Red Alert

Archive for the ‘M?ori’ Category

100 years of Maori rugby

Posted by Clare Curran on October 2nd, 2010

Maori rugby

Went to Carisbrook today. Am worried there wont be many more opportunities left to do that, though I’ll bloody well try to make sure there are.

Anyway, the curtain raiser to the Otago vs Canterbury game was more significant than the game itself. Even if it was under 9s teams playing.

They were marking the occasion of 100 years of Maori rugby. Otago has contributed a lot to Maori rugby, from Wiremu Teihoka (Ned) Parata born at Puketeraki, Karitane, who is widely regarded as the “father” of Maori rugby, and Tamati Rangiwahia (Tom) Ellison, born at Otakou (Otago) Peninsula, who, I am told, gave to New Zealand Rugby its iconic black jersey with the silver fern.

These men started an Otago legacy with the NZ Maori rugby team, which has seen 39 players since 1910 go on to represent their people.

As was said to me today, the under 9s players who took to the field today are not only helping celebrate the last 100 years of Maori rugby but are heralding in the next century. Hope they get to continue to play on Carisbrook.

Pictured (with me in the middle) are Ned Parata’s grandaughters; Marama Preedy (on the left) and Hirene Buchanan (on the right).

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Filed under: M?ori, sport

Mänu körero in Dunedin

Posted by Clare Curran on September 22nd, 2010

Talia at Youth parliament

The National Mänu körero Maori Speech competitions are being held in Dunedin this week and I am very proud that my Dunedin South Youth MP Talia Ellison is representing the Otepoti / Murihiku (Otago / Southland) region in the Senior English Section.

At the same time as she was preparing to represent Dunedin South at Youth Parliament Talia was also preparing for first the regional competition in June and then for Nationals this week. She has also been busy with other responsibilities in hosting the expected 56 competitors, and their supporters and whanau who are in Dunedin for the competition.

The three-day competition aims to encourage fluency in English and te reo Maori and it is an honour for Dunedin to host the annual event for the first time in its 45 year history. I am disappointed I’m not there but I’m very proud of Talia and also congratulate Paulette Tamati-Elliffe and the local organising committee for what I’m sure will be an awesome 3 days of competition and celebration.

More than 1000 people, including teachers, schools, whanau and kaumatua, have registered for the competition and hundreds more are expected to attend the event. Pupils are asked to speak on a range of topics, including “The Gift of Language”, and “Facebook – social networking for the 21st century”.

The competition has helped revive the Maori language.


Pukeatua kohanga reopens in Wainuiomata

Posted by Trevor Mallard on September 10th, 2010

I thought Nanny Jean Puketapu was old when she was the driving force behind the first kohanga over 30 years ago. She played a leading role in the reopening of the massive, flash new replacement kohanga on the old Wainuiomata Intermediate site. Some peoples’ contribution just can’t be measured.

Neville Baker, Kara Puketapu (my fathers schoolmate) and many leaders in Atiawa were there. Some were not.

Parekura was the guy who engineered the grant for the refurbishment. I suppose his experience and contacts have been developed through his public service as well as his political career – but he is a leader who backs people who get results.

I got a hard time for wearing my red socks (old Am Cup) – told to wear politics on sleeve not feet.

My talk praised those involved and put it back onto parents and grandparents to ensure that no Wainui child start school without quality early childhood education and consistent health care.


Future of television#4

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 27th, 2010

Cabinet is currently wrestling with what to do with TVNZ’s non-commercial channesl 6+7 once funding runs out next year. Leaving it up to TVNZ to sort out may be gaining the upper hand.  In part, they may be looking to technology to deliver an answer. Some Ministers apparently believe that given you can find an increasing amount of material that might be considered ‘quality’ or ‘public service’ content on the Internet or off Sky, why create a new edifice? The thinking goes that the market will solve this quite soon.

This is the derivatives approach to broadcasting; that amid a sea of junk bond programmes there will be some with real value. All you’ve got to do is find them and put them into a portfolio/folder/channel.

Here some will start crying that we fund local production via NZ on Air and this provides a platform for programmes which feed our sense of identity, and constitutes “public service broadcasting.”

Local production (however incentivised by NZoA or imposed by regulation) is not the same thing as public broadcasting.  For one thing, NZoA has no capacity to direct where programmes go; if they ain’t ‘commercial’ they are likely to be ghettoised, no matter what their broader importance or value. For many years, Governments have behaved as though it is–a convenient approach because it keeps the noisy creatives happy, while reducing the debate to commercial vs non-commercial objectives, and the circular and wholly subjective discussion of what constitutes “quality.”

