around, we've been getting abused
and threatened. Several members of our club have been assaulted,"
he said.
But Mr Bealing said even though its
lease had ended the council had not told the club to leave.
"We were paying lease up till a
couple of years ago. We've paid everything that we've been invoiced,
as such. Everything has been up in the air the last couple of years
so nothing has come through. But we're paying rates on the building.
We're paying the upkeep."
Another building next to the lake,
belonging to the old sailing club, was claimed by local Māori a
month ago. Most of its windows are smashed and one garage door has a
huge dent in it...
See full article HERE
10 October 2015
Gunpoint treaty threat and other
lies
Hawke's Bay elder
Jerry Hapuku spoke to the Hawke’s Bay Today newspaper for a
Waitangi Day story this year. Maybe the excitement of being
interviewed blurred the line between fact and fiction so he told a
story about his ancestor, chief Te Hapuku, being forced to sign the
Treaty of Waitangi at gunpoint.
That’s news to me I thought
when I saw the headline, having read a lot of regional history, so I
checked historian Angela Ballara’s description Te Hapuku and the
treaty in her biography of him in the Encyclopaedia of New Zealand.
Ballara is a current member of the Waitangi Tribunal and her writings
are very pro-Maori.
Ballara’s account shows that because Te Hapuku had signed the 1835 Declaration of the Independence in the Bay of Islands on September 25, 1838, Major Thomas Bunbury deemed it important to obtain his agreement to the treaty so visited him at the Tukituki River in Hawke's Bay.
"At first Te Hapuku refused to sign, saying that Nga Puhi were now slaves through the treaty, but Bunbury convinced him that his assent to the treaty could only increase his mana; he gave it on 24 June 1840”, Ballara wrote.
No gunpoint threat there! Ballara did write that Te Hapuku was threatened by British Resident James Busby at some time in the 1830s with a visit by a warship to stop him bullying whalers at Mahia.
“Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies”, the chorus of the old Fleetwood Mac song, could be the chorus of every Waitangi Day, as such imaginative accounts like that of Hawke's Bay elder Jerry Hapuku.
These little lies fill newspapers in early February every year, along with the turgid prose of academic treaty troughers telling us that we should keep shovelling cash to tribes despite grievances being settled. These lies include:
1. That Ngapuhi never ceded sovereignty, another lie trotted out this year, this time with the backing of a report from the hopelessly conflicted Waitangi Tribunal. Claimant logic is simple: The Waitangi Tribunal said so; the Waitangi Tribunal is official; therefore it must be true.
But the claim is a bare-faced lie: Article 1 of the treaty says the chiefs cede to the Queen of England for ever the entire Sovereignty of their country. Missionary William Colenso records the debate that shows the chiefs understood what ceding sovereignty meant. Chiefs at Kohimarama 20 years later reaffirmed their commitment to this deal.
2. “The wicked white coloniser” stole 25.2 million hectares of Maori land. This lie was incorporated into a stunt by Nga Tamatoa protesters at the 1971 Waitangi Day event.
New Zealand has 26.8-million hectares of land. Around 1.2-million hectares were confiscated during the 1860s wars (much of which was returned at the time). There is approximately 1.47 million hectares of Maori land. Everything else, being 24.13-million hectares, was sold.
Chiefs sold the land. They did not lose the land.
3. South Island tribe Ngai Tahu lost 12 billion dollars worth of assets and generously accepted as compensation $170-million.
A closer look at the facts shows that fewer than 2000 people occupied the 15 million hectare South Island in 1840, so few that the British thought it was uninhabited. Nevertheless, a handful of Ngai Tahu chiefs sold most of the South Island in 10 deals over 20 years from 1844 for a total of ₤14,750.
Between 1868 and 1995, Ngai Tahu had received five settlements of what started out as a single complaint. What is more, Ngai Tahu, like Waikato-Tainui, negotiated a top-up relativity clause, which means their latest settlement just keeps on giving. Moreover, Ngai Tahu had sold much of the South Island before the Treaty of Waitangi was signed, and the treaty commitment to investigate pre-1840 sales enabled chiefs to sell the land all over again while keeping the proceeds of the earlier sales.
4. General Cameron rode into Rangioawhia, near Te Awamutu, on February 24, 1864, rounded up all the Maori, locked them into the church, set fire to it, and anybody that tried to escape was shot, and 144 Maori were burnt to death.
The truth is that for many years afterwards all the churches in the village were still standing! One wooden church had bullet holes in it from the troops' fire at armed rebels firing from within it. Other rebels were firing from inside a rush whare that caught fire - whether from their own guns or those of the troops is not known.
Figures for the rebels inside vary from five to 12. In any case their bodies were recovered afterwards along with that of Sergeant McHale who had been killed by a bullet and his body dragged inside. Colonel Nixon was also killed when leading his troops.
Total casualties on both sides did not exceed about 20, thus achieving Cameron's objective of minimizing casualties by a surprise attack before dawn. The myth-makers give him no credit for that.
5. That Kereopa Te Rau, who swallowed the eyes of missionary Carl Volkner at Opotiki on March 2, 1865, was totally innocent of his murder.
Te Rau was found guilty by a properly constituted court of law and hanged the usual penalty for murder in those days. There is ample evidence in the nature of his involvement in this killing. (See Mary Tagg: "The Martyr's Crown"") Nevertheless, in June 2014, Te Rau received a statutory pardon from a craven government.
6. That there was no cannibalism of crew members of the "Harriet" wrecked near Cape Egmont, Taranaki, in 1834..
This was declared in video at the falsehood-ridden exhibition by the New Plymouth museum, exhibited in Nelson, 2013. Evidence from eyewitnesses Jackie and Betty Guard, the latter being captured, including the names of most of those slaughtered and eaten is incontrovertible.
The list could go on.
As for the tales you hear about Maori getting the strap for speaking Maori in school, as repeated by Education Minister Hekia Parata this week, what you are not told is that ALL kids were either strapped or caned when a rule was broken.
You are also not told that in the 1870s, a newly elected Maori Member of Parliament, Takamoana, sought legislation to ensure that Maori children were taught only in English.
A petition to parliament in 1877, by Wi Te Hakiro and 336 others, called for an amendment to the 1867 Native Schools Act which would require the teachers of a Native School to be ignorant of the Maori language and not permit the Maori language to be spoken at the school.
If it was merely a matter of “Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies”, as the chorus of the old Fleetwood Mac song tells us, there would be not issue other than academic debates over history.
The lies are dressed up as "oral history" the Waitangi Tribunal gives precedence to such oral history which is not cross-examined, over substantial written proof - legal documents and written eye-witness accounts.
But these lies form the basis of a grievance industry that has already transferred more than $2-billion to tribal entities that largely pay no tax. These lies help claimants within universities and the government push for this transfer of wealth to continue long after all land grievances have been settled.
http://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.co.nz/2015/02/mike-butler-treaty-gunpoint-threat-and.html
February 8, 2015
Ballara’s account shows that because Te Hapuku had signed the 1835 Declaration of the Independence in the Bay of Islands on September 25, 1838, Major Thomas Bunbury deemed it important to obtain his agreement to the treaty so visited him at the Tukituki River in Hawke's Bay.
"At first Te Hapuku refused to sign, saying that Nga Puhi were now slaves through the treaty, but Bunbury convinced him that his assent to the treaty could only increase his mana; he gave it on 24 June 1840”, Ballara wrote.
No gunpoint threat there! Ballara did write that Te Hapuku was threatened by British Resident James Busby at some time in the 1830s with a visit by a warship to stop him bullying whalers at Mahia.
“Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies”, the chorus of the old Fleetwood Mac song, could be the chorus of every Waitangi Day, as such imaginative accounts like that of Hawke's Bay elder Jerry Hapuku.
These little lies fill newspapers in early February every year, along with the turgid prose of academic treaty troughers telling us that we should keep shovelling cash to tribes despite grievances being settled. These lies include:
1. That Ngapuhi never ceded sovereignty, another lie trotted out this year, this time with the backing of a report from the hopelessly conflicted Waitangi Tribunal. Claimant logic is simple: The Waitangi Tribunal said so; the Waitangi Tribunal is official; therefore it must be true.
But the claim is a bare-faced lie: Article 1 of the treaty says the chiefs cede to the Queen of England for ever the entire Sovereignty of their country. Missionary William Colenso records the debate that shows the chiefs understood what ceding sovereignty meant. Chiefs at Kohimarama 20 years later reaffirmed their commitment to this deal.
2. “The wicked white coloniser” stole 25.2 million hectares of Maori land. This lie was incorporated into a stunt by Nga Tamatoa protesters at the 1971 Waitangi Day event.
New Zealand has 26.8-million hectares of land. Around 1.2-million hectares were confiscated during the 1860s wars (much of which was returned at the time). There is approximately 1.47 million hectares of Maori land. Everything else, being 24.13-million hectares, was sold.
Chiefs sold the land. They did not lose the land.
3. South Island tribe Ngai Tahu lost 12 billion dollars worth of assets and generously accepted as compensation $170-million.
A closer look at the facts shows that fewer than 2000 people occupied the 15 million hectare South Island in 1840, so few that the British thought it was uninhabited. Nevertheless, a handful of Ngai Tahu chiefs sold most of the South Island in 10 deals over 20 years from 1844 for a total of ₤14,750.
Between 1868 and 1995, Ngai Tahu had received five settlements of what started out as a single complaint. What is more, Ngai Tahu, like Waikato-Tainui, negotiated a top-up relativity clause, which means their latest settlement just keeps on giving. Moreover, Ngai Tahu had sold much of the South Island before the Treaty of Waitangi was signed, and the treaty commitment to investigate pre-1840 sales enabled chiefs to sell the land all over again while keeping the proceeds of the earlier sales.
4. General Cameron rode into Rangioawhia, near Te Awamutu, on February 24, 1864, rounded up all the Maori, locked them into the church, set fire to it, and anybody that tried to escape was shot, and 144 Maori were burnt to death.
The truth is that for many years afterwards all the churches in the village were still standing! One wooden church had bullet holes in it from the troops' fire at armed rebels firing from within it. Other rebels were firing from inside a rush whare that caught fire - whether from their own guns or those of the troops is not known.
Figures for the rebels inside vary from five to 12. In any case their bodies were recovered afterwards along with that of Sergeant McHale who had been killed by a bullet and his body dragged inside. Colonel Nixon was also killed when leading his troops.
Total casualties on both sides did not exceed about 20, thus achieving Cameron's objective of minimizing casualties by a surprise attack before dawn. The myth-makers give him no credit for that.
5. That Kereopa Te Rau, who swallowed the eyes of missionary Carl Volkner at Opotiki on March 2, 1865, was totally innocent of his murder.
Te Rau was found guilty by a properly constituted court of law and hanged the usual penalty for murder in those days. There is ample evidence in the nature of his involvement in this killing. (See Mary Tagg: "The Martyr's Crown"") Nevertheless, in June 2014, Te Rau received a statutory pardon from a craven government.
6. That there was no cannibalism of crew members of the "Harriet" wrecked near Cape Egmont, Taranaki, in 1834..
This was declared in video at the falsehood-ridden exhibition by the New Plymouth museum, exhibited in Nelson, 2013. Evidence from eyewitnesses Jackie and Betty Guard, the latter being captured, including the names of most of those slaughtered and eaten is incontrovertible.
The list could go on.
