Hui Taumata Sends Clear Message To The Government
Saturday 11 November 2000
“Today’s Hui Taumata has sent a clear message that iwi will not tolerate any further delays in the allocation of our fisheries,” Harry Mikaere, Chairman of the Treaty Tribes Coalition, said from Waipatu Marae today.
“We demand Parliament immediately pass the Maori Fisheries Amendment Act. And we demand all our fisheries assets. We will not entertain the aggregation of the assets at the Treaty of Waitangi Fisheries Commission.”
The Hui Taumata considered two resolutions from the floor. They were both passed unanimously except for abstentions by Treaty of Waitangi Fisheries Commissioners and Te Arawa. The resolutions were:
That Parliament immediately implement the Maori Fisheries Amendment Bill.
That this hui demands the allocation of all our fisheries assets and will not entertain the non-allocation of deepsea quota.
Iwi represented at the hui were:
Ngati
Hine
Ngati Wai
Ngati
Whatua
Hauraki Iwi
- Ngati Whanaunga
-
Ngati Pukenga ki Waiau
- Ngati Hako
-
Patukirikiri
- Ngati Tara Tokanui
- Ngati Paoa
-
Ngati Rahiri Tumutumu
- Ngati Porou ki Harataunga
-
Ngai Tai
- Ngati Hei
- Ngati Maru
- Ngati
Tamatera
Waikato-Tainui
Maniapoto
Te Arawa Waka
Ngati
Pukenga ki Tauranga
Te Whanau Apanui
Ngati Porou
Ngati Tamanuhiri
Rongowhakaata
Ngati Kahungunu
Tuwharetoa
Ngati Tama
Whanganui
Iwi
Rangitane
Te Atiawa
Ngati Ruanui
Ngaruahine
Ngarauru
Ngati Apa
Ngati
Hauiti
Ngati Tama ki Tau Ihu Trust
Ngai Tahu
Te Iwi Moriori
In addition, apologies were received from:
Te Atianga a
Mahaki
Whaingaroa
Raukawa
(Waikato)
Ngaiterangi
Ngati
Ranginui
Tuhoe Waikaremoana
Te
Runanga o Wharekauri Rekohu
Speakers at the hui were Mr Mikaere, John Upton QC and Derek Fox.
BACKGROUND
The Treaty Tribes Coalition was established in 1994 and has the support of more than 35 iwi.
The Coalition is seeking the immediate implementation of the “optimum allocation model” for fisheries assets that was developed by the Treaty of Waitangi Fisheries Commission through a five-year consultation process. At the conclusion of that consultation process two years ago, the model achieved the support of 76 percent of iwi representing 63 percent of Maori.
The model deals with $350 million of “pre-settlement” fisheries assets, which have been held in trust by the commission since 1989. The commission has also held a further $350 million of “post-settlement” assets since 1992.
The model was a compromise between those iwi that believed the assets should be allocated on the basis of coastline and those iwi that believed they should be allocated on the basis of population. All iwi agreed that allocation should be to iwi.
Under the model, deepsea quota would be allocated on a 50 percent population, 50 percent coastline basis. Inshore quota would be allocated on a coastline basis. Shares in Moana Pacific Fisheries would be allocated in proportion to the total quota volume allocated to each iwi.
A further $40 million cash would be allocated on the basis of population only, with another $10 million cash kept in trust for a Development Putea for those Maori who are not yet active members of their iwi organisations.
The model also requires that iwi have mandate and accountability mechanisms to deliver to their members, the vast majority of whom are urban residents.
Despite the majority support for the compromise model, allocation is being held up by the technical legal challenges of a few individuals. None of these challenges have been found to have merit by the courts, but legal action continues.
In May 2000, the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research (NZIER) undertook an independent and conservative study into the costs of delaying allocation of the “pre-settlement” assets.
It looked at just three costs of delay relating only to the quota component of the assets, including the inability of iwi to form long-term multi-iwi partnerships. From just these three costs, it concluded the costs were up to $14 million a year. This would compound to $84 million by 2006 if allocation did not occur immediately.
Following the release of the report, the Treaty Tribes Coalition renewed its call for the Government to fix the law to end the technical legal wrangling. The call was supported unanimously by the New Zealand Seafood Industry Council (SeaFIC) at its annual conference.
On 19 September 2000, the Treaty Tribes Coalition and representatives of 36 iwi presented the draft Maori Fisheries Amendment Bill to all Members of Parliament. If enacted, this draft bill would direct the Treaty of Waitangi Fisheries Commission to immediately implement the “optimum allocation model” and stop the destruction of wealth.
