The Compelling Need for a New Treaty Act
… the fastest legislature in the west. Geoffrey Palmer on the New Zealand Parliament
A classic example of what Palmer was referring to is the 1975 Treaty of Waitangi Act. The Act established the Waitangi Tribunal with powers to investigate and adjudicate on breaches of the 1840 Te Tiriti o Waitangi. However only Maori can make claims. A Maori is defined in the Act as “a person of the Maori race of New Zealand; and includes any descendant of such a person.”
But today scientists reject the concept of race – it is not a valid biological concept. All Maori New Zealanders are in fact part-Maori and the vast majority have more non-Maori blood than Polynesian.
The Treaty of Waitangi Act
is inaccurate in many respects. In the
“Legislative Process” as set out in the New Zealand Parliamentary procedures, there
are two tests for a bill which if passed and signed into law becomes an Act.
1.
Is the bill
“fit for purpose”?
2.
Is it “deemed
to be needed”?
One presumes that in deciding whether it is fit
for purpose, the accuracy and honesty of what is intended is thoroughly checked
by Crown legal experts and later dissected by legislators. However the lawyers
and politicians have let the country down with the 1975 Treaty of Waitangi Act.
For starters there is no reference to the actual 1840 Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
Consequently there is an
urgent need to repeal the Act and replace it.
Many mistakes in the Treaty of Waitangi Act
You would think that the
developers of the Act would have incorporated the only valid Treaty – the one
first signed on 6 February 1840 and then later by over 500 Maori leaders around
the country.
This document
had been translated into the Nga Puhi dialect by the expert Maori language
scholars, missionaries Henry and Edward Williams, from James Busby’s English
draft the night before local chiefs signed it at Waitangi. The Busby draft is
the only valid “English version”, and is now known as the “Littlewood Treaty.
However the Waitangi
Tribunal uses a different “treaty”, a variation of the unauthorised document
devised in 1840 by James Freeman, William Hobson’s Secretary. He used flowery
language in his version which he thought would be suitable for a Queen and
produced a much longer document than the original. Freeman also made two
crucial errors: he
·
added details
that were not in Busby’s original draft
·
omitted or
changed important references Busby had made.
Fortunately no Maori
chiefs subsequently signed the “Freeman fraud.”
Errors in the Preamble of the Treaty of Waitangi
Act wording
·
… a Treaty was entered into at Waitangi between Her late Majesty Queen
Victoria and the Maori people of New Zealand. There is no mention
of “Maori people” in the original.
· And whereas the text of the Treaty in the English
language differs from the text of the Treaty in the Maori language … The texts are
exactly the same. The English version (See the Littlewood Treaty section below), is Busby’s English draft which
Henry and Edward Williams translated into the Nga Puhi dialect on 5 February
1840.
· And whereas it is desirable that a Tribunal be established to make recommendations on claims relating to the practical application of the principles of the Treaty and, for that purpose, to determine its meaning and effect and whether certain matters are inconsistent with those principles. There were no principles in the original 1840 Treaty of Waitangi.
Mistakes in the wording of the Articles
Article the First
The Chiefs of the Confederation of the United Tribes of New Zealand and the separate and independent Chiefs who have not become members of the Confederation cede to Her Majesty the Queen of England absolutely and without reservation all the rights and powers of Sovereignty which the said Confederation or Individual Chiefs respectively exercise or possess, or may be supposed to exercise or to possess over their respective Territories as the sole Sovereigns thereof.
Freeman was very flowery and wordy here with more than twice the number of words of the original. The February 6 February Treaty simply said that the Chiefs “… cede to the Queen of England for ever the entire Sovereignty of their country.”
Article the Second
Her Majesty the Queen of England confirms and guarantees to the Chiefs and Tribes of New Zealand and to the respective families and individuals thereof the full exclusive and undisturbed possession of their Lands and Estates Forests Fisheries and other properties which they may collectively or individually possess so long as it is their wish and desire to retain the same in their possession;
The “Treaty” used by the Tribunal, based on Freeman’s document, omits in the second line from the original Treaty after “Chiefs and Tribes of New Zealand” and “to all the people of New Zealand”, and substitutes to the respective families and individuals.
