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Diabetes deaths in Fiji worst in the world, says watchdog

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By RNZ’s Dateline Pacific

The latest life expectancy world rankings show Fiji has the highest death rate from diabetes in the world with 188 of 100,000 fatalities being attributed to the disease.

The head of Diabetes Fiji says the ranking highlights the magnitude of the problem and the need for a more proactive approach.

Jenny Meyer reports:

LISTEN TO DATELINE

Transcript
Project manager Viliame Qio says people are shying away from medical attention and treatment out of denial and so when they do come forward they have more severe complications from their illness.

He says there needs to be more community education about diabetes and many people turn to traditional healers for help first, which also delays effective treatment.

-Partners-

“We have three amputations that take place in a day in the major hospitals and the main reason is the people are presenting late, they come very late, they are not coming early. So we want to get people to be educated that they have to seek medical attention first before they resort to other traditional methods or herbal methods.”

Viliame Qio says diabetes is the leading cause of disability in Fiji and people need to heed the public health messages about poor eating habits and sedentary lifestyles.

Dr Jone Hawera is a Fijian surgeon and says the diabetes crisis is becoming more widespread now affecting people in rural areas and at younger ages.

‘Bottom of the cliff’
“Just last week we amputated half a foot of a 30-year-old i-Taukei female. It’s not only the rate that’s increasing it’s also the age group that’s involved with the amputations. And that means we have a big disabled and non productive population. The economic impacts that’s going to make for us is huge.”

Dr Hawera says he is part of a group of frustrated, demoralised, under-resourced health personnel working at the bottom of the cliff trying to deal with the ongoing diabetes crisis.

He says there are many factors affecting the rate of diabetes including issues like food security and climate change and policy makers must do more to turn the crisis around.

He says diabetes is a physical manifestation of social issues and preventative policies need to address these.

“It’s preventable and that’s the hope that we continue to have, we know that it’s preventable. A lot of these deaths are preventable. A lot of these complications like amputations are preventable. We are trying to improve our education and our awareness, making people really understand what diabetes is and what causes it and the many ways they can prevent complications once they have it.”

Dr Hawera says he would like to see diabetes education get to a point in Fiji where people are prevented from getting the disease in the first place.

Early detection vital
Viliame Qio says both education and early detection are vital to dealing with the crisis.

“The very important thing is that you get screened and secondly that you adopt a healthy lifestyle. Especially the eating habits.

“Our diet has been transitioning from healthy food to very fast food and with this fast food comes a sedentary lifestyle. We need people to be very health cautious, to be mindful of what they eat and be physically active.”

Fiji’s Ministry of Health says one in three Fijians has diabetes and there is a higher incidence in Fijians of Indian descent.

It encourages regular health checkups and says symptoms include frequent urination, feeling thirsty and hungry, fatigue, blurry vision and pain in the hands and feet.

This RNZ Pacific item is part of the content sharing arrangement with the Pacific Media Centre.

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Indonesia plans to ramp up lobbying for UN Security Council seat

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Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi … prioritising contributions to peace, including in peace-keeping operations, and realising the Sustainable Development Goals. Image: P.J.LEO/Jakarta Post

By Dian Septiari in Jakarta

Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi is set to lobby more countries to vote for her country in its campaign for a non-permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council ahead of the vote that will take place next week.

Retno said she would head for New York again on Sunday, a few days before voting day on June 8.

“On the 4th [Monday] there will a diplomatic reception at the United Nations headquarters, while on the 5th, 6th and the 7th I still have the chance for more lobbying before voting day,” she told reporters on the sidelines of an iftar (breaking-of-the-fast) event at the Foreign Ministry on Monday.

In the last two weeks, Retno has visited New York, Guyana, Argentina and Peru and attended forums, where she also talked about Indonesia’s campaign for the seat.

Retno expressed her optimism, counting on Indonesia’s track record and contributions to world’s peace.

“Hopefully with all the contributions well-documented, it will become the reason why the countries vote for Indonesia,” she said.

-Partners-

She said if Indonesia gained the seat, it would prioritise contributions to peace, including in peace-keeping operations, realising the Sustainable Development Goals and pushing for more cooperation to solve transnational organised crime.

  • Dian Septiari is a Jakarta Post journalist.

More Indonesia stories

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PNG students in China say Facebook move is ‘irrelevant’ and damaging

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Papua New Guinean students in China protesting over a separate issue. A file picture of the Shenyang PNG Students Association members protesting over the shooting of students at the University of PNG in 2016. Image: Loop PNG

By Melisha Yafoi in Beijing

Students studying in Beijing, China, have described the move by Papua New Guinea’s Communications Minister Sam Basil to suspend Facebook for one month as “irrelevant” and damaging for education communications.

