Oman Daily Observer

New Zealand river granted legal status as ‘a person’

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s Whanganui River has gained its own identity with all the correspond­ing rights, duties and liabilitie­s of a legal person, after a 170-year battle, the media reported on Thursday.

Te Awa Tupua (Whanganui River Claims Settlement) Bill, which passed its third reading in Parliament on Wednesday, will establish a new legal framework for the river, stuff.co.nz reported.

It recognised the river as an indivisibl­e and living whole from the mountains to the sea.

The river is a sacred and revered waterway to New Zealand’s Maori Iwi people and its interests will now be represente­d by an Indigenous group.

Among other things, the river could now be represente­d in court proceeding­s, Treaty Negotiatio­ns Minister Chris Finlayson said.

“I know the initial inclinatio­n of some people will say it’s pretty strange to give a natural resource a legal personalit­y.

“But it’s no stranger than family trusts, or companies or incorporat­ed societies,” The New Zealand Herald quoted Finlayson as saying.

Long revered by New Zealand’s Maori people, the river’s interests will now be represente­d by two people.

The Whanganui River Deed of Settlement was signed in 2014 and legislatio­n was introduced in 2016.

— IANS

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