CITATION 1/ MOAI CROWN HAPU SOVEREIGNTY OF 21ST CENTURY HERE is - TopicsExpress



          

CITATION 1/ MOAI CROWN HAPU SOVEREIGNTY OF 21ST CENTURY HERE is correct CITATIONS, MOAI ROYAL BANK Legal CLAIMS & answers! (a) CITATION 135/ The Maori Financial Position today (b) CITATION 136/ The Trustees of the worlds biggest Bank are Prince Andrew of England and King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophia of Spain. (c) CITATION 137/ In 1844 Queen Victoria set up an Account whereby the NZ Government would pay taxes to the Queen for the right to occupy NZ. (d) CITATION 138/ Because they could not afford to pay the taxes (e) CITATION 139/ Governor Fitzroy waived the pre-emption clause to raise funds by selling land on the open market in breach of (f) CITATION 140/ Article 3 of the Treaty of Waitangi. This account was known as the Akaroa Bank. (g) CITATION 141/ The Queen deposits funds paid to her by the NZ Settlers Government for the right of occupation. (h) CITATION 142/ Governor Fitzroy overspent the fund so he was removed from office. (i) CITATION 143/ The NZ Settlers Government still pay taxes to the British Crown which are deposited in the London Branch of the BNZ before being transferred to the Akaroa Bank. (j) CITATION 144/ The interest was transferred to the New Zealand Reserve Bank, (k) CITATION 145/ however the Settler Government was using the fund without authority (l) CITATION 146/ so the Queen closed the account and only the interest goes to the Reserve Bank (m) CITATION 147/ which is now the Akaroa Bank and under the control of the Business Roundtable (n) CITATION 148/ that is, until Maori take back control of their own affairs by creating their own Government. (o) CITATION 149/ The Putea can only be accessed through a combination of 4 numbers held by 4 different people and known only to themselves. (((Continuation of CITATIONS 2 to 394)))King William IV High Court of Admiralty >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> CITATION 2/ Digital Maori March 3, 2013, 11:19 pm CITATION 3/ Maori Self Determination CITATION 4/ Tino Rangatiratanga O Te Iwi Maori CITATION 5/ The legal status of the NZ Settlers Government CITATION 6/ The NZ Government may not be a legally constituted body and therefore may not have the legal right to govern or to make laws. CITATION 7/ This is a constitutionally untenable situation for the Government, Parliament and the nation. CITATION 8/ The Government cannot lay claim to sovereignty that it does not have. CITATION 9/ Maori are the only true sovereigns in New Zealand. CITATION 10/ Maori sovereignty was established in 1835 CITATION 11/ at the signing of the Declaration of Independence CITATION 12/ and was not ceded to the Crown CITATION 13/ as the Government would have us believe. CITATION 14/ The truth behind the Government treaty myth needs clarification in order to bring out the truth. CITATION 15/ The purpose of the Treaty of Waitangi was to protect Maori from the problems of settler migration, CITATION 16/ particularly the problems associated with escaped convicts from Australia settling in New Zealand. CITATION 17/ Under the Treaty the Settlers were given the right of occupation and governance only CITATION 18/ so far as it would protect Maori sovereignty. CITATION 19/ – Kawanatanga for the protection of Rangatiratanga no more than that. CITATION 20/ Why would thousands of Maori cede their sovereign rights to a few hundred settlers as the Government would have us believe? CITATION 21/ The Treaty Grievance industry is nothing compared to the over inflated rights claimed by the Government. CITATION 22/ Article 1 of the Treaty ceded trusteeship of all Maori land to the Queen, her heirs and successors. CITATION 23/ Queen Elizabeth is the legal trustee of all Maori customary land in New Zealand where the native title has not been extinguished. CITATION 24/ Under Article 2 of the Treaty CITATION 25/ Queen Victoria guaranteed to Maori their sovereign right to the possession of all their lands, forests, fisheries and Taonga CITATION 26/ as the legal, equitable and beneficial owners. CITATION 27/ Article 2 reaffirmed Maori sovereignty as stipulated by articles 2 and 3 of the DOI (Declaration of Independence). CITATION 28/ Under the terms stipulated by the DOI, from 1835 to 1840 CITATION 29/ Maori had sovereignty over everyone living in Aotearoa NZ. CITATION 30/ It was this Kawanatanga