A hui at Waitangi today could finally start paving a way forward for Ngāpuhi’s 110 famously fractious hapū as they seek to settle their Treaty grievances with the Crown.
The independent hui comes just weeks after the Waitangi Tribunal released an almost 2000-page report detailing its findings from stage two of Te Paparahi o Te Raki — a years-long inquiry into Treaty breaches, land loss and military action suffered by Ngāpuhi between 1840 and 1900.
The tribunal went further than many expected by calling on the government to return all Crown-owned land in Ngāpuhi’s tribal area as well as paying significant compensation to allow the iwi to rebuild its economic base.
Even more challenging for the government, however, is a tribunal recommendation that the Crown starts talks with Māori about reworking the country’s constitutional framework to reflect the fact Ngāpuhi never ceded sovereignty.
The key finding of the bombshell stage one report from Te Paparahi o Te Raki, completed in 2014, was that Ngāpuhi chiefs did not give up their tino rangatiratanga, or sovereignty, when they signed the Declaration of Independence in 1835 or Te Tiriti five years later.