
Call For Urgent Action To Honour Te Tiriti To Restore The Health Of Water
Māori groups representing landowners, hapu and iwi filed proceedings in the High Court on the 26 June, against the Crown, citing its repeated failure to uphold the tikanga-based and Tiriti guaranteed rights, interests and responsibilities of Māori in relation to freshwater.
This legal challenge comes after over a decade of broken promises and Crown inaction, despite clear obligations under Articles 1 and 2 of Te Tiriti o Waitangi, repeated Tribunal findings affirming Māori proprietary rights and repeated court findings affirming kaitiaki rights. Successive governments have refused to establish a fair and durable water allocation system that enables Māori to exercise their rangatiratanga rights and their role as kaitiaki, even as both water quality deteriorates and water quantity diminishes across the country.
Despite a 2012 Crown assurance — led by then Deputy Prime Minister Bill English — that the Crown was committed to recognising and making appropriate provision for Māori rights and interests in water and geothermal resources , and the Supreme Court's endorsement of the Tribunal's ruling that the Crown must urgently address long-standing Māori proprietary rights in water, little has changed. The Crown continues to allocate water on a 'first-in, first-served' basis, ignoring the deep spiritual, cultural, and practical responsibilities of Māori as kaitiaki, and depriving Māori landowners and communities of the water rights they need to thrive.
The group is calling for:
• Immediate action to halt further decline in the health and wellbeing of water bodies
• Recognition of Māori tikanga and proprietary rights in water and geothermal resources
• A fair and durable water allocation system that enables Māori to fulfil their responsibilities as kaitiaki
'Under the Crown's watch, our waterways have become degraded, over-allocated and increasingly vulnerable. This is about restoring balance. It's about acknowledging that Māori have never relinquished our relationship with water. We are doing what we've always done: standing up for the health of our water, our whenua, and generations to come,' says Kingi Smiler on behalf of the claimant group.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
4 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Watch live: Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Tarsh Kemp to be laid to rest today
Hundreds of people are expected to gather in Taihape today to farewell Te Pāti Māori MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp who died last week, aged 50, following a battle with kidney disease. A Rātana service will be held at Ōpaea Marae around 11am before Kemp is laid to rest. All Te Pāti Māori MPs are at today's service, along with a cohort of MPs from Labour, including leader Chris Hipkins. A livestream of the service can be viewed from the top of this article. In the hours after her passing, Kemp's party said they were devastated and heartbroken by the loss. 'Takutai was more than a colleague to us, she was our sister, and we loved her dearly.' Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is not attending the service today but said there had been good representation from his MPs at the marae near Taihape already. That included Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka, Rangitīkei MP Suze Redmayne, New Plymouth MP David MacLeod, Maungakiekie MP Greg Fleming and Whanganui MP Carl Bates. Kemp's passing shocked Parliament. Flags flew at half-mast and flowers were placed on her bench in the House. Tributes from politicians highlighted her dedication to helping young people through dance, particularly in South Auckland. In 2021, Kemp received the New Zealand Order of Merit for her years of services. In her maiden speech at Parliament, Kemp said she had grown so close with many of the young people that they called her 'Aunty' or 'Mum'. Manurewa MP Arena Williams said Kemp 'always had an open door for young people'. 'There will be a lot of South Aucklanders who will really feel this, who will really miss having someone like this.' Labour's Willie Jackson said Kemp was a 'beautiful soul' with a vivacious, passionate personality and an 'absolute powerhouse' in her work for Manurewa Marae. Kemp was the chief executive prior to becoming an MP. 'As the CEO, she was at the forefront of Whānau Ora, rangatahi, Māori development, community development, you name it, and Tarsh was doing it.' Kemp was a first-term MP. She beat incumbent Peeni Henare (Labour) in the Tāmaki Makaurau seat by 42 votes in the 2023 election. Henare was visibly emotional at Parliament in the hours after Kemp's passing, saying the pair had called each other brother and sister. 'It is truly shocking ... when I think about our sister, her passion was for our young people and ... she loved her mokopuna [grandchildren]. We were up at Matariki on Friday and she literally said, 'I can't wait to get home to my mokopuna'.' Te Pāti Māori said 'Takutai devoted every last breath' to the movement for Māori liberation. Kemp was on the front benches at Parliament alongside Te Tai Tonga MP Tākuta Ferris the day before she died. 'Even as serious illness weighed on her, she continued to stand in the House, in our homes, on our marae and in our communities – relentlessly championing the rights and wellbeing of our people." Kemp also worked with the University of Auckland to develop a Rangatahi Mental Health Youth Hub in Manurewa to address the high suicide rates among young Māori.


