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New Zealand’s Mount Taranaki gets same legal rights as a person

A settlement according to which Mount New Zealand was granted the same legal right because the person became law after years of negotiations.

This means Tranaki Monga [Mt Taranaki] He will have itself effectively, with representatives of local tribes, IWI, and the government that works together to manage it.

The agreement aims to compensate for Maori from the Tranaki region for the injustice that was made to them during colonialism – including widespread land confiscation.

“We must recognize the harm that resulted in past errors, so that we can look at the future to support IWI to achieve their aspirations and opportunities,” said Paul Goldsmith, Minister of Government in charge of negotiations.

The TARANAKI MAUUGA Collective Bill in Law by the New Zealand Parliament on Thursday – with the mountain giving a legal name and protecting the summits and the surrounding lands.

It also gets to know the global Mauritage view that natural features, including mountains, are ancestors and beings.

“Today, Tranaki, our Mondaga [mountain]We have Monta Topona [ancestral mountain]Deby Narura Bakr, political commander Ti Patery Maori, said: [the Māori Party].

NargeWa-Packer is among the eight TARANAKI IWI, on the western coast of New Zealand, which is the mountain sacred.

Hundreds of Maori from the region appeared in Parliament on Thursday to see the bill becomes a law.

The mountain will not be officially known as EGMONT – which was called by the British explorer James Cook in the eighteenth century – and instead it is called Taraki Maunga, while the surrounding national park will also get its name Maori.

Aisha Campbell, who is also from Tranaki Euyi, told 1news that it is important for her to be in this event, and that the mountain “is what connects us and what connects us to each other.”

TARANAKI MAUUGA’s settlement is the latest access to Māori in an attempt to provide compensation for the violations of the Waitangi Treaty – which has established New Zealand as a country and given indigenous people certain rights in their lands and resources.

The settlement also came with an apology from the government to confiscate Mount Taranaki and more than a million acres of land from local Maori in the 1960s.

Paul Goldsmith admitted that “the violations of the treaty means that the massive and compound damage was caused to Whānau [wider family]Hap [sub-tribe] And IWI of Taraanaki, causing unbearable damage for many decades. ”

He added that it was agreed that reaching the mountain will not change and that “all New Zealands will be able to continue visiting this wonderful place for generations and enjoying it for future generations.”

The mountain is not the first natural feature in New Zealand that is granted a legal personality.

In 2014, the original Urewera forest became the first to gain this situation, followed by the WHANGANUI River in 2017.

https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1024/branded_news/9835/live/4119f730-df16-11ef-a75f-9dd268073925.jpg

2025-01-30 22:12:00

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