Two schoolgirls will present a petition to Parliament calling for a commemoration day for those killed in the New Zealand wars but Prime Minister John Key says a statutory holiday is unlikely unless New Zealand gives up one of its other public holidays.
Leah Bell and Waimarama Anderson started the petition at the start of the year and have since gathered more than 11,000 signatures, including that of the Maori King Tuheitia. The kingitanga was set up in the late 1850s to try to halt alienation of land, just before the battles between settlers and Maori in the Waikato in the 1860s.
The girls and about 200 Waikato school children have travelled to Parliament to present the petition to Hauraki-Waikato MP Nanaia Mahuta on Tuesday.
Teacher Lynda Campbell said the students from Otorohanga College were prompted into action after visits to battle sites in the Waikato last year. They were told kaumatua and kuia had tried to find a way to commemorate the land wars for some time without success.
"There was some sadness in that moment." She said Waimarama and Leah had decided to try for themselves. The ultimate goal was a national day of commemorations. "Whether that becomes a national holiday or not is up to the machinations of Parliament."