As for the tales you hear about Maori getting the strap for speaking Maori in school, as repeated by Education Minister Hekia Parata this week, what you are not told is that ALL kids were either strapped or caned when a rule was broken.
You are also not told that in the 1870s, a newly elected Maori Member of Parliament, Takamoana, sought legislation to ensure that Maori children were taught only in English.
A petition to parliament in 1877, by Wi Te Hakiro and 336 others, called for an amendment to the 1867 Native Schools Act which would require the teachers of a Native School to be ignorant of the Maori language and not permit the Maori language to be spoken at the school.
If it was merely a matter of “Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies”, as the chorus of the old Fleetwood Mac song tells us, there would be not issue other than academic debates over history.
The lies are dressed up as "oral history" the Waitangi Tribunal gives precedence to such oral history which is not cross-examined, over substantial written proof - legal documents and written eye-witness accounts.
But these lies form the basis of a grievance industry that has already transferred more than $2-billion to tribal entities that largely pay no tax. These lies help claimants within universities and the government push for this transfer of wealth to continue long after all land grievances have been settled.
http://breakingviewsnz.blogspot.co.nz/2015/02/mike-butler-treaty-gunpoint-threat-and.html
February 8, 2015
9 October 2015
The
announcement of the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) shows a complete
lack of understanding of the Treaty of Waitangi's principles, a
lawyer says.
The Waitangi Tribunal has granted a
group of claimants challenging the deal an urgent hearing, which is
expected to take place in January.
The claimants had asked the Crown not
to take any steps that would undermine the claim before it could be
heard by the tribunal but it declined, without giving any reasons.
The Federation of Māori Authorities
has praised the agreement. But the lawyer representing the claimants,
Kathy Ertell, said it was regrettable that the Crown had gone ahead
without the support of its treaty partner.
"It shows a complete lack of
understanding of what the principles of the treaty are, which are
about the development of a relationship going into the future
together between the Crown and Māori - not the Crown just rushing
off and doing whatever it wants when it comes to making agreements
which may compromise the sovereignty of New Zealand.
"It becomes even more important
that the Crown takes its treaty partner into its confidence."...
See full article HERE
Lack of consultation over marine
reserve - Ngāti Porou
The
Ngāti Porou tribal board and its seafood company are disappointed
with the decision to create a marine reserve around the Kermedec
Islands because of a lack of consultation.
Chairman Selwyn Parata said the way the
Crown had acted was inconsistent with its obligations to Iwi under
the Treaty of Waitangi and its 1992 settlement between the Iwi and
the Crown.
He said although conservation measures
added value and were important, so too were Treaty rights....
See full article HERE
Work begins on $3.7m Greta Point
housing development
A $3.7 million housing development is
underway in Wellington for descendants of Te Aro Pa iwi - more
than 140 years after their ancestors were forced off the land.
Te Aro Pa Trust, which represents about
1000 people who traced their lineage to the original pa inhabitants,
began work on a housing development in June at Greta Point in
Evans Bay. The 1.6-hectare site was previously occupied by the
Sheepskin Warehouse.
The apartments will include a shared
garden and communal courtyards and have been designed to support
affordable living for local Maori on low and modest incomes.
The development is being funded with a
mix of bank funding and grants from the newly-established Maori
Housing Network....
See full article HERE
8 October 2015
The president of the Maori Women’s
Welfare League says she’s looking forward to its annual conference
starting in Whangarei today to debate issues like the review of
Child, Youth and Family.
Prue Kapua says there have been changes
to the usual format so members have more time to discuss kaupapa and
develop a league position.
She says getting its views out in
public and being seen to be effective will be the way to draw in
younger members and keep the organisation relevant to whanau Maori.
"We have to start making
governments accountable, to the issues that affect us. We have to
start doing and saying the things that are really important that
we're doing not just because one or two of us are saying it but
because we've actually got the processes in place to be able to get
the views of all of our members" she says.....
See full article HERE
Call for $10m boost for Māori boys'
college
The
principal of Te Aute Māori boys' college near Napier wants the
Ministry of Education and the Anglican Church to follow the lead of
iwi to move the school into the future.
The boarding school will receive $5
million from the Heretaunga-Tamatea treaty settlement, which was
signed last month.
Mr Hiha wants to see the Ministry and
Church both contribute $5m so there is a $15m fund for the school's
sustainability....
See full article HERE
Auckland woman alleges workplace
bullying against her 'European values system'
A woman sacked from her teaching
position at a South Auckland school has alleged she was racially
bullied for her "European values system".
Marx has complained to the Employment
Relations Authority that she was discriminated against on racial
grounds "unlike Maori and Pacifica ... and one Indian"
colleagues.
"She was treated differently (on
unidentified grounds) by ... not getting use of a working computer
for her studies, and being criticised for not attending a powhiri for
a new [staff member].
"And ... [the fact she was] 'a
woman with European values system of freedom and democracy' was 'held
against' her by the two Board [of Trustees] members who investigated
the disciplinary matters that led to her dismissal."
She was fired for what was deemed
"serious misconduct"....
See full article HERE
MWWL says Māori women play central
role in addressing whānau needs
The Māori Women's Welfare League says
Māori women must play a central role in helping address the needs of
Māori children and their families.
Any solution for Māori families and
children must include Māori women at its centre. The League has
always reached into our communities in a way that departments and
other organisations can never do.”
Kapua adds “Of the 5000 children in
state care, almost 3,000 are mokopuna Māori. It is time now for the
Government to listen to the solutions we can offer as League women
involved in our communities and passionate about better outcomes for
our whanau."....
See full article HERE
7 October 2015
A network to support Maori-led house
building projects has been launched at the opening of a housing
development by a Ngaruawahia whanau.
The network has been set up under
government agency Te Puni Kokiri to support Maori-led housing
initiatives and develop greater Maori capability in the sector
In the last four years Maori-led
projects have funded the building of 95 new homes and infrastructure
has also been put in place to new and existing homes.
The Ranga-Bidois whanau developed a
plan with Whanau Ora support, and successfully applied for funding
from Te Puni Kokiri to help develop the project.
They then got funding for
infrastructure and to build the homes from the Ministry of Business,
Innovation and Employment as part of the wider housing investments by
the government through the Social Housing Fund.
Papakainga is a form of housing
development which occurs on multiply-owned Maori or ancestral
land....
See full article HERE
China business boosts Ngai Tahu
profit
Ngai Tahu has made a net profit for the
year ended June of $109 million.
That’s 25 percent down from last
year’s record $145 million, which was boosted by insurance payments
for earthquake damage.
Revenue was up at $346 million, and the
iwi also picked up $11 million from the Aquaculture Settlement and
$17 million from the relativity clause in its land settlement.
It paid out $26 million in tribal,
runanga and whanau distributions.....
See full article HERE
Crown concedes it failed to protect
Lake Horowhenua from pollution
The Crown has conceded it failed
to protect Lake Horowhenua from pollution, breached the Treaty of
Waitangi on multiple occassions and left the Muaupoko iwi virtually
landless.
The Waitangi Tribunal hearing opened at
the Horowhenua Events Centre in Levin on Monday, with 22 claims
looking at Lake Horowhenua, Hokio Stream and the Horowhenua land
block.
"We believe this will be one of
the most profound hearings we will have in this district," Judge
Caren Fox said on the opening morning of the tribunal.
In its written submission, released
before the hearing, the Crown acknowledged that the Muaupoko
iwi had "well-founded grievances".
It breached the Treaty of Waitangi and
this allowed Lake Horowhenua to become polluted.....
See full article HERE
A Far North
iwi is welcoming plans for a Kermadec Island sanctuary, but says a
phone call about the plan ahead of it being announced is not
consultation as claimed by the Government.
Te Aupouri says the first time it heard
about plans for a sanctuary was during a phone call from Environment
Minister Nick Smith the night before the announcement.
Mr Stevens said he was not sure how Dr
Smith came to the conclusion the iwi strongly supported the
sanctuary, saying proper consultation would have required the two
parties sitting down to discuss sanctuary.
"There's a difference between
supporting the sanctuary and opposing the way it was put in place.
We're saying we disagree with the processes," he said.
The Kermadec Islands have had a marine
reserve around them since 1990, but this decision will extend it from
12 nautical miles to the 200 nautical miles. The protected area will
be twice the size of New Zealand's land mass and 50 times the size of
the country's largest national park....
See full article HERE
Mr Peters
said the government's response as New Zealand's social circumstances
worsened as a result of the current economy was to privatise welfare
and to sell state houses.
"Nowhere in the waffle pouring out
of the Beehive has there been any reference to the core issues that
are creating social breakdown and the reasons behind children ending
up in state care," he said.
"Unless we in the Maori world
accept that there is an unacceptable level of parental
irresponsibility that only we can fix we will go on wasting
taxpayers' money.....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the
on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes
tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
6 October 2015
From the NZCPR archives (By Dr
Muriel Newman)
6 October 2015
Two flags, two peoples, a divided
nation
Incredibly the National Party has
advanced the Maori sovereignty agenda much more than the socialist
Labour Party did. That will prove disastrous for the future of New
Zealand and I’m sure will be a huge disappointment to many of those
who voted for National at the last election.
At a political level, the actions of
the National Party have re-opened the door to the return of Winston
Peters – who has consistently argued against racial division and
the prevailing partnership myth of the Treaty of Waitangi. It also
re-exposes National’s right flank to gains by the ACT Party, should
ACT choose to pursue this issue and wrestle away votes that would
otherwise go to New Zealand First.
The racism debate needs to be discussed
openly and honestly, and without fear or favour. We need to ask which
of two paths New Zealand wants to go down. The first is the path of
the Maori sovereignty movement that looks to a future shaped by
indigenous rights. We know from the experiences of Zimbabwe and South
Africa where that path leads.
The alternative path – desired by
most New Zealanders – respects indigenous culture but rejects
tribalism and privilege for our so-called indigenous population.
Most people want the grievance gravy
train to stop. Most people know the train has become a billion dollar
industry that has gone beyond righting the wrongs of the past, and
most can see that the motivations are now largely selfish.
What is particularly disturbing in all
of this is that John Key and his National Party either don’t see
it, or are prepared to turn a blind eye because it suits them to do
so.....
Read Dr Muriel Newman's full article HERE
Read Dr Muriel Newman's full article HERE
5 October 2015
Plans to set up one of the largest
ocean sanctuaries in the world breach Treaty of Waitangi obligations
and extremely late-notice consultation was cynical, the Maori
Fisheries Trust says.
The strong criticism comes after Labour
said the Government's "care free" approach to establishing
the Kermadec Ocean Sanctuary could lead to legal challenges from iwi.
"Iwi rights go beyond other
participants in the fisheries sector and include quota share
interests in fisheries based on QMA10 - the Kermadec zone. The nature
of those rights means all iwi have a commercial interest in this
area."
Asked if legal action was on the cards,
a spokesman for TOK said: "it might be something that iwi
consider if the Government continues to shirk its responsibilities
and obligations".....
See full article HERE
No safety net for Maori in Oz
A specialist in Maori and legal systems
says Maori are disproportionately likely to be affected by
Australia's harsh new visa laws.
Ms Stephens says the new rules affect
New Zealanders more than migrants from other countries because the so
called special relationship with Australia means they are less likely
to take out citizenship.
"Thirty seven percent of New
Zealanders have taken out Australian citizenship compared to other
ethnicities and Maori again are even less likely to take up
citizenship. Now because we do not have that tendency to have that
safety net of citizenship, Maori are disproportionately more likely
to be on the hard end of this kind of policy," she says.....