that Maori exchanged to the Crown for the protection of Rangatiratanga. ‘ CITATION 31/ Article 3 of the Treaty gave the Queen the pre-emptive right (first right of purchase) to all Maori land in Aotearoa. CITATION 32/ To the present day the Queen has never purchased ANY MAORI LAND in Aotearoa NZ. CITATION 33/ Any land sold in Aotearoa NZ, is and has been in defiance of article 3 of the Treaty and therefore is deemed to have been sold illegally. CITATION 34/ The purchase of land must be negotiated with the Queen directly. CITATION 35/ Maori as beneficiaries cannot sell land, that right lies solely with the Queen as Maori trustee. CITATION 36/ Maori have never at any time lost their land, CITATION 37/ it is being illegally occupied CITATION 38/ – the present New Zealand Government as has every Government before lied to its own people in the biggest confidence trick in world history. CITATION 39/ All land in NZ is Maori Customary Land CITATION 40/ “deemed” to be Crown Land for certain purposes under Section 144 of Te Ture 93 and Articles 1 and 2 of the Treaty of Waitangi. CITATION 41/ The Treaty of Waitangi conferred the right of OCCUPATION CITATION 42/ not the right to govern other than for the protection of our sovereignty and independence. CITATION 43/ All laws passed by the Parliament of Westminster were directed at the NZ Government limiting their powers over Maori. CITATION 44/ They are not our laws. CITATION 45/ The Declaration, the Crown Feudal and Fiducial Title CITATION 46/ He Whakaputanga o Te Rangatiratanga o nga Uri o Nu Tirini – CITATION 47/ The New Zealand Declaration of Independence 1835 is a living document CITATION 48/ which is enshrined within Te Ture Whenua Maori – Maori Land Act 1993 part XIII. CITATION 49/ The Declaration declared Maori Sovereignty and Independence in CITATION 50/ Article 2.The rights of Tangata Whenua under the DOI are protected by the Treaty of Waitangi under Article II. CITATION 51/ The Declaration was originally included in Part 4 of the Maori Affairs Amendment Act 1967 CITATION 52/ however it was later amended by the Maori Affairs Department to favour the Government not Maori. CITATION 53/ There were two (2) Common Law documents in existence between the DOI and the TOW(Treaty of Waitangi) which have important ramifications for Maori. CITATION 54/ The first is the feudal title of the Crown which binds the Crown to the reciprocal obligations of service and defence in protection of the Maori people and their interests. CITATION 55/ The Crown guarantees to Maori in NZ protection against any threat to their interests or well being. CITATION 56/ This guarantee was issued under standing orders from Lord Glenelg to Major Burke Governor of NSW an administrator of NZ on behalf of the British Colonial Office. CITATION 57/ The second is the fiducial title of the Crown. CITATION 58/ The fiducial title places an obligation upon the Crown to exercise a high standard of care in the management of Maori lands, estates, resources and funds under Letters Patent issued to Governor Hobson by Lord Normanby. CITATION 59/ Constitutional Law in New Zealand CITATION 60/ NZ Constitution Acts 1846 and 1852 CITATION 61/ Section 9 and 10 of the 1846 NZ Constitution Act provided Maori, under Maori Customary Law, the right to self Government within their own native districts. CITATION 62/ For Maori laws to be recognised internationally CITATION 63/ the Queen issues Letters Patent, CITATION 64/ these laws then become part of the laws of England and the United Kingdom, CITATION 65/ they are then enforceable as New Zealand law. CITATION 66/ The 1846 NZ Constitution Act was created to preserve Article 2 of the TOW, CITATION 67/ for the preservation of Tino Rangatiratanga CITATION 68/ and to restrain the Government from any attempts to govern Maori. CITATION 69/ The existence of the 1846 NZ Constitution Act is not commonly known. CITATION 70/ Under the 1852 NZ Constitution Act the settlers were granted the right to self government. CITATION 71/ However, Section 71 legislated the Maori right of self government CITATION 72/ through Letters Patent, issued under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom, CITATION 73/ passed first into English law, then becoming legally enforceable under NZ law. CITATION 74/ 1858 Native Districts Regulations Act CITATION 75/ allowed for the appointment by Maori Government of Native Assessors – Justices of the Peace to provide jurisdiction in summary proceedings. CITATION 76/ 1858 Native Circuit Courts Act . CITATION 77/ Every court in NZ is legally required to have a Native Assessor present whenever a court sits. CITATION 79/ This is still law today. CITATION 80/ However in defiance of the Queen rights as Sovereign, the Privy Council and the Commonwealth of UK all NZ Settlers Parliaments have ignored this requirement. CITATION 81/ This is in effect a treasonable act. CITATION 82/ Maori have the legal right and entitlement to be represented equally alongside a Magistrate in every court in the land, CITATION 83/ this is the Queens law. CITATION 84/ The Queen has the rightful and legal ownership of NZ as Maori trustee CITATION 85/ and is the External Sovereign Head of Right to NZ CITATION 86/ whilst Maori are the Internal Sovereign Head of Right in NZ. CITATION 87/ These Acts were passed into English law by the Parliament of Westminster CITATION 88/ and are still legally binding on the New Zealand Settlers Parliament today. CITATION 89/ The 1986 NZ Constitution Act passed by the 4th Labour Government CITATION 90/ has no power to remove any statutory law passed by another Government. CITATION 91/ Where those Acts may not seem to exist in NZ Law, CITATION 92/ and that is debateable, they still exist in British law and are still legally binding on NZ. CITATION 93/ There has never been any loss of Maori land in New Zealand CITATION 94/ – only theft on a monumental scale by dishonest politicians CITATION 95/ It is the responsibility of the Crown defence forces (UK and NZ) CITATION 96/ under the feudal and fudicial title obligation to protect the Maori people. CITATION 97/ The Westminster Parliament (UK) is legally bound to activate the standing orders of Lord Glenelg to Major Burke CITATION 98/ and the Letters Patent issued by Lord Normanby in defence of Maori sovereign rights. CITATION 99/ The Crown Regent The Queen is kept informed of what is occurring in NZ socially, economically and politically through her Regents. CITATION 100/ At present there are three Regents appointed to New Zealand, CITATION 101/ David Singh, Cliff Whiting and Joseph Murphy (Hohepa Mapiria). CITATION 102/ These three Regents are directly responsible to the Queen and her Privy Council CITATION 103/ not to the New Zealand Settlers and Migrants Government CITATION 106/ With Maori being the minority in their own country and therefore disabled CITATION 107/ the Queens Regent has the status of representative of the Sovereign CITATION 108/ (us) at a legal level until such time as Maori are self Governing. CITATION 109/ The present Maori Queens Regent is Law Lord Hohepa Mapiria. (Joseph Murphy) CITATION 110/ Te Ture Whenua Maori – Maori Land Act 1993 CITATION 111/ Te Ture Whenua Maori – Maori Land Act 1993 is an Act of the Parliament of Westminster CITATION 112/ not the NZ Settlers Parliament. CITATION 113/ It is binding on both the Crown and the Settler Government. CITATION 114/ The words “shall”, “control” and “power” in part XIII allow Maori incorporations CITATION 115/ to add, alter, delete or replace any parts of the constitutions by which they are incorporated, CITATION 116/ under any provision of the Act or any regulations made under the Act or any enactment and the general law or to make changes, CITATION 117/ to add, alter, delete under special resolution any part of Te Ture Whenua Maori – Maori Land Act 1993. CITATION 118/ The Act reads; ”Te Ture Whenua Maori, Maori Land Act 1993, Section 2.Interpretation of the Act generally – CITATION 119/ 1. It is the intention of Parliament (Westminster) that the provisions of this Act shall be interpreted in a manner that best furthers the principals set out in the preamble to this Act. CITATION 120/ What is in the preamble to this Act, is Kawanatanga – Governorship for the protection of Rangatiratanga – Sovereignty. CITATION 121/ Te Ture provides the mechanism whereby Incorporations may create laws, statutes, regulations, or place limitations on existing laws within their own Native Districts (Waka Districts) Native Districts cover the whole country. CITATION 122/ Section 2, subsection 2 states: Without limiting the generality of subsection 1. CITATION 123/ It is the intention of Parliament (Westminster) that powers duties and discretions conferred by this Act shall be exercised, as far possible, CITATION 124/ in a manner