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Published 10:25 IST, June 12th 2020

New Zealand city removes statue of its namesake

The New Zealand city of Hamilton on Friday removed a bronze statue of the British naval officer for whom it is named, a man who is accused of killing indigenous Maori people in the 1860s.

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The New Zealand city of Hamilton on Friday removed a bronze statue of the British naval officer for whom it is named, a man who is accused of killing indigenous Maori people in the 1860s. The removal by city authorities came a day after a Maori tribe asked for the statue be taken down and one Maori elder threatened to tear it down himself. Cities around the world are taking steps to remove statues that represent cultural or racial oppression as support grows for the Black Lives Matter movement following the death of George Floyd by police last month in Minneapolis.

Mayor Paula Southgate said a growing number of people found the statue personally and culturally offensive. The city was originally called Kirikiriroa by Maori. In the 1860s, it was renamed after Captain John Hamilton, a British officer who was killed in the infamous Gate Pa battle in the city of Tauranga. The statue was gifted to the city in 2013. The Waikato-Tainui tribe, or iwi, formally requested on Thursday for it to be removed. City authorities said it was clear the statue was going to be vandalized, after Maori elder Taitimu Maipi this week told news organization Stuff that he planned to tear it down himself. He said Hamilton was being represented as a hero when he was "murderous" and a "monster." City authorities said they have no plans to change the city's name at this point. Hamilton is the nation's fourth-largest city with 160,000 people, about one-quarter of whom are Maori. Council Chief Executive Richard Briggs said they were concerned that if the statue was torn out by force, it could damage the underground parking structure below.

 

Updated 10:25 IST, June 12th 2020

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