 |
|
Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
|
|
|
|
The Waitangi Tribunal
finding that Maori have property rights to water was
predictable, but is nevertheless a reminder of how well
organised the tribal elite have become.
They have their own political party, with political leverage
through a coalition agreement with the government. They have
the taxpayer-funded Maori Council, which is able to organise
activists into substantive claimant bodies. And they have the
taxpayer-funded Waitangi Tribunal, to re-write history and
deliver quasi-legal deliberations in favour of tribal
claimants.
If you think this claim for water is extraordinary, then
consider it in the context of claims for the electromagnetic
spectrum, many of our mountains, lakes and rivers, the
foreshore and seabed, and claims for the country’s plants
and animals. On this record, can we expect air to become a
taonga too? Does it hold previously unimagined spiritual
elements that require compensation? Perhaps those
commercialising air will be a new target - a levy on air
conditioners perhaps, on the grounds that they interfere with
the air’s mana.
Of course I jest, but it was not so many years ago that we
would have laughed at any hint of a tribal claim for the
ownership of water!
It really is time that the public woke up and decided what
sort of a country we want in the future. If we do nothing, the
sovereignty movement will use the momentum it now has to
deprive us all for their own personal gain.
That’s why it is becoming crucial that New Zealanders get
organised and speak out about the rampant growth in official
and legal racism. Are we prepared to tolerate greater tribal
influence in our everyday affairs – like paying a royalty to
the separatists every time we turn on our tap? Or have we
already had enough?
If you believe that with this water claim, the tribal elite
have gone too far in trying to rob New Zealand of its public
resources, then it is time to take a stand.
With the Government's constitutional review asking for public
feedback on the Maori roll, Maori seats, and the future of the
Waitangi Tribunal and Treaty within our constitutional
arrangements, the opportunity is now here to usher in a new
era of democracy for New Zealand based on equality under the
law. In a bid to provide a vehicle for change, last week the
New Zealand Centre for Political Research launched a
Declaration of Equality and an on-line petition. The
Declaration aims to restore equality under the law by removing
any reference to the Treaty or its principles in legislation
or in any constitutional document, and by abolishing the Maori
seats and the Waitangi Tribunal.
If you share our concerns about the present direction of New
Zealand, we are asking you to help us create a movement for
change, by signing the petition and calling on others to do
the same. Our initial target is 20,000 signatures, but we hope
to build to 50,000, 100,000 and more. We will deliver the
petition to Government Ministers in September next year to
coincide with the report back of the Maori Party's
Constitutional Advisory Panel. We will be asking Government
Members of the House of Representatives to show true
leadership in representing the views of the majority of New
Zealanders, by implementing the Declaration of Equality. If
you believe New Zealand’s course must be changed to stop the
separatists entrenching their hold over our country, then
please sign the petition here>>>.
But back to the water claim.
In their letter to the Prime Minister, the Waitangi Tribunal
found that the Maori Council claimants “presented conclusive
evidence that Maori hapu and iwi had customary rights and
authority over water bodies – as distinct from land – in
1840”.[1] They said this was because Maori people relied on
water resources for food, clothing, housing, transport, trade,
and the other physical necessities of life - as well as being
valued for spiritual and cultural reasons: “Rivers and other
water bodies could be living beings or ancestors. Each had its
own mauri (life force), its taniwha (spirit guardians), and a
central place in tribal identity.”
The Tribunal explained that “the closest English cultural
equivalent to the Maori customary right in 1840 was full
ownership. While Maori custom was not the same as ownership,
ownership was its closest equivalent. As at 1840, ownership in
English law included rights of exclusive access and
control.” They go on to explain that even though lands may
have been sold, claimants still have “residual” property
rights today.
When it comes to the settlements that claimants are demanding,
the Tribunal explained that what they want is “recognition
of their property rights, payment for the commercial use of
water in which they have property rights (particularly its use
for electricity generation), and enhanced authority and
control in how their taonga are used.”
This, they argue, cannot be obtained from shares alone: “The
claimants conceded that shares on their own will not give them
a very meaningful recognition of their water rights.
Nonetheless, shares in conjunction with shareholders’
agreements and revamped company constitutions could, if
properly crafted, give them enhanced power in these companies
that control and use their taonga and profit from them, and
thus a meaningful form of rights recognition.”
In other words, the tribal groups that are involved in the
claims for water involving the State Owned Enterprises
earmarked for sale, want shares, royalties, compensation, and
a role in the governance of the companies. The Tribunal states
that by pressing ahead with the sale of shares in Mighty River
Power, without first addressing Maori claims, the government
would be in breach of the Treaty. The Tribunal therefore
concluded that, “In the national interest and the interests
of the Crown-Maori relationship, we recommend that the sale be
delayed.”