that facilitates and promotes the retention, use, development and control of Maori land as Taonga Tuku Iho by Maori owners, their Whanau, Hapu and Descendents. CITATION 125/ In the Common Law case of Nireaha Baker vs Tamaki, the presiding Judge, Lord Davey decreed that the Crown lacked unreviewable prerogative power in relation to native title and that a Crown grant did not amount to extinguishment of native title. CITATION 126/ Therefore all land remains Maori customary land `deemed` Crown land for certain purposes. CITATION 127/ In the event of any conflict in meaning, Contra Preferentum prevails, the Maori version takes precedence. CITATION 128/ In the Maori version of the preamble the key word is “tika”. CITATION 129/ In section 144 the word `tika` meaning `to be` would translate to “Maori customary land, for the time being, deemed to be Crown Land. CITATION 130/ Under the Maori version, section 17 of the Te Ture Whenua Maori Amendment Act 1994 subsection 3 states that; CITATION 131/ A Maori Incorporation may by special resolution of the owners, CITATION 132/ alter, add to or replace its constitution in accordance with any provision of this Act or any regulations made under this Act. CITATION 133/ It is therefore legal under section 144 for an Incorporation CITATION 134/ to replace or alter the word `deemed` or to change the whole Act or portions of the Act under special resolution of each Incorporation relevant to that incorporation within their individual Rohe. CITATION 135/ The Maori Financial Position today CITATION 136/ The Trustees of the worlds biggest Bank are Prince Andrew of England and King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophia of Spain. CITATION 137/ In 1844 Queen Victoria set up an Account whereby the NZ Government would pay taxes to the Queen for the right to occupy NZ. CITATION 138/ Because they could not afford to pay the taxes CITATION 139/ Governor Fitzroy waived the pre-emption clause to raise funds by selling land on the open market in breach of CITATION 140/ Article 3 of the Treaty of Waitangi. This account was known as the Akaroa Bank. CITATION 141/ The Queen deposits funds paid to her by the NZ Settlers Government for the right of occupation. CITATION 142/ Governor Fitzroy overspent the fund so he was removed from office. CITATION 143/ The NZ Settlers Government still pay taxes to the British Crown which are deposited in the London Branch of the BNZ before being transferred to the Akaroa Bank. CITATION 144/ The interest was transferred to the New Zealand Reserve Bank, CITATION 145/ however the Settler Government was using the fund without authority CITATION 146/ so the Queen closed the account and only the interest goes to the Reserve Bank CITATION 147/ which is now the Akaroa Bank and under the control of the Business Roundtable CITATION 148/ that is, until Maori take back control of their own affairs by creating their own Government. CITATION 149/ The Putea can only be accessed through a combination of 4 numbers held by 4 different people and known only to themselves. CITATION 150/ The first 3 numbers are here in NZ. A form of chain reaction must take place before the number combinations can be activated. CITATION 151/ Many organisations in their greed have tried to access the Putea without success CITATION 152/ it can only happen under the conditions set by the Declaration of Independence 1835. CITATION 153/ In other words only Maori Incorporations have the right to access it and only when all 10 Waka have been filled. CITATION 154/ Lease monies paid to the Crown on behalf of the other 74 Commonwealth countries are also deposited into the fund. CITATION 155/ Since 1852 the NZ Settlers Parliament have also had to pay rent and taxes to the British Crown. This money is collected and deposited on behalf of Maori. CITATION 156/ The interest is paid into the Akaroa Bank CITATION 157/ and the principal into a Trust Fund administered by the Trustees. CITATION 158/ The principal sum is held in the United Nations and it is from this fund that the World Bank and the IMF borrow. CITATION 159/ The interest is administered by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and used by the NZ Government to support this countries infrastructure. CITATION 160/ It is Maori money that supports the NZ Economy. CITATION 161/ NB. The Putea is said to be worth approx 20 trillion dollars US. CITATION 162/ Before