The consequence is that there has been no history in N.Z. of what public broadcasting could be as a unified “system” within the total broadcasting landscape, and what its objectives in the digital era ought to be. It is time we had that debate.

Let’s accept the current model of state-owned television is skewed to the commercial realities. For twenty years, TVNZ has done what successive governments told it to do; make money. Sure, we as Labour stitched on the ‘dual mandate.’ We provided funding via the TVNZ Charter, admittedly modest, to try and provide something more. TVNZ was too attuned to its over-riding requirement to make money. It squandered some of the money on programming clearly outside the non-commercial ambit of the Charter and unwound some of the case for it.

Labour believes in public service broadcasting; the Charter was an attempt at achieving that.   We have it with Radio New Zealand. We  believe New Zealanders deserve some of that via television. Our sense of ourselves and the need for that to be reflected back to us is too important to entrust to the vagaries of the market, especially one that is changing fast.

We need a television platform that can endure into the future and survive the technological shift, while providing the New Zealand content that defines and redefines who we are as communities and a nation. The options could include Channel One, Channel 7 or even Parliament TV(when it’s not showing the House, which is the majority of times. ) Funding could come from a mix of revenue – from Channel 2 as the recession recedes, from some advertising or sponsorship, from a greater portion of NZ on Air funding, from the ‘digital dividend.’

Maori Television now provides ‘public service broadcasting’ for an audience that while actually attracting more Pakeha than Maori, is programmed around Maori interests. It costs around $35m a year for an essentially non-commercial service, about the same as Radio NZ. Maori Television, panned by the Nats and others when it started, is now accepted by most as providing innovative, modestly-costed flaxroots,  proud to be Kiwi television albeit to a modest audience. If we are talking about providing a viable, affordable platform into the future for all New Zealanders, that might be a good benchmark figure and comparative model to get us started on a national debate.


Wednesday poll – do only boorish rednecks think Hone is racist ?

Posted by Trevor Mallard on August 12th, 2010

Harawira is at it again. The Herald reports that he has written a column repeating his view that inter-racial relationships are not desirable.

In his regular column in the Northland Age this week, Mr Harawira says it seems “some boorish redneck wants to shove his boot right down my throat” every time he speaks.

“And so it was again last week when I made a comment about how I wouldn’t feel comfortable if one of my kids came home with a Pakeha for a date. But what was wrong with that?

Hone Harawira thinks Maori girls shouldn't go out with Pakeha boys

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Breastfeeding Awareness Week

Posted by Nanaia Mahuta on August 4th, 2010

This is one campaign where I am an avid supporter of giving the best start for our babies. My little fella is nine months, I quickly learnt that my priorities of breastfeeding him ‘for as long as I could’ did not fit into his master plan. about a month ago he took himself off of his own accord and simply moved on….I take my hat off to all the young mums and experienced mums who know that ‘breast is best!” feed their baby no matter where they might be. It’s interesting the funny looks or cringes one gets when breastfeeding! The world has moved on and thankfully more women are being educated about the importance of having waiu (breastmilk). No reira whaangai a taatou tamariki i te waiuu, kia tupu, kia hua, kia puawai! Mauri Ora!


Judith Collins: Blame Maori

Posted by Chris Hipkins on July 28th, 2010

On Sunday Judith Collins was quizzed on Q&A about New Zealand’s high rate of inprisonment. Here’s an extract from the exchange:

GUYON: …how can it be that we lock up people at double the rate of France?

JUDITH: Well what we have for instance is we have say 15% of the population Maori…

The Maori Party must be so proud every time they vote to prop up Judith Collins and her National government mates.


Wednesday poll – Maori charging for foreshore use

Posted by Kelvin Davis on July 7th, 2010

Should Maori be allowed to charge tourist operators a fee to use the Foreshore and Seabed?

