Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui Deed of Settlement signed today
21 December 2012
Historic $20 million Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui Deed of Settlement to be signed today (Friday 21 December) at Waikawa Marae, Picton
A new era begins for Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui today with the signing of their historic Te Tiriti o Waitangi Deed of Settlement at a ceremony at Waikawa Marae, Picton, at 3pm.
The $20 million settlement with the Crown includes a package of returned land, commercial property – such as local schools and other government-owned properties – important cultural redress and a $11.3million cash component.
The Deed of Settlement will be signed on behalf of the Crown by the Minister for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations, Hon Christopher Finlayson, and on behalf of Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui by its Trustees: Glenice Paine (Chair), Ronald Riwaka (Deputy Chair), Cindy Batt, Vennessa Ede, John Katene, Jon McGregor, William Reeves, Te Hawe Ruru, Ngawaina Shorrock and Neville Watson Tahuaroa.
History of Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui claim
Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui are the people of Te tiawa descent who whakapapa to Te Tau Ihu o Te Waka-a-Māui (the top of the South Island).
They originated from the Taranaki region, but by the 1830s were firmly based throughout the top of the South Island. By 1840 – when Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui signed Te Tiriti o Waitangi at Tōtaranui (Queen Charlotte Sound) - they were a dynamic and robust society with their own lands and cultural customs that regulated their life both on land and at sea.
The arrival of the New Zealand Company adversely affected Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui. Further, the Crown – under the leadership of Governor Grey – acquired much of the tribe’s land, with rangatira coerced into accepting minimal payment.
Within three decades of Te Ātiawa rangatira signing Te Tiriti, extensive Crown purchases in Te Tau Ihu had left Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui virtually landless.
Further encroachment of remaining Te Ātiawa land happening at the end of the 19th Century and throughout the 20th Century when land – particularly near Waikawa reserve - was taken by the Crown for public works.
The loss of land had a detrimental effect on the spiritual, economic and cultural wellbeing of Te Ātiawa as an Iwi.
Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui first lodged their claim with the Waitangi Tribunal in 1996. Since then almost two generations of Te Ātiawa whānui have worked to right the breaches of the obligations the Crown took towards all Māori through Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
In its apology to Te Ātiawa o Te Waka-a-Māui, the Crown says: “Through this apology the Crown seeks to atone for these wrongs and hopes that this settlement will mark the beginning of a new relationship with Te Ātiawa based on the Treaty of Waitangi and its principles.”
Settlement package
The settlement package will be made up of returned land, commercial property; such as local schools and other government-owned properties along with important cultural redress components.
The Deed of Settlement package includes the following:
Te Ātiawa has secured:
- 100% ownership of the Queen Charlotte Forest in
Tory Channel, excluding 16 ha
-
- 100% of the Rai
Valley Forest from Havelock to Whangamoa
-
- 100% of
the Golden Downs West 14
-
- 50% of the Upper Motueka
West 11 Forest
-
- 50% of the Golden Downs
12
-
- 33.3% of the Motueka 16 and 17
Forests.
-
-
This land has a total value of
approximately $6million.
Properties on Settlement:
- Army Drill Hall –
Nelson
-
- Picton Police Station
-
- Motueka
Department of Conservation building
-
- Golden Bay
High School shared 50% with Ngāti
Tama.
-
-
Cultural
redress:
- Kaitiaki (guardianship) of Queen
Charlotte Sound conservation
-
The Crown will
acknowledge the role of Te Ātiawa as kaitiaki (guardian)
over the coastal marine area in the Queen Charlotte Sound,
including Pickersgill Island, Blumine Island, Allports
Island, Mabel Island and Amerikiwhati Island.
Te Ātiawa will prepare a kaitiaki plan setting out its values in relation to the coastal marine area in the Queen Charlotte Sound, for the Marlborough District Council to treat as a Resource Management Act 1991 planning document.
- Kahu
Kiwi overlay classification (cultural
protection)
-
The Crown will acknowledge Te
Ātiawa values in relation to each of the following sites:
• East Head, Arapaoa Island
•
• Waikoropupū
Springs Scenic Reserve (shared with Ngāti Tama and Ngāti
Rārua)
•
• Farewell Spit Nature Reserve (shared
with Ngāti Tama and Ngāti Rārua)
•
• The
Brothers Islands (shared with Ngāti
Toa)
•
• Heaphy Track (the northern portion)
(shared with Ngāti Tama, Ngāti Rārua and Ngāti
Apa).
•
•
- Special Redress Waikawa
Bay
-
The Crown is to offer advice and expertise
to Te Ātiawa to undertake a scoping study on options to
improve the quality of the marine environment in Waikawa
Bay, to specified standards such as those suitable for
bathing and shellfish gathering.
- New and Altered
names
-
The settlement legislation will alter the
geographic names, including the following:
Existing
geographic names Altered geographic name
Queen Charlotte Sound (Tōtaranui) Queen Charlotte Sound / Tōtaranui
Separation Point Separation Point / Te Matau
Mount Campbell Mount Pukeone / Mount Campbell
Pickersgill Island Matapara / Pickersgill Island
Mount Robertson Mount Tokomaru / Mount Robertson
Tory Channel Tory Channel / Kura Te Au
Arapawa Island Arapaoa Island
Riwaka River Riuwaka River
ends