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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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Next
week the Waitangi Tribunal will be hearing the Maori
Council’s claim for the ownership of New Zealand’s
freshwater. To most people, water, like air, is part of a
natural cycle and is regarded as a ‘common good’
–managed by the Crown on behalf of us all, through Regional
Councils.
Once we would have been surprised and somewhat scathing of an
attempt by any group to claim the ownership of water. Not so
now. This claim for water is the iwi elite’s latest grab for
public resources. It follows last year’s success in opening
up the coast for claims by tribal corporations through the
repeal of Crown ownership of the foreshore and seabed.
However, these sorts of claims for public good resources
trespass on the goodwill that some still have towards iwi. For
decades, there has been a prevailing view that what’s good
for iwi is good for all New Zealanders. It has led to a more
relaxed public attitude towards the current round of historic
Treaty of Waitangi settlements - in spite of most people
realising that many of the claims are repeats of previous
‘full and final’ settlements. This attitude has been
shaped by a belief that the proceeds of the settlements were
being used for the benefit of all
tribal members. However, time has exposed the reality that
the settlement process has delivered a two-tier Maori society.
At the top are some immensely rich and powerful iwi elite
controlling $37 billion worth of assets. The bulk of Maori
however, have received no benefit from the lucrative
settlement deals – with many remaining shamefully poor and
disenfranchised.
Not even the 1992 fisheries settlement, worth $170 million,
resulted in the jobs for Maori that were being promised by iwi
leaders at the time. The jobs from iwi controlled fishing
quota have instead been contracted out to foreign vessels with
foreign crews and offshore processing.
This latest claim for public resources is of course
orchestrated around iwi opposition to the partial
privatisation of state owned assets. Maori Party MP Te Ureroa
Flavell explained to Parliament, “Let
me make it clear that we are strongly opposed to the removal
of the four State Owned Enterprises from the SOE act and to
the proposal to sell 49% of these important Crown assets until
historical treaty settlements are concluded with all claimants
who may wish to include these assets into their redress
packages.”
In other words, the reason for their opposition is not that
they want to preserve the assets for all New Zealanders, but
that they want the assets for themselves, with tribal leaders
standing to make massive gains from such settlements.
Self-interest too was clearly the central factor in the Maori
Party’s opposition to the Crafar farm deal. In January,
co-leader Pita Sharples, strongly criticised the
government’s approval of the sale to Chinese investors
stating, "The Maori Party is absolutely against the sale
of our land to overseas interests”.[1]
In the next breath however, it was revealed they were asking
the government to bring in legislation that would give Maori
the first right of refusal over any land sale to overseas
interests: "Last August, we asked the Minister of Finance
to introduce a regulation to direct the Overseas Investment
Commission to check whether the seller had consulted with,
and/or offered land to the appropriate iwi before offering it
on the open market". In
other words, their interest was for Maori privilege ahead of
their concern for the national good.
Pita Sharples explained their opposition to the Chinese
buyers: "Our view has always been that we must protect
and preserve our land to keep it from falling into foreign
ownership. We do not believe selling off our land
to offshore investors such as Shanghai Pengxin is an act of
good faith in iwi as Treaty partners. Land is not just an
economic asset to be exploited for maximum profit. Papatuanuku
is the nurturer of all life, and her care must rest with
people who are committed to her for all time. Today a great
wrong has been done to New Zealanders. Our land is not just a
commodity, it is a living, breathing part of our history, our
culture, and our people. We just sold a piece of
ourselves."
Within a few months of making that statement Dr Sharples was
ready to leave on a Maori-only junket to China. Marae
Investigates asked him, “There's
been a huge back lash about the purchasing of the Crafar farms
by Chinese entities and yet you are going to China is there
any kind of conflict in your mind about going?” Dr Sharples
replied, “The Maori Party is against the selling of land to
people who don't live here that's all and it's got nothing to
do with Chinese or Americans or anything. If you want to buy
land come and live here and work the land and be New
Zealanders.” (It’s a shame Dr Sharples does not
take the same view when it comes to Maori controlled fishing
quota!)
On his return from China Dr Sharples changed his tune after
the news that Shanghai Pengxin intended offering two of the
Crafar farms to the same Maori trusts involved in the rival
bid: "Any agreement is a matter between the parties, and
the Government is not involved in negotiations. It is up
to the parties to decide when and how they might release
details of their agreement, and I will not be making any
further comment.” In other words, his opposition to land
sales to foreigners evaporated once he thought that iwi would
gain a slice of the action. He justified this self-serving
about face by claiming that such a deal “will benefit not
just Maori, but all New Zealanders”.[2]
This is the same sloganeering that is used by the government
to justify their affirmative
action agenda, which allows them to discriminate against
other New Zealanders in favour of Maori. While Human Rights
conventions require that all citizens must be treated equally
under the law regardless of race, governments can use
affirmative action programmes to justify special treatment
based on race – as long as such programmes are being used to
improve the circumstances of an underprivileged group, equal
to the general population. Affirmative action programmes are
meant to be a temporary, but typically, such government
programmes that deliver special rights and privileges to one
race of citizens at a cost to the rest of the population
remain entrenched - unless they are challenged.