See full article HERE
3 October 2015
Charter schools are an attack on the
educational rights and unity of the entire working class. For the
Maori nationalists, the charter system is to be used to secure public
funds to set up what are, in effect, racially segregated Maori-only
schools, on the model that already exists with “language nests”
at pre-school and primary levels.
The push for charter schools by the
Maori elite exposes all the purveyors of racial identity politics and
the program of “Tino Rangatiratanga,” or Maori
self-determination. According to this agenda, Maori should be in
charge of running their “own” affairs within the framework of the
profit system. There is nothing progressive in this. Maori are not
“one people,” but are divided by class.
“Self-determination” is the
perspective of a small privileged layer that has been created through
the Treaty of Waitangi settlement process on the basis of
multi-million dollar payouts to tribal businesses. Deeply hostile to
the working class, they have moved far to the right in defence of
capitalism and are now openly imposing austerity measures on working
people of all races.....
See full article HERE
Under the Treaty of Waitangi, iwi group
Nga Mana Whenua o Tamaki Makaurau had to be offered the first
opportunity to develop vacant or underutilised Crown land in
Auckland, and would be able to select an approved developer should it
decide to take up its opportunity to develop any of the sites, Smith
said in a statement.....
See full article HERE
'You want to get a job, don't bowl
up speaking Maori,' says Mike Williams
Former
Labour Party president Mike Williams has suggested there is no need
for Te Reo in prisons because it does not help inmates get a job once
they are released.
Mr Williams was speaking for the New
Zealand Howard League in an official capacity when he made the
comments at a public discussion about prisons this week.
Māori make up more than half the
country's prison population.
Mr Williams was asked by an audience
member if there should be encouragement for more Māori culture and
Te Reo use in New Zealand jails.
"My response is that New Zealand
runs on English - and that's the reality of it - we speak English,"
Mr Williams replied.
"[If] you want to go and get a
job, don't bowl up speaking Māori.
"This is the reality we have to
deal with... I can speak French and German but I don't try to buy a
bus ticket with either of those languages."....
See full article HERE
2 October 2015
Naked
greed of all Auckland land claim laughable (Opinion)
Maori king Tuheitia has been
ill-advised, I believe. We can all see that the man behind - and in
front of - the scenes is Tuku Morgan, apparently the king's closest
counsel. I think this is a mistake - and one Tuheitia keeps
making.....
Ngai Tahu has built its $170 million
settlement to a similar billion-dollar asset.
Good on both of them. The only rider
is, as charitable entities they have a business advantage over their
competitors in paying no tax. Still, their efforts are to be
admired....
Not so the lack of interest in
flax-roots Maori from some Maori leaders. Leaders who make but rare
statements on education, with apparently no ideas on how to improve
the lot of Maori, who seem equally bereft of suggestions on how to
fix Maoridom's many social ills, and who have not put a single plan
into action that can be seen to be addressing Maori problems, in my
opinion. It seems all we hear from them is another claim. Twenty-plus
years ago, I predicted the claims would never stop. It's Champagne
that comes from that tap, so why would they walk away? ....
Many of our Maori leaders have to
invest in this potential and step away from the Champagne tap.....
See full article HERE
Tribunal to hear Maori land law
challenge
The Waitangi Tribunal has agreed to
hear an urgent claim against the proposed repeal of Te Ture Whenua
Maori Act and its replacement with a radically different framework
for Maori land law.
The reform is being championed by Maori
Development Minister Te Ururoa Flavell as a much-needed response to
under-development of Maori land.
That's challenged by claimants
including Marise Lant and the New Zealand Maori Council, who says the
bill's purpose of optimum utilisation of Maori land degrades the
treaty guarantee that Maori have tino rangatiratanga to use their
lands in whatever manner they see fit....
See full article HERE
Maori groups wanted more Kermadec
consultation
Chief executive Peter Douglas said they
are not angry they weren't consulted, but they hope they will be in
future.
"We'd like to establish ourselves
as worthwhile contributing to the design of aspects of the fisheries,
including sanctuaries."
Fisheries spokesman Rino Tirikatene
said some iwi hold quota rights in the area, and both iwi and
fisheries companies should have had more of a say.
"In particular, Maori especially,
because they have a Treaty settlement which is enshrined in
legislation."...
See full article HERE
$240k to assess needs of isolated
marae
Two Taranaki organisations have been
granted funding for community projects in New Plymouth
Tu Tama Wahine O Taranaki and Taranaki
Iwi Trust will receive $80,000 in funding, for the next three years,
a total of $240,000 each, as part of the government's Community
Development Scheme 2015.
Taranaki Iwi Trust has seven marae/pa
that are rurally isolated and whanau struggle to access necessary
services. Initial work will be done to assess their needs.....
See full article HERE
Maori women support tour by Chris
Brown
Maori dames have spoken out in favour
of Chris Brown's visit to New Zealand in spite of his assault
convictions.
Dame June Mariu, Dame June Jackson,
Dame Iritana Tawhiwhirangi, Lady Tureiti-Moxon, and former New
Zealand's Woman's Refuge chief executive Merepeka Raukawa-Tait said
it was important Brown was allowed to perform in New Zealand.
The leaders were supported by other
women who work in domestic violence and Whanau ora.
NUMA, the National Urban Maori
Authority, has gone as far as inviting the R&B singer to its
south Auckland marae to meet some of the youth in the community and
share his experiences.....
See full article HERE
1 October 2015
Kermadec plans could see legal action - Labour
Plans to set up one of the largest
ocean sanctuaries in the world could be open to legal challenges from
iwi, Labour says.
"Te Ohu Kaimoana [the Maori
Fisheries Trust] hold significant quota for Maori in an area affected
by the sanctuary and yet they weren't consulted. This is a breach of
Treaty of Waitangi obligations...
See full article HERE
What it takes to reinstate a
traditional name
After
two years of consultation, Miranda Hot Springs on the shores of
Tikapa Moana (the Firth of Thames) is reverting to its original Māori
name.
As part of Ngāti Pāoa's treaty
settlement, the New Zealand Geographic Board is changing the name of
the hot springs and the locality to Pukorokoro-Miranda Hot
Springs.....
See full article HERE
A Tauranga
doctor has been awarded $150,000 from the Heart Foundation for a
revolutionary research programme aimed at preventing heart disease in
Maori.
Anna Rolleston, based at The Cardiac
Clinic in 3rd Ave, will head the 12-week exercise and lifestyle
management programme with a kaupapa Maori philosophy....
See full article HERE
30 September 2015
A group of Maori activists stormed the
office of the owners of Auckland's City Works Depot, dragging staff
out and barricading themselves inside, according to witnesses.
Senior Sergeant Rees of Auckland
Central police said police were working to resolve the problem.
"There was an occupation of a
group of aggrieved Maori who believe there was a grievance with the
land," he said.....
See full article HERE
Native Affairs – State of care -
Part 1
On Thursday last week the latest review
into Child, Youth and Family revealed more damning statistics on the
state of our kids in care, and a lack of consistent capability to
work successfully with Māori to improve their lives.
Around 57 per cent of children seen by
CYF by the time they are aged five are Māori.
But only 3 out of 10 caregivers are
Māori, compared with 5 out of every 10 being Pākehā....
See full article HERE
Anne Tolley : Hands off Te Whare
Tangata
In 1988 the groundbreaking report,
PUAO-TE-ATA-TU, into the Institutional racism of the the Social
welfare Department noted “ At the heart of the issue is a profound
misunderstanding or ignorance of the place of the child in Maori
society and its relationship with whanau, hapu, iwi structures.”
This was in response to the deprivation that Maori whanau face and
the mass removal of our children from whanau into the ‘care of the
state’. (1)
This is offensive and racist social
engineering. 35 % of all children taken into the ‘care of the state
are Maori. Maori are easy to be forgotten as the rubbish of
structural adjustment. Maori still haven’t recovered from the
extremist economic “reforms” of the eighties when an entire
generation of Maori & Pacific Island children and youth has
suffered under those reforms, and to this very day remain
stigmatised, marginalised and brutalised by harsh economic
conditions.
Māori culture aligns women with the
land, because the land gives birth to humankind just as women do. As
the world was born from Papatūānuku, so humankind is born from
women. A woman’s womb, called te whare tangata (the house of
humanity), is seen as the same as the womb of the earth.
Maori women's place in their whanau,
culture and society shows the impact of colonisation, assimilation
and urbanisation which had resulted in the loss of Maori culture and
the low socio-economic position of many of the women and their whanau
find themselves in today.....
See full article HERE
29 September 2015
An
academic in youth justice and criminal law says while the rangatahi
court system is a positive development, elements of it need to be
rolled out to accommodate adults as well.
The rangatahi courts are an alternative
to the youth court, with family group conferences held on marae to
decide what will happen to the young person.
The conferences adhere to Māori
protocols or tikanga.
Khylee Quince, a lawyer and lecturer in
youth justice and criminal law at the University of Auckland, said
that element of the rangatahi courts should be extended to the adult
court system....
See full article HERE
Iwi collective keen to expand
housing
A
collective of 13 Auckland iwi that is building 300 houses at Waimahia
Inlet in south Auckland, is keen to play a big part in the
development of the region's affordable housing.
But the Waimahia Inlet development
shows how affordable community housing can be provided.
Situated in suburban Weymouth, half an
hour's drive from downtown Auckland, Waimahia will be home for nearly
300 lower income households, tenants and first time buyers.
The former Crown land is now owned by
the Tamaki Collective, with the not-for-profit Housing Foundation as
the developer.
Some of the nearly 300 houses are for
sale on the open market, others are restricted to first-home
buyers....
See full article HERE
College students petition for a
national holiday to recognise Land Wars
More than 10,000 signatures on a
petition show New Zealand is ready to set aside a day to remember the
Land Wars.
Otorohanga College students have
collected the signatures in support of a national holiday to
commemorate the 19th-century battles.
They will march on Parliament in early
December to present their request, supported by Labour MP Nanaia
Mahuta, iwi leaders and fellow students.
Mahuta said she would take the petition
to Parliament and would like to see it tabled before the Maori
Affairs Select Committee.
She said a national day of recognition
would ensure people "continue to tell the story of ancestors who
went to war to fight for their land, rather than have it taken by
colonial government"....
See full article HERE
Work is to start on removing human
bones from a restaurant building site at Auckland's Long Bay Regional
Park.
Discovery of the ancient bones has
twice stopped the rebuild of the formerly popular restaurant on the
beachfront, the latest in November 2014.
The site has been sealed while Auckland
Council sought approval from Heritage New Zealand, with the support
of iwi and hapu, to clear the whole site.
wi and hapu representatives will be on
site to provide cultural monitoring of the excavations.
The restaurant was closed in May 2013
after 12 years for refurbishment.....
See full article HERE
27 September 2015
Deal with iwi criticised
District councillor Roger Haisman has
launched a strong attack on the proposed joint management agreement
with Ngati Porou for the Waiapu Catchment — saying the goal of the
iwi is to control everything in their rohe and claiming iwi on the
Poverty Bay Flats will follow suit.
Ngati Porou had made it plain at the
previous meeting with the council that they wanted control over all
of their whole claimed area. They said at this stage they were not
ready to do that and would settle for the area of the Waiapu
Catchment.
“They made it quite clear at that meeting that was what they were aiming at.
“Do you realise the implications of that?”
If the council went ahead with this agreement, did they think that the iwi on the west of the Waimata River would not want similar agreements?