This dishonest omission has consequently allowed the Tribunal to rule out any claims non-Maori could have made: e.g. people such as the descendants of the 33 settlers murdered in 1868 by Te Kooti and his warriors at Matawhero, and the families of the 164 farmers who had their buildings burnt to the ground and livestock killed or taken.
Furthermore Freeman and the Tribunal added in Article 2 … Estates Forests Fisheries … property that was not included in the original Treaty.
Article the Third
In consideration thereof Her Majesty the Queen of England extends to the Natives of New Zealand, her royal protection and imparts to them all the Rights and Privileges of British Subjects.
The phrase the Natives of New Zealand was not in
the 1840 Treaty. The actual Article 3 stated that “… the people of New Zealand
will be protected by the Queen of England and the rights and privileges of
British subjects will be granted to them.”
Errors in the Waitangi Tribunal section
of the 1975 Act
In considering the
suitability of persons for appointment to the Tribunal, the Minister of Maori
Affairs—
(a) shall have regard to the partnership between the 2 parties to the Treaty;
However “partnership” was not mentioned in the 1840 Treaty. The Treaty was between the British Crown and Chiefs and Tribes, and “all the people of New Zealand”
Jurisdiction of Tribunal to consider claims
(1) Where any Maori claims that he or she, or any group of Maoris of which he or she is a member, is or is likely to be prejudicially affected …
This confirms that only Maori claims are considered.
Jurisdiction of Tribunal to consider
proposed legislation
(1) The Tribunal shall examine any proposed legislation referred to it under subsection (2) and shall report whether, in its opinion, the provisions of the proposed legislation or any of them are contrary to the principles of the Treaty.
But there were no principles in the 1840 Treaty.
The Littlewood Treaty: the true English draft for Te Tiriti
In 1840 Henry Littlewood was the lawyer for James Clendon, US Consul and a friend of James Busby and William Hobson. The draft for the Treaty which Henry and Edward Williams translated into the Nga Puhi dialect was written by Busby on 4 February, and the original of the draft somehow remained in Littlewood’s possession. Other previous notes and drafts had been discarded.
In 1989 members of the Littlewood family were sorting out the estate of their late mother and found it.
The Littlewood document has an impeccable and unimpeachable pedigree.
· It has the date February 4 on it.
· It has the exact wording in English of Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
· The paper has the watermark “W Tucker 1833”, a rare letterhead from James Clendon’s house, where the final draft was written.
· Phil Parkinson at New Zealand Archives testified in 2000 that in his view it was written by James Busby.
Clendon did his own copy and sent it to Washington DC and a second copy went back to the United States with Antarctic explorer Charles Wilkes.
The government, the Waitangi Tribunal and many historians do not recognize the Littlewood Treaty despite the certainty that it is the English version written by Busby on 4 February 1840.
ACT’s Treaty Principles Act
ACT says every child born in New Zealand, and everyone legal immigrant, has the same rights. Those are the rights of a citizen. Nobody should get an extra say because of who their great grandparents were. Nobody should have to be treated differently because of who they are. ACT leader, David Seymour
On 12 October 2023 the NZ Herald reported that a poll found that 60 percent of Kiwis backed ACT’s proposed principles for the Treaty of Waitangi, compared to just 18 percent opposed.
ACT believes the Treaty ought to be a document that unifies New Zealand. But in recent decades the courts and Waitangi Tribunal have used a twisted interpretation of the Treaty principles to push an agenda of co-governance and division.
ACT would bring a “Treaty Principles Act” to Parliament.
The Act would be short but decisive. It would define the Principles of the Treaty as:
- All citizens of New Zealand have the same political rights and duties
- All political authority comes from the people by democratic means including universal suffrage, regular and free elections with a secret ballot
- New Zealand is a multi-ethnic liberal democracy where discrimination based on ethnicity is illegal.
If the majority support the ACT proposals in a referendum the Treaty Principles Act would become law, and subsequently the egregiously dishonest and inaccurate Treaty of Waitangi Act would need to be repealed and the racist Waitangi Tribunal phased out. These constitutional developments would end decades of injustice, dishonesty, division and inequality.
Roger Childs is a retired teacher who taught History, Social Studies and Geography for 40 years.