the Putea can be released Maori need to be a fully functioning entity under the mechanism set up under Te Ture ie. CITATION 163/ To be incorporated and readily identifiable entities to the British Crown. CITATION 164/ Sovereignty The Partnership has a sovereign interest throughout the Pacific Ocean. CITATION 165/ Section 11 of the Native Districts Regulations Act 1858 states;“Half –castes and other persons of mixed race living as members of any native tribe and all aboriginal natives of any of the Islands of the Pacific Ocean shall for the purposes of this Act be deemed to be persons of the “Native race”. CITATION 166/ Thus anyone living in NZ regardless of race is classed as a person of the native race. CITATION 167/ All indigenous peoples of the Pacific region are covered under Maori sovereignty. Under the terms of the Treaty and the 50/50 partnership between Maori and the Crown all indigenous peoples of the Pacific are sovereign in their own right. CITATION 168/ Tangata Whenua Maori must wake up and start taking their rightful place in the great society of nations. CITATION 169/ Only when Maori assert their sovereignty can we begin to address the worlds problems especially those being faced by the people of the Pacific. CITATION 170/ The estimated time by which Maori should have asserted their sovereignty is 2005. CITATION 171/ When this occurs the rest of the indigenous peoples of the Pacific will be free. CITATION 172/ Maori Incorporations and Te Ture. Maori Incorporations under statutory law have the same powers as Parliament. Dealing with the Settlers Parliament is deemed to be dealing with an artificial entity. CITATION 173/ When you deal with a Maori incorporation you are dealing with a natural person(s) and a natural body. CITATION 174/ Section 35 of Te Ture gives the same power to a Maori Land Court as a High Court. CITATION 175/ For instance Section 237 of Te Ture accords the MLC with the jurisdiction of the High Court. CITATION 176/ The High Courts jurisdiction is essentially only for Settlers because it is not a statutory body. CITATION 177/ But under section 150 of Te Ture, Maori Incorporations are independent statutory bodies over which not even the Maori Land Court has jurisdiction. CITATION 178/ The MLC is a Court of record only. The power of Te Ture is administered through the Incorporations. CITATION 179/ Sovereignty and Power are the domain of Incorporations. Through every Incorporation Maori can assert Independence, self Governance and self determination either individually or collectively without recourse to Settler law. CITATION 181/ Maori sovereignty in the 21st Century In order for Maori sovereignty to become fact, an Act of State has to occur. CITATION 180/ This happens when; CITATION 182/ • All ten Waka are filled. There are seven incorporations needed to fill each Waka. CITATION 183/ •A Maori Government is an identifiable entity. This is done through incorporations and the recognition of those incorporations by the Parliament of Westminster in the United Kingdom. CITATION 184/ •The Incorporation Common Seal confirms the status of each Incorporation as a legal body. CITATION 185/ •That the Seal is affixed to the incorporations documentation with CITATION 186/ •The Waka Districts Common Seal and CITATION 187/ •The Common Seal of the Upper House and General Assembly CITATION 188/ That is an Act of State. Acts of State come into existence when the whole nation passes them into law by Proclamation CITATION 189/ AN ACT OF STATE IS PASSED BY THE SOVEREIGN PEOPLE OF THE NATION.HOLDING MANA WHENUA, MANA TANGATA CITATION 190/ The entire Law Society of Incorporations are the Law makers – CITATION 191/ The power to make laws comes from the resolutions of the Incorporations. CITATION 192/ Once the Seal is affixed to documentation the Incorporation is then identifiable to the Crown. Letters Patent are issued making the resolutions Law in NZ. CITATION 193/ The DOI and Te Ture Article 1 of the Declaration of Independence was the union of our Tupuna and their land. CITATION 194/ They incorporated themselves and their lands to form The United Confederation of Tribes in statute under English Law. CITATION 195/ This has been re-enacted under Section 247 of Te Ture Whenua Maori Maori Land Act 1993. CITATION 196/ Article 2 of the Declaration affirmed their sovereignty to the land. This re-enactment is contained in Section 250 of Te Ture 