The Deed of Settlement included cash and land valued at a total of $170 million.
Waikato–Tainui was the first iwi to reach an historical Treaty of Waitangi settlement with the Crown for injustices that went back to the wars and land confiscations (raupatu) of the 1860s. The agreement was a major landmark in New Zealand’s developing Treaty settlements process. As historian Richard Hill, who was involved in the negotiations as a member of the Treaty of Waitangi Policy Unit, later explained in his Maori and the state (2009):
The settlement was for some $150 million more than the government had been prepared to offer less than five years before. A mere six years before the signing, in fact, there were no state plans to supersede the 1946 agreement. Matters had, certainly in international terms, moved fast.
The agreement also included a formal apology from the Crown. Queen Elizabeth signed the Act that made the agreement law during her state visit later in 1995. Tainui established a commercial framework to manage its tribal assets and by 2008 Tainui Group Holdings and Waikato–Tainui Fisheries had assets of $496 million.
Read more on NZHistory
The Waikato-Tainui claim – The Treaty in practiceOverview – Māori King movement origins
External links
- Waikato Raupatu Claims Settlement Act 1995 (Parliamentary Counsel Office)
- Waikato tribes (Te Ara)
- Royal apology to Tainui (Te Ara)
How to cite this page
'Waikato-Tainui sign Deed of Settlement with the Crown ', URL: http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/page/waikato-tainui-sign-deed-settlement-crown, (Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated 14-Nov-2013
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