The students in a forum have expressed disappointment that there are more pressing issues that the government needs to address yet it is concerned about legislating freedom of speech for the people.

They said that being outside the country they were able to read information and connecting with family back home as many of the people do not have other social media platforms other than Facebook.

READ MORE: Facebook shutdown ‘a mockery to APEC’

They also said through Facebook, leaders were made accountable to their actions and were condemned publicly for their wrongdoing.

“Some people abuse it but the majority use this to express themselves. Why is government so worried about it. They have better things to do than wasting time to fb issue,”  Beijing PNG students vice-president Samuel Ray said.

-Partners-

“The real issues are out there. We have police brutality on the rise, car theft, rural urban drift, poverty, deteriorating infrastructure both school, road and heath services. Drug shortage, TFF policy not working well etc.”

It was also raised that it is obvious that the people have already lost their trust in the government. As a result there would be no positive result coming from this temporary suspension.

‘Top shots on toes’
“Most politicians, top government officials and top shots are always on their toes for being exposed of under the table deals,” the students said.

“Our national media (with due respect to the hard working media team) can sometimes be compromised by the government. Thus leaves social media, with no restrictions on people on what they post. A national social network isn’t a solution. Data of citizens shouldn’t rest in the hands of privileged individuals to manipulate.”

An international relations student suggested that PNG’s Communications and Information Technology Department should focus more on things like how to improve network services around the country and work on helping PNG catch up to the digital era rather than trying to keep PNG away from it.

She said shutting down Facebook will not solve anything and trying to analyse its positive or negative impacts was a waste of time and resources.

“The government, instead of choosing to totally shut down Facebook, should innovate ideas on establishing appropriate alternatives especially on the imposition of penalties on those abusive users of this social media platform,” another student said.

Melisha Yafoi is a contributor to the Post-Courier.

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RSF strategic media freedom summit planned for Asia-Pacific

Event date and time: 

Wednesday, July 4, 2018 – 08:00 Friday, July 6, 2018 – 17:00

THE PACIFIC MEDIA CENTRE will be participating in a Reporters Without Borders (RSF) Asia Pacific region summit in Paris.

RSF is running training courses and assessing its work in the region.

Colleagues from Australia, Timor-Leste and the Pacific will be attending.

When: 4-6 July 2018
Where: Paris, France

RSF website

Report by Pacific Media Centre ]]>

Savu border unsolved, but Timor-Leste leader praises ‘amazing’ Indonesia link

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Fretilin’s former Prime Minister Dr Mari Alkatiri … “we look forward to guaranteed stability, ongoing development and to bring people out of poverty” in Timor-Leste. Image: Agora Timor

By Ismira Lutfia Tisnadibrata in Dili

East Timor’s outgoing Prime Minister Dr Mari Alkatiri says that after almost two decades of separation from Indonesia, the country’s relations with its neighbour continue to strengthen despite some unresolved issues.

Indonesia “is our biggest supporter,” he said.

Timor-Leste, also known as East Timor, celebrated the 16th anniversary of its hard-fought restoration to independence last week on May 20.

The day marked Timor-Leste regaining its independence after 24 years of Indonesia’s occupation, which invaded the country shortly following its independence from Portugal in November 1975 that political party Frente Revolucionária de Timor-Leste Independente (Fretilin) unilaterally declared.

In an exclusive interview at a hotel near Fretilin party’s headquarters, Dr Alkatiri, Fretilin’s secretary-general, described East Timor’s relationship with its former invader as “amazing, very good.”

“We still have some pending issues, such as maritime and land borders in Oecussi,” he said, referring to an East Timor coastal exclave surrounded by Indonesia’s East Nusa Tenggara province, which lies on the western part of Timor Island. East Timor is located on the island’s eastern half.

-Partners-

Oecussi is a special administrative zone and has been designated as special economic zone with Dr Alkatiri as its president.

Maritime border dispute
Dr Alkatiri, who also served as East Timor’s first prime minister from 2002 to 2006, said both countries need to solve the border issue soon because it would be difficult to define a maritime border on the Savu Sea without a clearly marked land border.

“But the goodwill from both governments is there,” he said, adding that successive governments of East Timor would continue to strengthen the relations between the two countries.

Dr Alkatiri described Indonesia as East Timor’s “biggest supporter” in its bid to become the 11th member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Outgoing Timor-Leste Prime Minister Dr Mari Alkatiri with his wife Marina Ribeiro Alkatiri, daughter Nurima Ribeiro Alkatiri and son-in-law Machel Silveira, pose for a photograph after an interview with Arab News at a hotel near the Fretilin party headquarters earlier this month. Image: AN

Dr Alkatiri, who has been serving his second term as prime minister since September last year, is a Muslim leader in a predominantly Catholic country. His family on his paternal grandfather’s side came from Hadramaut in Yemen.

