Stand Together: Boycott Anzac Services Until the Government Listens To Veterans.
Last week, Willie Apiata VC made headlines when he handed his Victoria Cross to Veterans’ Minister Chris Penk, vowing not to take it back until the law changes. His protest was about one simple, just demand: fixing the outdated criteria that exclude many service personnel from being recognised as veterans.
Why Boycott the Official Services?
The Paterson Report and the Unfulfilled Promise
In 2018, the Paterson Report into the Veterans’ Support Act 2014 laid bare the failures in how New Zealand treats its veterans. 64 recommendations were accepted by Ron Mark in May 2018, of which less than half were fully actioned. Recommendation 63 was clear: the government must urgently review the criteria for who qualifies as a veteran, ensuring fair recognition and support for all who served. This is the recommendation WIllie Apiata has made a stand on and is one of 13 recommendations that weren’t actioned by the government despite being accepted by Ron Mark in May 2018.
Seven years later, nothing has changed. Veterans still fight for basic entitlements, fair compensation, timely support and respect. Successive governments have had ample time to act—instead, they offer pithy 10-second sound bites and political buzz phrases at Anzac services while ignoring veterans the rest of the year. As Willie Apiata noted in his comments, he’d spoken on the recognition criteria issue to Ron Mark, Meka Whaitiri and Peeni Henare, all of whom, as respective Ministers ‘for’ Veterans failed to action the outstanding Paterson Report recommendations.
· Organise alternative commemorations—march with fellow veterans, not politicians.
· Wear your medals proudly, but refuse to participate in official ceremonies.
· Demand action on Recommendation 63—flood MPs’ offices with letters, petitions, and calls.
· Share this message—veterans, families, supporters: stand together.
Anzac Day Belongs to Veterans and their whanau, Not Politicians