New Zealand’s parliament yesterday began a debate on a bill aimed at reinterpreting the country’s founding agreement as hundreds of protesters continued their march toward the capital.
The ACT New Zealand party, a junior partner in the country’s coalition government, last week unveiled the bill, which aims to define the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi.
First signed in 1840 between the British Crown and more than 500 Maori chiefs, it lays down how the two parties agreed to govern.
Photo: AP
The interpretation of clauses in the document still guides legislation and policy.
The proposed bill passed its first reading yesterday and is to be sent to a select committee.
New Zealand Associate Minister of Justice David Seymour said that Maori are being given different rights than non-indigenous citizens, who lose out because of policies specifically designed for the uplift of Maori.
Seymour said people who oppose the bill want to “stir up” fear and division.
“My mission is to empower every person,” he said.
The legislation is seen by many Maori and others as undermining the rights of the country’s indigenous people, who make up about 20 percent of the population of 5.3 million.
Hundreds have set out on a nine-day march, or hikoi, from New Zealand’s north to Wellington in protest over the legislation, staging rallies in towns and cities as they move south.
Introduced by ACT, which won 8.6 percent of the vote in last year’s election, the bill is expected to fail.
Coalition partners the National Party and New Zealand First are only supporting the legislation through the first of three readings as part of the coalition agreement.
Both parties have said they will not support it to become legislation.
New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said his government’s top focus would be on the economy, and improving law and order.
“You do not go negate, with a single stroke of a pen, 184 years of debate and discussion, with a bill that I think is very simplistic,” Luxon told reporters before leaving for Peru to attend the APEC summit.
WAKE-UP CALL: Firms in the private sector were not taking basic precautions, despite the cyberthreats from China and Russia, a US cybersecurity official said A ninth US telecom firm has been confirmed to have been hacked as part of a sprawling Chinese espionage campaign that gave officials in Beijing access to private texts and telephone conversations of an unknown number of Americans, a top White House official said on Friday. Officials from the administration of US President Joe Biden this month said that at least eight telecommunications companies, as well as dozens of nations, had been affected by the Chinese hacking blitz known as Salt Typhoon. US Deputy National Security Adviser for Cyber and Emerging Technologies Anne Neuberger on Friday told reporters that a ninth victim
Russia and Ukraine have exchanged prisoners of war in the latest such swap that saw the release of hundreds of captives and was brokered with the help of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), officials said on Monday. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said that 189 Ukrainian prisoners, including military personnel, border guards and national guards — along with two civilians — were freed. He thanked the UAE for helping negotiate the exchange. The Russian Ministry of Defense said that 150 Russian troops were freed from captivity as part of the exchange in which each side released 150 people. The reason for the discrepancy in numbers
A shark attack off Egypt’s Red Sea coast killed a tourist and injured another, authorities said on Sunday, with an Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs source identifying both as Italian nationals. “Two foreigners were attacked by a shark in the northern Marsa Alam area, which led to the injury of one and the death of the other,” the Egyptian Ministry of Environment said in a statement. A source at the Italian foreign ministry said that the man killed was a 48-year-old resident of Rome. The injured man was 69 years old. They were both taken to hospital in Port Ghalib, about 50km north
MISSING: Prosecutors urged the company to move workers out of poor living conditions to hotels, but residents said many workers had already left the town Brazil has stopped issuing temporary work visas for BYD, the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Friday, in the wake of accusations that some workers at a site owned by the Chinese electric vehicle producer had been victims of human trafficking. The announcement came days after labor authorities said they found 163 Chinese workers who had been brought to Brazil irregularly in “slavery-like” conditions at the BYD factory construction site in the northeastern state of Bahia. The workers were employed by contractor Jinjiang Group, which has denied any wrongdoing. Later, the authorities also said the workers were victims of human trafficking,