New Zealandās parliament has erupted into fiery debate, personal attacks and a haka over a controversial bill that proposes to radically alter the way New Zealandās treaty between MÄori and the crown is interpreted.
The treaty principles bill was tabled by the libertarian Act party ā a minor partner in New Zealandās coalition government ā and passed its first reading on Thursday, amid scathing speeches and disruptions.
A vote on the bill was momentarily suspended, when opposition parties and people in the public gallery joined in a haka (MÄori dance or challenge), led by the Te PÄti MÄori MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke, who proceeded to rip up a copy of the bill.
The bill seeks to remove a set of well-established principles that has flowed from New Zealandās founding document, the treaty of Waitangi ā an agreement signed in 1840 between more than 500 MÄori chiefs and the crown, and which is instrumental in upholding MÄori rights.
The principles of the treaty have been developed over 50 years by courts, tribunals and successive governments to help guide the relationship between MÄori and ruling authorities and iron out differences in interpretations over the English and MÄori texts of the original treaty. Many principles have been developed and continue to evolve, but the most recognised are broadly defined as participation, partnership, protection, and redress.
They have been used in efforts to revitalise the MÄori language, including making it an official language, and were used to establish a MÄori health authority to reverse poor health outcomes for MÄori, which the coalition government dismantled this year.
Critics of the bill say Actās proposal undermines the treaty and its principles, which they believe threaten MÄori rights and promote anti-MÄori rhetoric.
MÄori members of New Zealandās parliament disrupted the passage of a bill that would reinterpret the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, which uplifts Indigenous peoples. The MPs performed a hakaāa traditional MÄori dance and chantācausing the session to be suspended.
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