In the case of Maori, affirmative action programmes are not
only deeply entrenched, but there remain serious concerns
about whether such programmes with funding tied to
disadvantage, can ever reduce disparity.
The reality is that race-based funding is a flawed concept.
The rapid intermarriage that has always gone on within the New
Zealand population has broken down racial barriers to the
extent that ethnicity is no longer a defining characteristic
of disadvantage. Instead it is family instability, poor
parenting, long-term welfarism, substance abuse, educational
failure, violence, crime and so on. While many people who
identify as Maori are over-represented in these negative
social statistics, it is not because of their race, but
because of these other factors. Race should not be used as an
excuse.
For the sake of the future of this country, it is time to put
this fixation with race behind us. New Zealand should become a
nation where equality before the law is a defining feature.
In his article Turning
around race-based policy, this week’s Guest Commentator
NZCPR Research Associate Mike Butler writes, “Race-based
policy has been a feature of governance in New Zealand as long
as the nation has had a government, and race-based affirmative
action has been with us since the 1980s.”
Mike’s analysis shows that with regard to Treaty of Waitangi
settlements, “Total historical redress, whenever it is
completed, may reach a grand total of around $3.9-billion.
This may be calculated based on the number of likely
settlements, which may reach 87; and the average financial
redress amount so far, which is $44.75-million. Each tribal
entity would have investments in land, buildings, forests,
farming, aquaculture, and an array of businesses. Many assets
that make up the financial redress quantum come with
gold-plated leases to government departments, guaranteeing
cash incomes far into the future. Each tribal entity would
have the rights of first refusal to buy surplus state-owned
assets for up to 172 years which gives tribal entities first
dibs on any surplus government houses, land, commercial
buildings, farm land, forest land, and aquaculture resources
in their area for the next three or four generations. Control
of these assets, and generous management packages, would be
concentrated in the few involved in running the businesses.”
Mike
concludes his article by asking, “What can be done to stop
this on-going handover? The short answer is to: Abolish the
Waitangi Tribunal; remove references to the treaty and its
principles from legislation, and drop the principles for Crown
action on the treaty; and abolish the Maori roll and separate
Maori seats.” To read the full article, please click here
>>>
To download Mike’s
updated NZCPR Treaty Transparency Report, which outlines the
detail of all Treaty settlements, click here
>>>
Many New Zealanders are deeply concerned that successive
governments have turned their back on our right to live in a
country free from racial discrimination and racial preference.
The increasingly race-based path that we are going down is an
anathema to a progressive democracy. So what should we be
doing to turn the situation around?
Clearly, after 30 years, affirmative action programmes have
shown they are not working and should be terminated. As Mike
has suggested, a sensible plan for legislative change would
involve:
-
Abolishing
the Waitangi Tribunal by repealing Sections 4-8 of the
Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975, leaving any final historic
settlements that are still in the pipeline to be
negotiated directly with the Crown - since more and more
iwi are choosing to do that anyway.
-
Removing
references
to the Treaty and its principles from legislation, by
examining modern-day statutes to identify and repeal the
relevant clauses.
-
Abolishing
the Maori roll so all New Zealanders are on one electoral
roll as equal citizens, by repealing Sections 76-79 of the
Electoral Act 1993; and
-
Abolishing
the Parliamentary Maori seats by repealing Sections 45 and
269 of the Electoral Act 1993, and abolishing
the local government Maori seats by repealing Sections
19Z-19ZH and 24A-24F of the Local Electoral Act 1991.
In
other words, bringing about equality under New Zealand law
would be a relatively straight forward legislative process, as
things stand today. It is this fact that is no doubt a driving
force behind the Maori Party’s plan to entrench into law a
new Treaty-based constitution. Such a constitution would
provide special status and privilege to those of Maori
descent, above all other New Zealanders.
The Maori Party’s plan is well advanced. Their hand-picked
Constitutional Review panel has already been selected.
Incredibly the panel does not intend to hold open public
meetings to hear the feedback of all New Zealanders. Instead,
they are intending to hold special Maori-only hui, and
invitation-only meetings - a strategy that was extremely
effective at minimising public scrutiny and awareness of the
foreshore and seabed changes. Alarmingly also, is the fact
that government Ministers have already indicated that any
final changes to our constitution may be approved by
Parliament rather
than having to be approved by the public through a binding
referendum. The bottom line is that New Zealand will again be
facing a fundamental constitutional shift in favour of Maori
and a further advance towards the politics of racial privilege
that the public will be largely unaware of.
This
week’s poll asks: Do you believe race-based affirmative
action programmes do more social harm than good? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.Maori Party, Maori
Party outraged at sale of Crafar farms
2.TVNZ,
Maori
may get two Crafar farms
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