4 February 2013
Maori flag to fly at Rotorua Civic centre on Waitangi Day
Rotorua District Council (RDC) is to fly a Maori flag alongside the New Zealand flag at the council Civic Centre on
Waitangi Day this week.
However it will be the ‘Independence Flag of the Confederated Hapu of New Zealand’ which dates back to 1835, and not the
more recent Tino Rangatiratanga flag.
The decision follows a recommendation made to RDC this morning (Monday 4 February) at a meeting of the council’s Te
Arawa Standing Committee.
The flag selected to fly this year on Waitangi Day is an interim measure only until a permanent flag is designed by Te
Arawa for use on future Waitangi Days.
A decision on what flag will fly in coming years has been left in the hands of Te Pukenga Koeke o Te Arawa, the group of
Te Arawa kaumatua which advises the council on cultural matters.
It is understood that Te Pukenga Koeke is mounting a design competition among schools to identify a flag that can
specifically represent Te Arawa people.
Te Arawa Standing Committee chairman and Rotorua mayor Kevin Winters said the choice of flag to be flown on the Civic
Centre was a decision for Te Arawa.
“In 2011 the council accepted in principle a request for a Maori flag to be flown at the Civic Centre on Waitangi Days
as acknowledgement of the partnership between Maori and the council in Rotorua.
“But we left the choice of flag to Te Arawa themselves to determine. While there were some who wanted the Tino Rangatira
flag selected, others among Te Arawa were equally adamant that that particular flag was unacceptable to them. There
needed to be a strong consensus and that did not appear to be the case by the time Waitangi Day came around last year.
“The decision by the Te Arawa Standing committee this week is a pragmatic one involving some compromise in the interim
until local iwi can come up with a more permanent solution for future years.
“We’re hopeful that by Waitangi Day in 2014 Te Arawa will have designed a unique flag that can be widely embraced by
Maori as representing Te Arawa,” said Mr Winters. “We look forward to flying that new flag on the Civic Centre next year
to acknowledge the place of Te Arawa in our history, their role in governance of our district today, and the continuing
partnership into our future.”
The Independence Flag of the Confederated Hapu that will fly this week on the Civic centre as a temporary measure was
used to welcome pakeha to Te Arawa country in the early 1800s and flew on the first ship to export produce from New
Zealand to Australia.
ENDS