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Turia: blame the unions

Posted by Chris Hipkins on May 20th, 2010

Tariana Turia has come up with a novel way of distracting attention away from the Maori Party’s vote in favour of increasing GST. During her First Reading speech on the Tax Bill this afternoon she decided to claim that the unions were responsible for Maori unemployment. Here is a direct quote:

“…in the 1980s when we had really high unemployment our people knew what it was like to be on the training-go-round. Through access training, through steps programmes, you name it. And did any of those young people get trained in real jobs skills, no they did not, and why didn’t they, because the union movement wouldn’t allow the kind of skills training that needed to take place for those young people that would have given them really employable skills in the workforce because they were afraid that by training these young people up in those skills that they would take jobs away from those who were working…”

Turia went on to claim that during the “9 years of plenty” Maori didn’t benefit from lower unemployment, despite the huge drop in Maori unemployment and the massive increase in Maori unemployment since her party decided to prop the National Party up in government. Check out the speech:


Good on you Hone

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 20th, 2010

I’ve known Hone Harawira for about a decade. Classic case of where one should judge an individual and not the family.

He did great work with a kura in his home patch. Chaired the board. They had some financial issues and there were some honest but unusual approaches. Always done in the interest of kids but sometimes caused trouble with the Ministry.

I always knew where he stood.

Still the case. Don’t always agree with him but never in doubt as to his views. That is one of the things about being an MP, you are elected exresssing opinions and while it is good to develop and learn it is also important not to pretend that you agree with things when they are rubbish.

Hone made it clear last night that he agrees with the Labour Party that putting up GST is an attack on the poor.

It is happenning so John Key and people of similar wealth and income can get a tax cut of over $1,000 a week.

Some loopholes in property taxation law are being closed to neutralise the effects and finance some softening for low income earners.

But the real benefits are not going to the core National supporters who earn $70 – $120k  – but to Key’s very high income mates.

I think the Nats will regret changing the top rate rather than doing a big increase to the threshold.

Because as Hone says it is poor people Maori and Pakeha who will finance the tax cuts for the rich. And thats not the Kiwi way.


National and Maori

Posted by Grant Robertson on May 16th, 2010

The Herald on Sunday editorial wades into the state of the National Party’s relations with Maori.

The biggest worry about the state of the relationship between National and the Maori Party is that the Prime Minister doesn’t seem to have noticed that there is a problem.

It certainly was a bizzare few days last week as John Key’s political judgement seemed to totally desert him. It would be interesting to know what David Farrar’s polling is telling National about its relations with Maori, but activities of the last week indicate they seem to think it is doing them some damage.

In any case his dumb joke about being eaten by Tuhoe is not really the point here, its where it fits in his view of relations with Tuhoe and Maori in general. As the editorial says

But Tuhoe spokesman Tamati Kruger has made it plain that it was the joke’s timing and context, not its content, that was problematic. A joke’s reception depends entirely on the quality and depth of the relationship between the jokester and his target. To say Key’s comment, a few days after a major slight, was ill-timed and misjudged is an understatement.

Treaty negotiations are a critical element of race relations in New Zealand. Their success relies on good faith and honesty. I am not saying Labour got everything right in this space, but it is essential that both parties in a negotiation know where they stand. I think Michael Cullen particularly understood this in his time as Treaty Negotiations Minister. When Tariana Turia says John Key’s approach lacks “integrity”, that is a problem.

So, where to from here? National’s relationship with the Maori Party is seemingly on shakey gorund. But what is more important for the long term political landscape is not what this means in terms of the Maori Party, but of Maori voters.

With Maori unemployment, especially among young people still sky high, a rising cost of living and the prospects of tax shuffle that will be unfair to many Maori families, Maori voters will be wanting to see their representatives find solutions to those problems. Not propping up a government that seems to have lost interest in their concerns.


What caused John to stop smiling and wave one finger at Tuhoe

Posted by Trevor Mallard on May 12th, 2010

Helen Clark and Michael Cullen were sometimes criticised for taking a bit of time to make big decisions. They sometimes resorted to seeking more advice, getting more reports, asking for further options.

Some people got frustrated with them – but most were ok because they knew that once either of them gave their word they would stick to it.

John Key may learn from the Tuhoe experience that you can’t just say yes to everybody.

Being the nice guy might work for a while but letting some grumpy national party delegates or a focus group turn you into a liar doesn’t do much for your integrity John.


An apology to Maori that would mean something

Posted by Chris Hipkins on May 11th, 2010

I think it’s great that the South African government has apologised to Maori for their exclusion from past rugby tours to their country. Naturally there is now pressure on the NZ Rugby Union to follow suit. I think they should go one better.

The best form of apology to those Maori players that were denied All Blacks jerseys in the past would be for the NZRU and SARFU to fund a NZ Maori tour of the republic, culminating in a match between the NZ Maori and the Springboks.

