Due to limited access to the building, the Auckland Information Office is available by appointment only. Please contact us by email at mlctamakimakaurau@justice.govt.nz
20 July 2023
MEDIA STATEMENT
E harikoa ana Te Tumu Whakawā i te kopounga o Te
Kaiwhakawā Matua hou o Te Kooti Whenua Māori
E harikoa ana Te Tumu Whakawā i te putanga mai o te pānui a te Minita Kairīwhi o
Te Puni Kōkiri, a te Hōnore Nanaia Mahuta, mō te kopounga o Kaiwhakawā Caren
Fox hei Kaiwhakawā Matua mō Te Kooti Whenua Māori.
On this page
Apply to remove or appoint committee members
Apply for an investigation into an incorporation Apply to remove or appoint committee members
Te tono ki te whakawātea i tētahi mema o te komiti (utu tāpae $228)
Apply to remove a committee member (filing fee $228)
Any shareholder of a Māori incorporation can apply to remove a committee of management member on the following grounds, they have:
failed to carry out their duties satisfactorily
breached any provisi...
I know this is a problem, and in my view primarily a matter of banks becoming educated in the Te TureWhenua Māori Act 1993. Another project which has just been launched on the Māori Land Online website by Te Puni Kōkiri and the Ministry of Justice is the Māori Land Geographic Information System (MLGIS) project.
Indeed, the owners all accept that I must resolve the issue in this instance”
Tikanga Māori is defined in Te TureWhenua Māori Act 1993 (the Māori Land Act) as “Māori Customary
rights and values”.
Apply online Download the application form Te tohu i ngā kaitiaki, ngā mema rānei o te komiti whakahaere
Trustees & committee members
Read about the roles and responsibilities of trustees and committee members.
A trust in terms of section 214 of Te TureWhenua Māori Act 1993, where interests
are held for the benefit of the descendants of a particular family member or tipuna.
4.
Only 17% of Māori knew how to speak te reo, only 5% of our children in schools could speak te reo, and furthermore, there were people of that time who declared there was no benefit in teaching te reo and no benefit in the continued survival of te reo Māori.
On this page
Dispute resolution service
The mediation process
What if a resolution is not reached? Ko te whakapapa te ara ki o mātua tupuna
It is your connections to each other that keep you connected to your ancestors Dispute resolution service
Our dispute resolution service is a free, voluntary, tikanga-based process where parties can resolve disputes related to Māori land confidentially, outside of a court setting.
In 2023, successors to the Hāwea-Wānaka block voted for interim representation, through a process facilitated by Te Arawhiti (Te Tari Whakatau) and Te Puni Kōkiri.