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The 1981 South African rugby union tour of New Zealand (known by many in New Zealand as The Springbok Tour, and in South Africa as The Rebel Tour) was a controversial tour of New Zealand by the South Africa national rugby union team, known as "the Springboks". The South African government's policy of racial segregation polarised opinions and sparked controversy throughout New Zealand. The decision to proceed with the tour inspired widespread protests across New Zealand. South Africa's policy of racial apartheid had made the nation an international pariah, and other countries were strongly discouraged from having sporting contacts with it. However, rugby union was (and is) an extremely popular sport in New Zealand, and the Springboks were considered to be New Zealand's most formidable opponents. Therefore, there was a major split in opinion in New Zealand as to whether politics should interfere with sport and whether the Springboks should be allowed to tour. Despite the controversy, the New Zealand Rugby Union decided to proceed with the tour. The government of Prime Minister Robert Muldoon was called on to ban the tour, in view of the commitments it had made under the Gleneagles Agreement, but decided not to interfere due to their public position of "no politics in sport". Major protests ensued, aiming to make clear many New Zealanders' opposition to apartheid and, if possible, to stop the matches taking place. This was successful in two cases, but also had the effect of creating a 'law and order issue'. For many people the issue became whether a group of protesters could be allowed to prevent a lawful game of rugby taking place. The dispute was similar to that involving Peter Hain in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s, when Hain's Stop the Tour campaign clashed with the more conservative 'Freedom Under Law' movement championed by barrister Francis Bennion. The police response to the protests also became a focus of controversy. Although the protests were among the most intense in New Zealand's recent history, no deaths resulted. After the Springbok tour, no official sporting contact took place between New Zealand and South Africa until the early 1990s, when apartheid had been repealed. The tour has been credited with leading to a decline in the popularity of Rugby Union in New Zealand, until the 1987 Rugby World Cup. Background A poster advertising a meeting of the Citizens' All Black Tour Association to protest against racially selected All Blacks teams touring South Africa. The Springboks and New Zealand's national rugby team, the All Blacks, have a long tradition of intense and friendly sporting rivalry.[1] From the 1940s to the 1960s, the South African apartheid policies had an impact on team selection for the All Blacks: the selectors passed over M ori players for some All Black tours to South Africa.[2] Opposition to sending race based teams to South Africa grew throughout the 1950s and 60s. Prior to the All Blacks' tour of South Africa in 1960, 150,000 New Zealanders signed a petition supporting a policy of "No Maoris, No Tour".[2] The tour occurred however, and in 1969 Halt All Racist Tours (HART) was formed.[3] During the 1970s public protests and political pressure forced on the New Zealand Rugby Union (NZRU) the choice of either fielding a team not selected by race, or not touring the Republic.[2] However, South African rugby authorities continued to select Springbok players by race.[1] As a result, the Norman Kirk Labour Government prevented the Springboks from touring during 1973.[3] In response, the NZRU protested about the involvement of "politics in sport". In 1976 the All Blacks toured South Africa, with the blessing of the then newly-elected New Zealand Prime Minister, Robert Muldoon.[4] Twenty-five African nations protested against this by boycotting the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal.[5] In their view the All Black tour gave tacit support to the apartheid regime in South Africa. The All Blacks again failed to win a series in South Africa (they would not do so until 1996, after the fall of apartheid). The 1976 Tour contributed to the Gleneagles Agreement being adopted by the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in 1977.[6] The Tour Police officers guarding a barbed wire perimeter around Eden Park near Kingsland Train Station. By the early 1980s the pressure from other African countries as well as from protest groups in New Zealand, such as HART, reached a head when the New Zealand Rugby Union proposed a Springbok tour for 1981. This became a topic of political contention due to the issue of the sports boycott by the other African nations. The Australian Prime Minister, Malcolm Fraser, refused permission for the Springboks' aircraft to refuel on Australian territory en route to New Zealand.[7] Despite pressure from activists for the New Zealand government (headed by Prime Minister Robert Muldoon) to cancel the tour, permission was granted, and the South African team arrived in New Zealand on 19 July 1981. Since 1977 Muldoon's government had been a party to the Gleneagles Agreement, in which the countries of the Commonwealth accepted that it was: - "the urgent duty of each of their Governments vigorously to combat the evil of apartheid by withholding any form of support for, and by taking every practical step to discourage contact or competition by their nationals with sporting organisations, teams or sportsmen from South Africa or from any other country where sports are organised on the basis of race, colour or ethnic origin."
