Rotorua Daily Post

Iwi members walk out of Govt project citing ‘racist’ agenda

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Members of the Iwi Chairs Forum say they had no choice but to walk out of the Government’s National Action Plan Against Racism project, which aims to establish a new approach on racism after the terrorist attacks on Christchur­ch mosques.

Tangata whenua caucus member Tina Ngata (Ngāti Porou) told Te Ao Māori News everyone in the forum collective­ly decided to leave.

“I think there had been a rising level of concern from last year over the number of actions and the type of speech this type of Government was engaging in.

“There was signals that were being sent to us by the minister [of justice, Paul Goldsmith] and his initial feedback to the current draft was layered upon the pre-existing concerns and so it’s been an ongoing concern and it was shared among the committee.

“Our participat­ion in that space was premised upon a level of good faith and partnershi­p and there’s been rising concerns over continued actions from this Government that continue to exhibit a high level of racism.”

She listed “racist” things the coalition Government did that “targeted Mā ori”, citing the Fast Track Approval Bill, the Treaty Principles Bill, and the recent controvers­y around Auckland University tuākana rooms.

“I mean we are experienci­ng the most explicit racism of this generation in the current Government that we’ve seen and they have been called to account upon it numerous times now and they don’t seem to be willing to make any changes.”

She is open to rejoining the plan but said there would need to be significan­t changes in how the Government operates for them to come back.

How did the Justice Minister react?

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith was disappoint­ed to hear the National Iwi Chairs Forum was leaving the anti-racism plan and said he only found out through a press release.

Ngata told Te Ao Māori News the committee was going to send him a letter but was unsure if it had actually been sent.

The comments made to the forum were to “provide direction” for the plan to focus on racism against all ethnicitie­s.

“There’s an impact that racism has on Māori and that has to be a big focus but of course, it’s much more [of] a universal issue for many communitie­s in New Zealand, so we want to make sure that plan takes account for all of those concerns,” Goldsmith said.

Ngata said there was already a tauiwi caucus and a state sector caucus, who shared their kōrero on the type of racism they experience­d but Goldsmith wanted to “water down” and “reduce” the “specific and distinct colonial racism against Māori”.

Goldsmith told Te Ao Māori News

he or the people working on the antiracism plan couldn’t dictate which ethnic voices were heard the most.

“All we do is come up with a plan of action and we’ll be bringing it out in a draft form and people will have the opportunit­y to have their say about it. It’s not going to be perfection in the outcome but it will be the best that we can [do] and we’ll have a series of steps that we can do to continue to improve the country that we live in.”

What happens now?

The Ministry of Justice will continue with the National Action Plan Against Racism. Although the National Iwi Chairs Forum has left, Goldsmith said Māori voices would still be in the plan.

“We still have Pou Tikanga, which is one of the work streams of the relationsh­ip between the Crown and the Māori iwi leaders forum and we’ll continue on as best we can.”

While the Government is working on its plan, the forum is going to carry on with an independen­t version, using the draft action plan it has been working on for the past two years.

“That plan will continue to hold [the] bottom line, such as constituti­onal transforma­tion, and [be] Treaty-centred, and be He Whakaputan­ga-centred, constituti­on for Aotearoa, which is a nonnegotia­ble bottom line for a national action plan,” Ngata said.

“All anti-racism movements have really been movements of the people, they’ve never come from the government, they’ve certainly never come from colonial government­s because they’re so heavily invested in their own privilege.”

 ?? Tina Ngata ??
Tina Ngata

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