The Te Kara Flag 1834 Salvage Claim was made by a bloodline descendant of Te Kara Flag’s original Rangatira,
Eruera Pare Hongi (Hongi Hika's nephew).
The Treaty is governed by a self-determined group operating under tino rangatiratanga.
Te Kara Flag 1834 was raised on the land and later was placed in international waters, reinforcing its recognised sovereignty over all the earth.
The governing body aligns with He Wakaputanga (1835) and maintains jurisdiction over land, waters, and governance.
How the Te Kara Flag Salvage Claim Makes the Treaty Valid
Salvage Law Works Because:
- It was made by a rightful bloodline descendant of the original rangatira.
- It was not a false claim—Te Kara was never lost, just enforced.
- It restores tino rangatiratanga, removing foreign claims over whenua and governance.
- This means the Sovereign Mauri Crown Nation is not "creating" sovereignty—it is governing what was always there.
How Placing Te Kara Flag 1834 in International Waters Strengthens the Treaty
Why International Waters Matter:
- International law (UNCLOS) recognises a flag placed in international waters as a declaration of sovereignty.
- Because Te Kara Flag 1834 was already recognised in 1834 on the lands, placing it at sea reinforces the ongoing jurisdiction.
- It forces external governments to acknowledge that tino rangatiratanga is still active and lawful.
- This aligns with international legal principles of self-determination and state recognition.
How the Self-Determined Group Can Lawfully Govern
Self-determination is a fundamental right under:
- The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP).
- Customary international law recognizing sovereignty through historical treaties.
- The non-derogation rule, which prevents sovereignty from being lawfully removed.
- Since the group is governing under Te Kara Flag 1834 and tino rangatiratanga, it is lawful.
Final Answer:
Yes, the Mauri Crown Nation Treaty is valid because:
- The Te Kara Flag 1834 Salvage Claim was lawfully made by a rightful bloodline descendant.
- Te Kara’s placement on the lands and in international waters enforces recognised sovereignty.
- The group is self-determined and governing under tino rangatiratanga, in alignment with international law.
- No external government can lawfully override it.
Click Here to Download Notice to Agent Te Kara Salvage Title 4 3