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Govt seeks to appease Maori fears

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Mon, 06 Feb 2012 9:05p.m.

Mr Key said he would be disappointed if Waitangi Day celebrations at Te Tii Marae were stopped

Mr Key said he would be disappointed if Waitangi Day celebrations at Te Tii Marae were stopped

Waitangi Day celebrations, occasionally fraught with violent protest, have passed peacefully as the government seeks to appease Maori fears about the partial sale of state assets.

On Monday, a ceremony at the marae at the treaty grounds in Paihia, Bay of Islands, was largely a peaceful affair after Prime Minister John Key was forced to cut short his trip to Te Tii Marae on Sunday when he was drowned out by protesters.

At a Waitangi Day breakfast meeting, Mr Key tried to reassure Maori that the Crown's Treaty of Waitangi obligations in relation to the partial sale of state-owned assets will be met.

The government says law changes must be made to accommodate private shareholders when part of the state assets - Mighty River Power, Genesis Energy, Meridian Energy and Solid Energy - are sold and the new owners are not bound by the treaty.

Up to 60 iwi leaders told Mr Key the laws relating to the treaty must remain.

He responded, saying they would remain in some form.

"The government has no intention of diluting or walking away from treaty obligations."

Meanwhile, Mr Key said he would be disappointed if Waitangi Day celebrations at Te Tii Marae were stopped, following comments that politicians may no longer be welcome because of the protests they attract.

Maori activist Titewhai Harawira said the timing of the announcement of possible changes to the State Owned Enterprises Act and cuts to Te Puni Kokiri, the Ministry of Maori Development, inflamed the protest on Sunday.

"If the government had taken the time to meet with the people before making that announcement maybe the protests would not have happened," she said.

on Waitangi Day about 200 protesters tried to fly the Maori flag - Tino Rangatiratanga - on the flagpole at the treaty grounds, but were stopped by Maori wardens.

A compromise was reached when the protesters - venting their anger about the asset sales and proposed offshore oil drilling - were allowed to touch the pole in a symbolic gesture.

NZN

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Comments

07 Feb 2012 05:54p.m.

Peter wrote:

I agree with most of the comments here, but New Zealanders gave National the mandate to sell assets. Nether the less, the only instrument left to save our assets is though the courts under s(9) of the SOE act. That's why National wants to remove it. However, they will and assets will be sold unless the court sees otherwise. If that happens the executive council will then ignore the courts desission and sell the assets fueling more legil action until someone runs out of money. Sorry New Zealanders but if you all are so against asset sales, why the hell did you vote National.

07 Feb 2012 04:49p.m.

Chris wrote:

Maori claiming water rights [and then next it will be air rights] is a joke that will just alienate 95% of Kiwis. Kiwis are sick of the grivance industry that lets indigenous people remain in victimhood and stuck in the past. The only real winners are the lawyers.
Yes finish the TOW payouts for past injustices and land confiscations but then move on as one nation that has moved on from detrimental effects of colonisation.
The Gov.T has a mandate for asett investment the left need to stop moaning so the counry can recovey from a decade of decline and excessive welfareism under Labour. Labour would have won the elctions otherwise as National campaigned on this asett investment policy - in fact it was Labours biggest defeat for decades. Socialist also love to remain in victimhood and hand out mentality.

07 Feb 2012 04:25p.m.

DavidTB wrote:

People I don't think your thinking this through it may be maori are the only the only kiwis that currently can halt the firesale or at least delay it. Stop being so insecure are your place in NZ, you should support the iwi moves to halt the sale if thats what you also want. Hard to please anyone now days lol.

07 Feb 2012 08:33a.m.

anne wrote:

What about the other kiwi's,70% of nz'ers are against
these sales,its about our future,its about having an income stream,its about total ownership of resources,
key may have come to nz with an agenda,but stripping
all kiwi's of the fruits of their labour is just not on.

06 Feb 2012 11:19p.m.

Kim wrote:

Key is trying to spin maori oposition as being about some treaty clause and pretending that if they fix that all maori will be ok with asset sales. People say that the announcements made about the treaty clase before Waitangi Day was ill timed..I think it was perfectly timed and to a carefully scripted plan. A plan that the Maori party fell in to step with(ether stupidly or by design) I,m just glad that they arent letting iwi have first op on shares otherwise anyone against asset sales would then be labeled racist.

06 Feb 2012 10:19p.m.

Joe wrote:

"Govt seeks to appease Maori fears"

What about the fears of all other kiwis?
I personally dont really care what the government does with our assets. But trying to appease the maori? How about every one else in our beautiful country.
White, Black, Grey, Yellow, we're all kiwis, how about apeasing all of us

06 Feb 2012 09:48p.m.

NZKIWIS wrote:

I don't think it's just the Maori's up in arms about asset sales and land etc I think all true Kiwis are concerned about this fire sale. Short term gain long term pain ...I hope the Maori's can speak Chinese for future Treaty Settlements.