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Wednesday, February 26, 2025

NZCPR Newsletter: The Consequences of Appeasement



New Zealand is now reaping the consequences of the misguided appeasement strategy adopted by successive governments when dealing with the growing demands of radical Maori leaders.

They have bent over backwards apologising and kowtowing to these activists, even though their subversive plan to impose tribal rule represents a major threat to the future stability and security of our democracy.


Having received numerous multi-million dollar “full and final” settlements and an endless stream of lucrative race-based contracts, these tax-free tribal businesses have grown into some of the richest and most powerful commercial conglomerates in the country.

But that’s not enough.

They are now using their wealth and influence to impose a form of tribal apartheid onto the country.

It’s not called that, of course. In true Orwellian fashion, it’s described as a benevolent-sounding ‘partnership’ between Maori and the Crown, even though such arrangements create a two-tier society divided by race: a ruling tribal aristocracy with the power of veto and dictatorial control over decision-making, and everyone else – second class citizens in our own country.

This agenda was supercharged by the Ardern administration and increasingly shapes society through education, the media, courts, churches, academia, the arts…

In education, children from pre-school to university are being indoctrinated and radicalised into angry activists who believe anyone who is not Maori is racist, that colonisation is evil, and that Western civilisation is denying tribal leaders their right to rule.

This situation is increasingly dangerous, not only because successive governments have failed to take this matter seriously enough, but because tribal demands are escalating.

They no longer just want control of land they claim to have lost in the past, but all New Zealand land including private land – a policy the radicalised Maori Party intends progressing once they become part of a new government.

They want all natural resources especially freshwater and are presently challenging the Government in Court in yet another attack on Parliamentary sovereignty.

And they want every mountain, lake, river, National Park - the whole Conservation Estate, which accounts for almost a third of New Zealand’s land area.

In fact, a framework to achieve a tribal takeover of Conservation was developed by Jacinda Ardern’s Administration. An Options Development Group of 12 members – 8 representing tribal leaders and 4 representing Conservation Boards – was established in 2020 to review the operations of the Department of Conservation. It
recommended “the delegation, transfer and devolution of functions and powers within the conservation system to tangata whenua” - including revoking all Crown protection of endangered species and passing that responsibility on to Maori! 

The project resulted in endemic tribal influence in conservation.

The new Government plans to update Conservation legislation next year and has initiated a public
consultation process. But if the Coalition is to honour its election pledge to end co-governance and He Puapua all references to Treaty principles and race-based rights must be eliminated from the new legislation.

Only then can the public be assured that a tribal takeover will be averted and the Conservation Estate future-proofed for all New Zealanders. 

This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, Fiona Mackenzie explains the stark reality of the situation we are now in:

“Across the country, people dependent on their business or employment income are being intimidated into silence regarding the influence of the tribal elite over many aspects of our lives.

“After the publication of my
article DOC Promotes Ancestral Privilege late January, I was contacted by professionals from the tourism, conservation, recreation, and infrastructure sectors. They shared their concerns about how the situation has already reached an alarming point.

“For instance, they described how the Department of Conservation (DOC) in the South Island appears to have delegated full control of operations to the Ngai Tahu corporation. Tribal executives now strongly influence DOC’s planning, conservation work, and concession/resource management granting and renewals - controlling applicants using coercive tactics and wielding the power of veto.

“Business owners affected by growing iwi control are too afraid to speak out or make formal submissions about DOC’s discriminatory practices, fearing it could cost them their livelihoods.

“That’s why NZ urgently needs the support of individuals whose livelihoods are not yet affected by government or iwi control to make submissions on the DOC consultation. You have the freedom to speak up for those Kiwis who feel unable to do so themselves. I encourage anyone, who can, to take up this cause, as the consequences for New Zealanders will only worsen if this takeover continues.”

This is the ugly truth of the situation in New Zealand today.

Tribal leaders have manoeuvred and manipulated their way into positions of power within the “system”.

If this is not stopped, the consequences for conservation will be devastating – as the reckless mismanagement of the Urewera National Park shows only too clearly. What’s worse is that this disastrous approach will inevitably be replicated elsewhere should tribal groups be entrusted with the management of conservation lands.

The demise of the Ureweras represents yet another misguided attempt at appeasement - this time by Chris Finlayson, the Minister of Treaty Negotiations in John Key’s Administration, who sacrificed the former World Heritage Status National Park as part of a Treaty settlement with Tuhoe.  

