Ngāpuhi hapū leader calls for $8b Treaty redress during Govt visit

Susan Botting Susan Botting | 10-02 16:20

A Ngāpuhi hapū leader today told Treaty Negotiations Minister Paul Goldsmith the country’s biggest iwi should get an $8.43 billion redress for generations of losses.

Te Whiu chairman TeRau Allen-Arena’s call came as Goldsmith met formally with Ngāpuhi hapū for the first time at Whitiora Marae in Te Tii on Te Puna Inlet in the Bay of Islands today.

Goldsmith visited Te Tii for Te Kotahitanga o ngā hapū Ngāpuhi’s October meeting, amidst efforts to get Ngāpuhi hapū together to work towards treaty settlement.

“Te Kotahitanga continues to have a goal to be a forum where the hapū of Ngāpuhi can come together and configure themselves for Treaty negotiations,” Tipene said.

But this would be done on their terms. They would configures themselves for negotiations as they wanted to, not as the Government or anybody else might wish.

ADVERTISEMENT

About 200 people packed the Whitiora Marae hui hosted by Ngāti Rēhia.

Goldsmith told those present the Government had ideas about how settlement might happen. But his purpose at the hui was to listen.

The visit was his first with wider Ngāpuhi hapū.

Te Kotahitanga o ngā hapū Ngāpuhi chair Pita Tipene said it was important the Minister came to hear from Ngāpuhi hapū.

It was about the Government listening and not telling Ngāpuhi what was going to happen.

Goldsmith said the Government would like to see Ngāpuhi’s Treaty of Waitangi claims settled. He believed this would be huge opportunity for the iwi.

Tipene said Ngapūhi hapū were looking to the future to find a positive way forward, rather than fighting among themselves.

ADVERTISEMENT

He said he hoped the Minister would be open to processing Ngāpuhi claims in a way that aligned with that of Te Kotahitanga o ngā hapū Ngāpuhi.

A range of hapū spoke at today’s hui including from the mid north and Whangārei.

Tipene said the Waitangi Tribunal had ruled Ngāpuhi had not ceded sovereignty when signing Te Tiriti of Waitangi or He Whakapuntanga.

He told Goldsmith that was Te Kotahitanga o ngā hapū Ngāpuhi’s firm position.

He was very clear that the the movement forward to a Treaty claims solution was very firmly happening in this context.

This was in spite of the Prime Minister recently indicating the Government’s position to be otherwise.

Ngāti Hine leader Waihoroi Shortland said those working for a Ngāpuhi solution had faced years of successive changes in those holding the Ministerial Treaty Negotiations portfolio.

ADVERTISEMENT

Hui speaker Roseanna Henare-Solomona told the Minister Ngāpuhi in Australia should not be lost sight of in terms of redress. Henare-Solomona splits her time between Northland and Australia.

Another hui speaker, Lee Harris, representing Hokianga hapū said working with conflicting views of who spoke for an area’s hapū was part of the process of moving forwards.

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

Consumers set to pay Rs8.7b for idle IPPs

ISLAMABAD: The National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (Nepra) is likely to impose an additiona...

No state pension for new employees from next fiscal

KARACHI: Public sector employees hired from the next fiscal year onward will no longer be eligible f...

Sugar prices drop by up to 8.5%

Listen to article The Utility Stores Corporation (USC) on Thursday reduced the prices of sugar acros...

Forged bank notes, equipment found in Waikato searches

Police found forged bank notes and the equipment used to make them yesterday while searching two pro...

Tiny oxygen bubbles a game changer for cutting farm water use

Tiny oxygen bubbles are being touted by some as a potential game changer for irrigating pastures and...

Student's sentence for killing two Melbourne sex workers 'unjust'

A nine-year prison term for a man who killed two Asian migrant sex workers within 24 hours shows tha...