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Tens of thousands march in New Zealand Maori rights protest

Protests have been swelling against a bill seen as an attempt to strip long-agreed rights from the country's 900,000 strong Maori population

Published: Tue 19 Nov 2024, 4:18 PM

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  • AFP

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Members of the Maori community and their supporters march through the streets  in Wellington on Tuesday in a protest rally to criticise the government for its policies affecting the Indigenous Maori population. AFP

Members of the Maori community and their supporters march through the streets in Wellington on Tuesday in a protest rally to criticise the government for its policies affecting the Indigenous Maori population. AFP

Members of the Maori community and their supporters take part in a protest outside the parliament in Wellington on Tuesday. AFP

Members of the Maori community and their supporters take part in a protest outside the parliament in Wellington on Tuesday. AFP

Booming Indigenous Maori "haka" chants rang out across New Zealand's capital on Tuesday, as tens of thousands rallied against a conservative push to redefine the nation's founding treaty.

More than 35,000 demonstrators poured into the harbourside city of Wellington, police said, shutting down busy streets as their spirited procession inched its way towards parliament.

Bare-chested men draped in traditional feather cloaks were joined by horse riders waving the red, white and black Maori flag.

Children marched alongside adults bearing distinctive full-face Maori "moko" tattoos and clutching ceremonial wooden weapons.

Protests have been swelling throughout New Zealand after a minor party in the conservative coalition government drafted a bill to redefine the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi.

Although the bill has almost no chance of passing, its mere introduction has triggered one of New Zealand's largest protests in decades.

After it was presented for debate in parliament last week, 22-year-old Maori Party MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke took to her feet in the chamber, ripped the bill in half, and launched into a haka.

She joined the crowds of protesters gathered on the lawns on Tuesday outside New Zealand's beehive-shaped parliament building.

"I may have been suspended for 24 hours and not let into the gates of the debating chambers but the next day I showed up outside the steps with a hundred thousand of my people, marching with our heads held high and our flags waving with pride," she told them.

"We are the king makers, we are the sovereign people of this land and the world is watching us here."

Many critics of the bill — including some of New Zealand's most respected lawyers —see it as an attempt to strip long-agreed rights from the country's 900,000 strong Maori population.

"It's not the best way to have a conversation. We will not accept unilateral change to a treaty that involves two parties," said Ngira Simmonds, a key advisor to New Zealand's Maori queen.

"There is a better way," he told AFP from Wellington.

Many demonstrators arrived in Wellington after a nine-day "hikoi" — or protest march —that began hundreds of kilometres away at New Zealand's northern tip.

At the centre of the outcry is government minister David Seymour, the outspoken leader of the libertarian ACT Party — a minor partner in the governing coalition.

Members of the Maori community march in a protest rally in Wellington on Tuesday. AFP)

Members of the Maori community march in a protest rally in Wellington on Tuesday. AFP)

Members of the Maori community march in a protest rally in Wellington on Tuesday. AFP

Members of the Maori community march in a protest rally in Wellington on Tuesday. AFP

Seymour has long railed against affirmative action policies designed to help Maori, who remain far more likely to die early, live in poverty or wind up in prison.

His bill would look to wind back these so-called "special rights".

Incumbent Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has voiced his opposition to Seymour's bill, meaning it is all but doomed to fail when it comes to a parliamentary vote.

But former conservative prime minister Jenny Shipley said just putting it forward threatened to "divide New Zealand in a way that I haven't lived through in my adult life".

Seen as the country's founding document, the Treaty of Waitangi was signed in 1840 to bring peace between 540 Maori chiefs and colonising British forces.

Its principles today underpin efforts to foster partnership between Indigenous and non-Indigenous New Zealanders and protect the interests of the Maori community.

The anniversary of the treaty's signing remains a national holiday.



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