Under the 2013 Te Urewera Act, the Park was given a “legal personality”, which meant that while no-one owns it, the Government retained the assets – including huts, camping grounds, bridges, boardwalks, and a Holiday Park. A co-governance Board of nine – six from Tuhoe and three representing the Crown – was established as “kaitiaki”, or guardians of the Park, with annual funding of $2.2 million to maintain the Park and ensure public access.

In 2022, Stuff published a 
report revealing just how much the Park had deteriorated. It had been closed for months, facilities had fallen into disrepair, and public access was denied with boat ramps blocked, and tracks and roads barricaded.

Trampers’ huts were vandalised, and later burnt down until a Court injunction stopped the carnage.

Department of Conservation staff have been driven away, with Tuhoe claiming they would undertake pest control themselves. But tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of traps left rotting reveals the truth that the lofty “kaitiaki” claims that Maori are the true ‘guardians’ of New Zealand’s natural heritage, are nothing short of a lie.

A follow-up story earlier this month,
reported further deterioration.

Pest control and conservation efforts have been “switched off” entirely, putting at risk one of New Zealand’s most endangered songbirds, the kokako.

The Department of Conservation’s ‘Mainland Island’ project had restored the bird population in the former National Park, but conservationists claim kokako numbers will now be ‘crashing’: “The Te Urewera Act signed the death warrant on kokako in northern Te Urewera, it’s as simple as that… They switched off 20,000 hectares of possum control. They just stopped doing it. There’s possums everywhere. Possums prey directly upon kokako - they kill the nesting females, they kill the chicks and they eat the eggs.”

Nor is it just the kokako under threat. Pest control in a kiwi sanctuary at Lake Waikaremoana has also been stopped, and there are now concerns not just for the future of kiwi, but also for the whio, or blue duck - another endangered species in the area.

The report reveals how the Department of Conservation, which provides the annual $2.2m grant to Tuhoe, could not say how much of that was spent on pest control: “The Department does not oversee how this grant is spent, other than at a high level.”

The Department was also unable to provide information about the state of kokako in the forest, claiming they hadn’t been monitored since 2014.

While millions of dollars of taxpayer funding continues to be delivered to tribal leaders, there appears to be no government oversight nor safeguards. This once pristine area of New Zealand – acclaimed around the world – has degraded into an ecological disaster.

Incredibly, the very same model that failed the Urewera National Park, has been adopted for Mount Taranaki, which is now recognised as a legal person under the name “Taranaki Maunga”. It too is managed by a co-governance board – in this case, eight from local iwi and four representing the Crown. In other words, the absurdity of giving inert landmarks a “personality” and legal status is nothing more than a political construct designed to transfer highly valued public conservation land into tribal control – and potentially, ecological disaster.

This is why preferential tribal treatment in Conservation affairs must be stopped.

But there’s more to it.

In their Discussion Document, the Department explains that their Section 4 ‘Principles of the Treaty’ clause is one of the “strongest” in New Zealand legislation, because of a 2018 majority Supreme Court
ruling in favour of ‘preferential treatment’ for Maori: “giving effect to the Treaty principle of active protection requires decision-makers to consider extending a degree of preference to Iwi...”

As a result of that finding, even established businesses that operate within the Conservation Estate, that have invested heavily in infrastructure, are now under
threat from tribal conglomerates objecting to the renewal of licences so they can take control and benefit from the goodwill that’s been created.

The Government’s new legislation must turn this situation around so tribal interests are not favoured above other New Zealanders.

That’s how things used to operate before the Department of Conservation became a money-making rort for Maori.

This can be seen only too clearly in the Punakaiki
scandal.

In 2018 the Department of Conservation received $25.6 million from the Provincial Growth Fund to build a new visitor centre at Punakaiki, which included space for Ngai Tahu to operate. But along the way, cost over-runs and “partnership” demands upended the objectives: Ngai Tahu was to be gifted what ended up as a $45.5 million centre to run as a profit-making commercial venture for their own benefit, with the Department of Conservation renting space from them for its visitor services.

When the local Conservation Board was asked why the building was being given to Ngai Tahu, the Ngai Tahu-appointed Board member Kara Edwards responded: “This is an example of a Treaty Partnership in action. It’s offensive to suggest otherwise and I’m not having it”.

And the Department of Conservation’s West Coast director, Mark Davies claimed, “The facility would be an ‘exemplar’ of DOC and Ngai Tahu working together in a Treaty partnership”.

So, taxpayers ended up paying $45.5 million for a new Department of Conservation visitors’ centre, only to find it was given to Ngai Tahu - a $2-billion private business development corporation - to run as a profit-making operation through its tax-free charity, while taxpayers now fund the Department to pay rent to Ngai Tahu, so visitor services can be provided!

Shouldn’t such massive taxpayer exploitation be subjected to a proper independent inquiry?

And what about Ngai Tahu’s plans to co-govern the Waitaki River - a vital resource of national significance with three hydro-electric dams and five other power stations, as well as a myriad of other water users?

Fresh from its
success in securing a $100-million-dollar deal from power generators renewing water rights for their Waitaki River hydro schemes, Ngai Tahu now wants to control the whole River.

Approval to investigate their co-governance proposal was secured from the Otago Regional Council, which has a Ngai Tahu ‘advisory’ board with voting rights - and from the Canterbury Regional Council, with its two Ngai Tahu-appointed Councillors.

Whether this outrageous proposal - from a conglomerate that is not only a major water user itself but has stacked the regulatory bodies it needs approval from with voting representatives - progresses or not, remains to be seen.

Without a doubt, conservation reform represents a major challenge for the Coalition Government: given the stranglehold that tribal interests have secured, will it honour its election pledge to remove all references to Treaty principles and race-based rights from the new legislation, or will it cave in and appease tribal leaders?

Submissions on the Conservation Department’s consultation close at 5pm on Friday February 28 – see details
HERE. Fiona Mackenzie’s submission can be viewed HERE.

Please note: To register for our free weekly newsletter please click HERE.

THIS WEEK’S POLL ASKS:

*Should the Department of Conservation’s co-governance arrangements be terminated?


Dr Muriel Newman established the New Zealand Centre for Political Research as a public policy think tank in 2005 after nine years as a Member of Parliament. The NZCPR website is HERE. We also run this Breaking Views Blog and our NZCPR Facebook Group HERE



12 comments:

Anonymous said...

I was up in the Ureweras last September. What used to be a pristine areas of bush with dense undergrowth are now a desert of just barren dirt under trees, that will soon be dying. Deer were so plentiful that I saw them as I walked, without needing to stalk, and there was evidence of possums everywhere. Most huts were vandalized or destroyed before the injunction and almost all the old tracks are closed.

It wasn't just a matter of lack of huts and DOC workers, but the negativity keep hunters and environmental people away. They used to have a visitors' centre that was one of the most significant pieces of architecture in NZ. It was designed by Maori architect, John Scott, but that was pulled down because it was too colonial and replaced with a tribal centre, were visitors are not made to feel.welcome. I was told off for wearing shoes in their "marae" even though there were no signs saying that.

Their attitude is why bother catering for DOC, tourists and visitors when they can rely on the government paying them anyway.

Rob Beechey said...

A book was written “In the Jaws of the Dragon” describes how the Chinese are taking over key sectors of our country’s economy as part of its strategic plan for global control of the world’s resources. Based on the worrying stranglehold greedy tribal interests have secured, enabled by weak government and creative treaty exaggerations, I fear there is enough material to write a new book, “In the Jaws of the Taniwha”.

John Porter said...

In November 2023 New Zealand First leader Winston Peters promised to end policies based on race.
During the election campaign, New Zealand First outlined plans to remove Māori names of government departments, for New Zealand to withdraw from the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, and to introduce a bill making English an "official" language of New Zealand.
"Our very democracy is at risk from a rising tide of racism and separatism that has given birth to secret social engineering that you were never warned about and most certainly never agreed to," Peters said before the election.
Reading Muriel Newmans article , Mr Peters seems to have forgotten what he promised on the campaign trail and at the formation of the coalition government! Maybe the international travel, meeting of international dignitaries and dare I say it, “the baubles of office” now seem to hold much more attraction than doing what he promised.
Should we be surprised? Well I’m not. That was just Winston being Winston!
SO WHAT ABOUT IT MR PETERS, ARE YOU GOING TO DO WHAT YOU PROMISED? READING MURIELS ARTICLE, YOUR TIME HAS COMETH!

Janine said...

I am not a tramper however I agree that the renaming and supposed revamping of iconic sites and areas doesn't necessarily improve them. A case in point would be Mt Bruce Wildlife Centre now renamed Pukaha. In earlier days, our experience was of a friendly, easy going, popular and interesting destination. Obviously named after someone from a well-known family called Bruce. Pukaha, on the day we visited, was devoid of visitors and very expensive. Someone had obviously poured a great deal of money into it but we preferred it as it was.