Now that would be an apology that would really mean something. I reckon it would be so popular they’d actually make money out of it.


Maori Party votes against workers rights

Posted by Darien Fenton on April 29th, 2010

The Maori Party just voted with National and Act on gutting the meals and restbreaks legislation that Labour brought in in 2008. 

I don’t get it.   The Maori Party says it stands up for the vulnerable and the powerless.  They make fine speeches about it all the time.   During the debate on the get the sack in 90 days bill, Pita Sharples said :

 Our policy for workers is to support, uphold and extend their rights – particularly to make workplaces and work legislation more worker and whanau friendly,” said Co-leader Dr Pita Sharples.

Well, this bill actually takes away the rights of workers to a break at work, unless the employer agrees and even then, the break could be one minute long.   It makes the workplace less worker and whanau friendly, and it makes the workplace less safe.

The day after we remembered the 6000 New Zealand workers who have been killed or injured on the job, a bill that will ensure that health and safety is compromised has been supported by the Maori Party. 

This will particularly affect the vulnerable and the powerless – the non-unionised, small workplaces, the low-paid and the marginalised.

I’m confused, but I’m also disappointed.  When it comes to workers’ rights, I’m happy to have allies wherever we can find them in this parliament, but I’m left guessing about the Maori Party.


A Gain for All Maori!

Posted by Nanaia Mahuta on April 29th, 2010

Parliament has just voted to raise the excise tax on tobacco with the hope to reduce consumption amongst New Zealanders. I for one think that credit should be given when its due!  This one goes to Tariana! Health and well-being is a matter of personal responsibility but I have witnessed first hand the impact of smoking amongst my whanau. There is alot of work to do and when statistics tell us that 5000 NZers die each year from smoking related illnesses urgent action is necessary. 46% of smokers are Maori a high percentage are women and far too many die as a result and that’s without second hand smoking taking its toll! This is the type of measure that will be felt throughout many communities – Let’s make sure that the future for Maori is a smoke-free one!


Nat rounds on govt foreshore proposal

Posted by Brendon Burns on April 26th, 2010

Ouch. Former National candidate and law lecturer David Round launched a blistering attack on the Government’s foreshore and seabed proposals in the Weekend Press

http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/opinion/perspective/3614257/Time-to-draw-a-line-in-the-sand

“A betrayal of all non-Maori New Zealanders” from an insincere Attorney-General who “wants to sell us down the river”

“On the beaches we should draw a line in the sand,” says Round. Now where have we heard that before and from whom…


Identity and Honesty

Posted by Charles Chauvel on April 25th, 2010

I’ve just come back from representing Labour at the Wellington Cathedral ANZAC Day Service, and then at the NZ War Memorial in Buckle St.

Each service was appropriately solemn – the more so as the tragic knowledge of the helicopter accident this morning became known by those present. Neither glorified war. At both, a uniquely New Zealand atmosphere prevailed. Biculturalism felt unforced; there were nice and sometimes accidental touches of informality. There was a sense of unbrassy confidence and dignity – a sense of a country and a community that had come to terms with itself.

It’s a case, I’m afraid, of the people leading, and the politicians being left way behind. I couldn’t help but contrast the feeling of right-ness of each ceremony today with the bad taste that the immaturity of the debate last week about our identity as a nation left in my mouth.

First, we had the National/Maori Party colluding over the covert accession to the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Then we had a heap of uninformed rhetoric about what our accession would mean. To top it all off, National, ACT and the Maori Party bloc-voted to stop a bill to allow people to vote on whether NZ should eventually become a republic going to a select committee for public submissions. During that debate, a whole lot of dishonest rhetoric was repeated by Government members.

It’s well-known in Labour circles that I thought we should have acceded to the Declaration when we were in Government. Around the time that the new ALP Government was deciding that Australia should do so, I spent time with Rob McLelland, Australia’s Attorney-General, and Stephen Smith, its Minister of Foreign Affairs, discussing the mechanics of their intended accession, and the statement of reservations that would be made at the time on Australia’s behalf. It seemed to me that we could do something similar in New Zealand, so that accession could take place, in an honest and forthright way, preserving the paths already taken here in an attempt to redress past historical wrongs. The Labour cabinet here received strong official advice to the contrary, and in the end that advice prevailed.

