Nelson Mail

King Country iwi pay respects to rugby icon

- ELTON RIKIHANA SMALLMAN

All Black legend Sir Colin Meads was farewelled by hundreds of people at a marae service in Te Kuiti.

Meads died on Sunday after battling pancreatic cancer since 2016. He was 81.

Ngati Maniapoto elder and former Labour Party MP Koro Wetere asked that Meads be brought to Te Tokanganui a Noho at Te Kuiti Pa, near the Waitete Rugby Club, for iwi to pay their respects.

The Meads family agreed and on Friday they carried his casket, draped with three feather korowai, on to the marae to a haka powhiri and karanga and a guard of honour.

Students from nine schools around the King Country joined in the welcome, including Otorohanga College, Aria School and Piopio College.

Former All Blacks Arran Pene and Stu Forster also attended, along with the Meads family.

The casket was placed on a mat on the ground in front of the meet- ing house before being taken to the porch for speeches. Meads lay in state until 1pm. The three korowai draping the casket - named Tuheka, Tu Tangata and Manaakitan­ga - belong to the Te Kanawa whanau. They were made by Dame Rangimarie Hetet and her daughter Diggeress Te Kanawa.

Kahutoi Te Kanawa said three of her mother and grandmothe­r’s korowai were needed to cover Meads’ casket from head to toe.

The Te Kanawa whanau paid their respects with the korowai because they have a long associ- ation with the Meads family, having attended school together and lived together in the same community.

‘‘I think the Meads whanau, because of him, have had an associatio­n with lots of families, but for us, it was appropriat­e to do that.’’

Former All Black Arran Pene said Meads demanded excellence on and off the field.

‘‘He was the ultimate example of how we played on the field, but also how we behaved off the field.

‘‘He was a very proud All Black and his standards were very high.’’

Meads had as big an influence on Maori rugby, he said. He credited him with saving the New Zealand Maori team from being axed in the 1990s.

‘‘He managed the Maori team overseas. His support in the rugby union and his support of Maori rugby has been immense,’’ Pene said.

Pene played rugby in Otago where the Colin Meads Fan Club originated.

‘‘He got rung up at 3am all the time and he always answered the phone and I think those relation- ships were still very strong until his passing.’’

King Country rugby centurion and son-in-law Paul Mitchell said Meads would always be remembered for his rugby, but was also a man of the community.

‘‘He was always available in whatever he did and he always supported us. Me, being a son-in- law, it made it a bit more difficult with Glynn (Meads). When we thought we had a good game, he brought us back to reality occasional­ly,’’ Mitchell said.

Meads’ funeral service will be on Monday in Te Kuiti at the Les Munro Centre, where big screens will be set up outside to cater to the masses expected to attend.

‘‘Te Kuiti is going to get a fright on Monday, I think.

‘‘There has been speculatio­n of 4000,’’ Mitchell said.

‘‘He’s always been a people’s man. It’s going to be sad, but the feelings are that what he’s done for New Zealand and the world - and with that statue now - he will never leave Te Kuiti.’’

Fugitive in court

Rollie James Heke has been remanded without plea at the Rotorua District Court on eight charges, including three of attempting to murder police officers. Four accomplice­s also appeared yesterday, facing charges of accessory to attempted murder after the fact. All appeared via audio visual link and were remanded in custody. Heke, 36, spent 12 days on the run after allegedly firing at three police officers with a semi-automatic, military-style weapon on the outskirts of Morrinsvil­le, in the Waikato, in the early hours of August 13. Heke’s expartner, Irene Scanlon, 43, was taken into custody in Te Awamutu yesterday morning. Police cornered Heke at a property in the Bay of Plenty forestry village of Kaingaroa about 1.30am on Friday.

More troops to Kabul

New Zealand will send a further three non-combat troops to Afghanista­n after a United States request. The request came on behalf of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on (Nato) in May for two additional personnel for ‘‘intelligen­ce and support’’. The 10 troops currently in Afghanista­n are based in Kabul at the Afghan National Army Officer Academy. Two of the extra personnel will deploy to positions within Mission Headquarte­rs in Kabul, and one will deploy to the academy as a physical training instructor.

Fatal collision

Before dawn broke on Friday, two Waikato men set off for work, one in a silver hatchback, the other in a latemodel ute. As one drove east and the other drove west along a rural road on the outskirts of Morrinsvil­le, one vehicle slipped across the centre line and slammed into the other. The driver of the hatchback died at the scene. The ute driver suffered moderate injuries. Both men, aged in their mid-40s, were the drivers and sole occupants. It was the 23rd fatality on the region’s roads this year. The region’s road toll is currently 12 fatalities fewer than the same time last year.

Charge over death

A 22-year-old man appeared in the Auckland District Court yesterday charged with manslaught­er following the death of Reginald Sharma on August 19 in the suburb of Three Kings in Auckland. Police found Sharma, 25, lying in a critical condition outside a house in the early hours of Saturday morning.

Sticky situation

A man has been arrested in Hawke’s Bay over $40,000 worth of allegedly stolen honey. Police searched the man’s Hastings house yesterday, also finding beeswax, a shotgun, and ammunition. James O’Keefe, 41, appeared in court later in the day on charges of burglary and receiving stolen property in relation to the large-scale theft of honey and associated products, including allegedly receiving about $40,000 worth of honey.

 ?? PHOTO: MARK TAYLOR/STUFF ?? Sir Colin Meads is carried on to Te Tokanganui a Noho marae near the Waitete Rugby Club yesterday.
PHOTO: MARK TAYLOR/STUFF Sir Colin Meads is carried on to Te Tokanganui a Noho marae near the Waitete Rugby Club yesterday.

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