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3.5.0050
Post hearing - Party Submission/Memo

A Sykes / R Jordan / J Bartlett (Wai 2656) Memorandum of counsel in response to memorandum-directions of Deputy Chief Judge C L Fox (Wai 898,#2.7.14)

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

23 Mar 2018
Rahinga: 431KB
3.5.0052
Post hearing - Party Submission/Memo

A Sykes / R Jordan / J Bartlett (Wai 125), Memorandum of counsel in response to memorandum-directions of Deputy Chief Judge C L Fox (Wai 898,#2.7.14)

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

23 Mar 2018
Rahinga: 478KB
3.5.0048
Post hearing - Party Submission/Memo

B D Gilling / J J Lang (Wai 614) Memorandum of counsel in response to memorandum-directions of Deputy Chief Judge C L Fox (Wai 898,#2.7.14)

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

23 Mar 2018
Rahinga: 413KB
3.5.0039
Post hearing - Party Submission/Memo

A Thomas (Wai 775) Memorandum of counsel in response to memorandum-directions of Deputy Chief Judge C L Fox (Wai 898,#2.7.14)

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

23 Mar 2018
Rahinga: 460KB
3.5.0064
Post hearing - Party Submission/Memo

D Naded (Wai 1995) Memorandum of counsel in response to memorandum-directions of Deputy Chief Judge C L Fox (Wai 898,#2.7.14)

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

23 Mar 2018
Rahinga: 644KB
3.5.0063
Post hearing - Party Submission/Memo

D Naden (Wai 1962) Memorandum of counsel in response to memorandum-directions of Deputy Chief Judge C L Fox (Wai 898,#2.7.14)

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

23 Mar 2018
Rahinga: 518KB
3.5.0069(a)
Post hearing - Party Submission/Memo

Appendix A

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

11 Apr 2018
Rahinga: 485KB
Wai 898 Vol 4
Report

Te Mana Whatu Ahuru: Report on Te Rohe Pōtae Claim, volume 4

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

The Waitangi Tribunal’s Te Mana Whatu Ahuru: Report on Te Rohe Pōtae Claims is the outcome of 277 Treaty of Waitangi claims submitted by Māori of the Te Rohe Pōtae inquiry district. This district extends from Whāingaroa Harbour to northern Taranaki, and inland to the Waikato River and Taumarunui.

The claims in the report were brought to the Waitangi Tribunal on behalf of a diverse range of groups and individuals. They alleged that the Crown breached the principles of the Treaty through a range of actions that resulted in significant prejudice to claimants and their tūpuna. Of the claims that would eventually come to be part of the Te Rohe Pōtae District Inquiry, the first was submitted to the Tribunal in March 1987 by Margaret Makariti Poinga on behalf of herself and members of Ngāti Hikairo. The last was the claim of Angeline Greensill concerning Māui’s dolphin and their threat of extinction, submitted to the Tribunal in September 2014.

The Te Rohe Pōtae Tribunal panel comprised Judge David Ambler (presiding officer), Sir Hirini Mead, Professor Pou Temara, John Baird, and Dr Aroha Harris. After the death of Judge Ambler in 2017, Deputy Chief Judge Caren Fox was appointed to the role of presiding officer.

The Tribunal heard 23 weeks of evidence, including six Ngā Kōrero Tuku Iho hui to hear traditions and oral evidence. Hearings began in March 2010 and ended in February 2015.

Volume 4 of Te Mana Whatu Ahuru addresses how the rapid alienation of Māori land reflected and fuelled an erosion of the ability of Te Rohe Pōtae Māori to exercise mana whakahaere, or self-government, over the way the district and its inhabitants were managed. An assurance that district leaders would be able to continue exercising mana whakahaere was contained within article 2 of the Treaty of Waitangi guarantee of tino rangatiratanga (self-government, autonomy), as well as the (1883–85) agreements between Te Rohe Pōtae Māori and the Crown, known as Te Ōhākī Tapu, that promised to give effect to the Treaty in the district.

Contrary to these promises, in the years after the Te Ōhākī Tapu agreements, the Crown’s actions, omissions, legislation, and policies designed to develop the area for Pākehā settlement largely stripped Te Rohe Pōtae Māori of their tribal authority. Areas affected included the governance and management of Māori communities, the impact of local government and public works legislation on remaining Māori land, and the management of the natural environment, including waterways.

The Tribunal found that the Crown failed to sustain Te Rohe Pōtae self-government in a Treaty-compliant way. While Te Rohe Pōtae Māori participated in a succession of representative structures and institutions expected to provide them with at least a form of mana whakahaere, these spheres of influence were limited, and many did not prove enduring.

The imposition of Pākehā local government structures further complicated Te Rohe Pōtae Māori’s struggle to retain mana whakahaere, and the Tribunal found that the Crown failed to ensure local government structures would adequately consider Te Rohe Pōtae rights to exercise their mana whakahaere and tino rangatiratanga.