93. CITATION 197/ Settler Government violations of Maori Rights since 1840 CITATION 198/ 1841 CITATION 199/ •Land Settlements Act: Lands not actually occupied by Maori were deemed to belong to the Crown. This was in direct contravention of Articles 2 and 3. CITATION 200/ 1844 CITATION 201/ •Governor Fitzroy removes the Crown right of pre-emption. With the removal of the pre-emption clause Fitroy sanctions the illegal right of land purchase to settlers. Fitroy was later removed for financial mismanagement. CITATION 202/ 1846 CITATION 203/ •Governor Grey abolishes the Protectorate Department giving Edward Gibbon Wakefields New Zealand Land Company the exclusive right of pre-emption in breach of Article 3. CITATION 204/ By 1852 in just 12 years the Crown had illegally taken over 32,000,000 acres of Maori land. Nearly half of all land owned by Maori had been taken in a “legally” sanctioned land grab. CITATION 205/ !852 CITATION 206/ •New Zealand Constitution Act The establishment of Provincial Government in New Zealand. Maori right to self Government defined under Section 71 of the Act. Provision for Maori self Government is ignored. CITATION 207/ 1859 CITATION 208/ •The illegal purchase of Ngati Awa land by Governor Grey in breach of Article 2 of Te Tiriti. CITATION 209/ By 1860 only 21,000,000 of the original 66,400,000 acres of Maori land was left. CITATION 300/ 1862 CITATION 301/ •Native Lands Act was designed to break down communal ownership of land, the legacy of which we are paying for now. CITATION 302/ Maori land ownership has become so fragmented it is of little use to most owners. CITATION 303/ It is this situation which Te Ture Whenua Maori, the Maori Land Court Act 1993 seeks to redress. CITATION 304/ 1863 CITATION 305/ •The Suppression of Rebellion Act. CITATION 306/ The removal of Maori right to trial under the Habeus Corpus Act. CITATION 307/ Maori imprisoned for defending their land ownership rights. CITATION 308/ Another 3,000,000 acres land grab as punishment for rebelling against the Government. CITATION 309/ 1864 CITATION 310/ •All remaining land reserved for Maori was placed under Government control. CITATION 311/ 1865 CITATION 312/ •Native Land Court Maori were forced to wait months to appear before the Native Court to validate land claims. CITATION 313/ Failure to appear gave the Court the right to take the land. CITATION 314/ Many Maori preferred to lose their land rather than go through the humiliating process of having to appear in court. CITATION 315/1866 CITATION 316/ •Oyster Fisheries Act Prevented Maori from setting up Commercial Oyster Fisheries forcing most Maori Commercial fishing enterprises into bankruptcy. CITATION 317/1867 CITATION 318/ •Maori Representation Act Four Maori seats established in Parliament. CITATION 319/ A response to Pakeha fears that Maori, who by this time had a majority under the property ownership qualification clause of the 1852 Constitution Act could gain a majority in Government. CITATION 320/ 1871 CITATION 321/ Government stipulation that English had to be taught in all schools. CITATION 322/ This almost led to the extinction of the Maori Language. CITATION 323/ Maori children were routinely punished for speaking Maori at school. CITATION 324/ 1877 CITATION 325/ •The Bishop of Wellington v Wi Parata – the infamous Prendergast decision. Judge Prendergast CITATION 326/ declares the Treaty to be a nullity CITATION 327/ believing Maori to be intellectually incapable of signing a Treaty. CITATION 328/ Another example of the Colonial arrogance that was rife at the time. CITATION 329/ 1879 CITATION 330/ •Greys amendment makes it easier for small farmers to acquire Maori land. CITATION 331/ 1879 CITATION 332/ •Peace Preservation Bill Maori were given 1 years hard labour for refusing to vacate their homes. CITATION 333/ 1880 CITATION 334/ •Maori Prisoners Act 200 Maori imprisoned without trial for an indefinite period for trying to prevent the surveying of confiscated land. CITATION 335/ 1880 CITATION 336/ •West Coast Settlements Act Taranaki Maori could be arrested without warrant and jailed for 2 years with hard labour for building anything or hindering the surveying of any property. CITATION 337/ 1881 CITATION 338/ •Native Reserves Act The control of Maori reserve land taken by the Public Trustee. CITATION 339/ 1881 CITATION 340/ •Parihaka – The infamous invasion of Parihaka. CITATION 341/ 