Despite this, Muldoon argued that New Zealand was a free and democratic country, and that "politics should stay out of sport." Some rugby supporters echoed the separation of politics and sport.[8][9] Others argued that if the tour were cancelled, there would be no reporting of the widespread criticism against apartheid in New Zealand in the controlled South African media. Muldoon's critics, on the other hand, felt that he allowed the tour to go ahead in order for his National Party to secure the votes of rural and provincial conservatives in the general election later in the year, which Muldoon would go on to win.[10] The ensuing public protests polarised the New Zealand population.[10] While rugby fans filled the football grounds, protest crowds filled the surrounding streets, and on one occasion succeeded in invading the pitch and stopping the game.[11] To begin with the anti-tour movement committed themselves, by and large, to a programme of non-violent civil disobedience, demonstration, and direct action. In anticipation of this and as protection for the touring Springboks, the police created two special riot squads, the Red and Blue Squads.[12][13] These police were, controversially, the first in New Zealand to be issued with visored riot helmets and with what was then referred to as the long baton (more commonly the side-handle baton). Some protesters were intimidated and interpreted this initial police firepower as overkill and heavy-handed tactics. After early disruptions, police began to require that all spectators assemble in sports grounds at least an hour before kick-off. At Gisborne on 22 July,[14] protesters managed to break through a fence, but quick action by rugby spectators and ground security prevented the game being disrupted. Some protesters were injured by police batons. Hamilton: Game cancelled At Rugby Park, Hamilton (the site of today's Waikato Stadium), on 25 July,[14] about 350 rioting protesters invaded the pitch after pulling down a fence using sheer force. The police arrested about 50 of them over a period of an hour, but were concerned that they could not control the rugby crowd, who were throwing bottles and other objects at the protesters.[15] Following reports that a stolen light plane (piloted by Pat McQuarrie)[16] was approaching the stadium, police cancelled the match.[15] The protesters were ushered from the ground and advised by protest marshals to remove any anti-tour insignia from their attire, with enraged rugby spectators lashing out at them. Gangs of rugby supporters waited outside the Hamilton police station for arrested protesters to be processed and released, and assaulted some protesters making their way into Victoria Street.[17] Wellington: Molesworth Street protest The aftermath of the Hamilton game, followed by the bloody batoning of marchers in Wellington's Molesworth Street in the following week, in which police batoned bare-headed protesters, led to the radicalisation of the protest movement as a whole. Many protesters took to protests wearing motorcycle helmets, as a way of protecting themselves from head injury.[18][19] The authorities too were forced to make concessions to the protest movement, strengthening security at public facilities after protesters disrupted telecommunications services by damaging a waveguide on a microwave repeater, disrupting telephone and data services, though TV transmissions continued as they were carried by a separate waveguide on the tower.[20] Army engineers were also deployed, and the remaining grounds were surrounded with razor wire and shipping container barricades to decrease the chances of another pitch invasion. At Eden Park, an emergency escape route was constructed from the visitors' changing rooms to allow for the event that the stadium was overrun by protestors.[21] Christchurch At Lancaster Park, Christchurch, on 15 August,[14] some protesters managed to break through a security cordon and a number managed to invade the pitch. They were quickly removed and forcibly ejected from the stadium by security staff and spectators. However, a large, well coordinated street demonstration managed to occupy the streets immediately outside the ground and confront the riot police. Rugby spectators were kept in the ground until the protesters dispersed. Auckland: plane invasion During the final test match at Eden Park, Auckland on 12 September,[14] a low-flying light plane piloted by Marx Jones and Grant Cole disrupted the final game of the tour by dropping flour-bombs on the pitch. In spite of the flour bombing, the game was continued.