Government Introduces Controversial MACA Legislation – Green Party

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The Governmentโ€™s introduction of its interventions in the Marine and Coastal Area (Takutai Moana) Act threatens to throw relations between Mฤori and Crown into deeper disharmony.

โ€œThis legislation is not fit for Parliament and represents an outright assault on the rights of iwi and hapลซ, disregarding the founding agreement Aotearoa was built upon,โ€ says the Green Partyโ€™s spokesperson for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations, Steve Abel.

โ€œTe Tiriti is foundational, governments are temporary and do not have the right to disregard or trample on the binding contract between Mฤori and Crown on which our nation is built. Iwi and hapลซ rights to their customary waters are part of tino rangatiratanga, and are core to the sovereignty tangata whenua never ceded.

โ€œThe Governmentโ€™s Takutai Moana re-write legislation robs Mฤori of customary rights to the marine and coastal area without moral justification or evidential basis. It is a regression to raupatu.

โ€œThe disingenuous narrative of โ€˜restoring parliamentary intentโ€™ that the Government is using to justify this attack on Te Tiriti is a complete misrepresentation of our history that overrides Mฤori rights in favour of corporations who want to exploit our oceans for private profit.

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โ€œThe Waitangi Tribunal was damning in its evaluation of this legislation, stating that it was a clear breach of tino rangatiratanga, antithetical to good government, and sidelined Mฤori rights and interests in te takutai moana without providing evidence for its claim that the publicโ€™s rights and interests require further protection.

โ€œTime and time again, Christopher Luxon has talked about the importance of Te Tiriti, praising it as our past, present and future. But these words are hollow in the context of his assaults on the taonga guaranteed to iwi in our founding agreement.

โ€œThe Green Party will stand alongside Te iwi Mฤori in opposing the Governmentโ€™s confiscation of their customary rights to the marine and coastal environment,โ€ says Steve Abel.