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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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The
absurd Treaty of Waitangi claims being made by iwi leaders
for
the ownership of pubic good resources that are the foundation
of life itself are driving New Zealand towards a race
relations tipping point.
In spite of the general goodwill of the public towards
finally settling all genuine Treaty claims, naïve and
self-interested politicians have instead taken the country
down the path of appeasement. Appeasement is based on making
concessions, but the problem is that over time demands
incrementally become more unreasonable.
Last
week’s Treaty settlement deal with Tuhoe is a case in
point.[1] At $170 million, it equals the largest settlements
ever made to Ngai Tahu, Tainui, and for commercial fisheries.
In addition, while “Cabinet policy has been that
conservation land is not readily available for use in Treaty
settlements, but small
sites of high significance to iwi can be transferred”, in
this deal, it is the half
a million acre
Urewera National Park that will be sacrificed.[2] Presently owned
by all New Zealanders, once the park is co-governed
by Tuhoe, it will lose its National Park status.
As if giving away our National Park is not enough, Tuhoe will
also gain “Mana Motuhake” or independence.
TV3 described this as a “monumental” change because it
opens up the potential establishment of an independent nation
state.[3] Through this deal, Tuhoe will take over the
management and delivery of taxpayer funded social service in
what amounts to the privatisation of government agencies in
the area. While Treaty Negotiations Minister Chris Finlayson
has denied this will lead to a Tuhoe “nation within a
nation”, this is clearly a step towards the creation of
their own self-governing entity. Tama Iti may have his own
private army after all!
The problem for New Zealand - as this Tuhoe case shows - is
that appeasement simply encourages further claims. According
to a report prepared for former Prime Minister David Lange in
1989 by Richard Hill of the Ministry of Justice - Settlements
of Major Maori Claims in the 1940s: a Preliminary
Investigation - Walter Nash’s Labour Government made a
full and final settlement of £100,000 to Tuhoe in 1958 for
“claims relating to the Urewera”.[4] One only has to
browse the pages of this report to see that all of the work
that went into gaining agreement from tribal leaders for their
“full and final settlements” in the early part of last
century, has effectively been trashed by this generation of
iwi corporations who have come back to demand more. Does
anyone honestly think that this will not continue on and on
into the future - ad nauseam - unless the system is changed?
Already Chris Finlayson’s generosity in settling claims is
coming back to bite us. This new $170 million deal with Tuhoe
will trigger the relativity clauses in the Tainui and Ngai
Tahu settlements. That means that they will receive 17 percent
and 16.1 percent respectively of the value of all settlements
in excess of the $1 billion fiscal cap – calculated in 1994
dollar terms. The trigger point is estimated to be around
$1.54 billion. With settlements expected to reach a total of
$1.79 billion, Tianui and Ngai Tahu business leaders are
anticipating a generous taxpayer-funded windfall gain.[5]
While New Zealanders are largely indifferent or disinterested
when it comes to politics and political decisions, they do not
like being taken advantage of - nor ripped off. Yet that is
what is happening right now with claims for water and wind.
Those making these demands are not only trampling on the
fundamental right of New Zealanders to live freely in their
own country, but they are severely compromising the ability of
our democratically elected government to govern.
We have clearly reached another crossroad in defining who we
are as New Zealanders. What sort of country do we want in the
future: one governed by the iwi elite, or one where all New
Zealanders - regardless of when they or their ancestors
arrived - are treated equally in the eyes of the law and have
equal rights and access over all of our public good resources?
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator David Round, a
constitutional law and Treaty expert at Canterbury University,
expresses a deep frustration at the dire state of race
relations. He looks at iwi claims for water and wind, and in
his forthright manner condemns the actions of the politicians
who have brought New Zealand to this point:
“The claim is just for a commercial use of wind, but if it
should be the case that Maori do have some right to the air
then that right would not, in principle, be just to commercial
use of the air, but to all uses. And we all use the air, to
stay alive. Maori now are claiming then, that they have a
right to the very air which we breathe and which sustains life
itself. That being
so, we would be under an obligation to pay them a rental just
for the right to remain alive. Put like that, the claim sounds
absurd; but it is really no more than the logical continuation
of the pathetic backside-licking by which our craven political
class ~ Labour, National, the whole pack of useless cowardly
swine, our smiling members of parliament, lovely people every
last one of them, always ready with a smile and a kind word ~
has sold us down the river for a generation. Down with them
all.”
The problem is, of course, that under MMP, the appeasement of
radical groups and the gaining of the Treasury benches have
become entwined. Both National and Labour embrace the
political arm of the Maori sovereignty movement - the Maori
Party - knowing that they may have the few critical votes that
keep or put them into power. But the effect of this political
convenience is that we New Zealanders can no longer sit on the
fence and expect our politicians to do the right thing –
under MMP, politics no longer works like that.
