| North Island East
List of Reports
 Wai No
 |  Report/Purongo
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55 | Te Whanganui-a-Orotu Report Claim Wai 55, dealing with Te Whanganui-a-Orotu, or the Napier inner harbour, was lodged with the Tribunal in March 1988 by seven local hapu. It was granted urgency because leasehold sections in the claim area were about to be sold.
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| 55 | Te Whanganui-a-Orotu Report on Remedies When Wai 55, the Te Whanganui-a-Orotu Report was released, the Tribunal considered that it was inappropriate for it to make final recommendations on the issue of remedies, and it set aside a week in early November 1995 to hear submissions on that issue. In June 1998, the Tribunal released its report on remedies, which recommended that various lands in the claim area be returned to the claimants and that monetary compensation be paid.
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| 103 | Report on Roadman's Cottage, Mahia In May 1989, Pauline Tangiora lodged claim Wai 103 with the Tribunal seeking the return of five acres at Mahia owned by the Wairoa District Council and formerly used as a roadman’s cottage.
Report on Roadman's Cottage, Mahia
In May 1989, Pauline Tangiora lodged claim Wai 103 with the Tribunal seeking the return of five acres at Mahia owned by the Wairoa District Council and formerly used as a roadman’s cottage.
Report on Roadman's Cottage, Mahia
In May 1989, Pauline Tangiora lodged claim Wai 103 with the Tribunal seeking the return of five acres at Mahia owned by the Wairoa District Council and formerly used as a roadman’s cottage.
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| 119 | The Mohaka River Report 1992 The Mohaka River Report 1992 was the first report concerning Ngati Kahungunu and the East Coast. It was also one of the first of the Waitangi Tribunal's 'rivers reports'. The claim Wai 119 concerned the tino rangatiratanga of Ngati Pahauwera over the Mohaka River and was brought by the late Ariel Aranui, for himself and on behalf of Ngati Pahauwera, in January 1990.
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| 201 | The Mohaka ki Ahuriri Report 2004 The Tribunal's Mohaka ki Ahuriri Report was released on Saturday 5 June 2004. Wai 201 concerned the loss of Maori land through pre-1865 Crown purchases, the operation from 1865 of the Native Land Court, the 1867 Mohaka-Waikare confiscation, and later Crown purchasing (mainly conducted from 1910 to 1930). Secondly, they related to the barriers to the use and enjoyment of lands retained in Maori ownership in the greater Hawke's Bay area.
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| 692 | The Napier Hospital and Health Services Report The claims required the Tribunal to look at the historical context of hospital services in Napier from 1851 to 1940 and in particular the promise of a hospital to Ahuriri Maori in 1851. The Tribunal found that there was widespread and severe ill health, and the impact of introduced diseases, was a principle cause of the crisis of survival which saw a halving of the national Maori population during the half century after 1840. Ahuriri Maori did not escape, and in the 1930s their health status still lagged far behind that of Pakeha.
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| 814 | Turanga Tangata Turanga Whenua: The report on the Turanganui a Kiwa claims In the Turanga Tangata Turanga Whenua report, the Waitangi Tribunal found that the Crown breached the principles of the Treaty of Waitangi by: attacking a defensive pa at Waerenga a Hika in November 1865; deporting and detaining 123 prisoners on Wharekauri (the Chatham Islands) without charge or trial; executing between 86 and 128 unarmed prisoners at Ngatapa Pa in 1868, again without charge or trial; extracting the cession of 1.195 million acres under duress; and by confiscating, without legal authority, the property rights of hundreds of Turanga Maori ‘alleged’ to be rebels.
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| | Related Links | The printed versions of the Tribunal's reports can be ordered from most good bookstores or directly from the publishers - Legislation Direct |
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