“I don’t think you realise where this is heading.
“It will mean the iwi will have a major say on what happens all over our district, particularly over the Poverty Bay Flats and the western area where there are large areas of land that is not in iwi ownership.
“We are handing a major say in what happens to a bunch of unelected people.....
See full article HERE
Maori trust manager relieved after
call
The
manager of a Maori trust trying to get people into their first homes
is feeling more hopeful of success, after a phone call from Social
Housing Minister Paula Bennett.
He Korowai Trust was advised this week
it could lose its charitable status, if it sells state houses it has
renovated, to needy families.
The Charities Commission has had to
review the status of many social housing providers after a court
found a Queenstown scheme was not charitable because it conferred
private benefit on the homeowners, rather than the community.
Mr Houghton said Ms Bennett assured him
she and the government support He Korowai's housing project, and
officials were working hard to resolve the question of charitable
status.....
See full article HERE
Govt announces funding boost to Te
Haerenga tours
The government has announced a funding
boost of $124,000 to Te Haerenga, a guided journey service on
Rangitoto and neighbouring Motutapu island.
It will give Iwi the opportunity to
share with visitors the traditional and contemporary stories linked
with the islands.
Iwi are also working to train young
Māori, and staff, involved with the venture, giving them skills they
can take out into the wider workplace....
See full article HERE
26 September 2015
Maori Claim to Water
The claim by some Maori for ownership
of freshwater cannot stand – regardless of any Waitangi tribunal
ruling in their favour. Maori especially understand the principle of
communal ownership and that nobody owns an un-alienated public
resource that is shared “in common”. Even feral pigs or deer on
private or public land are not “owned” until the hunter actually
bags the animal. Ownership then applies to the resource
(pig/deer/water) but not unless or until the point of “capture”.
Water is a prime example of an
un-owned, uncontrolled public asset, held “in common” until the
point of “capture” whether by a dam, diversion race, water pipe
or some other device that denotes possession.
Maori claimants appear to base their
claim to all fresh water based on the age old method of establishing
a property right – namely – “first possession”. The ancients
believed that those things which belong to no one became the property
of the first taker. Indeed “first possession” has been widely
applied in both common and statute law.
The expression - first come, first
served - is accepted as being a fair basis of allocation of a
particular (unclaimed) resource. The same principle applies to a
“first on last off” basis to employment and to other facets of
our society. That simple distribution of an unallocated (property)
right to any public resource has existed and worked well for years
where competing interests don’t exist.
With the advent of a commercial value
soon to be placed on fresh water, the claims to actual ownership of
water for rent seeking purposes as distinct from payment for
commercial use has given rise to the Maori and Green parties seeking
to apply a commercial value to water -something that until very
recently they thought was offensive. The incentive to apply financial
and political values to manage rivers for a shorter term private,
financial and political reasons versus the longer term wider public
good - is obvious.
The reason why the Maori claimants have
no basis to demand ownership of water is that for the first
possession rationale to stand they must have first demonstrated
possession, continuing use and control. Possession is vital to any
claim of ownership. This has simply not occurred. An association with
water -
Maori have failed to show any on going
relationship beyond that of expressing their respect and
understanding of the life giving qualities of water. That particular
belief is far from being unique to any race of people let alone
Maori. There will be no net gain to society from any redistribution
of ownership of water (other than a political gain) should a decision
be made by the Key Government to acquiesce to this demand. Maori
claimants to fresh water are not correct in their assertion that they
have historically owned fresh water. They have not shown activity
that has been consistent with continuous ownership from the time of
“first possession.” Nor have they demonstrated defense /
enforcement or intent to the claim to water. The occasional visit or
use is no different from any other association any natural person can
exercise with impunity.
The courts must recognize “first
possession” rights of the Crown on behalf of all New Zealanders.
Only the Crown has fully exercised defense of fresh water by a
delegated system of permitted use rights. It is those permitted use
rights that has allowed the fixed assets associated with water such
as dams, intake races, bores etc to be developed for both private and
public benefit.
Are Maori claimants seeking to acquire
these assets as well or is it merely the rental capacity that is
sought under this claim? The claimants would be able to extract any
price from the electricity generating plants on the rivers as well as
seeking a rental from all other users including town water supply
where applicable.
We now have a rather perverse situation
where Maori claimants want to privatize (rent seeking) fresh water
but are totally opposed to the Crown selling / privatizing assets.
Maori claimants must explain what they intend to do with (their)
flood waters which inundate private property. Currently floods are
referred to as an act of God so that no public agency can be assigned
responsibility for damage done by this public resource. That cannot
be the case when rent is achieved by the “owner” from the
beneficial use of water but is exonerated of all responsibility
during a flood event.
The ownership of fresh water is an
issue that will define the John Key Government. Mr Key has yet to
learn how to say - no - in unequivocal terms. Key’s choice is to
decide whether to write to a sentinel page in our history or be
assigned to the foot notes of expediency.
July 22, 2012
If privatizing our freshwater to iwi is
a concern to you then please sign the petition HERE
25 September 2015
Māori
claimants from the North have asked the Waitangi Tribunal to spell
out its position on sovereignty - and who holds it now.
The tribunal found
last year that Ngāpuhi chiefs had not ceded
sovereignty to the British Crown, when they signed Te Tiriti in 1840.
But it left open the question of
whether the Crown had since acquired it.
A lawyer acting for claimant groups,
Darrell Naden, said comments by a tribunal member at a recent hearing
implied it had accepted the Crown now holds sovereignty.
And he said, if that is the case,
claimants need to know.
"Our clients are presenting
evidence that since 1840 sovereignty had not been ceded," he
said.
"And, if the tribunal is however
of the position that sovereignty has been ceded since 1840 then that
affects the kind of evidence that they will present that affects the
kinds of arguments that they will want to raise, and there's that
kind of significance."....
See full article HERE
Medical Council wants partnerships
with Māori doctors
The
Medical Council is calling on non-Māori and Māori doctors to work
together to address issues of inequality tāngata whenua face in the
health system.
It has been 10 years since the council
published its standards on cultural competency - however, a decade
on, Māori still have poorer health statistics compared to non-Māori.
The council's chair, Andrew Connolly,
said one significant way the profession could help improve equality
was by supporting
Māori doctors in their advocacy and leadership roles
within the profession and in their tribal communities....
See full article HERE
Call for holistic approach to Maori
in legal system
Courts
could see fewer tāngata whenua in prison and re-offendending if a
more holistic model was used, say Māori working in the justice
system.
"A therapeutic approach is much
more team focused. So all of the personnel that would be helpful to
address whatever the cause of offending is, literally sit at the same
table and address the case, and help engage that person."
"Pou Oranga which brings a tikanga
Māori, kaupapa Māori focus, and peer support which brings a lived,
experience approach."
Mr Pene said he hoped the therapeutic
principles applied in the AODTC would become normalised in the
mainstream justice system....
See full article HERE
Interislander ferry Kaiarahi arrives
in Wellington Harbour to Maori blessing
The newest addition to Interislander's
ferry fleet has arrived in Wellington Harbour after a 13-day journey
from Singapore.
The Kaiarahi was formally welcomed
at a dawn ceremony with a Maori blessing on Thursday....
See full article HERE
24 September 2015
Govt not doing enough for poverty, Maori
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the
on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes
tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
23 September 2015
The New Zealand government is not doing
enough for people in poverty a large majority of Maori believe.
Four out of five Maori believe the New
Zealand government is not doing enough to combat poverty in the
community.
Around 17 per cent of New Zealand's
population, or 622,000 people, are assessed to be in poverty with
Maori and Pacific Islanders considered to be some of the highest risk
groups.
Motu Economic and Public Policy
research revealed that 82 per cent of Maori surveyed believe the
government is not adequately addressing the issue.
It compares with 51 per cent of
non-Maori.
Maori tend to have more "leftist"
beliefs than non-Maori, the report released on Wednesday says, with
the majority of responses believing that many live in need because
society is unfair.....
See full article HERE
Maori burial dispute hits court
A
dispute over the burial place of Wiremu Kingi Te Rangitaake, who led
Maori in the Taranaki Land Wars in the 1860s, is being played out in
the Environment Court in New Plymouth.
Greymouth Petroleum wants to overturn a
Heritage New Zealand decision denying it permission to begin
evacuations for its proposed Kowhai D wellsite in the Waitara Valley.
The application was declined after the
Otaraua hapu told Heritage New Zealand a "significant ancestor"
was buried in the vicinity of the proposed well.
Greymouth's expert witness historian
Buddy Mikaere today disputed whether the grave, whose precise
location has not been revealed, was actually near the proposed well
site.
Mr Mikaere said there was little
evidence King's body had been moved from Kaingaru after his death....
See full article HERE
Northland hapū call for treaty
negotiation halt
The
Northland group that took a claim to the Waitangi Tribunal over
Ngāpuhi's flawed mandate is calling on Treaty Minister Chris
Finlayson to halt all negotiations.
The movement, which represents 15-20
hapū and met
yesterday at Mangamuka, said the tribunal's
report supported its primary position - that all hapū have a right
to exercise rangatiratanga when deciding how and by whom they will be
represented in the tribe's treaty negotiations....
See full article HERE
23 September 2015
Northland group sacks Regional
Council
A
Northland group is issuing Māori passports, permits, consents and
qualifications, saying it no longer recognises the authority of the
Regional Council
The group, whose letterhead displays
the flag of the Declaration of Independence, recently sent a letter
to the Northland Regional Council sacking it, thanking it for its
efforts and saying it had done a miserable job.
Ngā Uri ā Hakiputatōmuri Native
Council is an active movement and local regional council Māori
Advisory Chairman Dover Samuels fears it has growing support.
Mr Samuels said, "They don't
recognise the council juristication, they think the council is tauiwi
- it has no powers over them - and they have no responsiblities to
respond to any requests by the Northland Regional Council and, I
would expect, other authorities."
He said they were distributing their
own passports, driving licences and motor vehicle registrations.
Mr Samuels said a Waitangi Tribunal
report which looked into the meaning of the Declaration of
Independence and the Treaty of Waitangi had strengthened Ngā Uri ā
Hakiputatōmuri's position.
The report found Ngāpuhi Chiefs did
not cede sovereignty to Britain.
Mr Samuels said some groups were using
the finding as a means to justify their position that existing laws
do not apply to them.
He said the Prime Minister needed to
clearly state that the sovereign powers of the nation rested with
Parliament and that the Waitangi Tribunal report was null and
void....
See full article HERE
Minister announces investigators of
indebted iwi
The
government has hired two key people to carry out an investigation and
to temporarily manage a Far North iwi.
A ministerial investigation is taking
place after the Aupōuri Māori Trust Board advised the minister that
it was hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt....
See full article HERE
Ngāti Awa call for Rena to be
removed completely
The Rena should be removed from
Astrolabe Reef. That's the view Te Patuwai and Te Rūnanga o
Ngāti Awa presented to the panel overseeing the Rena resource
consent hearings.
This is a different call from other
representatives of the subtribe....
See full article HERE
Iwi tax status mess for charity
sector
The Government’s mishandling of tax
status for charitable community housing providers is jeopardising
projects to house some of New Zealand’s most vulnerable families,
Labour’s Associate Housing and Community and Voluntary sector
spokesperson Poto Williams says.
“National has allowed this confusion
to continue for almost two years. Their latest move, rules that mean
Far North Iwi He Korowai Trust will lose its charitable status if it
allows families to pay off their homes, is simply nuts.....
