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Maori waka banned from royal pageant

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Mon, 13 Feb 2012 8:16a.m.

The waka was to be used to represent NZ in the June 3 pageant (file)

The waka was to be used to represent NZ in the June 3 pageant (file)

A traditional Maori waka has been banned from taking part in the Queen's Diamond Jubilee river pageant for fear it may capsize or lose control in strong currents, say news reports in London.

The waka was to be used to represent New Zealand in the June 3 pageant, which will feature more than 1000 craft on the River Thames, watched by a global crowd estimated to be in the millions.

"With regard to the Maori vessel, the limitations of the tidal river environment, the higher risk of capsize or foundering and, therefore, the scale of the safety resources that would be needed to rescue the considerable crew of this vessel in the event of an emergency, meant that she was not selected," a pageant spokeswoman told British newspaper The Sunday Times.

Chris Reynolds, a member of the London Maori club who was part of a crew that paddled the waka on the Thames in 2011, said: "It is a real shame that it hasn't been accepted and I'm really not sure why it has been turned down.

"The Thames can be choppy but it was fine last year. Dragon boats take their design from the waka and they will be allowed in the pageant, so it doesn't make any sense to me."

Pageant organisers hope each Commonwealth nation will be represented in the pageant, with Australia due to contribute surf lifesaving boats.

Despite the exclusion of the waka, New Zealand will still be represented in the pageant by a whaler boat and clinker vessel, along with a flag-carrying craft, said organisers.

NZN

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Comments

22 Feb 2012 02:50p.m.

bonnie wrote:

ummm didnt they sale across the pacific on wakas? and the first maori arrived here on them..and how many boats sink everday around the world? dosent stop people goin on them.. and how many car crashes..this is sooo lame! and why wuud it be embarrasing if it sunk? things sink!

13 Feb 2012 02:56p.m.

Chargone wrote:

while i can certainly see where they're coming from with disallowing the waka if it is actually a safety issue, i can't for the life of me see how a Whaler is representative of NZ. it's dubiously representative of some of the initial factors the eventually lead to NZ's creation as an entity, but at the same time it's pretty much the opposite of the position we usually try to take on things, is it not? symbolically it's ... problematic.

13 Feb 2012 12:33p.m.

kelvyn wrote:

So where's the problem? A whaler boat and clinker vessel represent NZ's majority culture anyway.

13 Feb 2012 10:19a.m.

Jim Seaview wrote:

TWO SUBWAKA INCIDENTS
Its quite clear that it is a matter of safety. Over Waitangi weekend we had two Wakas that didnt pass the float test, one at Waitangi and the other at Petone, both full of people. If a waka sunk in london - it would make world news and be embarassing for all New Zealanders.

13 Feb 2012 09:07a.m.

Erm... wrote:

"I'm really not sure why it has been turned down." Erm...maybe because it is not safe?? I'd say events on Waitangi Day would support that.