A/HRC/18/35/Add.4
claimant group or one of its members from pursuing modern claims against the Crown.
However, Maori express serious concern about the lack of independent and impartial
oversight of the settlement outcomes. This lack of independent review contributes to a
feeling on the part of Maori of an imbalance of power in the settlement process, as well as a
feeling that the settlement process is at times unfair.
42.
The Special Rapporteur understands that there are many difficulties and
complexities involved in the Government’s laudable effort to provide redress for historical
grievances through negotiated Treaty settlement. Nevertheless, the aforementioned
concerns have fomented an uneasiness and mistrust by Maori of the Treaty settlement
process, which may have negative implications for achieving the important goals of redress
and reconciliation that the process is designed to advance. The Special Rapporteur observes
that increasing Maori participation in and influence over settlement policies, procedures,
and outcomes could go a long way in alleviating the apparent discontent in the Treaty
settlement process felt by Maori groups.
D.
Settlements and outstanding cases
43.
There have been several noteworthy settlements reached by specific iwi groups as
well as pan-Maori settlements. Among these is the fisheries case, which took years to settle
and followed a 1992 report by the Waitangi Tribunal in the Ngai Tahu fisheries claim.27
The settlement provides Maori with an interest in half of New Zealand’s largest fishing
company and allocates Maori with 23 per cent of the existing fishing quota, plus 20 per cent
of all fishing quota issued in the future. Another example is the Commercial Aquaculture
Claims Settlement Act of 2004 (No. 107), under which the Crown will provide Maori with
the equivalent of 20 per cent of aquaculture space in the coastal marine area. While there
have been some controversial aspects of these settlements, most notably that all present and
future claims to commercial fishing and commercial aquaculture sites are considered fully
settled, overall, these settlements have already provided significant benefits to the Maori as
a whole and are expected to continue to do so in the future.
44.
The Special Rapporteur was also informed about several cases that are pending
before the Waitangi Tribunal or the subject of settlement negotiations with the Crown.
Many of these pending cases entail difficult challenges to settlement that are yet to be
overcome, as exemplified by the following cases:
(a)
Whanganui iwi. In 1999, following a claim lodged by the Whanganui iwi,
the Waitangi Tribunal issued the Whanganui River Report, recommending to the
Government that “the authority of [the iwi] in the Whanganui River should be recognized
in appropriate legislation. It should include recognition of the [iwi] right of ownership of
the Whanganui River, as an entity and as a resource, without reference to the English legal
conception of river ownership in terms of riverbeds”.28 In September 2009, the Whanganui
entered into settlement negotiations with the Government over the Whanganui River. The
iwi are seeking to co-manage the river in partnership with local councils and government
agencies, in a way that benefits the cultural, environmental, social, political, and economic
development of the iwi;
(b)
Ngati Tuhoe. Tuhoe is one of the largest iwis, comprising some 32,670
people, and is also one of the poorest iwi communities in New Zealand, scoring at the
27
28
“Ngi Tahu Sea fisheries report, Wai-27” (Wellington, Brooker and Friend, 1992).
Wai 167, The Whanganui River Report, p. 343.
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