Compulsory taking of Māori land for public works development purposes, which increased markedly after the Te Ōhākī Tapu agreements, was another means through which large tracks of Māori land were alienated, and Te Rohe Pōtae tribal authority diminished as a result. The Tribunal found that without meaningful consultation and without meeting tests of last resort, the Crown undertook the largest takings for public works in New Zealand history in the inquiry district during the twentieth century.

Crown and local authorities’ regulation of the natural environment, including waterways and water bodies, further diminished Te Rohe Pōtae Māori tribal authority over many taonga and sites of significance. Additionally, the Tribunal found Crown regulation and mismanagement of the natural environment likely resulted in significant damage to many of these important sites.

Based on its findings of Treaty breach in these areas, the Tribunal made recommendations to restore or better enable Te Rohe Pōtae Māori mana whakahaere, including by amending the legislative and policy frameworks associated with each area under review, and accounting for identified breaches in any Treaty settlement processes with claimants.

 

18 Dec 2023
Rahinga: 8.56MB
Wai 898 Vol 2
Report

Te Mana Whatu Ahuru: Report on Te Rohe Pōtae Claim, volume 2

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

The Waitangi Tribunal’s Te Mana Whatu Ahuru: Report on Te Rohe Pōtae Claims is the outcome of 277 Treaty claims submitted by Māori of the Te Rohe Pōtae inquiry district. This district extends from Whāingaroa Harbour to northern Taranaki, and inland to the Waikato River and Taumarunui.

The claims in this report have been brought to the Waitangi Tribunal on behalf of a diverse range of groups and individuals. They allege that the Crown breached the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi through a range of actions that resulted in significant prejudice to claimants and their tūpuna. Of the claims that would eventually come to be part of the Te Rohe Pōtae District Inquiry, the first was submitted to the Tribunal in March 1987 by Margaret Makariti Poinga on behalf of herself and members of Ngāti Hikairo. The last was the claim of Angeline Greensill concerning Māui’s dolphin and their threat of extinction, submitted to the Tribunal in September 2014.

The Te Rohe Pōtae Tribunal panel comprised Judge David Ambler (presiding), John Baird, Dr Aroha Harris, Sir Hirini Mead, Professor Pou Temara. After the death of Judge Ambler in 2017, Deputy Chief Judge Caren Fox was appointed to the role of presiding officer.

The Tribunal heard 23 weeks of evidence, including six Ngā Kōrero Tuku Iho hui to hear traditions and oral evidence. Hearings began in March 2010 and ended in February 2015.

The central issue addressed in the first two volumes concerned the negotiations between the leaders of Te Rohe Pōtae – especially Ngāti Maniapoto – and the Crown in the 1880s. The negotiations, and the agreements that resulted, are known by Te Rohe Pōtae Māori as Te Ōhākī Tapu. This term is derived from Te Kī Tapu (the sacred word), a phrase used by Ngāti Maniapoto leaders to describe the conduct they sought from the Crown.

The Tribunal found that the Crown’s representatives in those negotiations acted at times with dishonest and misleading negotiation tactics and promises. The Crown failed to engage as a Treaty partner and did not acknowledge Te Rohe Pōtae Māori tino rangatiratanga. The Tribunal found that the Crown’s significant breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi have caused serious damage to the mana and autonomy of the iwi and hapū of the district.

Volumes 1 and 2 also reviewed numerous other aspects of the Crown’s actions in Te Rohe Potae before 1905. These included the investigation of pre-Treaty land transactions, early Crown land purchasing, the establishment of the Kīngitanga, its implications for Te Rohe Potae Māori, the impacts of war, and the definition and maintenance of the aukati (Māori zone of authority) in Te Rohe Pōtae, which lasted for an unprecedented 20 years.

The report then reviewed Crown actions in relation to the building of the North Island Main Trunk Railway, the introduction of the Native Land Court to the region, and a further phase of Crown land purchasing between 1890 and 1905.

The Tribunal found the claims covered in volumes 1 and 2 of the report to be well founded. In summary, the Crown chose not to give practical effect to the Treaty principle of partnership in Te Rohe Pōtae from 1840 to 1900. It failed to recognise or provide for Te Rohe Pōtae Māori tino rangatiratanga before and during the negotiations collectively described as Te Ōhāki Tapu. This failure resulted in multiple breaches of the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, and Te Rohe Pōtae Māori have suffered significant and long-lasting prejudice as a result.

The Tribunal found that, because of these breaches, the opportunity to give proper effect to the Treaty in the district has yet to be fulfilled.

The Tribunal therefore recommended the Crown take immediate steps to act, in conjunction with the mandated settlement group or groups, to put in place means to give effect to their rangatiratanga. The Tribunal said that how this can be achieved will be for the claimants and Crown to decide. However, it recommended that, at a minimum, legislation must be enacted that recognises and affirms the rangatiratanga and the rights of autonomy and self-determination of Te Rohe Pōtae Māori.

