Hawaiian sovereignty seekers take over palace in Honolulu!
Sovereignty seekers in Hawaii
take over palace grounds in downtown Honolulu
HONOLULU, Hawaii - April 30, 2008 -
A Native Hawaiian group that advocates sovereignty briefly occupied the grounds
of a historic palace in downtown Honolulu on Wednesday, saying it would carry
out the business of what it considers the legitimate government of the islands.
Unarmed security guards from the
Hawaiian Kingdom Government group blocked all gates to the grounds of the
palace, which is adjacent to the state Capitol. They did not enter the building
itself.
After several hours, the protesters
agreed to reopen the gates but said they would remain on the grounds until
early evening and return Thursday. No arrests had been made as of
mid-afternoon.
Laura Thielen, state land director
who oversees the palace area, said some of the protesters could still be
charged.
"This is public property and
they can't block public access," she said.
Protest leaders had said they were
prepared to be arrested and would go peacefully.
Mahealani Kahau, elected "head
of state" of the group years ago, said the organization doesn't recognize
Hawaii as a U.S. state but would keep the occupation peaceful.
"The Hawaiian Kingdom
Government is here and it doesn't plan to leave. This is a continuity of the
Hawaiian Kingdom of 1892 to today," Kahau said.
The group is one of several
Hawaiian sovereignty organizations in the islands, which became the 50th U.S.
state in 1959.
The ornate Iolani Palace is
operated as a museum. Hawaiian King Kalakaua built it in 1882, and it also
served as the residence for his sister and successor, Queen Liliuokalani, the
islands' last ruling monarch.
It was neglected after the
overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom in 1893 and restored in the 1970s as a
National Historic Landmark. It includes a gift shop and is open for school
groups and paid tours.
The protesters aren't damaging
anything in the palace grounds, Kahau said. Workers inside the palace itself
had locked the doors and were not letting them inside.
State Sen. Kalani English - a
Native Hawaiian and a Democrat from East Maui-Lanai-Molokai - went over from
the Capitol to speak with some of the protesters and had his staff take them
food.
"This is the manifestation of
the frustration of the Hawaiian people for the loss of sovereignty and
land," English said.
"It is symbolic. This made a
statement. It got the word out about the plight of the Hawaiian people,"
he said.
Richard Kinney, who described
himself as an independent Hawaiian nationalist, said he went to the Capitol to
show his support. He carried an upside-down Hawaii state flag, signaling
distress.
"The sovereignty of these
islands is inherent to the Hawaiian people, and we've never relinquished
that," he said.
"Occupying any land, including
Iolani Palace, is the beginning," Kinney said.
Kippen de Alba Chu, executive
director of Iolani Palace, issued a statement that said the protesters
delivered a written message to palace officials claiming the grounds as the
seat of their government.
"While we respect the freedom
of Hawaiian groups to hold an opinion on the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom,
we believe that blocking public access to Iolani Palace is wrong and certainly
detrimental to our mission to share the palace and its history with our
residents, our keiki (children) and our visitors," Chu said.
In 1993, the U.S. Congress approved, and President
Clinton signed, an apology to the people of the Hawaiian islands. The document “acknowledges that the
overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii occurred with the active participation of
agents and citizens of the United States and further acknowledges that the
Native Hawaiian people never directly relinquished to the United States their
claims to their inherent sovereignty as a people over their national lands,
either through the Kingdom of Hawaii or through a plebiscite or referendum.”