Yahoo – AFP, Neil Sands, December 11, 2015
Wellington (AFP) - New Zealanders have chosen a silver fern on a black-and-blue background as their preferred flag design if the South Pacific nation decides to dump Britain's Union Jack from its national banner, officials said Friday.
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| The "Silver Fern (Black, White and Blue)" will go head-to-head with New Zealand's existing flag in a second referendum in March next year (AFP Photo) |
Wellington (AFP) - New Zealanders have chosen a silver fern on a black-and-blue background as their preferred flag design if the South Pacific nation decides to dump Britain's Union Jack from its national banner, officials said Friday.
The design
beat four other contenders in a nation-wide referendum, according to
preliminary results released by the New Zealand Electoral Commission.
Simply
titled "Silver Fern (Black, White and Blue)", the design will go
head-to-head with the existing flag in a second referendum in March next year.
"While
this is a preliminary result, New Zealanders can now turn their attention to
deciding whether to keep the current flag, or replace it," Deputy Prime
Minister Bill English said.
Prime
Minister John Key has led the push for reform, saying the existing ensign is a
colonial relic that is too easily confused with Australia's flag.
He had
previously nominated the winning design as his favourite, describing the silver
fern as an instantly recognisable symbol of New Zealand.
The flag
and an almost identical banner from the same designer, Kyle Lockwood, were
clear winners in the five-way race, each receiving more than 550,000
first-choice votes of the 1.5 million ballots cast.
Lockwood's
second-placed design simply changes the colour of one section of the flag's
background from black to red. They both feature four stars of the Southern
Cross as well as the fern.
"My
father represented New Zealand in underwater hockey and he always wore the
silver fern on black –- I always thought it would be on the flag one day,"
the designer said earlier this year.
"The
Union Jack just doesn’t seem right for New Zealand these days."
'Kiwi as
bro'
However,
polling indicates the current flag remains on track to beat any contender in
next year's run-off referendum.
Formally
adopted in 1902, it has a Union Jack in the upper-left corner with the Southern
Cross on a dark blue background.
Once part
of the British Empire, New Zealand is now independent, although Queen Elizabeth
II remains head of state.
However,
her power is seen as largely symbolic, and changing the flag is seen by some as
helping cut lingering colonial ties.
Key argues
a silver fern flag will boost New Zealand's global profile and will be
"worth billions" to the nation of 4.5 million in the long term.
He has
cited another former British colony, Canada, as an inspiration, saying the
maple leaf adopted in 1965 is now a universally loved national symbol.
Opponents
of change say New Zealanders have fought under the existing banner and also
criticise the NZ$26 million ($17.5 million) cost of the referendum.
In a rare
show of civil disobedience, veterans' group the Returned and Services'
Association (RSA) encouraged Kiwis to spoil their ballots.
The
normally conservative association argues that to change the flag disrespects
previous generations of soldiers who have died fighting under the banner.
"When
they have made the ultimate sacrifice for their country, our flag has been draped
over their casket at military funerals," it says on its website.
The often
heated debate has also had its lighter moments, particularly when the original
10,000-plus submissions for new flags were publically released.
One of the
most popular designs with online users was a flag featured a kiwi bird shooting
green lasers from its eyes.
Another had
a sheep alongside a cone of ice cream, with designer Jesse Gibbs saying the
juxtaposition of the two New Zealand favourites was "Kiwi as bro".
New Zealand picks Silver Fern for battle of the flags https://t.co/4b1FYuCBzP pic.twitter.com/markoFVzbC
— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) December 11, 2015

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