The State of Maori Rights - Margaret Mutu - E-Book

The State of Maori Rights E-Book

Margaret Mutu

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Beschreibung

The State of Maori Rights brings together a set of articles written between 1994 and 2009. It places on record the Maori view of events and issues that took place over these years, issues that have been more typically reported to the general public from a 'mainstream' media perspective. It is an important documentation of these fifteen years of New Zealand history, recording the assertion of Maori rights as the indigenous people of Aotearoa New Zealand, focusing on Maori issues and experiences and written from a Maori perspective.

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Contents

Front Cover

Title Page

List of Abbreviations

Chapter 1: Introduction

Issues and events as viewed through Māori eyes

Approach based on He Whakaputanga and Te Tiriti

The underlying problem of racism in New Zealand

Reoccurring issues and themes

The Waitangi Tribunal

The fiscal envelope – side-stepping the Tribunal to extinguish Treaty claims

The fisheries allocation debacle

Racism and Pākehā media

International criticism of government treatment of Māori

Loss of key leaders

Bright spots

Added references

Acknowledgements

Chapter 2: 1994–95 – The Year of the Fiscal Envelope

Sealord deal controversy – settling fisheries claims by removing rights

Māori electoral option – government reluctance to ensure Māori participation

The fiscal envelope debacle – unilaterally determined government policy on extinguishing Māori Treaty of Waitangi claims and rights

Māori reaction to the fiscal envelope – initial silence at the magnitude of the insult followed by firm, repeated and unanimous rejection

Waikato-Tainui Settlement – Crown-determined and a dangerous precedent

Attempts to repeat Waikato-Tainui in Te Hiku o te Ika create uproar

A bright spot – Whale Watch Kaikoura wins international acclaim

Chapter 3: 1995–96

The Taranaki Report – laying bare 155 years of Crown atrocities

The Hīrangi hui – strategising for constitutional change through decolonisation and scrutinising Māori leadership qualities

Challenges to Crown-appointed Māori leaders

Nelson Mandela visits and criticises the government’s racist attitude

Arson at Takahue

… And at Taumaranui

Minister of Conservation steps in on Whanganui problems

Ngāi Tahu claims settlement negotiations recommence in the face of damaging litigation

Negotiations abandoned in Te Hiku o te Ika

Chapter 4: 1996–97

Māori success in the first MMP election …

… Encourages racist backlash

Māori MPs as fodder for racism in the media and the House

Attacks on the pilot Aotearoa Television Network and Tuku Morgan

And what of the media coverage of scandals in high places in the Pākehā community?

Some victories in the courts and the Waitangi Tribunal

The Muriwhenua Land Report breaks new ground by considering Māori understandings of land transactions

A bright spot – Philip Tataurangi wins the Australian PGA Championship

Chapter 5: 1997–98

Great sadness at the passing of leaders

Sir Hepi Te Heuheu

Tuaiwa (Eva) Rickard

Matiu Rata

Fisheries allocation has now been in the courts for five years

Treaty land claims settlements – Whakatōhea fails, Ngāi Tahu reaches agreement

Customary fisheries negotiations fail

Chapter 6: 1998–99

Collapse of National-New Zealand First coalition weakens Māori input into government

The Hīkoi of Hope – a huge protest march against poverty

Politicians bicker after floods ravage impoverished Māori communities

The Waitangi Tribunal defies the government and …

1) … Uses its powers to make binding recommendations

2) … Finds that Māori own rivers

3) … Condemns the Crown for denying Māori access to the radio spectrum

Tainui successfully injuncts the Crown over Electrocorp

And the fisheries allocation debacle continues …

Chapter 7: 1999–2000

Māori return to Labour – for now …

Dover Samuels, Minister of Māori Affairs for a short six months

Can the PM’s Cabinet Committee on Closing the Gaps really bring government departments to account for Māori deprivation and poverty?

PM’s choice for Hauraki electorate easy target for right-wing ACT Party

Rest of the Māori in Parliament keep their heads down

Police shoot young Māori student – was it racially motivated?

A new Treaty Minister, a slightly different approach – but no real change

Ngāi Tahu settlement seems OK

Tainui – not so good

And the fisheries allocation debacle grinds on …

As does the radio spectrum row …

At long last, a constitutional debate opens – only to be closed down immediately

Chapter 8: 2000–01

Postcolonial Traumatic Stress Disorder, Māori poverty and violent offending

… And the Prime Minister bans the H-word – Holocaust …

… So other Māori MPs duck for cover – except for Dover and Sandra …

… But the government still abandons the ‘Closing the Gaps’ policy

Prime Minister under fire from Māori

Lack of governance and administrative expertise causing concern but no media scrutiny …

… Except for Tainui

Sir Robert Mahuta

Much more respectful coverage of Pākehā commercial disasters

Successful Māori settlements overlooked by the media

Treaty of Waitangi Fisheries Commission commercially successful but the fisheries allocation debacle continues …

Waitangi Tribunal celebrates its twenty-fifth birthday but still struggles with government indifference to its funding, findings and recommendations

Settlements

Pākaitore

Pouakani, Ngāti Ruanui, Te Uri o Hau

Māori opposition to genetic engineering

A breakthrough in local government – Māori representation on Bay of Plenty Regional Council

Chapter 9: 2001–02

Supporting Māori sovereignty is politically unsafe

Local councils, not Māori, left to decide if Māori representation allowed

Māori views on Māori sovereignty … in the New Zealand Herald!