We also need to properly hold politicians to account for the
election promises that they make. It is not good enough that
they can promise to abolish the Maori seats, for example,
during an election campaign – maybe even gaining office
because of it - then shrug their shoulders and do a deal with
a coalition partner that postpones such a policy for the
duration of their period as government … which is the only
time when they are actually in a position to change the law!
David Round is intensely critical of the unprincipled actions
of politicians and explains that for the sake of the future,
it is time for New Zealanders to step up:
“You may think these words excessively harsh. I’m sorry,
but they are not. If you think they are excessively harsh ~
and if you do not tell your MPs, of all parties, in fact ~
what you think of their stupidity, dishonesty and racism, then
you ~ yes, you, my friend ~ are part of the problem.
We get the government we deserve. I could practically
guarantee that if every one of you, reading this column, and
agreeing with me, were to phone your MP regularly, and tell
him or her precisely what you thought, we would make a
difference. We read these columns, we moan to each other, but
we don’t moan to the people who matter. It is very nice of
you to e-mail me, or telephone me, as some of you do ~ and I
do appreciate it! ~ but do not do it any more. Telephone your
Members of Parliament. Make appointments to see them. (Don’t
bother joining their parties and ‘radicalising from
within’; ordinary rank and file members of all political
parties are just unpaid fundraisers and cheerleaders, whose
views receive very little respect.)
Tell them exactly what you think of them and their
policies. Don’t just do this once. Make their lives a
misery. That is what they are doing to ours, after all. They
are running our country into the ground. And, after all, Maori
are making their lives a misery. That is actually why Maori
are succeeding, because they are actually out there
complaining, while we just sit at home and get angry in
private. So ~ get up, and do something. Don’t be daunted;
don’t put up with you MP’s condescension and racism. STOP
BEING NICE. We are
at war. At present ~ long may it continue ~ words are our
weapons. For heaven’s sake, use them. Muriel & I and the
handful of other people who write and do things cannot do it
all by ourselves. If you ~ yes, you ~ do not act, then you
have only yourself to blame for the consequences.” To read
David’s full article, click
here >>>
Democracy is a long way from
being perfect - but it is a system that allows the public will
to prevail peacefully. It only works, however, when people
find their voice.
The time has come for New Zealanders to speak out against the
motives of a powerful minority that has influence across
government and the country’s major institutions. We need our
politicians to find the spine to stand up to aggressive
minorities. Through the force of our collective public voice,
we need to persuade them to be the inspirational leaders each
may have imagined they could be.
We want our politicians to represent our views and
aspirations, speaking up for ordinary New Zealanders - the
silent majority who voted them into office.
People power is a force that politicians cannot ignore. It
just takes one voice – your voice - but when combined with
the voices of your family and friends, your neighbours and
concerned fellow citizens, it becomes an unstoppable force for
change.
As a country, we are now at the point where we can either move
forward together as one nation, or become even more deeply
divided as two. It’s not about ignoring or disrespecting the
rights of Maori – it’s about recognising what’s best for
the future of all New Zealanders. It’s a choice – two
nations divided, or one nation that is strong.
Through the government’s Constitutional Review, we are being
given the opportunity over the next twelve months to decide on
the sort of a future we want. We already know what the Maori
Party have planned - they want Maori
law to be sovereign. If you aspire to a future of equality
with all citizens pulling together for New Zealand, then you
must act.
Tell your MPs what you think and what you want them to do. Tell
them often and hold them to account. They are your MPs and
they are required to represent your views in Parliament. We
need to remind them that’s what a Parliamentary democracy
is. The contact details of all MPs can be found in a
convenient format on our website HERE
Encourage people to sign the DECLARATION
OF EQUALITY – one law for all New Zealanders with no
special treatment based on race. Help us create a movement for
change. By the end of the week more than 20,000 will have
signed the Declaration. With twelve months to go before the
government begins considering the options for constitutional
reform, why not help us reach out to half a million New
Zealanders - half a million New Zealanders committed to
equality is
a force to be reckoned with! Sign HERE
We have now started a fighting fund for a nation-wide public
information campaign. The government has given the Maori Party
$4 million to spend on convincing New Zealanders that a Treaty
based constitution is in the best interests of the country. We
need to counter that - to let people know the dangers that lie
in a Treaty based constitution, and to remind the country that
a future where all citizens are equal is far brighter than one
mired in racial
division. To donate to the fighting
fund,
please click HERE
This
week’s poll asks: How
well do you feel your MPs represent your views - very well,
adequately, not well at all? Click here for poll >>>
FOONOTES:
1.Chris Finlayson, Crown
Offer Accepted by Ngai Tuhoe Settlement Negotiators
2DoC,
Briefing
to the Incoming Minister of Conservation 2008
3.TV3, Tuhoe
deal “monumental”
4.Richard Hill, Settlements
of Major Maori Claims in the 1940s: a Preliminary
Investigation
5.NBR, Treaty
settlement top-ups likely for Tainui, Ngai Tahu next year
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