The
House of Ariki (Are Ariki) is a
parliamentary body in the Cook Islands
. It is composed of Cook Islands chiefs,
members of the nobility (
ariki), and
has a purely advisory role.
It was established in 1967 by Prime Minister Albert Henry, shortly after the country
obtained self-government from
New
Zealand
. Henry stated that the
ariki were
the Cook Islands' "royal heritage". The House of Ariki was intended
to confer additional legitimacy and strength to the newly
self-governing nation, and to help it define its national identity.
Henry stated:
- "The ariki [and other chiefly ranks] and their
tribes are the backbone of all nations in this world. For
any nation to allow this backbone to be broken or to disappear
would mean that they are relying on a foreign backbone for their
survival."
According to
Ron Crocombe and Jon
Tikivanotau Jonassen:
- "The House of Ariki was created to marginalize the
ariki. Most of them had opposed the party that won the
election at self-government, so it created and quarantined them in
a House with dignity but no power. To marginalize ariki
further, that party later created a Koutu
Nui of mata’iapo and rangatira (lesser chiefs) many of whom had
supported the party."
Members of the House of Ariki are appointed by the
Queen's Representative. There are up
to twenty four members, representing different islands of the
Cooks.
The members are:
The
incumbent president of the House of Ariki is Tou Travel Ariki (Mitiaro
).
Its function is to "consider such matters relative to the welfare
of the people of the Cook Islands as may be submitted to it by
[Parliament] for its
consideration, and it shall express its opinion and make
recommendations thereon to [Parliament]". It may, therefore, only
discuss matters put to it by the democratically elected Parliament,
and may only voice suggestions in return. As such, the House of
Ariki plays an essentially ceremonial role.
June 2008 coup claim
On
June 13,
2008, a
small majority of members of the House of Ariki attempted a coup,
claiming to dissolve the elected government and to take control of
the country's leadership. "Basically we are dissolving the
leadership, the prime minister and the deputy prime minister and
the ministers," chief Makea Vakatini Joseph Ariki explained. The
Cook Islands Herald suggested that the
ariki were
attempting thereby to regain some of their traditional prestige or
mana. Prime Minister
Jim Marurai described the take-over move as
"ill-founded and nonsensical". Police commissioner Pat Tasker added
that it was "laughable", and that the police did not intend to take
it seriously. By
June 23, the situation
appeared to have normalised, with members of the House of Ariki
accepting to return to their regular duties.
See also
References
- "Premier Albert Henry stressed that the retention and
recognition of the nation’s ‘royal heritage’ would associate the
Cook Islands with the more fortunate nations of the world, that is,
with nations such as Great-Britain [or] Tonga […] which had maintained a strong sovereign
identity. [...] The choice before the people of the Cook Islands
was, therefore, a clear one – either to follow the path of Great
Britain, the ‘Mother Country,’ and retain an indigenous spine, or
to follow that of the New Zealand Māori and allow ‘the backbone of Polynesian existence to
disappear’. […] Ariki, like the British monarchy, lent historical
depth to this nation while increasing its prestige (at least in its
own eyes) within the Pacific region." Sissons, Jeffrey. Nation
and Destination: Creating Cook Islands Identity. Suva: University of the South
Pacific (Institute of Pacific Studies), 1999, ISBN 982-02-0142-X, pp.61–62.
- Albert Henry, quoted in Sissons, Jeffrey, ibid
- Ron Crocombe and Jon Tikivanotau Jonassen. "Political culture,
representation and the electoral system in the Cook Islands".
Political Culture, Representation and Electoral Systems in the
Pacific conference paper, Port Vila, Vanuatu, 10-12 July 2004
- Since the 2002 constitutional amendment [1]
- Constitution of the Cook Islands, section
8
- Constitution of the Cook Islands, section 9
- "Cooks heading for internal strife", TVNZ, June 13,
2008
- "NZ Māori stirs Cooks sovereignty stoush",
Stuff.co.nz, June 13, 2008
- "NZ Māori behind strange Cook's 'coup'", Stuff.co.nz,
June 17, 2008
- "Cooks deputy PM to meet chiefs over takeover
claims", ABC Radio Australia, June 19, 2008.
- "Cook Islands chiefs drop take over claim, return to
normal duties", Radio New Zealand International, June 23,
2008
External links