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Home / Rotorua Daily Post

Tuhoe protest against their own

By Charlotte Jones
Local Democracy Reporter·Rotorua Daily Post·
27 Apr, 2021 07:34 PM4 mins to read

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Tuhoe elders (from left) Te Waiarani Harawira, Paki Nikora and Heni Davis-Teepa are flanked by the names of marae and hapu who have pulled out of Tuhoe governing body Te Uru Taumatua. Photo / Charlotte Jones, LDR

Tuhoe elders (from left) Te Waiarani Harawira, Paki Nikora and Heni Davis-Teepa are flanked by the names of marae and hapu who have pulled out of Tuhoe governing body Te Uru Taumatua. Photo / Charlotte Jones, LDR

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Disillusioned Tuhoe are marching against their own after years of growing tension between hapū and tribal leadership.

Murmurings of dissent within the Tuhoe nation have grown to a roar and, on Friday, kaumatua and close to 50 supporters protested outside the iwi headquarters in Taneatua.

Anger at leadership decisions has seen some hapū pull away from the iwi's governing authority Te Uru Taumatua (TUT).

Paki Nikora leads protestors in a chant calling for the removal of Te Uru Taumatua leadership. Photo / Troy Baker,  Whakatāne Beacon
Paki Nikora leads protestors in a chant calling for the removal of Te Uru Taumatua leadership. Photo / Troy Baker, Whakatāne Beacon
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Paki Nikora of Te Kaunihera Kaumatua o Tuhoe, a group of Tuhoe kaumatua who have opposed TUT leadership for many years, said things came to a head when leadership attempted to block hapū from accessing Provincial Growth Fund putea to upgrade and renovate marae.

Those hapū who left the tribal authority have since received letters stating that they are welcome to return anytime but, in the meantime, would be unable to access many resources.

This included education grants, marae assistance such as insurance, hunting licences, fish and tents for tangihanga, and they would have no say in board appointments or management of their river and forest.

Nikora said it was confiscation all over again.

"What makes it worse is, it's confiscation of our own," he said. "That makes it worse than the first-time around."

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Protestors blocked off the driveway to Te Uru Taumatua offices on Friday morning. Photo / Troy Baker, Whakatāne Beacon
Protestors blocked off the driveway to Te Uru Taumatua offices on Friday morning. Photo / Troy Baker, Whakatāne Beacon

Te Kaunihera have tried for many years through the courts to have a review of the Tuhoe Trust deed and to have an independent agency oversee the next elections to ensure they are free of corruption, Nikora says.

However, court action has so far been ineffective and that is why the protest was organised.

"The short story is, we are stuck in a dictatorship that we have been trying to address since settlement," Nikora said.

"We want the leadership to change. We want this protest to ring bells in Parliament and the legal fraternity to say, 'come on, we are in trouble here'. We need an independent election. Every AGM has been a crook process, they want us to sit there and nod our heads like puppets."

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Talei Bryant (L) and another woman work to hang a hand-painted sheet over a road sign outside Te Uru Taumatua offices in Tanuatua. Photo / Charlotte Jones, LDR
Talei Bryant (L) and another woman work to hang a hand-painted sheet over a road sign outside Te Uru Taumatua offices in Tanuatua. Photo / Charlotte Jones, LDR

Ruatoki kuia Te Waiarani Harawira said her hapū had been told it was too "Pākehā" in its dealings and after that had not returned to any tribal meetings.

"It's very hard to work with the current leadership. There is no desire to discuss or collaborate. It is a dictatorship.

"There has been no effort on their part to come to a resolution or to meet with our hapū to discuss the issue."

Harawira rejects TUT's stance that it can stop hapū from having a say in the management of their own river and forest.

Another Ruatoki kuia, Heni Davis-Teepa, said Tuhoe's internal conflict was causing friction and division between whānau and hapū and that hurt.

Several of the picket signs at the protest bore the names of hapū and marae that had left the tribal authority.

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Some called out specific leaders and others said TUT "sucked" and described the authority as "terrorists".

Some others called out the Whakatāne District and Bay of Plenty Regional councils for only consulting with TUT and not going out to the wider iwi. Ihaka (Chas) Te Whetu, also of Te Kaunihera, said he was very pleased with how many people turned out for the protest.

"It's sobering our so-called leaders keep behaving the way they are, but we aren't going to go away.

"The turn-out has been fantastic so I think they [the leadership] will get the message, but I don't think they'll accept it. If they were for everyone then we wouldn't be here today, but our ultimate aim is for them to go."

The support for those protesting was clear in Taneatua with many trucks and cars passing the group tooting and cheering in support.

The protest comes after some Tuhoe hapū met in Whakatāne late last year to declare a vote of no confidence in the tribal leadership.

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Requests to TUT for comment went unanswered.

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