In the case of Ngāti Maniapoto, or their mandated representatives, the Tribunal recommended that legislation must take into account and give effect to Te Ōhāki Tapu, in a way that imposes an obligation on the Crown and its agencies to give effect to the right to mana whakahaere.

 

18 Dec 2023
Rahinga: 16.74MB
Wai 898 Vol 1
Report

Te Mana Whatu Ahuru: Report on Te Rohe Pōtae Claim, volume 1

Index to the Wai 898 Combined Record of Inquiry for the Te Rohe Pōtae District

The Waitangi Tribunal’s Te Mana Whatu Ahuru: Report on Te Rohe Pōtae Claims is the outcome of 277 Treaty claims submitted by Māori of the Te Rohe Pōtae inquiry district. This district extends from Whāingaroa Harbour to northern Taranaki, and inland to the Waikato River and Taumarunui.

The claims in this report have been brought to the Waitangi Tribunal on behalf of a diverse range of groups and individuals. They allege that the Crown breached the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi through a range of actions that resulted in significant prejudice to claimants and their tūpuna. Of the claims that would eventually come to be part of the Te Rohe Pōtae District Inquiry, the first was submitted to the Tribunal in March 1987 by Margaret Makariti Poinga on behalf of herself and members of Ngāti Hikairo. The last was the claim of Angeline Greensill concerning Māui’s dolphin and their threat of extinction, submitted to the Tribunal in September 2014.

The Te Rohe Pōtae Tribunal panel comprised Judge David Ambler (presiding), John Baird, Dr Aroha Harris, Sir Hirini Mead, Professor Pou Temara. After the death of Judge Ambler in 2017, Deputy Chief Judge Caren Fox was appointed to the role of presiding officer.

The Tribunal heard 23 weeks of evidence, including six Ngā Kōrero Tuku Iho hui to hear traditions and oral evidence. Hearings began in March 2010 and ended in February 2015.

The central issue addressed in the first two volumes concerned the negotiations between the leaders of Te Rohe Pōtae – especially Ngāti Maniapoto – and the Crown in the 1880s. The negotiations, and the agreements that resulted, are known by Te Rohe Pōtae Māori as Te Ōhākī Tapu. This term is derived from Te Kī Tapu (the sacred word), a phrase used by Ngāti Maniapoto leaders to describe the conduct they sought from the Crown.

The Tribunal found that the Crown’s representatives in those negotiations acted at times with dishonest and misleading negotiation tactics and promises. The Crown failed to engage as a Treaty partner and did not acknowledge Te Rohe Pōtae Māori tino rangatiratanga. The Tribunal found that the Crown’s significant breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi have caused serious damage to the mana and autonomy of the iwi and hapū of the district.

Volumes 1 and 2 also reviewed numerous other aspects of the Crown’s actions in Te Rohe Potae before 1905. These included the investigation of pre-Treaty land transactions, early Crown land purchasing, the establishment of the Kīngitanga, its implications for Te Rohe Potae Māori, the impacts of war, and the definition and maintenance of the aukati (Māori zone of authority) in Te Rohe Pōtae, which lasted for an unprecedented 20 years.

The report then reviewed Crown actions in relation to the building of the North Island Main Trunk Railway, the introduction of the Native Land Court to the region, and a further phase of Crown land purchasing between 1890 and 1905.

The Tribunal found the claims covered in volumes 1 and 2 of the report to be well founded. In summary, the Crown chose not to give practical effect to the Treaty principle of partnership in Te Rohe Pōtae from 1840 to 1900. It failed to recognise or provide for Te Rohe Pōtae Māori tino rangatiratanga before and during the negotiations collectively described as Te Ōhāki Tapu. This failure resulted in multiple breaches of the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi, and Te Rohe Pōtae Māori have suffered significant and long-lasting prejudice as a result.

The Tribunal found that, because of these breaches, the opportunity to give proper effect to the Treaty in the district has yet to be fulfilled.

The Tribunal therefore recommended the Crown take immediate steps to act, in conjunction with the mandated settlement group or groups, to put in place means to give effect to their rangatiratanga. The Tribunal said that how this can be achieved will be for the claimants and Crown to decide. However, it recommended that, at a minimum, legislation must be enacted that recognises and affirms the rangatiratanga and the rights of autonomy and self-determination of Te Rohe Pōtae Māori.

In the case of Ngāti Maniapoto, or their mandated representatives, the Tribunal recommended that legislation must take into account and give effect to Te Ōhāki Tapu, in a way that imposes an obligation on the Crown and its agencies to give effect to the right to mana whakahaere.

 

18 Dec 2023
Rahinga: 9.45MB
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