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August 2009
No
Public Mandate for UN Indigenous Rights Declaration
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In May, Justice Minister
Simon Power explained to the United Nations that the new
National-led Government intends to sign the United Nations
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.[1] The
problem for New Zealand is that this is being done without a
mandate from the public. If people really understood exactly
what the declaration proposes, they would reject it outright,
as the Labour Government did - to their credit - in 2007.
During New Zealand’s ‘Universal
Periodic Review’, Simon Power stated, “Mr
President, I turn now to the issue of international
consideration of indigenous issues. In September 2007, the
previous Government choose not to support the UN General
Assembly’s adoption of the UN Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples because some of the Declaration’s
provisions were considered incompatible with New Zealand’s
legal and constitutional arrangements.
“The
New Zealand Prime Minister has indicated that he would like to
see New Zealand move to support the Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous People provided that New Zealand can protect
the unique and advanced framework that has been developed for
the resolution of issues related to indigenous rights. That
framework has been developed in the context of New Zealand’s
existing legal arrangements and democratic processes.”
The Maori Party has long campaigned for New Zealand to ratify
the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous
Peoples. Party co-leader Pita Sharples is so convinced that
the Maori Party’s Confidence and Supply Agreement with
National will lead to New Zealand supporting the declaration,
that he has already announced that the Government will sign
this month. The Prime Minister responded by saying that it is a
work in progress: "We've been working our way through
that just to make sure we've got all the i's dotted and t's
crossed. I'm feeling more confident that we can sign the
declaration but I wouldn't want to put a time frame on
it."[2]
The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
consists of 46 Articles which confer on indigenous people
special rights that elevate their status above that of all
other citizens.[3] These include the right to
“self-determination” and separate self rule, through their
own political, economic, legal, social and cultural systems
including separate education, health and housing - all funded
by the state - the right to virtually all of New Zealand’s
land and resources, the right to on-going compensation, and
the right of veto over the actions of the Government.
In 2007, at the 60th
United Nations General Assembly, when the Clark Labour
Government refused to endorse the declaration, New Zealand’s
representative Rosemary Banks stated, “We are unable to
support a text that includes provisions that are so
fundamentally incompatible with our democratic processes, our
legislation and our constitutional arrangements. These
provisions are all discriminatory in the New Zealand
context.”[4]
She
identified four provisions in particular that stood out. Under
Article 26 indigenous peoples are given the right to all lands
and territories that they have traditionally owned, occupied
or used – including land now lawfully owned by others - with
the result that the entire country could potentially be
affected.
Under
Article 28, which outlines provisions relating to
compensation, again the entire country would appear to fall
within the scope of the Article, including private land. As
Rosemary Banks explained to the UN, “It is impossible for
the State in New Zealand to uphold a right to redress and
provide compensation for value for the entire country”.
Of
further major concern was that the Declaration gives
indigenous peoples the right of veto not over the
democratically elected government but also over all matters
relating national resource management. In particular under
Article 19, the government would need to obtain
the consent of indigenous people before passing legislations
or regulations that may affect them, with Article 32(2)
extending that to lands, territories, minerals, water and
other resources.
These
propositions are at such great odds with the concept of New
Zealand as a modern democratic nation where people of all
races live peacefully as equal citizens before the law, that
it is almost impossible to understand how John Key and his
National Government could justify even contemplating signing
such a declaration.
David
Round, lecturer in law at Canterbury University and this
week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator warns, “It would surely be
a safe rule of thumb that where the hand-wringers of the
Labour Party decline to go, no more thoughtful and reasonable
party should venture. If
even fools decline to rush in, surely angels should fear to
tread. That we might even be thinking of signing should fill
us with alarm. And the very fact that the issue is so close to
Mr Sharples’ heart may suggest that he and the Maori Party
see the Declaration as not just meaningless lip-service, as it
is sometimes represented, but as a tool for possible future
use.”
And
using the declaration as a “tool for future use” is
certainly on the mind of the Maori Party. This is no
meaningless aspirational
affirmation of indigeneity. It is a lever to set in motion an
agenda which will see Maori assume higher authority than other
New Zealanders over all domestic matters - including the
country’s natural resources - a process that is already
underway through the increasingly generous interpretations of
the Treaty of Waitangi that have been used by successive
governments keen to win the support of Maori.
