The New Zealand Herald

Colonisati­on felt in NZ still: Little

Justice Minister tells UN we need to work with Ma¯ ori

- Lucy Bennett politics

Justice Minister Andrew Little has laid out a picture of New Zealand’s human rights before the United Nations. Little led a delegation to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva for New Zealand’s universal periodic review.

He spoke before the council on New Zealand’s human rights, beginning with the state of the relationsh­ip between Pa¯keha¯ and Ma¯ori.

Little, who is also Treaty of Waitangi Negotiatio­ns Minister, said the Treaty had been breached, leaving Ma¯ori “strangers in their own land”.

“The impacts of colonisati­on continue to be felt today through entrenched structural racism and poorer outcomes for Ma¯ori,” Little said in prepared notes.

“If we are to address the seemingly intractabl­e problems facing some Ma¯ori, like the disproport­ionate representa­tion of Ma¯ ori in state care and our prisons, then we need to work constructi­vely with Ma¯ori to find solutions.”

Little said that along with Ma¯ori, Pasifika people, the LGBTQI community, new migrants and the disabled were also disadvanta­ged in New Zealand.

“For example, our LGBTQI community encounters higher levels of violence. Disabled people in New Zealand have less access to paid employment but higher living costs.

“Also, while New Zealand has been held up as a leader in gender equality, women are still not on an equal footing with men in our society.”

Little touched on mental health, NZ’s world-first “wellbeing Budget” and crime.

He called the justice system “broken”.

“We have one of the highest incarcerat­ion rates per capita in the world, and it has risen in recent years. Ma¯ori are disproport­ionately represente­d at every stage of our criminal justice system, both as offenders and victims.

“We are struggling with prison capacity and prisoner violence,” he said.

But Little said there was much to celebrate in New Zealand, pointing to the representa­tion of women in Parliament and in the public service.

“We are proud of our record as a contributo­r, nationally and internatio­nally, to human rights,” he said.

“We look forward to engaging [with the UN] to continue to better protect and promote the rights of New Zealanders.”

The universal periodic review considers New Zealand’s human rights records over the past five years.

The findings of the review are not legally binding, but are sometimes cited as persuasive in the courts and the Waitangi Tribunal.

New Zealand was last reviewed in 2014, when the Government accepted 121 of the UN’s 155 recommenda­tions.

Progress on the recommenda­tions is monitored by the Human Rights Commission.

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Andrew Little spoke at the United Nations about the state of the relationsh­ip between Pa¯keha¯ and Ma¯ori.
Photo / NZME Andrew Little spoke at the United Nations about the state of the relationsh­ip between Pa¯keha¯ and Ma¯ori.

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