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Mau movement - Civil disobedience |  | Mau movement - Civil disobedience: Encyclopedia II - Mau movement - Civil disobedience |  | The Mau remained true to this sentiment, and despite the exile of Nelson, continued to use civil disobedience to oppose the New Zealand administration. They boycotted imported products, refused to pay taxes and formed their own "police force", picketing stores in Apia to prevent the payment of customs to the authorities. Village committees established by the administration ceased to meet and government officials were ignored when the went on tour. Births and deaths went unregistered. Coconuts went unha ...
See also:Mau movement, Mau movement - Influenza epidemic, Mau movement - O.F. Nelson, Mau movement - Civil disobedience, Mau movement - Black Saturday, Mau movement - Moving towards independence, Mau movement - An American Samoa Mau |  | | Mau movement, Mau movement - An American Samoa Mau, Mau movement - Black Saturday, Mau movement - Civil disobedience, Mau movement - Influenza epidemic, Mau movement - Moving towards independence, Mau movement - O.F. Nelson, History of Samoa |  | |
|  |  | Mau movement: Encyclopedia II - Mau movement - Civil disobedience
Mau movement - Civil disobedience
The Mau remained true to this sentiment, and despite the exile of Nelson, continued to use civil disobedience to oppose the New Zealand administration. They boycotted imported products, refused to pay taxes and formed their own "police force", picketing stores in Apia to prevent the payment of customs to the authorities. Village committees established by the administration ceased to meet and government officials were ignored when the went on tour. Births and deaths went unregistered. Coconuts went unharvested, and the banana plantations were neglected.
As the select committee was forced to admit, "a very substantial proportion of Samoans had joined the Mau, a number quite sufficient, if they determined to resist and thwart the activities of the Administration, to paralyse the functions of government."
Richardson sent a warship and a 70-strong force of marines to quell the largely non-violent resistance. 400 Mau members were arrested, but others responded by giving themselves up in such numbers that there were insufficient jail cells to detain them all, and the prisoners came and went as they pleased. One group of prisoners found themselves in a three-sided "cell" which faced the ocean, and were able to swim away to tend to their gardens and visit their families.
With his attempt at repression turning to ridicule, Richard offered pardons to all those arrested; however, arrestees demanded to be dealt with by the court, and then refused to enter pleas to demonstrate their rejection of the court's jurisdiction.
Other related archives1908, 1914, 1919, 1927, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1936, 1962, Apia, German, History of Samoa, India, New Zealand, Samoan, Savai'i, Swedish, Wellington, Western Samoa, Wilhelm Solf, William Nosworthy, World War I, civil disobedience, coconut, colonial, copra, cricket, influenza, nonviolent
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Civil disobedience", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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