See full article HERE
22 September 2015
College ponders name change to broaden appeal
Turakina
Maori Girls College is looking to attract more pakeha students and
may take the name "Maori" out of its title to increase
enrolments.
The 110-year-old Marton school is in
danger of closing after Education Minister Hekia Parata announced a
consultation process last month.
Iwi and Maori trust sponsorship, more
day pupils, whanau living in Australia, students under CYF care,
marketing to other ethnic groups and appealing to pakeha families who
want their girls to have knowledge of Te Ao Maori are listed as
strategies in a report prepared by the school's board of trustees in
response to the closure threat.
The report says if the college is to
appeal to a broader group, it may need to promote Turakina as
"Turakina Girls College."....
See full article HERE
Astrolabe
Reef has suffered enough and the Rena wreck should be left as it is,
Motiti resident Nepia Ranapia says.
Mr Ranapia is a senior member of
Korowai Kahui o Nga Pakeke o Te Patuwai, an umbrella group of elders
that sits within a traditional tribal committee.
"We say that Otaiti [Astrolabe
Reef] has suffered enough and that the conditions of the consent
proposed by the applicant will be sufficient to ensure that the mauri
[life force] of the reef is respected. The elders say that removal of
the final remains of the Rena is unnecessary and could cause more
spiritual harm than good." .....
See full article HERE
Ngati Whatua Orakei mark key
historical Akld moment
A
special ceremony was held by Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei Trust in a
central Auckland city reserve to mark the 175th anniversary of its
signing over of land to the Crown.
On September 18, 1840, Ngāti Whātua
chiefs signed a provisional Deed with the Crown and 3500 acres of
land was later handed over to become Auckland....
See full article HERE
21 September 2015
Why I disagree with Gareth Morgan
In recent weeks, Gareth Morgan has
written several articles for the “New Zealand Herald” promoting
his book on the implications of the Treaty of Waitangi for modern New
Zealand. Then a couple of days before Waitangi Day I had a call
from David Fisher of the “Herald” telling me that Dr Morgan would
be going to the Orewa Rotary Club to give a speech criticising what
he called “ignorant Brash-think” about the Treaty.
I made some comments suggesting that I disagreed quite fundamentally with his views and they appeared in the “Herald” the following day. Later that day, I got a phone call from one of Dr Morgan’s staff (Gareth must have been too busy to call me himself) inviting me to attend the speech and make some comments in reply. After giving the matter some thought, I accepted the invitation and have no regrets that I did so.
It was obvious that Dr Morgan had
chosen the venue for maximum media impact, with my attendance also
designed to increase the media appeal. And there were certainly
plenty of media in attendance – arguably as many media people as
other audience members. It turned out that, while we spoke at
the premises used by the Orewa Rotary Club, this was not a meeting of
the Orewa Rotary Club, which no doubt explains why the audience was
so tiny.
Because the “debate” – really a
speech by Dr Morgan and a relatively brief reply by me, followed by a
small number of questions from the audience – attracted some media
attention, I accepted Muriel’s invitation to write a brief piece on
why I disagree with Dr Morgan.
Let me first acknowledge that Dr Morgan
and I agree on some issues. He is opposed to separate Maori
electorates, Maori wards in local government (and by implication the
Maori Statutory Board in Auckland) and quotas for Maori in
educational institutions. Granting any group special rights is
contrary to Article 3 of the Treaty he believes, and I totally agree
with that.
Having these special rights is also
patronising, and implies that Maori aren’t quite competent enough
to have their voices heard in the political arena, or get into some
university courses, without a special leg up. Of course that is
nonsense: when I was in Parliament, there were 21 Maori in Parliament
– roughly the same percentage of Maori Members of Parliament as
Maori are in the wider population – only seven of them elected in
the Maori electorates. The other 14 were elected in general
constituencies or were placed in a winnable position on a party’s
list. (Ironically, the person who chaired our debate in Orewa
personified that fact – she was Georgina Beyer, herself Maori, who
won the rural electorate of Wairarapa for the Labour Party in
competition with Paul Henry.)
Similarly in Auckland: the first
election of councillors after the super-city was established in 2010
saw three people of Maori descent elected – not in Maori wards but
on their own merit – and again three Maori out of a total of 20
councillors meant that Maori on the Council were in roughly the same
proportion as Maori in the general population.
But as explained in his recent Ngapuhi
speech, Dr Morgan’s basic position seems to be that –
“.. the Treaty is whatever a
reasonable person’s view of the following four taken together leads
them to – not any one taken in isolation, but all taken together:
1) Treaty
of Waitangi
2) Te Tiriti O Waitangi
3) Principles of the Treaty
4) Post-1975 Consensus on the Treaty.”
2) Te Tiriti O Waitangi
3) Principles of the Treaty
4) Post-1975 Consensus on the Treaty.”
And I think that that is nonsense.
The so-called principles of the Treaty have often been referred to,
frequently in legislation, but have never to my knowledge been fully
explained, let alone agreed. And to refer to a “post-1975
consensus on the Treaty” is again a meaningless concept – I know
of no such consensus, and the whole reason for the ongoing debate is
that there is no consensus about what the Treaty means, or should
mean.
In one of his “Herald” articles Dr
Morgan talked about Maori having a partnership with the Crown, making
us, in his words, “one nation, two peoples”. I also think
this is nonsense, Lord Cooke notwithstanding. The idea that
Governor Hobson envisaged the British Crown – the representation of
the most advanced country in the world at the time – forming a
partnership with a disparate group of Maori chiefs who were, at that
time, scarcely out of the Stone Age, is ludicrous. Moreover, to
speak of New Zealand in 2015 being “two peoples” is equally
silly: the overwhelming majority of people who identify as Maori also
have some non-Maori ancestors, frequently a non-Maori parent, while
“non-Maori” are no longer exclusively European but embrace a very
wide range of ethnicities.
So I disagree with Dr Morgan’s
starting point, and as a result I disagree with many of his
conclusions.
I think making the teaching of te reo
compulsory in primary school, as he advocates, would be a complete
waste of valuable teaching time for most New Zealand children, many
of whom can’t even read and write well in English – which is not
just the dominant language of New Zealand but is also the dominant
language of the whole world. Being able to read and write in
English is of fundamental importance to all New Zealanders, whatever
their ancestry. And yes, there may be merits in terms of brain
development in learning a second language at an early age, but if a
second language is to be learnt it should be one which would be of
benefit in the wider world, such as Mandarin or Spanish.
(Interestingly, I took part in a Maori TV programme a few years ago,
on a panel of six people discussing whether te reo should be a
compulsory subject in primary school. Even though I was the
only non-Maori on the panel, the panel voted by clear majority
against making the teaching of te reo compulsory.) Of
course if resources were infinite – so that we could teach te reo
without crowding out anything else in the school curriculum – then
why not learn a whole bunch of languages? But as an economist
Dr Morgan should know better than most that resources are not
infinite: teaching te reo would have an opportunity cost –
something else would have to drop out of the curriculum.
The idea of having an Upper House with
50% of its members being Maori, which Dr Morgan also advocates,
strikes me as utterly absurd, and totally at odds with any concept of
democracy.
Many of our problems today stem from
the way in which Te Tiriti O Waitangi – the real Treaty, which
Maori chiefs signed – has been reinterpreted to suit the desires of
modern-day revisionists. But its meaning is totally
unambiguous.
The first clause involved Maori chiefs
ceding sovereignty to the British Crown, completely and forever.
And there can be not the slightest doubt about that. That Maori
chiefs understood that at the time is abundantly clear from the
speeches made by the chiefs themselves, both those in favour of
signing and those opposed to it. This was further confirmed by
a large number of chiefs at the Kohimarama Conference in 1860, and
confirmed again by Sir Apirana Ngata in 1920.
The third article of the Treaty
provided that all Maori – “tangata Maori, katoa o Nu Tirani” –
should receive full citizenship rights – and this included the many
slaves of other Maori, most being held in abject conditions and often
the victims of cannibal feasts. Today, we tend to see this
clause as no big deal but in 1840 it was an extraordinary thing for
the Queen’s representatives to offer – nothing similar happened
for the Australian aborigines, or the American Indians.
All Maori, no matter their status, were offered the “rights and
privileges of British subjects”, putting them on a par with every
other British subject – not, it may be noted, ahead of other
British subjects but on a par with them.
The second clause is what has caused so
much angst. Actually, the clause is redundant since all it does
is guarantee the right of citizens to own private property, and
British subjects have this right anyway. But note that
the guarantee was made to all the people of New Zealand – “tangata
katoa o Nu Tirani” – in clear distinction to the third article
which specifically applied only to Maori – and “all” means
“all”. In other words, rights of ownership were guaranteed
to all New Zealanders, not just to those with one or more Maori
ancestors.
There is ongoing debate about what
“tino rangatiratanga” meant at the time but it is impossible to
believe it meant what modern-day revisionists try to take it to
mean. Why on earth would Hobson have asked Maori chiefs to sign
a Treaty involving the complete cession of sovereignty in the first
clause if the second clause contradicted that first clause?
Let me say that I have always supported
the payment of compensation by the Crown to any New Zealander, Maori
or non-Maori, who can establish with a reasonable degree of certainty
that their property has been illegally confiscated by the Crown.
There are clearly suspicions that some of the claims which have been
settled in recent times have in fact been settled on several previous
occasions, and that brings the settlement process into disrepute.
But in principle nobody can object to the Crown paying compensation
to any New Zealander whose property has been illegally
confiscated.
So in summary, I like the Treaty: it is
a very simple document recording the cession of sovereignty by the
Maori chiefs who signed it; extending to them in return the full
rights of British subjects; and guaranteeing to all New
Zealanders the right to own property.
But it does not require us all to learn
te reo; it does not provide for separate Maori electorates or Maori
wards; it does not give Maori a power to veto RMA resource consents;
it does not give Maori any preferential rights over natural
resources; and it certainly provides no basis for an Upper House with
half its members being Maori.
February 8, 2015
19 September 2015
It is "inconsistent" to claim
the mauri of Astrolabe Reef/Otaiti is harmed by the Rena when iwi
have accepted intentional sinkings near significant sites, says a Te
Arawa witness.
Ms Bennett said she did not support
anything foreign in the moana but after her dive last week, she was
happy with the way the reef was recovering.
This had made her question the evidence
of those who said mauri could not exist where a ship was.
She raised the intentional sinking of
the Seafire in 2008 off the shore of Whakatane with the acceptance of
local iwi Ngati Awa.....
See full article HERE
Maori sites blessed on Clutha trail
Two sites of significance to Maori on
the Clutha Gold Trail were blessed this week ''to let the past be
comfortable with us coming through''....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
18 September 2015
Freshwater management 'at crucial
point'
Water
experts have been told ensuring that the governance and management of
freshwater recognises Māori interests is a critical challenge for
New Zealand
Rahui Papa, the chair of
Waikato-Tainui's executive board Te Arataura, made the comment at the
Water New Zealand conference currently being held in Hamilton.
An iwi leaders' forum has been in
discussion with the government to make sure iwi, hapū and whānau
rights and interests in freshwater are not ignored.
Julian Williams, who works for
Waikato-Tainui's environment unit, said the move from local to
national decision-making on freshwater recognised iwi as a full
partner with the Crown.
Mr Williams said, for Waikato-Tainui,
the definition of ownership and control of the Waikato River was
clear.