15 comments:
The Treaty did unify NZ. That was its function and that’s what it did.
As for the correct English version- it can only be the version which was translated into Maori because Hobson did not speak Maori.
I agree entirely and would like to be positive and think it could happen-but will this Government have the intestinal fortitude?
Geoffrey Palmer has a lot to answer for.
The Final Draft was virtually word for word to the translation Rev Henry Williams had made, except for the Preamble and Article 3 of the translation having the phase,'chiefs and the people of New Zealand' substituted for 'chiefs and hapu of New Zealand' (Rangatira me nga Hapu o Nu Tirani) in the preamble and 'the people of New Zealand' substituted for 'all the Maori of New Zealand' (tangata Maori katoa o Nu Tirani) in Article 3.
'All the people of New Zealand' was unchanged in Article 2.
"The treaty which forms the base of all my proceedings was signed at Waitangi on the 6th February 1840, by 52 chiefs. This instrument I consider to be de facto the treaty, and all signatures that are subsequently obtained are merely testimonials of adherence to the terms of that original document". Governor Hobson's instructions to Major Bunbury when collecting further signatures.
If there is a principle of the treaty it is the handshake and words spoken by Governor Hobson to each of the signatories, He iwi tahi tatou- We are now one people.
The Littlewood draft is an inconvenient truth that was quickly moved out of public scrutiny.
It, so I'm told mirrors the actual maori version and official treaty.
Even if the Littlewood draft had never been found, the wording in the maori version is explicit.
Anyone able to read te reo would be in no doubt as to its meaning.
How was it so easy for all New Zealanders to be so easily deceived by the reinterpretation of a simple document agreed upon between people's happy to become one nation all those years ago.
Every kiwi needs to aquaint themselves with the true version of Te tiriti o Waitangi
English or Maori version. So many people I know have never bothered.
Mathematics was not my high point at school, but I managed okay in my trade. WE have politicians who do not seem to know that "We Are Now One People", and want to divide us up with Co-Governance. Some 80 plus books pertaining to our history have been removed from libraries, schools and university bookshelves some 40 years ago. Why!
Kevan
Palmer, Findlayson, Key - we ought not look back, but forward. Te Tiriti is best reflected in the 'Littlewood' English version, but that aside, what ACT propose is entirely reasonable and appropriate. Unless we embrace such a referendum, we are on a journey to Hell in a handbasket. It's way past time we decided what we, as a nation, stand for, and what we seek to achieve. If we are to stand divided, history has determined what the future holds.
>But today scientists reject the concept of race – it is not a valid biological concept.
Oh really? Race is in fact recognised as very real in modern biology albeit rather fuzzy around the edges. It has a genetic basis but also has some cultural connotations (when used as a synonym of 'ethnicity').
All of us are one race. What we call ourselves is mostly our current location. Or the location we have a memory of coming from.
There is only one place on this planet we are indigenous to. Africa.
All of us are related to all of us. We are the Human race.
We are not what we think we are. Every so-called race and the differences between us are from our locations that our bodies have become accustomed to. Lighter skin to let in more sunlight for vitamin creation. Darker skin to keep sunlight out so the body didn't create too much. Of the vitamin.
Cheers Bob.
Have you ever asked yourself these questions because it was not the Treaty of Waitangi?
1. How did New Zealand come under the dependency of New South Wales?
2. How did Captain William Hobson become Lt. Governor of New Zealand?
3. How did New Zealand separate from New South Wales?
4. How did New Zealand become a British Colony?
5. How did Lt. Governor Hobson become Governor of New Zealand?
6. Who granted power and authority to the Governor?
7. Who gave New Zealand its first Constitution?
8. Who set up New Zealand’s First Legislative Council and Executive Council?
9. Who set up our Political, Legal and Justice systems under one flag and one law, irrespective of race, colour, or creed?
10. What is New Zealand’s true Founding Document and first Constitution?
It was not the Treaty of Waitangi!
Over 500 tangata Maori agreed to give up their governments by the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 and in return, they became British Subjects with the same rights as the people of England.
No more, no less, no Partnership and definitely, no Co-governance.