The Minister of Maori Affairs referred the draft bill to Cabinet and the commission, while the National Party said it would support it. The draft bill has been placed in the ballot to be introduced as a Private Member’s Bill.
END
What The
Government Has Been Saying
About The Treaty Of
Waitangi
11 November 2000
The Government sees the
Treaty as a “living” document that can be used to address
contemporary issues:
“The Treaty is a living
document.”
Hon. Margaret Wilson
Sunday
Star-Times
17 September 2000
“This Government, more
than any government in the past, is committed to the Treaty
as a modern, living guide to its relationship with
Maori.”
Hon. Margaret Wilson
Article in Mana
Magazine
August-September edition
This approach leads it to put greater emphasis on Article Three of the Treaty than the previous Government:
“In the past, people haven’t
thought much about article three. Socialists – I suppose
that’s a terrible word to use, isn’t it? – people who
believe in social justice would emphasise article three more
than the others, to be frank.”
Hon. Margaret
Wilson
Sunday Star-Times
17 September 2000
“We are a
Labour-Alliance Government. We are interested in social and
economic matters. We focus on article three.”
Hon.
Margaret Wilson
New Zealand Herald
16 September
2000
“The treaty is about a relationship and we seem to
have got a bit derailed by thinking it’s about money or
property or rights.”
Hon. Margaret Wilson
New Zealand
Herald
11 October 2000
Because of this emphasis on article three, settlements under article two have to be seen in a wider context, according to the Government:
“The
settlement of historical grievances also needs to be
understood within the context of wider government policies …
for example, the Government’s “Closing the Gaps” programme …
“
Hon. Margaret Wilson
“New principles to guide the
settlement of historical Treaty claims”
20 July
2000
“We see the settlement of historical claims as a part
of a much wider relationship between the Government and
Maori, which encompasses our modern commitment to the Treaty
and our commitment to closing the gaps.”
Hon. Margaret
Wilson
Article in Mana Magazine
August-September
edition
In fact, Government has gone so far as to position “closing the gaps” as a “new partnership” that drives its approach to the Treaty of Waitangi:
“[Closing the Gaps
aims to] address disparities and drive Maori development
through a new partnership approach between Maori, the state
sector, business, local government and the wider
community.”
Hon. Parekura Horomia
Timaru Herald
26
September 2000
“The Government’s approach to the Treaty of
Waitangi is driven by the Closing the Gaps, which involves
facing up to the reality of what is happening in New Zealand
today.”
Hon. Margaret Wilson
Press Statement
19
September 2000
It’s not clear, though, what “Closing the Gaps” is about. On the one hand, the Crown seems to be saying it is about what the Government can do through its traditional mechanisms in order to help Maori “catch up”:
“”Closing the Gaps” is about focussing the collective
resources and harnessing the energy of the Government and
Maori to improve Maori economic and social results … The
government has set aside $243 million to close the gaps of
which $113 million (over four years) has been allocated to
government departments for capacity building for Maori and
Pacific peoples.”
Hon. Parekura Horomia
Speech
30
August 2000
“[Closing the Gaps] is about helping one
sector of the community to catch up with the
rest.”
Ngatata Love
New Zealand Listener
28 October
2000
But Tariana Turia has a different message:
“I don’t
like the term “Closing the Gaps”. I’m much more committed
to encouraging our people to look at whanau development
models, to look at the potential of families instead of the
problems of families.
“The last thing Maori want is to be
measured up against another people whose values and
aspirations are quite often different.
“I am not
supportive of building the capacity and capabilities of
government departments essentially to bring Maori people to
brown up the service and yet nothing changes for the people
on the ground.”
Hon. Tariana Turia
RNZ Mana News
14
August 2000
“Around the world it’s been shown that
indigenous peoples progress at a far greater rate when they
are in control of their own development, and this is what we
are committed to doing.”
Hon. Tariana
Turia
Speech
7 June 2000
And Tariana Turia certainly wouldn’t be interested in any notion that “closing the gaps” should “drive” Treaty policy:
“My particular expectation
of departments is that they will uphold the Treaty of
Waitangi as the primary factor in the relationship between
the Crown and whanau, hapu and iwi.”
Hon. Tariana
Turia
Speech
7 June 2000
In any case, the Government has moved in recent weeks to stress that “Closing the Gaps” is not only for Maori, or even only for Maori and Pacific people. In the Budget, the Minister of Finance said:
“The
Government’s Budget 2000 makes a major contribution to
closing the social and economic gaps that exist between
Maori and Pacific peoples and other New Zealanders.”