[22] "Patches" of criminal gangs, such as traditional rivals Black Power and the Mongrel Mob, were also evident (interestingly enough, the Black Power were Muldoon supporters [23]). Footage was also shown of the Clowns Incident, where police were shown beating unarmed clowns with batons.[24] Some of the protest had the dual purpose of linking alleged racial discrimination against M ori in New Zealand to apartheid in South Africa. Some of the protesters, particularly young M ori, were frustrated by the image of New Zealand as being a paradise for racial unity.[9] Thus it was seen as being useful by many opponents of what they saw as racism in New Zealand in the early 1980s to use the protests against South Africa as a vehicle for wider social action. However, there were as many Maori who supported "The Tour" and attended games, as opposed it. The rugby Aftermath The Muldoon government was re-elected in the 1981 election losing three seats to leave it with a majority of one seat. The NZRFU constitution contained much high-minded wording about promoting the image of rugby and New Zealand, and generally being a benefit to society. In 1985 the NZRFU proposed an All Black tour of South Africa. Two lawyers successfully sued the NZRFU, claiming such a tour would breach the NZRFU's constitution. The High Court stopped the All Black tour. The 1981 Springbok tour of New Zealand could arguably have been stopped by the courts: it is interesting that protest groups did not attempt such a remedy within the "system" in 1981. The All Blacks did not tour South Africa until after the fall of the apartheid r gime (1990 1994), although after the official 1985 tour was cancelled an unofficial tour did take place in 1986 by a team which included 28 out of the 30 All Blacks players selected for the 1985 tour. These were known both inside and outside the Republic of South Africa as the New Zealand Cavaliers, but often advertised inside South Africa as the All Blacks or alternatively depicted with the Silver Fern. Some considered that for the first time in history, rugby in New Zealand had become a source of embarrassment rather than pride. Six years later, however, the team won the 1987 Rugby World Cup.[26] The role of the police also became more controversial as a result of the tour. In New Zealand culture - Prominent artist Ralph Hotere painted a Black Union Jack series of paintings in protest against the tour.
- Merata Mita's documentary film Patu! tells the tale of the tour from a left-wing perspective.[27]
- John Broughton wrote a stage play, 1981 examining the way The Tour divided a family.
- Music popularly associated with the Tour included the punk band RIOT 111, and the songs "Riot Squad" by the Newmatics and "There Is No Depression In New Zealand" by Blam Blam Blam.[28]
- Ross Meurant, commander of the police "Red Squad", published Red Squad Story in 1982, giving a conservative view. ISBN 978-0-908630-06-6
- The TVNZ 1980s police drama Mortimer's Patch included a flashback episode of the (younger) main character's Tour police duties
- In 1984 Geoff Chapple published 1981: The Tour, a book chronicling the events from the protesters' perspective. ISBN 978-0-589-01534-3
- In 1999 Glenn Wood's biography "Cop Out" covered the tour from the perspective of a frontline policeman. ISBN 978-0-908704-89-7
- David Hill, New Zealand author, has written a book, The Name of the Game, which is as story of a schoolboy's personal struggles during the tour. ISBN 978-0-908783-63-2
- New Zealand leftist Tom Newnham's book By Batons And Barbed Wire is one of the largest collections of photos and general information of the protest movement during the tour itself. ISBN 978-0-473-00253-4 (hardback). ISBN 978-0-473-00112-4 (paperback)
- The documentary, 1981: A Country At War, chronicled the Tour from various perspectives.[29]
- The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa has collected a number of objects related to the Tour including images, helmets[30][31] and an entrance ticket.[32] The exhibition Slice of Heaven: 20th Century Aotearoa has a section about the Springbok Tour.[33]
- Rage, a dramatisation of the Tour written by Tom Scott, was filmed in mid-2011[34][35] and had its first broadcast on New Zealand's TV One on 4 September 2011.[36]
- The Engine Room, a play by Ralph McCubbin Howell, opened at BATS Theatre in Wellington on 27 September 2011. It contrasts the dual stories and viewpoints of John Key and Helen Clark during both the 1981 tour and the 2008 general election.
See also Notes and references Bibliography External links fr:Tourn e de l' quipe d'Afrique du Sud de rugby XV en 1981 it:Tour della Nazionale di rugby a 15 del Sudafrica 1981
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