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| A statue of Captain Cook stands in Sydney's Hyde Park (AFP Photo/WILLIAM WEST) |
Britain's top diplomat in New Zealand made a low-key "expression of regret" to Maori on Wednesday over deadly clashes that occurred when Captain James Cook's arrived in New Zealand 250 years ago.
British
High Commissioner Laura Clarke travelled to the North Island town of Gisborne
for a ceremony with the Maori iwi, or tribes, who Cook met when he landed in
October 1769.
The
explorer's arrival sparked a series of skirmishes in the following days that
resulted in nine deaths and is still recalled with anger by locals.
In a
statement posted on its Facebook page, the Rongowhakaata Iwi Trust said the
ceremony with Clarke was to acknowledge the hara, or atrocities, committed 250
years ago.
"Cook
and his crew landed on the banks of the Turanganui river at 4pm, within 30
minutes they had opened fire and (local chieftain) Te Maro was dead," it
said.
"Our
whanaunga (relative) was the first casualty of The Collision."
It added:
"After only being here for two hours, Cook and his crew had trespassed,
terrorised, killed and stolen from us."
The British
High Commission issued a brief statement about the event but refused to provide
further details, saying it was a "private dialogue between the envoy and
the iwi.
"The
expression of regret responds to a request from the local iwi for this history
to be heard and acknowledged," the statement said.
"The
British High Commissioner will acknowledge the pain of those first encounters,
acknowledge that the pain does not diminish over time, and extend her sympathy
to the descendants of those killed."
Local media
reported British officials had "sworn the iwi involved to secrecy"
and carefully avoided framing the statement as an apology.
However,
New Zealand's race relations commissioner Meng Foon, a former Gisborne mayor,
had no such qualms.
"It's
a significant day today... I hope that the apology or message will acknowledge
the murder of nine Maori from Turanganui-a-Kiwa (Gisborne)," he told Radio
New Zealand.
"I
hope they both can move forward and tell our history."
On three
epic voyages, Cook helped chart the vast Pacific Ocean more than any other,
making him one of the most celebrated explorers of his era.
But his
legacy has been questioned by many modern scholars amid accusations that his
"discoveries" led to colonialism and the devastation of the
traditional societies he encountered.

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