Mainstream media Māori bashing

So why is the Treaty claims settlement process so chronically slow?

Kidnapping of baby Kahurautete Durie

World Trade Center bombing – Māori perspectives

New Zealand Herald turns its sights on Māori Television

Tariana Turia not afraid to take on mainstream media

Te Tangata Whai Rawa o Wēneti: The Māori Merchant of Venice, a stunning performance

MAI FM tops the ratings

Prime Minister apologises to Chinese and to Samoans – but not to Māori

And there’s heaps to apologise for

Attacks on Māori make MPs of Māori descent reluctant to publicly support their own

July general election sees a record twenty MPs of Māori descent in Parliament

Chapter 10: 2002–03 – The Year the Crown Declared War over the Foreshore and Seabed

Record number of Māori MPs but only two in cabinet …

… And only two outspoken in their support of Māori

National Party attacking Māori from every possible angle

Māori objections to replacement of Privy Council ignored

Media attacks on Māori Television finally halted

Bullyboy tactics employed in the continuing fisheries allocation debacle

Local Government Act stripped of the ability to ensure Māori participation

Mainstream media discrimination against Māori MPs continues

New Zealand Herald columnist attacks mainstream media Māori bashing

Whale Rider attracts critical acclaim

Two Treaty settlements this year

Government angry at Tribunal for its findings in favour of Māori for petroleum …

… And the Court of Appeal for doing the same for the foreshore and seabed …

… So Crown proposes confiscation of Māori land in the foreshore and seabed on a massive scale

Government clashes with Māori over aquaculture

Chapter 11: 2003–04 – The Year of the Battle for the Foreshore and Seabed

Māori react very strongly to government announcement of proposed confiscation of foreshore and seabed

Māori opposition highly organised – government steps up anti-Māori propaganda campaign – Tariana Turia resigns

Government refuses to listen to Māori and continues pushing through legislation

Court of Appeal’s decision in Malborough case upholds Māori rights

Foreshore and seabed legislation removes Māori rights while preserving non-Māori rights – a declaration of war

Reality of Māori marginalisation – Māori MPs bow to Labour pressure and betray their constituents

Pākehā racism unashamedly displayed

National Party leader exploits racism – Brash’s Ōrewa speech

National Party Māori bashing gives government excuse to cut funding for Māori programmes

Māori Television, now finally launched, helps in the battle against foreshore and seabed legislation

A national Māori collective to fight the foreshore and seabed legislation – Te Ope Mana a Tai

Waitangi Tribunal upholds country-wide claims against foreshore and seabed policy …

… And the government ignores the Tribunal, yet again …

… And the Prime Minister breaks even more fundamental constitutional rules and attacks a Māori judge

Last resort: a 50,000-strong protest march – the Hīkoi

Prime Minister calls marchers ‘haters and wreckers’ and says she prefers the company of sheep

Chapter 12: 2004–06

Legislative confiscation of the foreshore and seabed continues to gnaw at Māori and the country

Attorney-General admits Foreshore and Seabed Act discriminates against Māori but …

United Nations CERD criticises Foreshore and Seabed Act

Damning Report of United Nations Special Rapporteur a wake-up call for New Zealand government

On the Foreshore and Seabed Act

On constitutional issues

On human rights and the Waitangi Tribunal

On Treaty settlements

On education

On culture

On social policy

On international indigenous rights

On civil society

Māori welcome report as blueprint for reinstating Māori rights – government condemns it then ignores it

On the existence of so-called Māori privilege – ‘he had not been presented with any evidence to that effect’

Māori tertiary education institutions under attack – for being too successful

Looking for the bright spots – the Māori Party

Māori Party wipes out the Māori MP stereotype

Michael Campbell, Ngāti Ruanui and Ngā Rauru – golf champion extraordinaire

Robert Hewitt – miraculous survival with the help of his ancestors

Peter Loughlin, Ngāti Tūwharetoa – fashion designer par excellence

Chapter 13: 2006–07

More great sadness at passing of leaders

Dame Te Ātairangikaahu

Emeritus Professor Sir Hugh Kāwharu

Don Selwyn

Māori-government tensions persist; Māori protest continues but with more effective support

Treaty of Waitangi claims ongoing source of tension

The loathed fiscal envelope settlement policy remains to extinguish Māori Treaty claims

Yet settlements are proceeding nevertheless

Ngāti Mutunga Settlement Act

Te Rōroa Claims Settlement Bill

Ngāti Whātua ki Ōrākei Agreement in Principle

Te Arawa Lakes Settlement Act

Central North Island forest settlements run into major problems as the Crown makes itself a beneficiary of the settlement

Ngāti Kahu gives up on the settlement process and repossesses its lands

Chapter 14: 2007–08 – The Year of Contrasts: Terror Raids and a Courageous New Treaty Settlements Minister

Terror raids on Tūhoe

Raids a chilling reminder of previous government invasions of Tūhoe

Raids a disguise for a fishing expedition?

Prime Minister and Commissioner of Police violate rules of sub judice; Solicitor-General refuses to allow prosecution for terrorism; evidence leaked to unscrupulous media

Māori Party comes to defence of Tūhoe; UN asks for an explanation

New Zealand votes against the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

Waitangi Tribunal criticises government Treaty settlement policy – yet again

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance becomes Treaty settlements Minister

Mauao returned to its rightful owners – but not really

Government abandons its settlement policy to reach agreement on settling Ngāti Kahu’s claims

Loss of several Māori icons

Syd Jackson

Archbishop Whakahuihui Vercoe

Hone Tūwhare

Barry Barclay

Commemorations for thirty-year anniversaries of Raglan and Takaparawhau

Commemorations at Waitangi peaceful yet again

Victoria Cross awarded to Corporal Willie Apiata

Chapter 15: 2008–09 – A Year of More Good News than Bad

Māori Party wins five seats and receives mandate to become part of the government

Agreement between Māori Party and National covers major issues for Māori

Two Māori Party ministers

Prime Minister agrees to Māori flag but not to Māori seats on Auckland super city

Treaty claims settlements proceed apace …

Taranaki Whānui ki Te Upoko o Te Ika Deed of Settlement

Ātihau-Whanganui Incorporation Agreement

Waikato River Deed of Settlement

Ngāti Kahu Agreement in Principle

Hauraki and South Island Commercial Aquaculture Settlement

Ngāti Porou Agreement

Reminder for the Prime Minister that settlements still unjust and unfair

Appendix 1: The Declaration of Independence 1835

Appendix 2: The Treaty of Waitangi 1840

Glossary

References

Index

Copyright

Back Cover

List of Abbreviations

ABS

Aotearoa Broadcasting Systems

ACT

Association of Consumers and Taxpayers

ANZAC

Australia and New Zealand Army Corps

BIL

Brierley Investments Limited

CA

Court of Appeal

CEO

Chief Executive Officer

CERD

(United Nations) Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination

ERMA

Environmental Risk Management Authority

Hon.

Honourable

HSBC

Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation

MA

Master of Arts

MLR

Māori Law Review edited by Tom Bennion

MMP

Mixed Member Proportional representation

MP

Member of Parliament

NZLR

New Zealand Law Reports

NZPA

New Zealand Press Association

OECD

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

OTS

Office of Treaty Settlements

PhD

Doctor of Philosophy

QSM

Queen’s Service Medal

SFO

Serious Fraud Office

TPK

Te Puni Kōkiri – The Ministry for Māori Development

TWOA

Te Wānanga o Aotearoa

UNDRIP

United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

USPGA

United States Professional Golf Association

CHAPTER 1:

Introduction

This book brings together a series of annual reviews of issues affecting Māori that have been published over the past fifteen years. In 1994, the editor of The Contemporary Pacific, a journal of Pacific Island affairs published out of the Centre for Pacific Island Studies at the University of Hawai’i (Mānoa), asked me to provide a review of issues affecting Māori over the past year. Ranginui Walker had been providing annual reviews for the journal for several years and wanted to pass the role over to me. There was plenty to write about; during 1994 and 1995 Māori were once again at loggerheads with the New Zealand government, this time as we battled them over their iniquitous fiscal envelope policy for settling Treaty of Waitangi claims. So I agreed, and found it cathartic to be able to review and record our experiences over the previous twelve months, having participated in many hui not only amongst my own people of Te Hiku o te Ika (the Far North) but also on marae throughout the country. I had been actively involved in our own land issues and then our Treaty claims for nearly two decades and had the benefit of many hours of discussion with my own Ngāti Kahu kaumātua and kuia, as well as many others around the country, about what was happening to the Māori world.

Issues and events as viewed through Māori eyes

Every year after that The Contemporary Pacific asked me to review the previous twelve months from July to the following June and that format has been retained here. Every year there were far more issues and events to report on than could be included in the review. Those I included were those I had heard being discussed on marae, in other hui, in Māori news media such as Mana magazine and on the Māori radio stations which had operated since the 1980s and then, since 2004, on Māori Television. Even so there were still several important issues that I did not cover. The approach I took was to try to capture as best I could the wide range of thinking expressed by Māori on issues and events affecting us as Māori. And while many of the events and issues I reviewed were covered in the mainstream (Pākehā) media, the way they were reported there rarely, if ever, reflected Māori thought on the matter.

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