Bastion Point occupation commemorated
News release
10.05.08
Auckland - Thirty years ago, protesters faced off with 700 police, army, navy and the government over plans to develop
Ngati Whatua ancestral land at Bastion Point. This month on May 25, 2008 the protagonists will again meet to mark the
30th anniversary of that day in 1978 when 222 people were arrested in a massive show of force that has been called a
defining moment in New Zealand history.
Leader of the 1977 protest, Joe Hawke, has never regretted the decision to occupy the land to stop the government from
building high-rise housing at Bastion Point. “I went onto the Point, not to invite an arrest, but to arrest a wrong, and
30 years on, all of Ngati Whatua are benefiting from that stand”, he said.
He will be part of the events being planned for May 25 to commemorate that struggle, foster reconciliation and re-affirm
Ngati Whatua’s footprint on the land in Auckland, including a Remembrance and Reconciliation Ceremony being hosted at
Orakei Marae, led by former Governor-General Sir Paul Reeves.
Bastion Point events organizer Alec Hawke says the ceremony at the Marae will be open to all interested parties and
especially those who played a part in the Bastion Point story.
“We hope to bring together those that were arrested, representatives of the Police, the Army and Government members of
all parties, as well as many prominent Maori, Pakeha, and Pacific Islanders who played a role in supporting the Bastion
Point occupation. For Ngati Whatua o Orakei it will be a re-dedication of our ties to the land in Tamaki-Makarau, a
positive message of our successes and our place in Auckland today”, he said.
Leading up to that day there will be a series of events around the city to mark the anniversary. The Auckland City
Library is hosting a two-week display of archive materials such as posters, photographs and other material related to
the Bastion Point occupation. Several prominent photographers who documented the occupation and eviction from Bastion
Point are contributing their works from their private collections.
There will also be a series of podcast lectures through MANU AO network of Maori academics, hosted by the University of
Auckland, beginning with a panel discussion on Thursday, May 22. On May 23, there will be an Indigenous roundtable
discussion at the Marae to discuss and compare experiences on Indigenous participation in protected land management in
Australia and New Zealand. Maori Television is playing a 2-hour tribute on May 25 from 9pm -11pm.
ends