Thousands of people have joined a nine-day march towards New Zealand’s capital over a contentious bill redefining the country’s founding agreement between the British and the Indigenous Maori people.

New Zealand police reported that about 10,000 people marched through the town of Rotorua in protest against the Treaty Principles Bill on Friday, greeted by hundreds waving the Maori flag as they headed south to the capital, Wellington, some 450km (280 miles) away.

The march – or hikoi in the Maori language – is expected to reach Wellington on Tuesday, with participants staging rallies on their passage through towns and cities across the country after the bill passed its first parliamentary reading on Thursday.

The measure overhauls the 184-year-old Treaty of Waitangi, a document granting Maori tribes broad rights to retain their lands and protect their interests in return for ceding governance to the British. The document still guides legislation and policy today.

The ACT New Zealand party, a junior partner in the governing centre-right coalition government, last week unveiled the bill, which it had promised during last year’s election, arguing that those rights should also apply to non-Indigenous citizens.

The Maori people and their supporters say the bill threatens racial discord and undermines the rights of the country’s Indigenous people, who make up about 20 percent of its 5.3-million population.

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  • hexbee [she/her]
    ·
    5 hours ago

    Treaty of Waitangi, a document granting Maori tribes broad rights to retain their lands and protect their interests in return for ceding governance to the British

    This isn't even exactly true. When the brits first wrote this treaty, it had two versions - there was an english language version, which used something similar to those words ("ceding governance to the British"), and a scraped together Maori language version, which didn't contain the word "governance" because it wasn't a word or even a concept as such in the indigenous language. Therefore, when signing the treaty, the two parties had a very different idea of what they were signing. Now even this treaty, which secured terms favourable to the white devil through a trick, is not enough for the bloodthirsty settlers.

    It's heartening to see mobilisations such as this, however I hope the indigenous people of Aotearoa are able to build a more sustainable power base to fight for their interests as the liberal mask of the empire continues to slip.