In
a speech delivered last week, at “The Indigenous Peoples
Legal Water Forum”, the Maori Party co-leader Pita Sharples
explained that while the Resource Management Act provides for
the inclusion of Maori ‘values, perspectives and
consultation’ in resource management matters, Maori
overwhelmingly believe it does not go far enough.[5] They are
demanding equal status with the Crown - a position which would
see them having superior power over all other stakeholders.
With
regard to water management, Dr Sharples explains that there is
a widespread expectation that Maori will be given the position
of “kaitiaki of water”, which he maintains will be “one
of equal partnership with the Crown”: “The contribution
that tangata whenua can make towards sustainably managing our
water resources will be of benefit to all New Zealanders.”
So
while it starts with water, if the advocates of indigenous
rights get their way, Maori customary rights and practices
will assume paramountcy – whether in regard to the foreshore
and seabed, claims for private property or indeed lands
already compensated and settled, claims for water, minerals,
oil and gas, or other natural resources, or indeed matters
relating to spiritual and cultural practices - the declaration
of indigenous rights covers almost every aspect of life.
All
of this leads to a question that David Round addresses in his
article: with generous rights potentially being proffered that
would elevate an indigenous person to a position equal to
royalty, he asks who would qualify?
“Oxford
tells us that an indigenous person is one ‘born or produced
naturally in a land or region; native to that soil, region,
&c’. In that sense, all of us born here are indigenous.
We may speak a language and have a culture that developed
elsewhere; but then, so did the first Maori when they arrived
from the Hawaiki they still remember.
“If,
on the other hand, ‘indigenous’ is used to refer to a
people whose ancestors have lived in a place from time
immemorial, then New Zealand has no indigenous inhabitants,
for human settlement on these islands began only about 800
years ago.”
This
is a key point: “These are the only two things
‘indigenous’ can mean; being born in a place, or having
ancestors who have been there forever. The word does not mean
merely ‘having ancestors who arrived in a place before
someone else’s’. That is, however, the meaning given to
the word by sundry spokespeople for the self-styled
indigenous. We learn from websites that the only
‘indigenous’ people in Europe are the Lapps, or Sami as
they are called these days. Other Europeans are not indigenous
to lands they have inhabited for thousands of years. Not only
are the Anglo-Saxons not indigenous; the Gaels, descendants of
the ancient Britons (a Celtic people), are not either.
In Japan only a few thousand Ainu, an ancient people,
are said to be indigenous; other Japanese, despite 5,000 years
of residence, are not.
“But
if Japanese and Britons, despite thousands of years of
occupation, are not indigenous, how can Maori be indigenous
after a mere 800 years in New Zealand?
“The
only possible explanation is that ‘indigenous’ is
interpreted as meaning simply ‘being somewhere first’.
Well, if simply being somewhere first gives one greater
rights, then I look forward to European New Zealanders whose
ancestors arrived here several generations ago having more
rights than recent immigrants. Absurd? Put like that, yes. If
a Cantabrian, say, were to claim special privileges in his
province just because his ancestors arrived on the first four
ships, we would laugh in his face at his pretension. So why,
when we change the ship into a waka, does the argument become
more convincing?
He
concludes, “Let us by all means respect other races and
cultures. The simplest and best way to do that, however, is by
respecting basic principles of non-discrimination and agreed
human rights, rather than by inventing special new rights for
a completely undefined category of ‘indigenous’ persons…
So then: an ‘indigenous’
Maori race is rot; an utterly separate and distinct Maori
race, untainted by intermarriage, is rot; increasingly, a
separate and distinct Maori culture is rot; and a political
programme of special inalienable ‘rights’ for this
mysterious people is also rot. Please, Prime Minister, do not
sign
the Declaration. We will only regret it.” To read David’s
article click
here >>>
The
Government does not have a mandate to sign the Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples when the impact on the fabric
of New Zealand society could be so far reaching and
destructive. And anyone who tries to shrug off concerns by
saying that the agreement will not change anything is
politically naïve. Once in place this declaration has the
potential to become a springboard for racial supremacy and the
sort of separatist unrest most New Zealanders hoped we would
never see.
To
echo the words of David Round, “Please, Prime Minister, do
not sign the Declaration”.
This
week’s poll asks: What
is your advice to the Prime Minister regarding the Declaration
on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples – should he sign the
Declaration, yes or no? Go
to poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Simon
Power, Human
Rights Council: Universal Periodic Review of New Zealand
2.Herald,
Decision
near on endorsing UN rights declaration
3.United
Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
4.Rosemary Banks, Explanation
of New Zealand’s Vote at the UN General Assembly
5.Pita Sharples, Indigenous
Peoples' Legal Water Forum
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