Robert Arthur said...

The major problem is that the great majority of the general public are not aware of the situation. It should be regularly and extensively reported in the msm but is not. Few now trouble to read newspapers in any case and it requires effort to assemble and present as luring pictures for cell phones. RNZ maintains a relentless pro maori stance. As I have persistently laboured, any hint of supposed co governace is effectively total maori control. On the "other" side there is invariably someone who has been captured by maori flannel, and near all are terrified of cancellation, so the nationally coordinated maori demands triumph. At best there is veto induced stalemate.
Despite words,maori see the conservation estate as a potential source of income. Otherwise wilderness state with pigs and possums galore suits their passtimes.Spiting of the general public colonists, as by blocking or complicating, or ruining the access experience acquires mana.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Muriel. Have you ever though of starting a youtube channel to share your views? More kiwis need to know about this. It is not just for the super young. Lady C, who must be in her 80s is a conservative english influencer on youtube with hundreds of thousands of subscribers. She talks about the royals, harry and meg and uk politics.

Anonymous said...

The consequences of appeasement is tyranny. And here we are.

Peter said...

Hear, hear, John. "Winston is being Winston", one who makes the right noises when it's voting time, but almost invariably falls short on actual delivery, or when it really counts. He did give us Jacinda after all and, despite all his feigned horror at He Pua Pua, what has he achieved to really dismantle it?

And there in this "discussion" document (and conveniently avoided if you use their submission tool) is Section 4, which addresses "Working with Iwi (and Hapū)" - NB. the addition of the latter like an afterthought, but presumably because "Iwi" are not actually mentioned in Te Tiriti? And, despite all the current controversy, there it recites that 'wonderful' politician created requirement "...to give effect to the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi." It goes on to mention a Supreme Court ruling citing "...the Treaty principle of active protection requires decision-makers to consider extending a degree of preference to Iwi as well as looking at the potential economic benefit of doing so." Whose economic benefit is not discussed, but putting Maori in a position of oversight and control of concessions, is akin to a fox looking after a hen house and we've seen how well that all works in the Urewera, Lake Rotorua, and with things like the Meridian Resource consent renewal. Along with our foreshore and seabed, New Zealand's natural qualities and resources, that should be there for the benefit of ALL our citizens are being quietly expropriated under our very noses. A former National Government had Chris Finlayson doing 'wonderful' things for Maori, now we have Tama Potaka, who is keeping a remarkably low-profile on this matter. And just why is it that Iwi were consulted weeks before anyone else on this matter? I thought there we had laws on discrimination? A cynic might think it was to give them a heads-up, to suggest they stay mum and not raise an issue - the better the public is kept in the dark the better. Just like the twisting of that more entirely recently manufactured 'active protection principle', what A RORT and WE ALL MUST DEMAND THIS IS NOT GOOD ENOUGH - NOT BY A LONG SHOT!

Anonymous said...

Hey, don’t worry everyone. In no time flat our PM will be onto all the Rorts, and put an end to the whole malevolent system. Ah, well, maybe next year, or perhaps after the Nats get re-elected, or maybe a couple of years after that. What… you say you can’t read Manglish? It’s all there for your information Dummy. Just be thankful we have such a great Govt!

Anonymous said...

Muriel is correct about private land.
You can google " return private land to maori say greens" and go into maoriparty.co.nz website, click on policy, then click on box "mana motuhake" to see their first right of refusal policy for private land.
This would bring house values crashing down, because under this policy a private land register would get set up for new areas that are declared "maori land." Under this first right of refusal policy, you would have to ask iwi first if they wished to buy your house or land. If they said no, then you would be allowed to put it onto the open market. Tell me, who would be foolish enough to buy this house or land once it's been declared maori land.? So you can't sell it. Then iwi might come in with a new lower offer. See how it might work?

Allen Heath said...

Well said Peter. Why do events in 1930s Germany and Italy come to mind? In fact, why not contemplate the less-than subtle incursions orchestrated within Russia, China and Japan in those bad old days of yore? Ignore history and it comes back to bite you on the bum.

Anonymous said...

Is this where all the disenfranchised, disconnected, dying of slow death "rednecks" hang out. Its great you've all found a home to share your pakeha-grievance with (someone pull out the padre collar) - bless. The rise of Maori is happening all around you (now $120bn and growing), get over it, your next generation (of Pakeha) will know quiet a different and mature world beyond your historical scaremonger narrative.