For the second time in less than three weeks, a Sikh religious procession in New Zealand has taken place under heightened police vigilance, following protest activity by a small nationalist group, raising growing concern among community leaders about repeated attempts to challenge public faith gatherings.

The latest incident in Tauranga on Sunday, during a Sikh Nagar Kirtan held to mark the birth anniversary of Guru Gobind Singh, was organised by Gurdwara Sikh Sangat and another gurdwara.

Hundreds of devotees participated in the event, which involved prayers, hymn singing and community engagement, and had been formally approved by local authorities well in advance.

According to reports from Tauanga, police confirmed that a group associated with earlier disruptions in the country gathered separately during the event and staged a demonstration involving haka performance and slogans asserting cultural ownership of public streets. Although the protest did not physically obstruct the procession, officers opted to modify the return path of the religious march to prevent any potential confrontation.

Gurdwara representatives stressed that the demonstrators were not close to the main body of participants.

“It was a bit far,” Puran Singh, one of the organisers and president of the Gurdwara Sikh Sangat, established in 2012, was quoted by the India Weekender.

According to the reports of Indian Weekender.CO.NZ, Singh said the programme proceeded smoothly once the protest activity concluded. “This was the twelfth annual Sikh Parade in Tauranga, and it takes place on a very large scale,” he said.

Singh said, “The nagar kirtan serves broader community purposes beyond religious observance.”

As per a Weekener report, “These parades are not just a celebration, but also a time for the community to be more aware, as immigration advisers, health camps and even other benefits are shared with those attending the gathering.”

Singh further said participants, particularly younger members of the community, complied fully with police instructions. “The youngsters participating in the parade were cooperative with the police,” Singh said, noting that public events of this scale require months of preparation and multiple layers of approval.

“The council and police have always been extremely helpful during our events,” he said.

Singh also cautioned against online speculation and exaggerated claims circulating after the event.

He emphasised that “once the haka concluded, there was no escalation or disruption”.

Law enforcement authorities confirmed that their response was precautionary, shaped by recent history. Inspector Christopher Summerville of the Bay of Plenty Police’s Māori Pacific Ethnic Service said officers acted promptly to ensure safety, said reports from New Zealand.

“Officers on site intervened immediately, ensuring the parade concluded safely,” Summerville said.

The Tauranga gathering marks the second nagar kirtan within three weeks to attract protest attention from the same group. In late December, a similar Sikh procession in Manurewa, South Auckland, was temporarily disrupted when protesters positioned themselves along the route while performing a haka. That standoff lasted roughly half an hour

Editorial Context & Insight

Original analysis and synthesis with multi-source verification

Verified by Editorial Board

Methodology

This article includes original analysis and synthesis from our editorial team, cross-referenced with multiple primary sources to ensure depth, accuracy, and balanced perspective. All claims are fact-checked and verified before publication.

Editorial Team

Senior Editor

Dr. Elena Rodriguez

Specializes in India coverage

Quality Assurance

Associate Editor

Fact-checking and editorial standards compliance

Multi-source verification
Fact-checked
Expert analysis