Journalism Schools Stage Combined Hui
ROTORUA, NZ (AUT Journalism/Pacific Media Watch): New Zealand's Maori journalism school and the country's largest media
course have combined for a two-day hui (workshop) at the Waiariki Institute of Technology's Tangatarua marae.
More than 100 student journalists gathered at Rotorua for the hui, many of them attending or reporting on the hikoi
(march) to Parliament protesting at the government's proposed seabed and foreshore legislation.
Associate Maori Affairs Minister Tariana Turia yesterday announced her resignation from the Labour government in protest
over the legislation, saying a new Maori political movement had been born. She was immediately stripped of her
portfolios by Prime Minister Helen Clark.
The workshop combined journalism students from Waiariki Journalism School, which teaches a national diploma in
journalism designed for Maori media work, and Auckland University of Technology's School of Communication Studies final
year journalism students.
A former Fiji Times reporter and a Sri Lankan international student were among the AUT students on the marae.
Resource people included Maori tourism entrepreneur Doug Tamaki, co-owner of Tamaki Tours; Bay of Plenty MP Tony Ryall;
head of Waiariki's School of Maori Studies Ngahi Bidois; Wena Harawira, of the Maori Journalists Organisation (KTR); and
Dr Jill Chrisp and Marama Davidson of the Human Rights Commission.
Workshop facilitators Annabel Schuler (Waiariki) and Dr David Robie (AUT) hope that the cooperation between the two
institutions will lead to regular combined workshops in future.
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