By declaring that a public good resource that is actually
owned by no-one is owned by tribal groups, the Tribunal is
attempting to create wealth for these tribes – at the
expense of all other New Zealanders. But by pushing the
government to not only gift shares, but enable claimants to
get involved in the governance of these commercial businesses
– through seats on the Boards and political input into
business decisions – the Tribunal is seriously undermining
the whole sale process.
At this stage, Prime Minister John Key is standing up for the
public interest by reinforcing the widely accepted
understanding that water is a common resource that can be
owned by no-one. Whether he continues to stand firm is a true
test of his leadership. If he succumbs to this blackmail, then
the sale price for the partially privatised State Owned
Enterprises will fall.
In addition, any suggestion of the private ownership of water
will adversely impact on the ability of electricity generators
to maintain resource consents to take water. Generators are
already reputed to be paying millions of dollars in tribal
consent sweeteners - which of course, results in higher power
prices for consumers.
Giving claimants influence in Mixed Ownership Model businesses
could spell disaster for the sale process. Any form of
political influence in a business represents an investment
risk with a consequent lowering effect on share value. In
addition, compensatory payments by the government, means less
income from asset sales. What had been seen as an attractive
investment option, adding quality to a quality-deprived
sharemarket, could well become tainted by uncertainties.
The problem for New Zealand is that these water claims will
NOT stop at power generators. Dairy farming will be the next
target for water rights claims by tribal leaders who will put
forward the same arguments. In fact, anyone anywhere who uses
water could progressively become a target, if tribal activists
find that the government is prepared to sacrifice the rights
of all New Zealanders to a free public good resource, in the
interests of keeping the Maori Party on board as a coalition
partner.
But the price of some political demands are simply too high.
In his article Just say No!, this week’s NZCPR Guest
Commentator, freelance writer Michael Coote reminds us that in
the case of the Urewera National Park, which Treaty
Negotiations Minister Chris Finlayson is reported to have been
on the brink of giving to Tuhoe, John Key stepped in and
stopped the claim dead in its tracks:
“In May 2010, after getting an earful from a National Party
conference about pandering to Maori, Mr Key personally
torpedoed the handover of the national park and called the
idea unacceptable to the Government. Just saying no to
a national park being used as a Treaty settlement, Mr Key
said, It's fair to say that the proposal from Tuhoe's
negotiating team falls outside of the broad principles that
have operated for other Treaty negotiations. A lot of Treaty
settlements have unique provisions, but in my view it would
have been quite a significant step away from the broad
principles under which we normally negotiate a Treaty
settlement.” To read the full article click here>>>
There is another important consideration in this whole
argument - which no-one else appears to have raised. In 2006,
Prime Minister Helen Clark signed into law an end-date for
historic Treaty claims. Clause 6AA of the Treaty of Waitangi
Act 1975 limits the jurisdiction of the Waitangi Tribunal to
deal with historic claims submitted after 1 September 2008:
“after 1 September 2008 no Maori may submit a claim to the
Tribunal that is, or includes, a historical Treaty claim”.
While Part 2, states that this “does not prevent a
historical Treaty claim submitted to the Tribunal on or before
1 September 2008 from being amended in any way after 1
September 2008”, this water claim by the Maori Council is a
new claim that focuses on rights dating back to 1840.
According to the law, Part 4 states, “To avoid doubt, if a
claim is submitted to the Tribunal contrary to subsection (1),
it must be treated for all purposes as not having been
submitted.”[2]
In other words, the Tribunal has no jurisdiction with regard
to the Maori Council’s new historic claim.
I asked Canterbury University law expert David Round for his
opinion on this. He agreed that this was a worthy argument,
explaining, “Whatever the common law situation before 1967,
the Water and Soil Conservation Act of that year said that the
sole right to take natural water was vested in the Crown ~ all
common law rights were impliedly extinguished. The Resource
Management Act 1991 continued the same regime. The rights to
use the water for hydro-electric power generation were granted
under one or the other of these statutes. Maori lost whatever
legal rights they ‘may’ have had a long time ago. Well
before 2008!”
So there we have it. We should call on John Key to not only
stick to his guns on the fact that no-one owns water, but he
should also instruct Crown Law to rule that the Maori
Council’s claim to the Waitangi Tribunal is out of order
because the Tribunal no longer has any jurisdiction to
investigate historical Treaty claims.
This
week’s poll asks: Should
John Key stick to his guns that no-one owns water - even if it means the Maori Party will leave the Coalition? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1..Waitangi
Tribunal, The Interim Report on the National Fresh Water and
Geothermal Resources Claim
2 .NZ
Legislation, Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send to friend
Your
Comments:
Reader's
comments will be posted on the
NZCPR Forum page click
to view >>>
Skip to top Skip
to this weeks poll
Send
to a friend:
|