Scoop
18 hours ago
- Scoop
Pōmare Power Fuels Stinging Health Blast
A century after he was Minister of Health Sir Māui Pōmare remained politically potent at Waitara's Ōwae marae on the weekend, inspiring outright rejection of Government policy on Māori health. Standing for the Crown, New Plymouth MP David MacLeod bore the stinging criticism with obvious discomfort – like Pōmare he is a son of Ngāti Mutunga iwi. Te Rā o Tā Māui Pōmare (Sir Māui Pōmare Day) each year celebrates the first Māori medical doctor and health minister, with kōrero about uplifting Māori health. On Saturday Pōmare's great-granddaughter Miria gave the whānau address, condemning health policy changes for Māori. 'Hard-fought, hard-won gains for Māori health over the last 125 years have now been seriously undermined by the disestablishment of Te Aka Whai Ora, the Māori Health Authority – a move that has been severely criticized for discouraging Māori initiatives and disregarding the principle of tino rangatiratanga: self-determination.' Her tupuna embraced scientific medical advances, but Miria Pōmare said he also pushed for a systematic Māori health focus. Reforms were underpinned by Maori leadership, culturally-appropriate interventions, and commitment to self-determination: principles derived from Te Tiriti o Waitangi, she said. 'He knew the issues were not medical alone – they were political and economic and spiritual.' As New Zealand's first statistics minister Tā Māui knew accurate data was crucial to win resources for Māori health equity. Two weeks ago the Government canned the regular census and will instead collate data already gathered by state agencies. 'It appears to be a sinister reversion back to an assimilationist approach of former times,' said Miria Pōmare. Her address drew vocal assent and applause. In Te Ikaroa a Māui – the wharenui built and named to honour Tā Māui – Te Ātiawa and Taranaki leader Wharehoka Wano acknowledged David MacLeod's whakapapa with Pōmare. But Wano told the National Party MP that tribal leaders on the paepae agreed with Miria Pōmare. 'Haere mai ki te Paremata o Tā Māui Pōmare (Welcome to Sir Maui Pōmare's Parliament).' 'And this is the opposition!' 'Forever!' someone called from the floor. MacLeod stood in place of Māori-Crown relations minister Tama Potaka, who was at MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp's tangihanga. 'I'm here for the Crown. It's not David McLeod, it's not myself, but it is the Crown that I'm representing today.' He delivered Potaka's message of hope: health spending rises, hospital upgrades including in New Plymouth, funding for Māori wardens, Kāinga Ora working with iwi housing providers, support for Kura Kaupapa Māori. MacLeod said Pōmare worked with fellow Māori MPs from different parties. 'Today, we have Maori MPs in all political parties,' said MacLeod. 'We are mainly focused on common goals, just like Māui and Apirana [Ngata] back in the day.' There was no applause. Kaumātua Peter Moeahu was glad for the MP's clarity about representing the Crown. 'I don't think a helluva lot of the Crown at the moment, David.' Moeahu said Māori were threatened 'every single day' by laws like the Treaty Principles Bill, the Regulatory Standards Bill and changes to resource management and local government. 'We know what you're doing, David,' said Moeahu 'But you are demonising us Māori as you do it, so that everybody's attention is focused on Māori … while you dismantle the environmental protections of this nation.' Moeahu's son, New Plymouth District councillor Dinnie Moeahu, took his turn at MacLeod and his Government. 'Since you've been in office… I have been more frustrated, angry, mamae - in pain - than ever before,' he told MacLeod. 'You speak with a forked tongue. I don't believe everything that you said today and I don't even think you believe it.' A dozen young Māori doctors at Ōwae to honour Tā Māui told the hui a wave of hundreds more was in the pipeline. Acclaimed Te Ātiawa brain scientist Professor Sir Richard Faull said his childhood heroes were Pōmare and fellow Ngāti Mutunga doctor and MP Te Rangi Hīroa (Sir Peter Buck). Faull said Te Tiriti set the gold standard for Māori health and wasn't about one partner being dominant. 'We have to have our Māori doctors to look after our Māori people and that is non-negotiable. 'Māui Pōmare knew that.'


Scoop
19 hours ago
- Scoop
Tahiti Prepares For Its First Matari'i Public Holiday
In November, Tahiti will mark Matari'i as a national public holiday for the first time, following in the footsteps of Matariki in Aotearoa. Matari'i refers to the same star cluster as Matariki. And for Tahitians, 20 November will mark the start of Matari'i i ni'a, the season of abundance, which lasts for six months to be followed by Matari'i i raro, the season of scarcity. Te Māreikura Whakataka-Brightwell is a New Zealand artist who was born in Tahiti and raised in Tūranganui-a-Kiwa, Gisborne, with whakapapa links to both countries. He spoke to RNZ's Matariki programme from the island of Moorea. His father was the master carver Matahi Whakataka-Brightwell, and his grandfather was the renowned Tahitian navigator Francis Puara Cowan. In Tahiti, there's been a series of cultural revival practices, and with the support of the likes of Professor Rangi Mātāmua, there is hope to bring these practices out into the public arena, he said. The people of Tahiti have always lived in accordance with Matari'i i ni'a and Matari'i i raro, with six months of abundance and six months of scarcity, he said. "Bringing that back into the public space is good to sort of recognise the ancestral practice of not only Matariki in terms of the abundance but also giving more credence to our tūpuna kōrero and mātauranga tuku iho." Whakataka-Brightwell said there has been a little controversy around the new holiday as it replaces another public holiday, Internal Autonomy Day, on 29 June, which marks the French annexation of Tahiti. But he said a lot of people in Tahiti like the shift towards having local practices represented in a holiday. There will be several public celebrations organised for the inaugural public holiday but most people on the islands will be holding more intimate ceremonies at home, he said. "A lot of people already had practices of celebrating Matariki which was more about now marking the season of abundance, so I think at a whānau level people will continue to do that, I think this will be a little bit more of an incentive for everything else to align to those sorts of celebrations." Many of the traditions surrounding Matari'i relate to the Arioi clan, whose ranks included artists, priests, navigators and diplomats who would celebrate the rituals of Matari'i, he said. "[Tahiti] it's an island of artists, it's an island of rejuvenation, so I'm pretty sure they'll be doing a lot of that and basing some of those traditions on the Arioi traditions." Whakataka-Brightwell encouraged anyone with Māori heritage to make the pilgrimage to Tahiti at some point in their lives, as the place where many of the waka that carried Māori ancestors were launched. "I've always been a firm believer of particular people with whakapapa Māori to come back, hoki mai ki te whenua o Tahiti roa, Tahiti pāmamao. "Those connections still exist, I mean, people still have the same last names as people in Aotearoa, and it's not very far away, so I would encourage everybody to explore their own connections but also hoki mai ki te whenua (return to the land)."