Hon.
Michael Cullen
Minister’s Budget Overview
15 June
2000
“The most urgent and visible gaps exist between
Maori and Pacific peoples and others.”
Hon. Michael
Cullen
Budget Speech
15 June 2000
Now the Government says:
Prime Minister Helen Clark and senior ministers will
take a different approach to “selling” the [Closing the
Gaps] programme, moving it away from a “brown-white” issue
to one of poverty. A spokesman for the Prime Minister said
the Beehive had discerned a backlash in recent weeks and
wanted the presentation of the gaps policy tweaked to ease
concerns. “It became an issue about improving the lot of
Maori [but] that is only part of it,” said the
spokesman.”
New Zealand Herald
27 October
2000
“[Feedback from WINZ offices that members of the
public thought the Government was taking money off poor
whites to give to Maori and Pacific Islanders] was
outrageous. So, yes, we have been moving to correct
misperceptions. It’s meant … that we’re focussing on low
decile needs across the board.”
Rt Hon. Helen
Clark
Dominion
24 October 2000
“Gaps between Maoris
and non-Maoris are not the only gaps that exist in New
Zealand, and they are not the only gaps that the Government
is seeking to close.”
Hon. Steve
Maharey
Dominion
28 September 2000
Because the Government believes “closing the gaps” (whatever it is actually about) should “drive” policy towards the Treaty (which is itself a “living document”) it believes it should make decisions about the place of the Treaty in New Zealand society on a case by case basis. It is no longer a matter simply of what is right and wrong:
“If you’ve got
legislation relating to education or housing you may wish
then to see the relevance [of a Treaty clause] and how it
would apply,” said Margaret Wilson. “What we’re trying to
do is not be politically correct and just stick in clauses,
but see that as part of achieving the overall objective.”
That objective was social and economic development.
(underlining mine)
New Zealand Herald
16 September
2000
Since everything is a matter of what the Government may decide to do, the Government can decide to exclude oil and gas from the settlement process, no matter what anyone else may say:
“The Government has reaffirmed that Crown
minerals (including petroleum), which are owned and managed
in the national interest, will not be included for
consideration in the historical claims process.”
Hon.
Margaret Wilson
“New principles to guide the settlement
of historical Treaty claims”
20 July 2000
Associate
Energy Minister Paul Swain said last night that he had
assured oil drilling companies of continuing Crown ownership
of oil and petrol – and no Waitangi Tribunal hearing or
subsequent court action by Maori would change that. “If the
tribunal decision is in their favour, and it may or may not
be, then I would imagine they’ll be looking to try and have
that claim reinforced through the courts procedure,” he
said. “They have a right to do that, but they know the
Government's position.”
Dominion
16 October
2000
“[Contemporary minerals claims] should be parked as
an issue for another day,” Helen Clark told the Herald. “We
cannot deal with it at this time.” She has also questioned
whether it is a treaty issue because nationalisation of
petroleum in 1937 applied to all landowners.
New Zealand
Herald
24 October 2000
At the same time, the Government intends to “review” the Treaty of Waitangi Act to ensure the Tribunal fits in with the Government’s plans.
“I also
intend to take a proposal to Cabinet, with the Minister of
Maori Affairs, to seek a comprehensive review of the Treaty
of Waitangi Act. I believe a review is needed to ensure the
future role and focus of the Tribunal is consistent with the
Government’s overall objectives in both historical and
contemporary issues.”
Hon. Margaret Wilson
“New
principles to guide the settlement of historical Treaty
claims”
20 July 2000
Whatever the results of the review, the Minister has the Tribunal pigeon-holed to most probably play less of a role in the future, and its search for the truth does not always get to the “heart” of what is needed:
“Its work continues and will continue.” But, [Ms
Wilson] said, the tribunal process was too slow. Its
resourcing and the consequent ability of the tribunal to
meet the demand for its services needed to be looked at.
“It is also significant that such an important institution
has rather unclear lines of accountability back to the
Government,” she said. “Its historical decisions provide
valuable background and statements about the truth of what
has happened. But the decisions do not always get to the
heart of what needs to be negotiated between the Government
and claimants.”
Evening Post
10 October
2000
“Tribunal hearings will always have a place. But
there is no law saying they must always be the basis of
constructive negotiations. … I hope [the review] will make
clear that exhaustive and painstaking historical research is
not the only basis on which the claimants can seek
redress.”
