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Labour MP Objects to Politicised Pasefika

Labour Party

Monday 15 March 2010, 10:42AM

By Labour Party

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AUCKLAND

Labour MP Objects to Auckland City Council’s Blatant Breach of Political Neutrality at Pasefika Festival

Auckland City Council officials have woefully breached political neutrality by issuing instructions to Pasefika village organisers that Labour MPs not be allowed on the main village stages, says Labour MP for Mangere Su’a William Sio.

It was embarrassing and humiliating to see our people treated with such contempt by this council, says Su’a William Sio.

“In all my years of attending the Pasefika Festival, this is the first time it has ever happened.

In this Festival, it should be Pacific people, not a National-led government, that dictates who can stand up and speak at Pasefika.

“My heart goes out to the village organisers who were visibly uncomfortable carrying out these orders

“We (Labour MPs including Carmel Sepuloni, Chris Carter, Carol Beaumont, Jacinda Ardern,) were aghast at what was happening.

“I will be making my objections very clear on this matter to Auckland City Council and its Organising Committee.

“As an electorate MP, I represent a constituency with one of the largest Pacific populations. We come here to celebrate our cultures. It is our Pacific custom to get up on stage and offer our gratitude, encouragement and support to the wider Pacific communities.”

Some village stages, such as Tokelau, Fiji, Tuvalu and Tahiti, kept to Pacific etiquette and protocol and invited us on stage.

“But I could tell village organisers were torn between following proper Pacific protocols, or adhering to the instructions of a National-led Auckland City Council and its sensitivities about seeing Labour MPs at our own Pasefika community events.”

“As one of the Pacific MPs, I said to one of the organisers, after they had informed me of the instruction from council: ‘how can you let them do that to Pacific people here? These are Pacific villages, these belong to Pacific communities, not them’, referring to the National-dominated Auckland City Council led by Mayor John Banks.

“This council, led by National’s John Banks, are already acting out the model of autocratic leadership that we don’t want in a SuperCity, says Su’a who sits on the Auckland Governance Legislation Select Committee reviewing the super city bills before the House and the hundreds of public submissions.

“This is a small, but significant, example of how power concentrated in the hands of one individual, such as the Mayor, can lead to abuses like this.

“Today’s example at the Pasefika Festival abused the goodwill of Pacific people and council and village organisers need to take heed, says Su’a who is also a Samoan matai.

Pasefika organisers say the reason for the ban was that Auckland City Council did not want politics discussed at the Festival.

Yet that ban on talking politics, in practice, only applied to Labour Party MPs, says Su’a.

From 1pm, National Party MPs, including Prime Minister and Auckland City Mayor John Banks were taken from stage to stage making political announcements and promoting National Party MPs on villages main stage.