Post by Kiwi Frontline on Jul 13, 2017 17:21:54 GMT 12
FONTERRA CATCHES THE MAORI SEPARATISM BUG SAYS NZ FIRST
New Zealand First is accusing Fonterra of catching the Maori separatist bug by employing Tiaki Hunia as its new general manager: Māori strategy and just over a month after Mr Hunia was announced by Minister Flavell as the supposed head of the Maori Land Service.
“Is Tiaki Hunia the world’s shortest employed public servant?” says New Zealand First Leader and Northland MP Rt Hon Winston Peters.
“In six weeks, Mr Hunia has gone from the newly appointed head of the Maori Land Service to Fonterra’s newly minted general manager: Māori strategy.
“It proves what chaos it is under Māori Development Minister Te Ururoa Flavell, who’d appointed Mr Hunia before his Te Ture Whenua Māori Bill had passed. Yet Mr Hunia has done ‘Māori Development’ of his own and could be joining Fonterra’s $500,000 plus club.
“Why on earth is Fonterra going down this Māori separatist rabbit hole?....
auckland.scoop.co.nz/2017/07/fonterra-catches-the-maori-separatism-bug-says-nz-first/
Another article in the same vein > WINSTON PETERS GOES ON ATTACK AGAINST FREEDOM CAMPERS
Peters also launched a new attack on the Green Party after Metiria Turei's comment that NZ First had racist policies and Peters had made racist remarks about Muslims and terrorists.
He said it was not racist to question high immigration levels or policies that created a separate system for Maori and others.
He said the Greens promoted separatist policies, such as Maori ownership of water.
He also took aim at National, accusing it of ''separatism by stealth" by putting up Resource Management Act amendments which require councils to consult with iwi over what role they have, and reaching Treaty settlements which gave iwi a stake in local resources and management.
One of those was the recent Tuwharetoa settlement in the Taupo region.
He said the Government's version of the Seabed and Foreshore Act - the Takutai Moana Act - was also trouble in the waiting, saying hundreds of claims had been made to rights over the coastline.....
www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11889684
New Zealand First is accusing Fonterra of catching the Maori separatist bug by employing Tiaki Hunia as its new general manager: Māori strategy and just over a month after Mr Hunia was announced by Minister Flavell as the supposed head of the Maori Land Service.
“Is Tiaki Hunia the world’s shortest employed public servant?” says New Zealand First Leader and Northland MP Rt Hon Winston Peters.
“In six weeks, Mr Hunia has gone from the newly appointed head of the Maori Land Service to Fonterra’s newly minted general manager: Māori strategy.
“It proves what chaos it is under Māori Development Minister Te Ururoa Flavell, who’d appointed Mr Hunia before his Te Ture Whenua Māori Bill had passed. Yet Mr Hunia has done ‘Māori Development’ of his own and could be joining Fonterra’s $500,000 plus club.
“Why on earth is Fonterra going down this Māori separatist rabbit hole?....
auckland.scoop.co.nz/2017/07/fonterra-catches-the-maori-separatism-bug-says-nz-first/
Another article in the same vein > WINSTON PETERS GOES ON ATTACK AGAINST FREEDOM CAMPERS
Peters also launched a new attack on the Green Party after Metiria Turei's comment that NZ First had racist policies and Peters had made racist remarks about Muslims and terrorists.
He said it was not racist to question high immigration levels or policies that created a separate system for Maori and others.
He said the Greens promoted separatist policies, such as Maori ownership of water.
He also took aim at National, accusing it of ''separatism by stealth" by putting up Resource Management Act amendments which require councils to consult with iwi over what role they have, and reaching Treaty settlements which gave iwi a stake in local resources and management.
One of those was the recent Tuwharetoa settlement in the Taupo region.
He said the Government's version of the Seabed and Foreshore Act - the Takutai Moana Act - was also trouble in the waiting, saying hundreds of claims had been made to rights over the coastline.....
www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11889684