Kia‘i, or the self-dubbed protectors of Maunakea, on Thursday responded to an offer from Hawai‘i County Mayor Harry Kim proposing both sides of the Thirty Meter Telescope dispute stand down through the end of February.

Protectors accepted Kim’s terms, which don’t include demonstrators leaving the mountain, only that they move their camp to the roadside in order to return public access to Maunakea. The demonstration began on July 15, 2019. The access road is expected to reopen Dec. 28.

Mayor Kim offered personal assurances that there would be no attempts to begin construction on Maunakea by TMT, and that neither State nor County law enforcement would interfere with protectors who remain on the mountain.

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According to a Thursday Facebook post on Pu’uhonua o Pu’uhuluhulu Maunakea, an official social media page of the Kia‘i, protectors agreed to the mayor’s terms “for safety reasons.” However, the post continued to say that the group would “not leave Maunakea until the TMT leaves Hawai‘i.”

TMT has said confirmed it doesn’t plan to immediately move forward with construction, but instead intends to engage directly with Native Hawaiian elements who oppose it. The organization was also critical of State and County government, saying both had proven unable of providing “safe and secure access” to the mountain.

Gov. David Ige cited TMT’s position as reason for his decision last week to remove all State law enforcement from Maunakea indefinitely.

The following is the full post from the protectors, made at 5:14 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 26, 2019: