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Rising star in Māoridom lost: Body found in Waimakariri River

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sat, 6 Feb 2021, 1:11pm
Kapuaiwaho "Kapu" Waretini was a rising star of Māoridom when he drowned in the Waimakariri River on January 30. Photo / Supplied
Kapuaiwaho "Kapu" Waretini was a rising star of Māoridom when he drowned in the Waimakariri River on January 30. Photo / Supplied

Rising star in Māoridom lost: Body found in Waimakariri River

Author
NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sat, 6 Feb 2021, 1:11pm

The body of a 38-year-old man who drowned in a Canterbury river last weekend has been found.

He was Kapuaiwaho "Kapu" Waretini, dubbed as a rising star of Māoridom.

Police were called to area about 6.30am and while formal identification is yet to take place, the body is believed to be that of Waretini, 38, from Auckland.

Waretini won a Sir Peter Blake leadership award in 2012 and forged a career that spanned the public and private sectors.

He drowned while swimming in the Waimakariri River near Christchurch on Saturday. He leaves behind a partner and a young child.

Former Auckland deputy mayor Penny Hulse, a friend of the family, said his death was "heartbreaking".

"Kapu showed real leadership qualities. He has the connections with Māoridom that could have really seen him go somewhere," she said.

His "Aunty Naida", Dame Naida Glavish, is the chair of Te Rūnanga o Ngāri Whātua and a former president of the Māori Party.

He led a team at Te Puni Kōkiri that sought to highlight Māori success for the world at the 2011 Rugby World Cup in Auckland, and his boss there, Dr Pauline Kingi, has remained a close friend and mentor.

"Kapu was a pretty driven young man," Hulse said.

"Because of his family connections, there was a lot expected of Kapu, and he did stand up and into that place and that's why people like Pauline will speak highly of him, also acknowledging that sometimes it's quite a challenge being a young Māori leader and living up to those expectations all the time."

Hulse said Waretini "had a really compassionate side".

"He had his own issues to deal with. He also had a compassionate side and a lot of us remember that."

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