Hon. Margaret Wilson
Article in Mana
Magazine
August-September edition
“The Government’s
direct negotiation with claimants ensures delivery of the
agreed settlement and minimises costs to all
parties.”
Hon. Margaret Wilson
“New principles to
guide the settlement of historical Treaty claims”
20 July
2000
Perhaps this is why the Government has refused to increase funding for the Waitangi Tribunal by the $2 million a year requested. While the Government decided not to issue a press statement on this at the time of the Budget, others have not been so reserved:
The Waitangi Tribunal bid for
an extra $2 million from last month’s budget, but was
refused an increase in operational funding. Tribunal
director Morrie Love said the tribunal had been forced to
reduce the number of hearing days this year from 160 to 110.
“It gets tighter and tighter,” Mr Love said. “Our costs can
only increase and the budget bottom line is fixed – it’s not
indexed against inflation or anything like that, so we have
no protection against increased costs. We asked for extra
funds to deal with a greater number of hearings, and more
research because we were concerned that the Crown Forestry
Rental Trust was moving away from the tribunal process and
research, and that we would need to be commissioning more of
that ourselves.” The demand for hearings was now high and
it would create significant delays. “In the longer term,
taking into account research and the ability to get through
hearings, it may well stretch the completion date of
historical claims from the year 2010 to the year
2014.”
Dominion
4 July 2000
Faced with the Government wanting direct negotiation and its refusal to increase tribunal funding, Joe Williams has spoken out:
Judge Williams issued a reminder that the tribunal
gave settlements greater legitimacy. “There have always
been governments willing to consider historical Maori
grievances on terms acceptable to those governments. Some
have even been willing to establish commissions of inquiry
into those grievances.” The tribunal was the first
institution designed to be a standing public and independent
inquisition into these matters, he said.
Dominion
8
July 2000
The Judge worries that at least one settlement process may fall over:
Yesterday, at a preliminary
Gisborne inquiry hearing in Wellington, Chief Judge Williams
questioned how next year’s Gisborne hearings could continue
without CFRT funding for managing the claims. “The whole
point of the Gisborne approach was to ensure that
communication got done up front, so we weren’t having
mandate disputes at the back-end. That simply can’t be done
if there is no funding.”
Dominion
1 November
2000
Chief Judge Williams now worries that without adequate funding for the tribunal, community support for the settlement process may evaporate:
“To be effective, the
tribunal must retain credibility with claimants and the
Crown. Credibility is largely determined by results. … Many
New Zealanders, Maori and Pakeha, are suffering from land
claims fatigue. They accept the need for the process and of
that I am hugely grateful. They just wish it could proceed
at a faster pace. I agree. … If the process takes too long
… the constituency will desert its leaders. … What is
currently needed above all else is a sensitive and
experienced keeper of the process, a keeper which
understands the many perspectives which are now brought to
bear on the settlement process, an institution whose purpose
the parties accept is to facilitate constructive and
structured engagement between the protagonists. … The
tribunal should be funded to undertake this role. It is
after all aimed at closing the communications gaps between
the Crown and claimants.”
Chief Judge Joe Williams
RNZ
Mana News
7 November 2000
In this free-for-all environment – with the Treaty a “living document” and policy towards it driven by “closing the gaps”; and with the tribunal being undermined and claimants asked to negotiate with the Crown without the benefit of a tribunal report – it is not surprising that people are moving away from a literal interpretation of the Treaty – who it is between and what it says.
Mr [John] Tamihere insists that the use of the term
“mana whenua in the [health] bill simply perpetuates an
historic and feudal anachronism.”
The Press
28 October
2000
Mr [Shane] Jones is disturbed that the customary
concept on “mana whenua” is being taken and used out of
context. “They seem to be used by the people who promote
the ideology of decolonisation. It’s a massive diversion
away from the real task in hand.” … “By inserting a term
like “mana whenua” into public welfare legislation, my deep
fear is that we are handing over a customary concept with
limited relevance in the modern function of society … to the
High Court and to the legions of lawyers who currently feast
at the trough of the fisheries settlement. Once this term
falls into the hands of wrangling tribal runanga and their
lawyers, the debate will have nothing to do with children
who aren’t being presented to doctors until they are half
dead.”
