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New Zealand’s foreign minister berates Mexico-born MP for use of nation’s Maori name

Winston Peters, who is Maori, objected to Ricardo Menendez March calling New Zealand by its Maori name, ‘Aotearoa’, in parliament

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New Zealand’s Foreign Minister Winston Peters. Photo: Reuters
The speaker of New Zealand’s parliament has told lawmakers he will not consider further complaints about the use of the country’s Maori name, Aotearoa, in parliament after Foreign Minister Winston Peters sought to have it banned.
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“Aotearoa is regularly used as a name of New Zealand,” Speaker Gerry Brownlee said in a ruling on Tuesday. “It appears on our passports and it appears on our currency.”

The conflict over a word increasingly prominent in New Zealand life arose last month when Peters objected to another lawmaker’s use of the term. It reflects the way enthusiasm for the indigenous language among New Zealanders of all ethnicities has at times prompted a backlash – including about what the country should be called. It was also the latest salvo in the so-called “culture war”-style friction between two political parties.

Ricardo Menendez March, from the left-leaning Green Party, used the name Aotearoa during a question to a government minister. The composite word means “land of the long white cloud” in te reo Maori, the Maori language.

Why is someone who applied to come to this country in 2006 allowed to ask a question … that changes this country’s name?
Winston Peters, New Zealand’s foreign minister

Peters – who is deputy prime minister, foreign minister and leader of the populist party New Zealand First – objected in a point of order.

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