"The way we describe it is that,
as a responsibility, she is ours, she is mine to look after, she is
mine to care for - and she owns us, so ownership, in that sense to
us, means that she is ours and we are hers.....
See full article HERE
A Northland
cultural tutor is offering classes to Northland business people who
wish to improve their understanding of Maori culture with a view to
doing better business with tangata whenua.
Ellis Bryers, originally from Opononi
but now living in Tauranga, said he regularly got requests from
non-Maori businesses about how to do work with iwi.
"For Pakeha, it's about
approaching business with Maori with the values of a friendship.
"For Maori, it's about forgiveness
... forgiving the sins of the ancestors of the people standing in
front of you.....
See full article HERE
Approval given for geothermal plant
on Māori land
A
green light has been given for the construction of a geothermal power
plant on Māori land near Kawerau in the Bay of Plenty.
Eastland Group is in partnership with
landowners Kawerau A8D Ahu Whenua Trust to build a plant 2.3
kilometres northeast of the township.
In the past, Ngati Tuwharetoa ki
Kawerau has raised concerns about the site being the birthplace of
their ancestor - Tuwharetoa.....
See full article HERE
At a recent Iwi Chairs Forum hosted by
Waikato Tainui at Hopuhopu, iwi leaders resolved to actively support
the establishment of partnership schools (kura hourua) in their rohe.
We also resolved to advocate that the Government expand this
initiative and to advocate the concept publicly, in particular the
importance of high-quality teaching, high educational achievement and
strong supportive partnerships with iwi, communities and other
organisations.....
See full article HERE
17 September 2015
Auckland ratepayers have no choice over funding Maori appeal
Auckland ratepayers have no choice but
to fund a legal appeal over the way Maori advisers to the council are
selected, Mayor Len Brown says.
An appeal by the Independent Maori
Statutory Board (IMSB) over the way it selects its members was heard
by the Court of Appeal on Tuesday.
The IMSB was set up in 2010 to advise
the newly merged Auckland Council on issues affecting Maori, after
the Government rejected the idea of separate Maori seats.
Broadcaster Willie Jackson successfully
took the IMSB's selection panel to the High Court, with the judge
ruling its selection process was flawed.
"We can have all sorts of feelings
about the rights and wrongs of the case but we're obliged to follow
the law," he said.
"The law has been interpreted to
say that until such time as the matter is finally determined in court
the panel continues to sit.
"And while the panel continues to
sit we are obliged under our statute to pay any costs that they
incur, including court costs."
The Auditor-General has turned down a
request by a group of councillors for an inquiry into the
circumstances surrounding the appeal funding vote.....
See full article HERE
Call for more recognition of Tino
Rangatiratanga flag
Maori Party co-leader Marama Fox says
the Maori sovereignty flag doesn't need to be included in the
referendum, but should be flown alongside whichever design wins.
Fox wants to see the Tino
Rangatiratanga flag flying from places like Parliament.....
See full article HERE
Council set to right century-old
land grievance
Rotorua Lakes Council has today moved
to remedy a long-standing iwi grievance over confiscated land on the
eastern shore of Lake Rotoiti. The strip of land is part of a parcel
of land taken from Ngāti Tamateatutahi by the Crown 118 years
ago.......
See full article HERE
Māori world view leads to greater life
satisfaction
New research from Massey University has
compared work/life balance and life satisfaction levels across seven
cultures – and found that New Zealand Māori scored the highest on
both fronts.
Sixty-seven per cent of Māori
respondents rated their work/life balance as above average, while
only 58 per cent of Pākehā felt the same way. When it came to life
satisfaction, the gap was even wider – 81 per cent of Māori rated
their life satisfaction as above average, compared to only 59 per
cent of Pākehā.
“If your world view is not all about
your own personal wellbeing, you are more likely to feel content with
your work/life balance, even if it doesn’t mean you’re actually
working less hours.” ....
See full article HERE
16 September 2015
Justice calls for places dedicated
to Te Reo
High
Court Justice Joe Williams is calling for the creation of places or
districts dedicated to speaking Te Reo Maori.
Justice Williams, who served as Chief
Judge of the Maori Land Court, and as Chairman of the Waitangi
Tribunal, said the focus should shift to Maori language "places".
"They could be places throughout
New Zealand where the Maori language is seen as a regular part of
community intercourse, community discourse and discussion, so that
bilingual signs would be expected, families would be supported to
speak in Maori in their homes, and the language would be valued in
the districts."
He said if there was such a place, he
would move to it and live there.....
See full article HERE
Maori access super before 65? Russel
Norman's replacement says it's worth a look
New Green MP Marama Davidson wants to
improve party’s connection with Maori, saying it traditionally
hasn’t had a strong presence in Maori communities.
Asked if Maori should be able to access
NZ Super before the age of 65 (the current age of eligibility for all
New Zealanders), she replies: “Both of my own grandparents didn't
make it past 65, and so we need to look at how to make things more
equal for those discriminations.” ...
See full article HERE
Matakana settlement dragging on
Descendants
of the owners of Panepane Point on Matakana Island are being called
to a hui on their ancestral land on September 20 to discuss its fate.
The
land, some 400 acres, was taken from Maori ownership in 1922 for port
purposes, and never returned.
The
land was taken in two parts involving a dozen original owners, who by
now would have ‘quite a lot' of descendants, says Taiawa.
“This is the issue – the terms and
conditions that the western bay are deciding they are putting on the
land before they return it to us,” adds Taiawa. “We will decide
what is going to be on there and agree it from there.”....
See full article HERE
Riverhead Forest treaty settlement
closer
The Waitangi Treaty settlement will see
land at Te Onekiritea Pt (Hobsonville Pt) vested to the iwi to
establish a marae, the Crown also contributing $300,000 towards it as
well as Bethells beach reserve land as a cemetery and the Kawarau Pa
site on Tiritiri Matangi Island.
The settlement, valued at $6.5 million
plus interest, includes a Crown apology, the vesting of nine sites
totalling 31 hectares, including over 80 per cent of Riverhead
Forest, and their accumulated rentals.
For two years after settlement they
will also have first option to buy the land of four local schools to
be leased back to the Crown.
They will have first right of refusal
over Clarke House and Te Onekiritea Pt at Hobsonville, and
non-exclusive right of refusal for 173 years for "surplus"
Crown owned properties around the Mahurangi coast.
Paremoremo Prison falls in the
agreement area with a 170 year non-exclusive right of first refusal,
along with non-exclusive deferred selection right to purchase the
Paremoremo housing block land.....
See full article HERE
Protesters Occupy Former Lake
Horowhenua Sailing Club
On his way back from terminating the
Maori occupation of Kaitaia Airport, Police Superintendent Wallace
Haumaha was diverted to Lake Horowhenua to deal with another Maori
occupation.
Last Sunday, more than twenty Mua-Upoko
owners took possession of the former Sailing Club building
overlooking this privately-owned lake.
Superintendent Haumaha warned these
owners he could arrest them and lock them all up in jail, but was
prepared to let the status quo remain while he conducted some
investigations.
However, former Horowhenua District
Councillor Anne Hunt was on hand to show Superintendent Haumaha
copies of various court judgements including one from the Supreme
Court confirming that the clubs were unlawfully occupying buildings
that belong to Mua-Upoko.
She also pointed out that the Crimes
Act justifies owners entering their own buildings during the daytime
for the purpose of taking possession thereof.....
See full article HERE
Report supports Whānau Ora
The chair of the North Island Whānau
Ora Commissioning Agency commented today on the Productivity
Commission’s report on more effective social services.
“The report clearly demonstrates the
value and efficacy of Whānau Ora and our commissioning for outcomes
approach,” said Merepeka Raukawa-Tait.
Te Pou Matakana (TPM) was launched in
July 2014 as part of the government’s decision to move the funding
and funding decisions for Whānau Ora closer to the community.
“The inquiry confirms that the Whānau
Ora approach is working. But more support from government agencies
will be required for Whānau Ora to have the impact that is needed
for families to achieve their goals and aspirations,” said Ms
Raukawa-Tait.....
See full article HERE
15 September 2015
From the NZCPR archives (By Dr Muriel Newman)
Intimidation and Fear in Coastal
Communities
Maori protest action has created a pall
over the Far North community of Taipa. It’s the one that is in the
news at the moment, but everywhere Maori activists have been allowed
by the authorities to take the law into their own hands, the
community has been forced to suffer the consequences. Invariably, the
protesters bully and intimidate local residents, making their lives a
misery. Fuelled by the government’s proposed foreshore and seabed
law, which would see Maori gain ownership of vast tracts of New
Zealand’s coastline, such radical protest action may well become
commonplace. If it is not nipped in the bud, locals will be denied
the right to the peaceful enjoyment of their community through
constant harassment and threats from Maori sovereignty activists, and
local businesses will bear the financial cost.
In situations of protest action, it’s
unacceptable for officialdom to turn a blind eye. In a country that
upholds the rule of law, bullies must not be allowed to take the law
into their own hands – even if it is in the name of the Treaty of
Waitangi. As Neville Chamberlain with his plan for “peace in our
time” found out to the cost of Britain and much of the rest of the
world, appeasement policies never work!
In New Zealand the principle of one law
for all is a fundamental tenet of public order, necessary to protect
law-abiding citizens from the illegal actions of thugs and bullies.
That means the enforcement arms of government must be colour blind
and treat all citizens who break the law equally.
If you or I tried to create a public
nuisance by setting up camp on a public access-way, we would expect
to be moved off immediately. Similarly if, as a show of open
defiance, we tried to build a temporary dwelling to act as a
headquarters for our protest, we should expect to be issued with a
removal order from the local council almost before we had started!
In other words, the authorities would
threaten prosecution and move us on almost before we had got
ourselves settled. Why should it be any different for Maori?
In any on-going protest action there
are areas that should be of huge concern to the authorities. Firstly,
there is the fact that protesters are trespassing on land that
doesn’t belong to them, camping illegally, and building structures
without consents. Secondly, they are blocking access, intimidating
locals and generally creating a public nuisance. Thirdly, they may be
driving vehicles that are unwarranted or unregistered, and they might
have dogs to guard their camp that might be unregistered. If they are
unemployed, the serious question arises of how can they be possibly
be protesting full time when they are meant to be out looking for
work? If they have school-aged children with them, there are
questions about their schooling, since it is illegal to keep children
out of school. And then, there is the whole issue of the reason for
their action – if they are protesting over the foreshore and seabed
or Treaty of Waitangi settlements, then central government should
accept responsibility, since it is their laws that have lead to the
action – local communities should not be expected to pay the price.
And a significant price it can be.
In Papa Aroha, a small coastal
community located on the Coromandel Peninsula, a protest went on for
four long months before the authorities finally stepped in to end the
occupation and give locals back their community. Maori protestors
were claiming the foreshore and seabed as well as the surrounding
lands. They blocked access to a public road and boat ramp, threatened
to charge anyone using the area, and declared surrounding reserves
“wahi tapu” in an effort to further block public access.
According to the court documents, the
Maori protesters took possession of the Papa Aroha Beach Access Road
in July – a public road owned by the Thames-Coromandel District
Council.[1] Claiming the foreshore and seabed belonged to them, they
proceeded to blockade the road and establish a camp with tents,
caravans and illegal buildings. They placed warning signs across the
road including “Trespassers will be Prosecuted”, “Private
Property, No Access, Keep Out”, “Wahi Tapu – Keep Out”, and
“Foreshore and Seabed – Unextinguished Native Title”.