I regret that. But I can say that open and respectful debates have occurred within the Labour caucus on the subject. Those debates have centered on the merits of the Declaration, the extent to which it can represent customary international law without the accession of two major common law jurisdictions that have enforced indigenous rights – the US and Canada- and whether an effectively partial accession would be an act of good faith on New Zealand’s part. These are the real questions around the Declaration. They deserve proper debate.

Ditto the issues around moving toward becoming a republic. We had an excellent caucus debate about the Bill. Better yet, colleagues decided to support the legislation. They could see the value of people getting to debate the issue through the select committee process. How disappointing, then, to get down to the House on Wednesday night to watch ACT not even bother to take a call, the Maori Party trot out all sorts of inaccurate rhetoric about how the bill was inconsistent with the Treaty, and the Nats talk about how the debate would be “divisive”, so we shouldn’t have it.

New Zealanders are more comfortable than their elected representatives on questions about their identity. It’s time for politicians to catch up.


The changing face of New Zealand

Posted by Raymond Huo on April 23rd, 2010

Some interesting projections were released by Statistics New Zealand yesterday:

In 2026:

The European or Other population will grow from 3.21 million (2006 estimate) to 3.47 million an increase of 0.4 percent.

The Maori population will grow from 620,000 (2006 estimate) to 810,000 an increase of 1.3 percent a year

The Asian population will grow from 400,000 (2006 estimate) to 790,000 an increase of 3.4 percent a year

The Pacific population will grow from 300,000 (2006 estimate) to 480,000 an increase of 2.4 percent a year

The dramatic rise in these populations is attributed to births (Maori and Pacific) and migration (Asian).

What does this mean for New Zealand? I’m interested to here some feedback on the country’s changing demographic.

Click here to view the report from Statistics New Zealand:

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO1004/S00239.htm


Spot the irony

Posted by Trevor Mallard on April 22nd, 2010

In two weeks the Maori Party will vote for a very silly bill to take GST off “Healthy Food”

Just imagine trying to define that. And how much of each we are allowed each hour/day/week before GST kicks in. And the army of inspectors to check the food. And the increase in GST or other tax to cover the diff.

And then two weeks after that the Maori Party will vote to increase GST on healthy foods to 15%.

Hypocrites.

Update Link to press statment which makes it clear that white bread, all cheese and fruit in sugar syrup are all healthy foods according to the Maori Party. Thanks prickles

Update II Deep fried potatos and kumera both defined as healthy (all vegetables)

Update III  Deep fried chicken also a healthy food according to the Maori Party


Does the government have the stomach to make the Declaration binding?

Posted by Kelvin Davis on April 22nd, 2010

“The Treaty is a fraud,” is a mantra I grew up with in the seventies and eighties. A heap of Maori were upset that in 1840 the Crown signed a document they had no intention of honouring. “The Treaty is a Fraud,” became “Honour the Treaty”, and we still feel the repercussions a hundred and seventy years later after that original deceit.

How ironic that some of those upset Maori of the seventies and eighties are now part of the Crown that has signed another document that the Crown has no intention of honouring.

Because the Maori Party is part of this hoax, it now seems acceptable.

It is indicative of how far race relations have come that the Crown can sign a document for Maori, look us in the eye, smile, and tell us they have no intention of honouring their signatures – and we don’t get upset.

Unless of course, what Judge Eddie Durie and public law expert Mai Chen say is correct. Then there may be potential over time for Maori to claim back territory and resources Maori traditionally owned as well as the right to veto legislation.

When the Declaration was adopted in September 2007, Rosemary Banks our permanent representative in the United Nations noted there were four provisions that were fundamentally incompatible with New Zealand’s constitutional and legal arrangements.

No legislation has been introduced since then that aligns the Declaration with New Zealand’s constitutional and legal arrangements and yet Crown Law advice to John Key differed substantially to that given to Helen Clark. He should explain this difference.

It will be interesting to see whether this government has the stomach to make this a binding Declaration.

I hope our children, grand children and great grandchildren are not going to spend the next one hundred and seventy years protesting, marching and getting arrested in order to have this Declaration honoured.

I hope that in one hundred and seventy years a government doesn’t have to establish a Declaration of Indigenous Rights Tribunal to sort out the grievances that have arisen because the Declaration wasn’t honoured.

I hope in one hundred and seventy years Ngapuhi aren’t preparing for a hearing to sort out our claims against the Declaration of Indigenous Rights.

I hope we haven’t condemned ourselves to repeating history.

As one chapter of grievance nears a conclusion, I hope we haven’t just opened another.