Hawke's Bay Today

Protesters call for end to farm forests

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Country came to town on Friday as more than 70 people took part in a Napier protest against afforestat­ion of what they say is some of New Zealand’s most productive farmland.

Intending to both inform people of the issue and the need to push Government to block sales abroad for pine-planting driven by carbon credit benefits, the rally attracted mainly a senior-to-retired farming community.

Shouting “Save Our Farms”, they marched from Memorial Square, through the Emerson St parking precinct, Hastings and

Tennyson streets, to the Municipal Theatre.

Speakers included farmer and Gisborne district councillor Kerry Worsnop, Wairarapa farmer and sheep breeder Derek Daniell, Ngati Pahauwera iwi member Rose Perret, and 14-year-old Iona College student Sophie Stoddart.

Perret was one of three from the iwi who spoke, concerned about the iwi developmen­t trust’s decision to put iwi-owned Pihanui Station into trees, and said a group of beneficiar­ies of the trust were considerin­g lodging a claim to block the decision, saying members had not been consulted.

She and fellow members said their concerns were the same as all of those at the gathering and everyone had to fight to stop the loss of land from the food production chain.

Sophie resurrecte­d a speech she had presented at school in Year 8, saying the loss of farm land for food production could be “the biggest disaster in New Zealand history”.

Worsnop, who led a protest in Gisborne last week, said: “We cannot wait. This cannot go on

another year.”

 ?? PHOTO / WARREN BUCKLAND ?? The rally as farming came to town in the Napier CBD.
PHOTO / WARREN BUCKLAND The rally as farming came to town in the Napier CBD.

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