A win/win for culture,Kurt Meinicke and for the earth. It doesn't happen every day.
But following the longest-running litigation in the country's history, the Whanganui River in New Zealand (or Aotearoa's) North Island will be treated as a human being in the eyes of the law.
A group of Māori people known as the Whanganui Iwi have fought for their relationship with the river to be recognised by law (known to them as Te Awa Tupua), since the 1870s.
SEE ALSO: New Zealand is the hippest new escape plan for AmericansThe bill recognising the river passed on Wednesday, and Te Awa Tupua will now have all the corresponding rights, duties and liabilities of a legal person. The river can also now be represented in court.
"I know the initial inclination of some people will say it's pretty strange to give a natural resource a legal personality," Treaty Negotiations Minister, Chris Finlayson, told the New Zealand Herald.
"But it's no stranger than family trusts, or companies or incorporated societies."
The country's third-longest river, will be represented by one member from Whanganui Iwi and another from New Zealand's government.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"It responds to the view of the Iwi of the Whanganui River, which has long recognised Te Awa Tupua through its traditions, customs and practise," Finlayson said in a statement.
"This legislation recognises the deep spiritual connection between the Whanganui Iwi and its ancestral river and creates a strong platform for the future of Whanganui River."
As part of the deal, a financial redress of NZ$80 million ($56 million) is included in the settlement, while NZ$30 million ($21 million) will be placed in a health and wellbeing fund.
'Uptown Funk' is certified diamond, thanks to you, the internetStudy shows man likely killed by brutal boomerang 800 years agoIvanka Trump speaks out about her father's remarks toward womenHacking the presidential election just isn't possible (yet)J.K. Rowling delivers magical takedown of Donald Trump with a single tweetFuture MacBook may have a transforming E ink keyboard from SonderWall of taco trucks wages delicious protest outside of Trump's Vegas hotelDude advertises his mixtape on Wendy's sign, promptly gets firedBoth Clinton and Trump's college newspapers endorse . . . Hillary ClintonEminem's new track, 'Campaign Speech,' calls out Donald Trump and everything elseTravis Kalanick says Uber is becoming a 'robotics company'Shonda Rhimes drops the hammer on Trump in one badass tweetNew photo of Jupiter shows planet with huge smiley faceToday in Trump mockery: The return of the ‘shortDude advertises his mixtape on Wendy's sign, promptly gets firedLondoner leaves notes for strangers to make their commutes bearableObama's final state dinner came with pasta and Mario BataliLeBron James is already in midseason form and everyone in the NBA should be terribly afraidSomeone needs to tell Dwight Howard it's only the preseasonFuture MacBook may have a transforming E ink keyboard from Sonder Around 10,000 Amazon workers are striking just before Christmas The Dogs of Plaza Almagro by Hebe Uhart Redux: Mother for Whom the Whole Sky by The Paris Review Know Thyself by Meghan O’Gieblyn Bills vs. Steelers rescheduled NFL playoff game: New game time and how to watch Staff Picks: Sweaters, Sisters, and Sounds by The Paris Review Poets on Couches: Donika Kelly Reads Taylor Johnson by Donika Kelly Redux: The Vagaries of Taste Might Swerve by The Paris Review The complete list of winners at the 2024 Critics' Choice Awards Over Venerable Graves by Maria Stepanova OpenAI removes military and warfare prohibitions from its policies The Secret Identity of Janis Jerome by Michelle Orange Digital art sales aren't done. These Bitcoin artworks are going for thousands. Artifact news app is shutting down, one year post The Talents of the Saar Family by The Paris Review How to watch UFC's Walker vs. Ankalaev without cable: Schedule, streaming deals, and more Climbing Desolation Peak by Alison Bechdel Wordle today: The answer and hints for January 14 Redux: About You I Know Only the Weight of a Little Ink by The Paris Review Classic Literature as Fortune Cookie Fortunes by Jean
2.2284s , 8199.859375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Kurt Meinicke】,Information Information Network