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A037(b)
Other Document

Ngati Kahu, Ngati Rangi, Ngati Pango [Part 2]

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

20 Sep 2016
Size: 13.65MB
S001
Other Document

Ngati Hinerangi Grievances Relating to the Building of the Kaimai Tunnel and Deviation

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

14 Jul 2015
Size: 12.82MB
S006
Other Document

Town and country planning and its impact on Tauranga Maori communities, c1953-1990; a summary and analysis of the existing research

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

10 Jul 2015
Size: 2.55MB
S007
Other Document

A study of Environmental Planning in Tauranga Moana since 1991

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

10 Jul 2015
Size: 2.68MB
A037(a)
Other Document

Ngati Kahu, Ngati Rangi, Ngati Pango [Part 1]

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

28 Jul 2015
Size: 7.6MB
A046
Other Document

Otawhiwhi Reserve & Bowentown Domain

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

10 Jul 2015
Size: 3.55MB
A045
Other Document

Huharua, Pukewhanake & Nga Kuri A Wharei

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

10 Jul 2015
Size: 3.13MB
A035
Other Document

Hydro-Electricity in the Wairoa river Catchment: Land Acquisition

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

07 Sep 2016
Size: 1.71MB
A034
Other Document

Public Works Acquisitions in Poike Block

Wai 215 - Combined Record of Inquiry for the Tauranga Moana claims

16 Aug 2016
Size: 3.25MB
Wai 212 Rivers
Report

Te Ika Whenua Rivers Report

Ika Whenua Lands and Waterways claim

The water from the puna wai [water of the spring] of a whanau is considered a taonga to that whanau as it carries the Mauri [life force] of that particular whanau. Of course all the waters of the puna wai find their way into the river and thereby join with the Mauri of the river. In essence then the very spiritual being of every whanau is party of the river … In this sense the river is more than a taonga; it is the people themselves.

Wiremu McAuley

Claim Wai 212 concerned the mana and tino rangatiratanga of the hapu of Te Ika Whenua over the Rangitaiki, Wheao, and Whirinaki Rivers and their tributaries. It built on the Te Ika Whenua energy assets claim and, like that claim, was severed from Te Ika Whenua’s original claim and accorded urgency by the Tribunal.

The claim was brought in the name of Hohepa Waiti and Kini Porima, as the chairman and secretary of Te Runanganui o Te Ika Whenua Incorporated Society, on behalf of themselves and the hapu represented by Te Ika Whenua.

The Tribunal constituted to hear the Te Ika Whenua rivers claim comprised Judge Glendyn Carter, Bishop Manuhuia Bennett, Mary Boyd, and Georgina Te Heuheu, though Ms Te Heuheu resigned from the Tribunal following her appointment as a list candidate for the National Party in September 1996. The first hearing was held at Tipapa Marae in Murupara in early November 1993, the second hearing at the Maori Land Court in Rotorua in late August 1994, and the third and final hearing at Painoaiho Marae in Murupara in mid-October 1994.

The Tribunal heard how the rivers served as a vitally important food source and means of transport and communication, and how they were essential for Te Ika Whenua’s spiritual and cultural well-being. Claimant evidence ‘clearly established’ that the middle reaches of the Rangitaiki and the Whirinaki and Wheao Rivers were a taonga over which the hapu of Te Ika Whenua had mana and rangatiratanga.

The Tribunal also heard of the effect that hydro schemes had had on the resident eel population and the flow of the rivers.

Maori anger is mounting over development on the Rangitaiki River that has seriously depleted eel populations in the Murupara District … Below the Te Mahoe dam, eel populations are building up. But in the quiet Ikawhenua Range country, the river’s birth place, Maoris are concerned that one of their traditional foods is disappearing.

Moves to press the Internal Affairs Department into building a run-off or race for eels so they might ‘climb’ over the dam have been turned-down because of high costs.

The Rotorua Daily Post

one of the greatest tragedies of the diversion of the Rangitaiki and the Wheao ‘blowout’ was that all the beautiful little pools of clear water that made the Wheao one of the greatest trout fishing rivers in the world, as well as a great place for tuna, were wiped out. The Wheao they had known, the lands on which they had lived for weeks and what used to be a great place for mahinga kai were all gone.

The Waitangi Tribunal

Like the Mohaka River Tribunal before it, the Ika Whenua rivers Tribunal considered the application of the common law rule ad medium filum aquae, which assumes that the owner of land bordering a non-navigable river owns the adjacent riverbed to the middle line. According to the Tribunal, this rule conflicted with the Maori view of ownership, and in the Tribunal’s view, it was ‘inescapable’ that the application of this rule was a major factor in Te Ika Whenua’s loss of title and tino rangatiratanga over their rivers.

Clearly, the customary and Treaty rights of rangatira and hapu and tangata katoa (all the people) of Te Ika Whenua are part of their tino rangatiratanga and are in conflict with Crown assertions on the ownership of rivers by virtue of statute or common law. Claimant evidence shows that rivers were and still are a taonga that provides material and spiritual sustenance and a strong continuing bond. The people belong to the river and the river belongs to the people.

The Waitangi Tribunal

In its report, released in September 1998, The Tribunal found that Te Ika Whenua held a proprietary interest akin to ownership of the rivers as at 1840 in that they had full and unrestricted use and control of the waters thereof while they were in their rohe. That right or interest was property guaranteed protection under article 2 of the Treaty and Te Ika Whenua were entitled to have had conferred on them in 1840 a proprietary interest in the rivers that could be practically encapsulated within the legal notion of the ownership of the waters.

The Tribunal also made a number of recommendations to the Crown relating to the recognition of Te Ika Whenua’s residual rights in the rivers, the management and control of the rivers, the vesting of certain parts of the riverbeds in the claimants, and the compensation owed to them for the loss of title resulting from the application of the ad medium filum aquae rule.

01 Sep 1998
Size: 9.38MB
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