Supporting documents to responses to post-hearing evidence, 6 Jan 14
Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District
Memorandum-directions of Judge D J Ambler adding Glen Katu and Wayne Jensen as named claimants to Wai 1585, 20 Dec 13
Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District
Wai 1585, 1.1.1(a)
Amendment: 10 Dec 13
Date Received: 10 Dec 13
Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District
Memorandum-directions of Judge D J Ambler adding further final statements of claim to the Te Rohe Pōtae Record of Inquiry (Wai 753, 1585, 2020, 2090, 586 and 1396), 20 Dec 13
Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District
Responses to post-hearing evidence from hearing week six, 6 Jan 14
Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District
J Gough (Crown) Closing Submissions
Wai 2417, the New Zealand Maori Council Maori Community Development Act Claim
The Mangatū Remedies Report
Wai 814 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Gisborne claims
The Mangatū Remedies Report, released in June 2014, is the outcome of applications for remedies by four claimant groups from Tūranganui-a-Kiwa (Gisborne). These groups – the Mangatū Incorporation (Wai 1489), Te Aitanga a Māhaki and Affiliates (Wai 274 and Wai 283), Ngā Ariki Kaipūtahi (Wai 499, Wai 507, and Wai 874), and Te Whānau a Kai (Wai 892) – asked the Tribunal to use its potentially binding powers to require the Crown to return to them all or part of the Mangatū Crown forest licensed lands within the Tūranga inquiry district.
The Tribunal held its inquiry into the historical claims of Tūranga Māori between 2001 and 2002. In 2004, the Tribunal released Turanga Tangata Turanga Whenua: The Report on the Turanganui a Kiwa Claims. The Tribunal found that all of the iwi and hapū groups who had appeared before it had been prejudicially affected by wide-ranging Treaty breaches deriving from Crown conduct and policies in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The Tribunal noted especially the substantial loss of life and land suffered by Tūranga Māori.
The Mangatū Incorporation filed an application for an urgent remedies inquiry on 31 July 2008, seeking return of 8,522 acres of land in the Mangatū 1 block purchased by the Crown in 1961 for afforestation purposes. The Incorporation sought an urgent inquiry because an Agreement in Principle was expected to be signed by the Crown and Tūranga Māori in August 2008, the result of settlement negotiations that had commenced shortly after the release of the Tribunal’s Tūranga report. That agreement proposed the return of the Mangatū Crown forest licensed lands to the wider hapū grouping as commercial redress, including the land purchased from the Incorporation in 1961. The Incorporation, however, considered that the 1961 land should be returned to the Incorporation owners, and asked the Tribunal to use its binding powers to do so.
The Tribunal initially declined the Incorporation’s application for an urgent hearing. However, the Incorporation sought judicial review of the Tribunal’s decision and, on 19 May 2011, the Supreme Court directed the Tribunal to hear the Mangatū Incorporation remedies application urgently. Following this, the three other applicants – who represent the claims of hapū and iwi involved in the original Tūranga district inquiry – also lodged applications for binding recommendations.
The panel members for the Mangatū remedies hearing were Judge Stephanie Milroy (presiding officer), Tim Castle, Wharehuia Milroy, and Dr Ann Parsonson. Two weeks of hearings were held in Gisborne in June and October 2012. Closing submissions of the parties were heard in November 2012 in Wellington.
The Tribunal found that all four applicants had well-founded claims that were deserving of redress. However, the Tribunal did not consider that binding recommendations were appropriate in the circumstances and so declined to make the recommendations sought. In particular, it could not be certain that binding recommendations would provide redress proportionate to the prejudice suffered by the claimants. As a result, the Tribunal was unable to make recommendations that would be fair and equitable between the four groups. The Tribunal was concerned that redress which seemed to favour one group over others would risk creating fresh grievances, and might undermine the chances of achieving a durable Treaty settlement of the claims.
The Tribunal strongly urged all the applicants to reunite and return to settlement negotiations with the Crown. The Tribunal reiterated its preference that redress for well-founded claims should be negotiated with the Crown. In the report, the Tribunal said: ‘Any compromises that are made, and all settlements require compromises, should be made by the hapū and iwi involved – they are the ones with the mana and rangatiratanga to make such agreements, not the Tribunal.’ It emphasised that negotiations allow all parties much more flexibility than binding recommendations to develop a satisfactory settlement package.