Protesters Disrupt 3rd Reading Of Fast-track Bill – 350 Aotearoa

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350 Aotearoa has interrupted the third reading of the fast-track bill by dropping banners from the public gallery, highlighting the over 90% of submitters that opposed the fast-track bill. The activists have now been barred from Parliament.

350 spokesperson Adam Currie said the action was not taken lightly.

โ€œWe have followed the official process to a tee – filing submissions, waiting patiently to be heard and so on. But it hasnโ€™t worked, and democratic norms have been breached. We may have broken Parliament rules to make a point today, but Christopher Luxonโ€™s government is not following the rules either.โ€

โ€œLuxonโ€™s government is disrespecting the democratic process by withholding key information from MPs and the public at every stage; incredibly the applications for projects baked into the fast-track bill were only released yesterday; how were MPs supposed to consider applications they hadnโ€™t even seen? Theyโ€™re disrespecting democracy by barring thousands of submittors from being heard. And theyโ€™re disrespecting the process by shutting communities and whฤnau out of decision-making and robbing them of their appeal rights. We refuse to take this lying down – and extractive projects will never have the social licence to go ahead as we resist them at every turn.”

Supplied: 350 Aotearoaย 

โ€œThe bill ignores Te Tiriti O Waitangi and violates the Tino Rangatiratanga of whฤnau, hapลซ and iwi. It would enable projects currently prohibited by local councils, the Environmental Protection Authority or the Supreme Court – such as seabed mining in whale habitats and dumping raw sewage into the moana. The bill would allow coal mines on conservation land and enable an air-polluting waste incinerator project that the council, the school and the community all oppose. Whatever happened to Nationalโ€™s promises of decentralisation? Christopher Luxon’s government is turning a blind eye to the evidence highlighted by the 93% of submitters who opposed the fast-track bill.โ€

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โ€œThe fast-track is a blatant attempt to change our national character and core values as New Zealanders – away from care, honesty, and love for the outdoors and towards exploitation, recklessness and a system of exclusion.

โ€The fast-track bill is anti-democratic, anti-climate, and anti-Te Tiriti. Regardless of the bill passing today, thousands of New Zealanders are ready to stop these projects from being built in our communities,โ€ says Currie.

1 COMMENT

  1. That’s what this govt. does. They break long established rules. So whatever happens using those broken rules will have to be reassessed when they’re gone.
    I wouldn’t want to have a business dependent on bad legislation which could be changed and made stronger with a change of govt. Very precarious.
    Having paid bribes to have my business get special consideration, I’d want to be sure nothing could upset my applecart.

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