Hands Off Our Tamariki : a Rally to Demand the Halting of State Abuse of Māori Tamariki And Whānau
In recent weeks Māori organisations, Iwi and collectives have sent an overwhelming message to government that they must
end the taking of tamariki Māori and give decision-making power and resources to hapū, iwi and Kaupapa Māori
organisations for the wellbeing of tamariki Māori, and keep Māori babies within whānau.
In just over a week a collective of these organisations along with concerned whānau, parents, academics, students and
communities will rally at Parliament to say #HandsOffOurTamariki.
Hands Off Our Tamariki take this stand as whānau, in the assertion of our cultural and collective obligation as
protectors of our tamariki and mokopuna.
Hands Off Our Tamariki stand in defence of our cultural right to defend and protect current and future generations.
Rally co-organiser Rihi Te Nana states, “Some Iwi have begun to monitor the impact of the Ministry of Children on whānau and are calling whānau to share their
experiences of interactions with the Ministry. Whānau Ora collectives have initiated an inquiry into the policies and
processes of the Ministry of Children in respect to the removal of Māori tamariki and the issues of abuse experienced by
Māori tamariki who are placed in State ‘care’. There are now numerous reviews or inquiries underway including the
Ministry review of the widely viewed process of attempted removal of a newborn from a Hawkes Bay hospital and various
forms of inquiry being led by the Children’s Commission Judge Andrew Beecroft; the Chief Ombudsman Judge Peter Boshier
and the Whānau Ora collective. This tells us that the failings of the Ministry is widely known across the sector. The
only ones that continue to defend the Ministry and its appalling record is the CEO Grainne Moss and Minister Tracey
Martin”.
Associate Professor Leonie Pihama also emphasises the failures of the Ministry stating, "It is clear this system is dysfunctional and we demand that the Ministry end their violent treatment of tamariki and
whānau. This is state sanctioned abuse. And we are not the only ones who recognised that the Ministry is woeful in the
care and wellbeing for tamariki. Iwi are stating it, Māori organisations are stating it. Health professionals are
stating it. The Children’s Commissioner is stating it. Judges are stating it. Academics are stating it. And Whānau have
been yelling it for generations."
For many years Māori have called for transformative and systemic change within the Ministry of Children and its
predecessors CYFS and the Department of Social Welfare. A critical report that has been raised by Māori consistently is
Puao-Te-Ata-Tū (1988). What is clearly evidenced for over 30 years is the failure of successive governments, Ministry’s
and their agencies to prioritise Māori needs and aspirations for the wellbeing of our tamariki and mokopuna.
In our Open Letter to the government, signed by almost 17,000 people, the Hands Off Our Tamariki Network has called for
the current government to put a stop to the punitive and bullying processes of the Ministry of Children in regard to the
removal of tamariki Māori. There is resounding evidence of the failure of the Ministry to listen to the needs of whānau
and of the denial of fundamental rights of whānau to make decisions about the well-being of their tamariki and mokopuna.
The Hands Off Our Tamariki Network continues to call for the resignation of both the CEO Grainne Moss and for the
Minister Tracey Martin to step down and strongly advocate for Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to step up and to take
seriously the calls by Māori for Kaupapa Māori solutions and approaches that are led by Māori for Māori. The current
system has actively shown itself to be abusive and incapable of providing for the needs of Māori whānau, our tamariki
and our mokopuna.
We also call for the Prime Minister to meet with Māori organisations, whānau, hapū and iwi to discuss Māori driven
solutions. That PM Ardern work with these organisations to support and resource the establishment of a Kaupapa Māori
practice model of service for our tamariki and whānau building on the strong network of Whānau Ora, Māori/Iwi Provider
networks, Te Kōhanga Reo, Kura Kaupapa Māori and Wānanga.
We note that the call for systemic changes and in particular the continued perpetration of institutional racism by the
State upon whānau is not only within the Ministry of Children but is a system wide issue. We have been informed of the
collusion of Family Court, the Police, the Ministry of Education, DHBs and other organisations with the Ministry of
Children in the removal of Māori tamariki. Reports undertaken over the past five years highlight the impact of systemic
racism across all sectors within this society.
If change is to happen for the well-being of Māori tamariki and their whānau then there must be a greater commitment to
meaningful and equitable Treaty relationships that enable and resource Kaupapa Māori approaches and solutions. This
includes a dismantling of all components of the existing system that fail to provide for Kaupapa Māori including a
significant shift in the education sector.
In particular there is urgent need for (i) change in the Social Work education which is currently dominated by western
frameworks of social work practice; (ii) a prioritisation of Kaupapa Māori education such as offered within the wānanga
sector; (iii) the removal of the Social Work Registration Board oversight of Māori social work training and (iv) the
establishment of a new Māori system of accreditation for Whanau Ora and Kaupapa Māori social service education.
The Hands Off Our Tamariki Rally against the removal of Māori tamariki and mokopuna will take place at Parliament on
July 30th. The rally will converge at the Cenotaph below Parliament at 12pm. The walk to Parliament will begin at 1pm.
The ‘Hands Off Our Tamariki’ Letter will be presented to Parliament at the rally. https://www.handsoffourtamariki.org.nz/
Commentators with experience of care for tamariki and whānau have agreed to speak and share their knowledge with the
rally. The rally will be facilitated by Leonie Pihama, Tere Harrison and Laura O’Connell Rapira.
Invited Speakers include (more to be announced this week):
Dame Tariana Turia
Paora Moyle
Prue Kapua
Alison Green
Khylee Quince
Des Ratima
Ripeka Ormsby
Annette Sykes
Rihi Te Nana
Jean Te Huia
Rally details are available here: https://www.facebook.com/events/410698589765993/