For months, members of the public were
denied access to the boat ramp, the beachfront, the adjacent stream,
and Department of Conservation Reserves. In addition, protesters were
abusive and violent towards anyone wanting to use the area, including
those in the camping ground next door who had to put up with months
of aggression and law-breaking........
Continue reading HERE
November 21, 2010
13 September 2015
Squatters with alleged gang connections have Waitara beach community residents living in fear
Fear and intimidation rule at Waitara's
East Beach. The Taranaki Daily News investigates claims a group of
squatters took over the neighbourhood and left residents scared for
their life to complain about it.
Residents of a quiet seaside community
say they are living in fear behind locked doors after a group of
squatters they claim have gang connections illegally moved into their
neighbourhood.
Locals at East Beach, a small community
in the town of Waitara near New Plymouth, claim the squatters on the
piece of land known as the Rohotu Block, are dealing drugs, building
illegally and threatening and intimidating people walking their dogs
along the beach.
Some say they have had confrontations
with the group but have been too afraid to make complaints to
authorities for fear of violent retribution.
Attempts to approach the site this week
to talk with the squatters were met with verbal abuse and threats of
violence.
The site the alleged squatters are
occupying is Maori freehold land managed by the Rohotu Block Trust
and their legal advisers, under Te Ture Whenua Maori Land Act 1993.
Trust chairman Vincent Brown declined
to comment about the alleged squatters or answer questions about the
legality of their occupation, though it is understood the trust does
not necessarily want them on their land.
In April police were asked to accompany
members of the trust, to ensure peace was maintained, while they
spoke to the group about stopping earthworks at the site.
"At the time the people occupying
the land claimed rights to occupy as Tangata Whenua," Sergeant
Phil Quinn said......
See full article HERE
The Tindall Foundation hosts Iwi
leaders hui
Earlier this week The Tindall
Foundation was honoured to welcome nine Maori Iwi leaders from around
New Zealand to a special hui hosted at our offices in Takapuna. The
purpose was to share ideas about how The Tindall Foundation can most
effectively support Maori now and in the future. Our Trustees and
staff are aware of how important it is to have a sound
understanding of current issues and opportunities for Maori so the
group came together to discuss ways in which we can work
collaboratively to support Maori, help tackle some of the issues
people face and work out possible solutions that could lead to better
outcomes in the future.
It was a very productive and inspiring
hui. We were delighted to host the following representatives, Sir
Mark Solomon, Ngai Tahu; Dr Pita Sharples, Ngati Kahungunu; Papa
Rahui and Parekawhia McLean, Tainui; Martin Wikaira, Ngati
Tuwharetoa; Debbie Ngarewa-Packer, Ngati Ruanui; Helen Leahy, Ngai
Tahu; Kevin Prime, Ngati Hine and Blair Ngarimu, Ngati Whatua.
John McCarthy, Manager of The Tindall
Foundation says, “The Foundation was honoured and privileged to be
able to host such a distinguished group of Maori leaders at our hui.
We hope this will be the start of an on-going relationship which will
help guide our work with Maori into the future”.....
See full article HERE
Demand growing for Māori corporate
law
Māori lawyers are considering what new
skills they will need to develop as the historic claim settlement
process winds down.
More than 180 Māori lawyers and
130 law students attended the annual hui of the Māori lawyer’s
association in Waitangi over the weekend.
Te Huinga Roia Māori co-chair
Rachel Mullins says they are facing new challenges as settlements
start to flow.
"Our people are now needing our
lawyers to have commerical legal skills to become property lawyers,
to have facts law skills so that they can progress to the next stage
and they can be the advisors for the iwi and moving forward to grow
the asset base."....
See full article HERE Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
12 September 2015
Whanau
Ora is the Maori Party's flagship policy, but five years on, even the
Government support partner finds it difficult to explain exactly what
the programme does, and where the money for the various contracts
comes from.
The latest report
card on Whanau Ora has been released and it was
light on any hard data.
It surveyed hundreds of whanau and
concluded many have found the initiative useful, but it did not go
into details about how it was funded, particularly the controversial
Whanau Innovation and Integration Fund.
This reflects the public relations
surrounding the programme since it was launched in 2010.
While many agree in principle it sounds
like a good idea, few can explain exactly how it works, or whether it
works.....
See full article HERE
Councillors cave in to ‘vote
our way or be sued’ threat from Maori selection panel ... and
ratepayers must pay.
We have John Key and Rodney Hide to
thank for the scandal erupting over Maori representation on the
Auckland Council.
In designing the super city, they were
so busy appeasing their allies and supporters that they forgot to
consider the bigger democratic picture. To satisfy his Maori Party
allies, the Prime Minister was forced to incorporate some form of
separate Maori representation into the governance structure. But Mr
Key and the then-Minister of Local Government, Mr Hide, regarded
elected "Maori" seats as a step too far.
The compromise is the existing mess of
unelected appointees, voting alongside elected councillors and
answerable to no one but a mysterious selection panel that like some
exotic insect, is supposed to die once its reproductive task is
done.....
But what's really needed is to take a
blowtorch to this whole un-elected bad dream, and permit Auckland to
return to its democratic roots.....
See full article HERE
See full article HERE
Maori learners 'will get lift' from
today's announcement
The Minister of Education’s
announcement to fund a full time coordinator and provide ongoing
funding to support an initiative for lifting Maori children’s
learning was met with enthusiastic applause at the Te Akatea Maori
Principals’ conference today.
The initiative, the Maori Achievement
Collaboratives, are the result of school principals from both Te
Akatea and NZPF working together with Ministry officials to find a
better way to approach learning for Maori.
‘The answer lies in creating a school
culture that equally respects a Maori and Pakeha world view,’
said Robert Clark, President of Te Akatea. ‘That means reaching out
to iwi and to whanau and making the school a place where our Maori
parents belong and are welcome to contribute rather than school being
a foreign place where they feel no sense of ownership,’ he said.
‘The problem we faced as leaders of
schools was in fully appreciating the Maori world view,’ said
Denise Torrey, President of NZPF. ‘Most Maori children are in
mainstream schools and most have Pakeha principals who struggle
to understand how to create truly bicultural school environments’,
she said. ‘What our principals needed was the opportunity to
understand the elements of biculturalism they were lacking and this
requires collaborative groups working together with a facilitator who
has the knowledge and skills to bring that understanding to the
group,’ she said.
‘The Minister’s commitment to
funding this initiative now means that principals across the country
will have the opportunity to address learning for Maori children in
a way that is meaningful for their particular context, so that
tamariki everywhere can truly enjoy success as Maori,’ said
Clark.....
See full article HERE
East Coast iwi 'not opposed' to
protesting oil, gas plans
East
Coast Maori are prepared to protest plans to explore for oil and gas
off the coast of Gisborne.
Energy and Resources Minister Simon
Bridges has opened consultation on four proposed exploration blocks.
One of them stretches from East Cape in
the north to the lower South Island - a total of 68,661 square
kilometres....
See full article HERE
Back incarcerated Maori Waitangi
claim, says iwi
A
Hawke's Bay iwi is urging other tribes to step up and back an urgent
claim submitted to the Waitangi Tribunal alleging the Crown is
responsible for the high number of Māori in prison.
Retired probation officer Tom Hemopo
has made an application to the Tribunal claiming the Crown had done
little to address the high rate of Maori imprisonment and
reoffending.
Statistics New Zealand figures show the
percentage of Māori convicted of offences was at its worst in 2014;
for the first time since 1980, Māori made up a greater percentage of
all convictions than Europeans, with 38.7 percent Māori compared to
38.3 percent European.....
See full article HERE
Former Green Party co-leader Russel
Norman will resign as an MP and from the Green Party to head
Greenpeace New Zealand.
Dr Norman's resignation will see Marama
Davidson become the party's 14th MP.
Ms Davidson, from Manurewa, Auckland,
is a political commentator who has worked at the Human Rights
Commission for ten years.
"With every close there is a new
opening, and we are incredibly excited about Marama Davidson becoming
an MP," Ms Turei said.
"Marama is a modern, progressive
voice for Maori political aspiration and will also be a very welcome
fourth member of the party's Maori caucus."....
See full article HERE
Crown given a telling off over its
treaty talks with Ngapuhi
The Waitangi Tribunal has ruled that
the Crown made a number of breaches in its negotiations with Ngapuhi.
The Crown appointed Tuhoronuku
Independent Mandate Authority to represent Ngapuhi during treaty
settlement negotiations.
But hapu including Ngati Hine have
argued the group doesn’t have the mandate to oversee the
negotiations and in December last year The Waitangi Tribunal held an
urgent hearing over the concerns.
Today the tribunal released its report
concluding the Crown had failed to protect the ability of hapu to
exercise their rangatiratanga in deciding how and by whom they would
be represented in settlement negotiations.
It went on to say that the structure
and processes of Tuhoronuku deny hapu any effective means of
withdrawing from it or exerting control over how it represents
them.....
See full article HERE
A further article here Tuhoronuku 'notfit' to settle claim - Tribunal
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
11 September 2015
Most Muriwhenua iwi settle with Crown
Legislation
giving Far North iwi a strong say over 90 Mile Beach and affecting
the largest return of land to Maori has been passed by Parliament.
As part of the deal, the iwi will
co-manage conservation land in the region, and 90 Mile Beach, known
by Maori as Te Oneroa-a-Tohe.
A board for beach management will be
created which will include 50 percent iwi and will be chaired by iwi.
Mr Piripi said swimmers and fishermen
would not be disadvantaged....
See full article HERE
More Support Needed for Maori
Boarding Schools
New Zealand First is concerned Māori
are being shut out of government support for education, leading to
the closure of Māori boarding schools.
“The Minister of Education has said
Turakina Māori Girls’ College will have to close if it doesn’t
get more students,” says New Zealand First Māori Affairs
Spokesperson Pita Paraone.
“First Hato Petera, now Turakina are
fighting for their existence. Changing the Aspire Scholarship
criteria is the least the government can do to support Māori
boarding schools and give Māori education a much needed boost,”
says Mr Paraone....
See full article HERE
Iwi and DOC unite to ensure
Kāpiti Island treasures are protected
“While the island is managed as
Nature Reserve under the Reserves Act 1977, it is important that
Ngāti Toa is able to exercise their kaitiakitanga over the island”
says DOC Partnerships Manager Paul McArthur....
See full article HERE
Past pupils sheltered from the rain and
wiped away tears as a rousing haka was performed outside of
Parliament in an effort to save Turakina Maori Girls' College.
About 150 people, including past and
present students of the boarding school, braved steady rain to
protest the potential closure of the school, which has been open for
110 years.
The delegation presented a petition to
Maori Party co-leader Marama Fox, who told them she was proud they
had braved the rain, although it was a disgrace that they had not
been allowed into Parliament.
"They don't know the strength that
we have, that we have built over years, over centuries, and we will
show them our strength today. And you have come, and you have shown
them your strength.....
See full article HERE
Three new appointees to
Waitangi Tribunal
Māori Development Minister, Te Ururoa
Flavell, has announced the appointments of three new members to the
Waitangi Tribunal.
Dr Hauata Palmer, Derek Lardelli and
Bill Wilson QC will join the Tribunal along with 13 other members who
have also been reappointed.
New appointments to the
Waitangi Tribunal are:
Dr Hauata Palmer is a
well-respected kaumātua from Ngāi Te Rangi and he holds a honourary
Doctorate in Philosophy. He worked for the Department of Māori
Affairs for several years before returning home to work for his hapū
and iwi in the Tauranga region.
