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20.04.10

NZ. Editorial: Small step at UN is big on symbolic value

Categories: New Zealand

When the previous Labour Government was confronted with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, it quailed.

The potential political backlash, rather than the practical outcome of signing a non-binding document, was uppermost in its mind.

 


Pita Sharples (far right) said NZ's signature restored the mana and moral authority of Maori to speak in international forums on justice, rights and peace matters. Photo / Supplied

 


At its behest, New Zealand joined a group of only four UN members opposed to the declaration. It was a nonsensical state of affairs for a country whose record on indigenous rights is far superior to the vast majority of those who had signed up.

It also placed even greater distance between Labour and the Maori Party, for which the declaration has a strong symbolic significance.

That was never a state of affairs likely to be replicated under John Key, the pragmatist.

If, as Labour suggested, the declaration was fundamentally incompatible with New Zealand's constitutional and legal systems, the task was to negate this. Duly, a way has been found.

A rider has been attached to this country's statement of support reaffirming "the legal and constitutional frameworks that underpin New Zealand's legal system" and noting that those existing frameworks define "the bounds of New Zealand's engagement with the declaration".

This has enabled the Prime Minister to say that signing up to the document, as announced by Maori Affairs Minister Pita Sharples at the UN, would have no practical effect.

There would, in particular, be no change in terms of the process used to resolve Treaty of Waitangi claims. But it was, he said, a "small but significant step" in building better relationships between Maori and the Crown.

Dr Sharples, for his part, saw an end to a situation that had been "a great disappointment" to Maori under the previous Government.

The Maori Party co-leader said New Zealand's signature restored the mana and moral authority of Maori to speak in international forums on justice, rights and peace matters.

If so, that is a worthwhile gain. Equally, New Zealand has enhanced its authority and credibility in this area.

Such possibilities seemed to elude the previous Government, which saw only obstacles. It fretted over a variety of matters, not least the declaration's provisions on redress and compensation for indigenous peoples.

It seemed not much fussed about finding a way to make these consistent with the mechanisms for settling treaty claims.

 

FUENTE

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10639715

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