American Indian group supports Nelson Maori claim
Media Release
13 May 2010
From Te Kahui Ngahuru Trust
American Indian group supports Nelson Maori claim
The Nelson Maori group fighting its stalled Treaty
claims says it is humbled and
honoured to receive
support from Canadian Indian Chiefs.
Yesterday Grand Chief
Stewart Phillip, President of the Union of British
Columbia Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) criticised the New
Zealand Government’s failure
to negotiate with
Nelson’s Te Kahui Ngahuru Trust.
The New Zealand
Government is refusing to negotiate the Trust’s WAI56
claim
for land loss and mismanagement of Maori land in
Nelson, Motueka and Golden
Bay.
In a media release
Grand Chief Phillip pointed out similarities between New
Zealand’s and Canada’s Governments in their
continued injustices against
indigenous people.
He
said ongoing injustices such as woefully inadequate land
reserves or “Crown
mismanagement of Te Kahui Ngahuru
or the many outstanding specific claims
in Canada, add
to the severe economic, cultural and social suffering of
our
Indigenous communities.”
Te Kahui Ngahuru Trust
Chairman James Wheeler said both Maori and American Indian
peoples had a similar heritage and needed redress for past
injustices.
“Grand Chief Phillip is so right when he
says as Indigenous Peoples, our fight is
the same the
world over. Our Title and Rights are being ignored,
trivialised and
dismissed. Maori are totally
disillusioned by the Crown’s flawed claims
settlement
process.”
"It is high time the Office of Treaty
Settlements began to understand that our claim is about the
original owners of the Nelson Tenths Reserves who have
suffered hardship for over a century”, says Mr
Wheeler.
The support from the Canadian Indian group
follows recent criticism by the
United Nations Human
Rights Committee of the New Zealand Government’s
Government’s approach to Te Kahui Ngahuri Trust.
Mr
Wheeler said one of the Government’s most pressing tasks
was “to create
genuine, durable and principled
settlements’, yet it was seen internationally as
failing to ensure the views expressed by Maori in the
context of the historical
Treaty claims process were duly taken into account.
He said Te Kahui Ngahuru would
continue to fight for justice and was obviously
gaining
significant international recognition for its
cause.
Ends
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