Derek Lardelli (Ngāti
Porou, Rongowhakaata) is an expert in moko, kapa haka, tribal history
and whaikōrero. He has been a cultural advisor for numerous groups
including the All Blacks and New Zealand’s Olympic team. He lives
in Gisborne and is an Associate Professor at Toihoukura, School of
Māori Arts at the EIT Tairāwhiti campus.
Bill Wilson QC has
extensive experience in public and private law. He was a Queen’s
Council from 1996 to 2007, a Court of Appeal Judge from 2007 before
being appointed to the Supreme Court in 2008. He resigned in 2010 to
practise as an arbitrator, mediator and legal adviser. He has
previously served on the Waitangi Tribunal from 1986 to 1995.
Reappointments to the Waitangi
Tribunal are:
Wilson Isaac
Dr Aroha Harris
Basil Morrison
Dr Monty Soutar
Tania Simpson
Tureiti Moxon
Miriama Evans
Professor Rawinia Higgins
Professor Pou Temara
Ronald Crosby
Dr Angela Ballara
David Cochrane
Sir Hirini Moko Mead
See full article HERE
10 September 2015
Ngati Kahu occupiers have left Kaitaia
Airport.
Six of the occupiers have been arrested
and the rest issued with trespass notices, Far North District Council
Mayor John Carter said.
"I can confirm the occupation is
over," he said.
Speaking in Parliament on Wednesday
Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations Minister
Christopher Finlayson slammed the "oafish behaviour"
of Ngati Kahu iwi members who had occupied the airport.
Finlayson said the airport was being
occupied by "a few miscreants" who did not represent Ngati
Kahu.
The occupiers had no right to interfere
with members of the local community carrying out their lawful
activities, he said.
But Mutu said the activists had the
full backing of the wider Ngati Kahu iwi . She said Finlayson's
comments were "totally unproductive".
Most of the occupiers were members of
the Patukoraha and Ngai Tohianga hapu repossessing land
that was taken from them by the government in the 1940s, she said.
"They're not protesting, they've
repossessed their land."
She said the occupiers did not want to
keep the airport closed.
"They just want Finlayson to say,
'Yes, we know it's Ngati Kahu land'," she said....
See full article HERE
Bonfires VIDEO
Maori get $3.6 million from Rena
The owners and insurers of
the Rena are planning to give $3.6 million to Bay of Plenty Maori
interests to help mitigate adverse cultural effects of the wreck of
the containership on Astrolabe Reef.
The
claimants include Te Runanga o Ngati Whakaue ki Maketu Inc (now
sought to be represented through Mr Hemi Bennett), Ngati Whakahemo
(Maria Horne), Te Runanga o Ngai Te Rangi Trust, Te Whanau o Tauwhao
and Te Runanga O Ngati Awa.
The amounts claimed for the
infringement of customary rights, damage to mana, loss of kaitiaki
and infringement of cultural rights and interests, ranging from
$450,000 to $2.2 million
Several groups who represent a section
of Motiti Island interests acknowledged that it would be appropriate
to address the adverse effects on the Island as a whole, including
people and communities, by making worthwhile provision for projects
on the Island.
This is in addition to the approximate
$300,000 already paid to benefit the Island community from the $1
million fund established by MSC as a goodwill gesture after the ship
ran aground, says Matthew.
As a result of those discussions, the
amount was increased by $500,000 to $1.5 million. This is intended as
mitigation for the “whole of Island” – including non-Maori -
and not for any particular group.
See full article HERE
Call to educate migrants about Māori
A
new report has identified a need for more education for migrants
about Māori, the Treaty of Waitangi and biculturalism.
Multicultural New Zealand executive
director Tayo Agunlejika said there was widespread acknowledgement of
the need to respect and understand the Treaty of Waitangi, but also
concern multiculturalism could erode its position.
Mr Agunlejika said there was a feeling
there is a lack of education for migrants about the role they should
play in the relationship between the Crown and Māori....
See full article HERE
Westgate town square gets Maori name
The centre of
the new Westgate Town Centre development will be called Te Pumanawa
Square, named by the Henderson-Massey Local Board.
he board carried out historical
research of the area and consultation with Hetaraka Tobin, kaumatua
and representative of Ngati Whatua o Kaipara, in order to come up
with an appropriate name.
Henderson-Massey Local Board chairwoman
Vanessa Neeson says the board was honoured to choose the significant
name....
See full article HERE
9 September 2015
Protest at Kaitaia Airport
Activists have moved onto land at
Kaitaia Airport today.
Leader Wi Popata, of Ngati Kahu, said
the occupation was a protest against a $100 million Treaty of
Waitangi settlement, due to be ratified tomorrow.
The Te Hiku Claims Settlement Bill is
due for its third and final reading in Parliament on Wednesday and
includes the settlements of four of five Muriwhenua iwi - Te Aupouri,
Ngai Takoto, Te Rarawa and Ngati Kuri. Ngati Kahu is the only Te Hiku
iwi to not yet settle.
About 40 people gathered at the Oturu
Marae earlier this morning, before walking to the occupation site
with fence posts and corrugated iron to begin constructing a new
marae.
The protesters went to the front desk of the airport and informed staff there that they an occupation was taking place.
The protesters went to the front desk of the airport and informed staff there that they an occupation was taking place.
One of the occupation organisers Hone
Popata said they would be occupying land beside the airport terminal,
and all operations at the airport would be closed.
"We are in charge now," he
said....
See full article HERE
'100 pages of self-justification'
A
new report into Whānau Ora is 100 pages of self-justification, New
Zealand First leader Winston Peters says.
Mr Peters, a long-time critic of the
social policy initiative, said the review still did not explain how
the $140 million programme was performing and how the money had been
spent.
Mr Peters said there had been numerous
complaints about Whānau Ora's spending and the report did not touch
on that.
"Instead it's just pages of
self-justification, with no serious examination of how it is
performing."...
See full article HERE
8 September 2015
The battlelines have been drawn between
owners of the cargo ship Rena and local iwi, over plans to allow the
wreck to remain off Tauranga's Otaiti (Astrolabe) Reef.
Rena owners Daina Shipping have
applied for resource consent which will allow the wreck to stay off
the reef while local iwi want it removed.
The Bay of Plenty Regional council
received 153 submissions for the month-long hearing which will begin
in Mount Maunganui on Monday.
Ngai Te Hapu Incorporated Society
spokesman Buddy Mikaere said the hearing will be more of a
"David versus Goliath" battle.
"Clearly the resources that the
applicant has brought is something which we haven't got a hope of
matching. So it's very much David versus Goliath."
Mikaere said the society will be
emphasising the cultural aspects of the case.
"Dumping a wreck on a taonga reef
in no way enhances our relationship with that reef and if the
particular cultural provisions in the [Resource Management Act] have
any teeth, then this will be a real test of that," he said.....
See full article HERE
Marae could get $1m after Treaty
settlement
Looking towards the post Treaty phase,
Dr Tipene Leach said Heretaunga-Tamatea wanted to diversify its asset
holdings structure.
"We're talking about very large
amounts of money going from the settlement to the marae, whereby
they'll be able to set up for their future. That future we're hoping
will involve business opportunity and investment."
Dr Tipene Leach said the plan was to
put $50 million in a central governance body, about $25 million to
its marae, of which there are about 23, and the rest would go to a
model targeted at regional development.....
See full article HERE
An imminent $100million Treaty of
Waitangi settlement will help four Northland iwi move forward and
meet the aspirations of their people, leaders say.
The Te Hiku Claims Settlement Bill is
due for its third and final reading in Parliament on Wednesday and
includes the settlements of four of five Muriwhenua iwi - Te Aupouri,
Ngai Takoto, Te Rarawa and Ngati Kuri.
Ngati Kahu is the only Te Hiku iwi to
not yet settle......
See full article HERE
Historic apology planned for
Parihaka
Treaty
Negotiations Minister Chris Finlayson says a planned Crown apology to
Parihaka will be a history-making occasion.
Mr Finlayson said previous attempts to
apologise for the 1881 sacking of the Taranaki settlement had failed,
but he hoped the recommendations of a group headed by Dame Tariana
Turia would be acceptable to all parties.
At the signing of the Taranaki iwi's
$70 million Treaty
settlement yesterday, Mr Finlayson said a deal
was being worked out for Parihaka.
Parihaka was the centre of passive
resistance to the Crown in the mid-1800s, and after it was attacked
and ransacked its leaders were illegally jailed in the South Island
and on the Chatham Islands.
Mr Finlayson said he was hopeful of
signing an agreement this year and working towards a reconciliation
ceremony by the end of 2016.....
See full article HERE
NZ Parliament shuts its doors on
Māori Girl’s school
The Speaker of the House is refusing to
allow a delegation of 150 supporters of Turakina Māori Girls College
to attend a parliamentary lunch hosted by Māori Party MP, Marama
Fox.
The luncheon event aimed to showcase
the schools’ successes over its 110 year history and featured a
cultural performance by current students.
Despite repeated attempts to challenge
the speaker’s decision, the Turakina delegation of current and
former students, staff and Presbyterian Church members have been told
their trip to Parliament is “too political.”
“We haven’t even been able to
secure seating in the Speaker’s Gallery of the debating chamber so
that our current students can watch question time,” says organiser
Mrs Eichstaedt...
See full article HERE
Delays to $30m Maori ICT Development
Fund cause frustration
A $30 million Maori ICT development
fund has been delayed amid claims of a governance botch and
disagreements over how the funds should be spent.
Maori Internet Society chairman
Karaitiana Taiuru said the delay meant money was sitting in a bank
account when it could be helping the community.
The fund, which is the joint
responsibility of Maori Development Minister Te Ururoa Flavell and
Communications Minister Amy Adams, was approved by the Government
last year.
That was as a consolation prize after
the Government rejected a Waitangi Tribunal claim to $270m of radio
spectrum that was freed up by the closure of analogue television in
2013.....
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the
on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes
tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.
7 September 2015
Legal threat ahead of council funding vote7 September 2015
The head of a panel that selects Auckland Council's Maori advisers threatened councillors with personal legal action over a vote to release ratepayer money.
Tame Te Rangi, the chairman of the Independent Maori Statutory Board's selection panel, made the threat in a letter to Auckland Council's chief executive, Stephen Town, on July 24.
The Herald on Sunday obtained a copy of the letter, which states if Auckland Council didn't release the funding, he would initiate "legal proceedings against Auckland Council and each member of the Governing Body in their personal capacity".
The vote went ahead and the money — which the selection panel wants to use for a High Court case — was approved.
But some of the councillors have lodged a formal complaint with the Auditor-General calling for an investigation. "In essence this amounted to the individual who had written a letter threatening councillors with legal action against them personally," they wrote.
"No legal advice was forthcoming as to the personal liability of councillors and the vote proceeded."...
See full article HERE
Mole News is published on a regular basis to expose the
on-going build up of race-based privilege in New Zealand. The Mole welcomes
tips - please send to mole@nzcpr.com. Older news items can be found HERE and HERE.The vote went ahead and the money — which the selection panel wants to use for a High Court case — was approved.
But some of the councillors have lodged a formal complaint with the Auditor-General calling for an investigation. "In essence this amounted to the individual who had written a letter threatening councillors with legal action against them personally," they wrote.
"No legal advice was forthcoming as to the personal liability of councillors and the vote proceeded."...
See full article HERE
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