New Zealand Herald
8 August 2000
The same attitude is reflected in the Government’s attitudes to the Treaty Tribes Coalition and the 36 iwi that support it. It doesn’t see these iwi as its Treaty partner but as “lobbyists” and “stakeholders”:
“Treaty Tribes have been
diligent lobbyists, raising issues in the public debate,
initiating research and going out to stakeholder groups. …
I received a lot of advice on whether or not I should be
available to receive your submission today. … Advisors were
concerned that my presence and willingness to receive your
submission might be seen as evidence that I was firmly in
one camp of the allocation debate. … I can understand why
some of my advisers are sensitive about public perceptions.
… [My presence] signals that we take your views seriously as
a major stakeholder in the current debate.”
Hon. Parekura
Horomia
Speech when receiving the Maori Fisheries
Amendment Bill
19 September 2000
Perhaps the reason the Government takes this approach is because of reports by journalists with the Prime Minister’s confidence of a deal having been done at Parliament between so-called “urban Maori MPs” and iwi Maori MPs”:
“The two sides appear to
see compromise over allocation of the Fisheries Commission
quota. There is broad agreement that the commission should
retain control and the focus should shift to how the profits
are distributed.”
Al Morrison
North &
South
September 2000
The same report suggests the Government wants so-called UMAs to be able to have custody over children:
“Sitting in the wings is legislation
enacting a Waitangi Tribunal recommendation that the
Waipareira Trust, and thus other urban authorities, be given
status to hold guardianship.”
Al Morrison
North &
South
September 2000
Deals like this can be done because Maori don’t know what is being done in their name, according to one senior MP:
“Maori know nothing about the
fish settlement.”
John Tamihere
Sunday News
21 May
2000
Usually, Tamihere argues fisheries assets should be aggregated.
“We have done wonders for Maori by keeping the
asset aggregated.”
John Tamihere
Sunday Star
Times
14 May 2000
“If we allow this resource to go to a
fundamentalist minority we’ve got a problem.”
John
Tamihere
1ZB Larry Williams
17 May 2000
“If we don’t
get that through [keeping deep sea fishing assets in the
hands of the commission], it’s by-election time for
me.”
John Tamihere
Sunday Star Times
14 May
2000
Jones agrees with him:
“The Maori development
prospects can’t be divorced from the economics of the
industry. The single inalterable fallacy of the allocation
process is that by allocating assets we will improve the
position of Maori in the industry. That argument is based
on confetti. Everything is going towards critical mass,
avoidance of duplication, reduction of transaction costs.
The reason Sanfords wants Sealords is to rationalise the
fishing industry.”
Shane Jones
Sunday Star Times
14
May 2000
But other times, Tamihere argues allocation could be OK:
“By all means, the iwi groups must take the lion’s
share and prevail.”
John Tamihere
Sunday News
21
May 2000
“I think [setting up a 10 percent tithe] would
take a lot of heat out of where we are coming from.”
John
Tamihere
Kim Hill Show
17 May 2000
If there is any doubt that the Government has a strange view about the position of whanau, hapu and iwi in New Zealand society, it was removed when 36 iwi came to Parliament with the Maori Fisheries Amendment Bill:
“Well, there isn’t [a potential
meeting of minds to stop the litigation] actually. I mean
the Treaty Tribes Coalition basically reflects the views of
the majority of the outgoing Maori Fisheries Commission.
Now, it’s fair to say that commission’s been established for
what.. seven, eight years, and never managed to come up with
a clear proposal for the government. They did a lot of
consultation, went round and round in circles, there’s been
a lot of litigation. Basically the model they wanted is the
one these people came to parliament with yesterday. Now,
the point is we’ve just appointed a new commission. It is
more broadly based. It will take another look at the model,
and really it’s not on for the in effect the outgoing
commission to come through the backdoor of the Treaty Tribes
Coalition and say well, this is what we want and you should
legislate for it.”
“[The idea that the Government doesn’t
want to seriously address the issue] really is the laugh of
the century because the legislation passed by Jim Bolger’s
government.. months earlier in the 90’s required the Maori
Fisheries Commission to come to government with a
recommendation for allocation. To the best of my knowledge
that’s never happened in seven or eight years.
“The next
move is for the new commission to get to grips with the
issue, and I hope that’s much more quickly than the last
one, and to come to government with a recommendation. Now,
the government doesn’t have to accept the recommendation,
but the point is so far we’ve had nothing to either accept
or reject.”
Helen Clark
Canterbury on Air
20
September 2000
A final message about Helen Clark’s attitude:
“There are signs [the Prime Minister] is losing
patience with the fractious, divisive side of Maoridom that
is never thankful, ever-demanding and lacking in political
nous.”
Al Morrison
North & South November
2000