Secret BOP venue for anti co-governance roadshow

Stop Co-Governance roadshow organiser Julian Batchelor at the Kerikeri event. Photo: Peter De Graaf/Northern Advocate/LDR

A ‘Stop Co-Governance' roadshow will go ahead at two venues in the Bay of Plenty this month with one venue secret and protests expected.

Julian Batchelor's Anti Co-Governance roadshow is being held in Tauranga and Mount Maunganui on April 22 and 23.

'No doubt there will be protests,” says Julian.

'We are only letting people in who we know who they are and police will stop anyone coming in that we don't want, or make anyone exit the building from inside. Attendees have to pre-register. We have people on the ground who know people, so they will know if anyone tries to register under another name.'

Māori leader, Buddy Mikaere, says there were likely to be peaceful protests at the meetings.

”He says he is entitled to the principle of free speech, and so are we. The views he expresses have consequences, and iwi and many others are not happy he is coming, but equally we have the right to attend to respond to what he is saying.”

Batchelor opposes co-governance and criticises Māori MPs, Treaty of Waitangi rights for Māori and iwi organisations.

This week's meeting in Mount Maunganui was assessed by committee members of Mount Community Hall, who decided it could still go ahead, confirmed a spokesperson.

The Tauranga meeting was originally planned in a historic hall overseen by Tauranga City Council.

Corporate services general manager Alastair McNeil says the council has received emails from people voicing their disappointment and concerns about safety.

'The beliefs expressed by the Stop Co-governance campaign do not align with the community outcomes we are seeking to achieve and suspect the general anti co-governance rhetoric is offensive to many in our community.”

Event organiser Batchelor says they has decided not to use the council venue after all as council 'was trying to impose ridiculous health and safety rules”.

The new Tauranga venue is in a private building, he says, which he's not going to reveal.

'People can meet at the Historic Village and then will be told where to go. This is to protect the owner of the new venue.”

His roadshow has already hosted several anti-co-governance meetings around the country which sparked protests, with police in Ōrewa needed to separate counter-protesters from attendees.

Some of the venues booked throughout New Zealand for the five-month tour have been cancelled, including in Rotorua and Mount Eden.

A meeting planned for Hamilton in April was cancelled by the Waikato Indian Association, a spokesperson for the venue says.

At a Stop Co-Governance event in Orewa police separated protesters from those at the event. Photo: Supplied/Local Democracy Reporting.

A petition against the tour, started by Kaipara councillor Ihapera Paniora has more than 6000 signatures, alleging that Batchelor's tour is inciting racial disharmony as defined by sections 61 and 131 of the Human Rights Act 1993.

Advocacy organisation, Aotearoa Liberation Group, run by Pere and Samah Huriwai-Seger, has encouraged peaceful protests at previous meetings, saying the tour is a 'thinly veiled vehicle to spread racist propaganda”.

The group considered the forced cancellations and venue changes as 'a win”, says Samah Huriwai-Seger,

”It shows that people in Aotearoa are not willing to entertain this kind of negative discourse.”

The group was not organising any Bay of Plenty protests but had pamphlets and other resources that locals could access.

Annemarie Quill/Stuff

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4 comments

Want to

Posted on 17-04-2023 17:34 | By Merlin

Want to have their say but not let others have theirs.Only selected attendees.Where is freedom of speech in that or democracy.


Good!!

Posted on 17-04-2023 19:32 | By Bruja

About time we got some 'freedom of speech' back in this country. I hope both meetings are very well attended. Peaceful protest?....certainly....that's also democratic but people have the right to hear ALL views not just the woke/cancel culture rubbish that we are sick to death of!


Thank you Julian

Posted on 17-04-2023 19:33 | By Equality

On behalf of all of us who support your campaign but are not in a position to attend your meetings at Tauranga and Mount Maunganui. God bless


Co-governance.

Posted on 19-04-2023 16:05 | By morepork

I'm against it, but I won't be attending the meeting. My objections are that the Treaty has no such nonsense in it (we ALL have the same rights as British citizens, and Maori ceded Rangatiratanga (the right to rule) to the Crown, in return for certain privileges. (Read Article 2...). The term is woke speak governmental. I don't like "secret" meetings, but, given that the government has them all the time, I can see how some people would think it is OK. I have some faith in Buddy's integrity, and if he is attending I believe he will be fair. The right to govern, in NZ, rests with the Crown. A Parliamentary Democratic system allows ALL of us to express our objections and, if we HAVE to, change the government. This applies equally to ALL of the 128 ethnicities that live in our diverse land. An EVEN playing-field.


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