Key Points
- Three New Zealand MPs have been suspended for performing a haka in parliament.
- They claim they have been punished for being Māori.
- A parliamentary privelege commitee had recommended the suspension.
New Zealand’s parliament agreed on historically lengthy suspensions for three Indigenous MPs who last year performed a haka, a traditional Māori dance, disrupting the reading of a controversial bill.
A parliamentary privileges committee in May recommended the suspension of the three Te Pāti Māori parliamentarians for acting in “a manner that could have the effect of intimidating a member of the house”.
The three performed the haka last November ahead of a vote on a controversial bill that would have reinterpreted a 185-year-old treaty between the British and Indigenous Māori that still guides the country’s policy and legislation.
The government voted through the suspensions, which will see Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi stand down from parliament for 21 days, and representative Hana-Rāwhiti Maipi-Clarke for seven days.
While the members are suspended, they will not be paid or be able to vote on legislation.
They have been “punished for being Māori”, Ngarewa-Packer told the BBC.
“We take on the stance of being unapologetically Māori and prioritising what our people need or expect from us.”
Maipi-Clarke told parliament ahead of the vote that the suspension was an effort to stop Māori from making themselves heard in parliament.
“Are our voices too loud for this house? Is that the reason why we are being silenced?”
“Are our voices shaking the core foundation of this house? The house we had no voice in building … We will never be silenced and we will never be lost,” she said.
Suspending politicians is rare in New Zealand’s parliament with only three members suspended in the past 10 years, according to New Zealand parliamentary services.
Before Thursday, the longest suspension was for three days, according to New Zealand representatives who spoke earlier in the day.
Judith Collins, who heads the privileges committee and serves as attorney-general, had previously told parliament that the haka forced the speaker to suspend proceedings for 30 minutes and that no permission had been sought to perform it.
“It’s not about the haka … it is about following the rules of parliament that we are all obliged to follow and that we all pledged to follow,” Collins said.
The opposition Labour party called for a compromise and proposed censure instead of suspension.
Labour considers the suspension to be “inconsistent with the fundamental nature of this democracy,” Labour parliamentarian Duncan Webb said on Thursday.
“This decision is wildly out of step with any other decision of the privileges committee,” said Webb.