1. Over 500 chiefs signed the “official” Tiriti o Waitangi in the Maori language, but only 39 signed the “unauthorised” Treaty of Waitangi in English.
2. Maori were not the indigenous people of New Zealand when they signed the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840
3. Through intermarriage of their ancestors own free will, today’s Maori are no longer the people who signed the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840.
The answer to the above questions is very simple.
It was Queen Victoria’s 1840 Royal Charters/Letters Patent!
Queen Victoria’s Royal Charter/Letters Patent dated the 16 November 1840 was issued under, “The Great Seal of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland”. It separated New Zealand from New South Wales dependency and made New Zealand into a British Colony with a Governor and Constitution that set up New Zealand’s political, legal and justice systems under one flag and one law, irrespective of race colour or creed.
Queen Victoria’s 1840 Royal Charter/Letters Patent is New Zealand’s true Founding Document and first Constitution.
Attached are the six documents that made New Zealand into a British Colony researched by the One New Zealand Foundation Inc. from documents held in the New Zealand, Australian and American Archives, plus the British Parliamentary Papers.
For further information: www.onenzfoundation.co.nz. OR Email: ONZF@bigpond.com.au
Guess who saved the Littlewood Treaty from being hidden from the public in 1989 when it was found, the same as Government is hiding Queen Victoria's Royal Charters today. The One New Zealand Foundation Inc. See original article in the ONZF book printed in 1992, "He iwi tahi tatou - We are now one people".
Congratulations Roger. Absolutely brilliantly written for accuracy and precision. This summary of our situation needs to be given to all Kiwis BEFORE any referendum so that they know what the hell they are voting for and against.
Given that the National party doesn't recognise Maori were to be treated as englishmen.
They were being adopted into the English race. By Queen Victoria, in her Royal charter for the British Colony of New Zealand, penned 9 months after the Treaty's, of Waitangi were created and signed in two different copies. Two languages.
One of which she probably couldn't read. And perhaps two copies that most Maori could not read.
NZ to Britain was about a 6 month sailing trip. Giving her 3 months to mull over her response.
It actually states in the Royal charter Maori were given the same rights as Englismen.
((Googled: treaty of waitangi signed?
On 6 February 1840, the Treaty of Waitangi/Te Tiriti o Waitangi was signed at Waitangi in the Bay of Islands by Captain William Hobson, several English residents, and between 43 and 46 Māori rangatira.19/09/2016
Googled: queen victoria's royal charter when?
With British Sovereignty firmly asserted, Queen Victoria's Royal Charter/Letters Patent dated the 16 November 1840 ratified that Sovereignty had been legally and morally obtained by Great Britain over all the Islands of New Zealand. This was recognised and accepted by the rest of the world ever since.))
There is a fairly large discrepancy in these dates. It tells me That Queen Victoria was not happy with the treaty as it was,
So made a claim to New Zealand her way.
This Queen Victoria's Royal Charter is the document the world recognised as New Zealand's founding document.
This cannot be disputed. Only the reason or reasons why?
Cheers Bob.
Why do most historians disregard the Littlewood documents relevance? Because it is a translation from the Māori version. Clendon himself confirmed that when he dispatched it to the US government, explicitly saying it was a translation.
Williams translated the English draft (now missing) on the evening of the 4th Feb , he returned the Māori version back to Hobson on the morning of the 5th. In order that Hobson could confirm the accuracy of the translation, Busby translated it back to English ( the Littlewood text) for him.
The English version of the treaty was signed by 39 chiefs and has the seal and signature of Lieutenant-Governor William Hobson.
https://nzhistory.govt.nz/media/interactive/waikato-manukau-treaty-copy
Anyone know, who wanted the treaty and why?
I've heard two.
The first was the French were coming to claim NZ. The Akaroa land purchase. That created the French land company.
The second was.
Maoridom, wanted law and order? To bring the wars between tribes to a close.
Because so much has been hidden from us. I am uncertain if either is true.
But my reasoning always goes back to the royal charter. Created by the Queen they were seeking, something from. Protection maybe. For me that negates all previous documents as ones she wasn't happy with.
To the one she wrote herself. I give that one credence over the rest. Because it was later than the other two.
Cheers Bob.
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