2500 troops attack the people of Parihaka and arrest the prophet Te Whiti. CITATION 342/ 1886 CITATION 343/ •Native Lands Administration Act CITATION 344/ The government of the day rejects the traditional right of communal ownership CITATION 345/ forcing Maori land to be placed in the hands of trustees CITATION 346/ who had the right to sell. CITATION 347/ 1886 CITATION 348/ • Te Whiti re-arrested under the West Coast Preservation Act and jailed for 3months without trial. CITATION 349/1887 CITATION 350/ •Native Land Act Bastion Point appropriated for ‘defence’ purposes. CITATION 351/ 1893 CITATION 352/ •Native Land Purchase Act was passed to speed up the further purchase of Maori Land. CITATION 353/ 1894 CITATION 354/ •Advances to Settlers Act. Low interest loans made available to settlers to buy land from the Government. CITATION 355/ Loans for development of land and farms were not available to Maori. CITATION 356/ Validation of Invalid Land Claims Act. Any Pakeha misdealings concerning Maori Land were legitimised. CITATION 357/ Maori Land Settlements Act CITATION 358/ •Maori land placed under the control of Land Councils on which there was no Maori representation. CITATION 359/ The white population had increased along with their desiref or land. CITATION 360/ 1897 CITATION 361/ • 92 Maori arrested and imprisoned for protesting against the Public Trustee control of their lands. CITATION 362/1903 CITATION 363/ •Parliament reaffirms Judge Prendergasts ruling on the nullity of the Treaty. CITATION 364/1905 CITATION 365/ •Native Councils abolished to speed up the Governments land grab process. CITATION 366/ 1905-1908 CITATION 367/ •Three more years of amendments to the Native Land Act to force further sales of Maori land. CITATION 368/ 1908 CITATION 369/ •Tohunga Suppression Act. Penalties imposed including the threat of jail for any Maori Tohunga who practiced Rongoa Maori or who taught Maori spirituality. CITATION 370/ 1909 CITATION 371/ •Maori Health Act made it illegal for Maori women to breastfeed their babies. The whangai system of Maori adoption was outlawed to prevent Maori from adopting Pakeha children. CITATION 372/ 1918 CITATION 373/ Maori returned servicemen ineligible for the armed forces Rehabilitation Scheme. The scheme was only available to Pakeha. CITATION 374/ 1920 CITATION 375/ By 1920 the New Zealand Government had taken 62,000,000 acres of Maori land. CITATION 376/ 1953 CITATION 377/ •Maori land not being occupied or used was declared waste land and taken by the Government. CITATION 378/ Town and Country Planning Act prevented Maori from building on their land forcing many Maori into the cities. CITATION 379/ 1960 CITATION 380/ The Hunn Report Civil servant Jack Hunn recommends the speeding up of the assimilation process a process which by its very nature would have seen the end of Maori as a culture and as a race. CITATION 381/ The establishment of Kohanga Reo in the 1970’s and the late remergence of Kurakaupapa CITATION 382/ Maori began the Maori Renaissance which subverted the assimilaton agenda. CITATION 383/ 1967 CITATION 384/ •Maori Affairs Amendment Act gives the Maori Trustee the power to ask individuals to sell communal owned land to the Government. Land with fewer than 4 owners had to be put under 1 title. CITATION 385/ 1967 CITATION 386/ •Ratings Act illegally made Maori customary land subject to rates. CITATION 387/ 1986 CITATION 388/ •The introduction of the fisheries quota system breaches article 2 of the Treaty. CITATION 389/ Remember incorporate. CITATION 390/ If you desire to see the return of this country to its rightful owners then you must incorporate, CITATION 391/ either as Hapu or simply as a Whanau Incorporation. CITATION 392/ In order for an Incorporation to have sovereign status it must be done in accordance with Te Ture Whenua Maori Maori Land Act 1993/1995 CITATION 393/ To be put in contact with someone who can guide you through the process of establishing your Incorporation.15% shareholding collectively is required to establish a Hapu Incorporation. CITATION 394/ This information is taken from and interview with Joseph Murphy (Hohepa Mapiria). One of the three Regents who are directly responsible to the Queen and her Privy Council.https://facebook/pages/MOAI-ROYAL-BANK/473660489402605?ref=ts&fref=ts
Posted on: Tue, 22 Jul 2014 03:47:03 +0000

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