“They came as traders at that time and decided to stay,” he said.

Dr Alkatiri’s maternal grandparents were Timorese who came from Baucau and Liquica districts. He is married to Marina Ribeiro and has three children.

De facto leader
Indonesia was one of the regional bloc’s founding countries when it was established in 1967, and is regarded as its de facto leader.

Indonesia endorsed East Timor’s ASEAN bid when it formally submitted its application in 2011 during Indonesia’s ASEAN chairmanship.

Singapore, the current chair, has been reluctant to welcome East Timor into the bloc, but has said it looked forward to East Timor meeting the requirements to allow it to become a member.

Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said after hosting an ASEAN leaders’ summit in April that the topic was discussed during the forum, but “there was no extended discussion of the matter in this meeting”.

Dr Alkatiri said that ASEAN membership is “a very long dream”.

So far, Timor-Leste has met two of the requirements to be an ASEAN member: The country is located in Southeast Asia and has embassies in all 10 member states.

“This is one of the few things that is a consensus between the leadership of Timor Leste, despite the differences,” he said.

Coalition rule
Dr Alkatiri’s apparent successor Xanana Gusmao, who is poised to serve as prime minister for the third time, said East Timor is doing its best to become an ASEAN member.

“We understand some (member) countries think we are not ready, but sooner or later, we will be a member,” Gusmao said in an interview at his party National Congress for Timorese Reconstruction (CNRT) headquarters.

CNRT led a three-party coalition that beat the shortlived, Fretilin-led minority government in the May 12 parliamentary election.

Dr Alkatiri said the most pressing need for East Timor, with almost half its 1.2 million population still living in poverty, was government investment in public infrastructure, such as education and health, and spending on basic living needs, such as community housing and clean water.

“This is a 16-year-old country. We still need to build the nation; we really need to strengthen the foundation of the nation, institutional, political foundation, everyone needs to join efforts to do it,” he said.

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Dr Schram absconds on bail – claims PNG prosecution is ‘political’

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Dr Albert Schram … his Netherlands passport was returned last week and he now says he will not go back to PNG to face trial with no guarantee of justice. Image: Dr Schram’s blog

By Keith Jackson in Noosa

In a shock development in Papua New Guinea’s Schram case, the former vice-chancellor of the PNG University of Technology has said he will not return to Papua New Guinea “until major changes occur in the country”.

Dr Schram said he has been the subject of a “political prosecution” and will forego bail rather than return to an uncertain legal future in PNG.

“[We entered] a parallel world where lies are truth and all people are blind, deaf and mute,” he wrote in Facebook of the charge of “false pretence” he is facing.

READ MORE: My arrest: Wrongful dismissal and malicious prosecution in PNG

“In this world, you are completely alone because there is no point in trying to have a reasonable conversation with anyone. A truly terrifying world, but the truth will set us free.”

News story of the Sevua report backing Dr Schram in The National. Image: File

But Dr Schram said he will still go through “the costly process” of getting his original doctorate legalised and send it through diplomatic channels to the committal court in Waigani.

-Partners-

“This should clear all charges for ever,” he said.

Last Tuesday, against the wishes of police prosecutor Kila Tali, national court judge Panuel Mogish had varied Dr Schram’s bail conditions and ordered his passport be returned to enable him to travel to Italy to obtain the credentials which would have been prime evidence in a court hearing on a charge that Dr Schram engaged in “false pretence”.

Left at weekend
Dr Schram and his wife Paulina left Papua New Guinea on Saturday ostensibly to retrieve the doctoral qualifications from the European University Institute in Florence.

“We got out,” Dr Schram emailed me from Singapore yesterday, “probably not able to come back until major changes occur in the country.”

“In his judgement on May 22 on the bail conditions, the judge in the national court was deliberately explicit on the substantive case,” Dr Schram has written on his Facebook page.

“There is not a shred of primary evidence suggesting I have falsified anything, while there is overwhelming evidence that in fact my doctorate is genuine,” he said.

“Finally an independent judge has said what anyone with common sense could have concluded since the complaints were made in 2012.”

Dr Schram quoted Justice Mogish as writing in his judgement:

“In spite of this overwhelming evidence (presented by Dr Schram) Mr [Ralph] Saulep continues to dispute the authenticity of the applicant’s doctorate degree. I find this ridiculous and difficult to fathom especially when neither he or the police are in receipt of evidence from the European University Institute in Florence Italy, confirming their allegations and suspicions”.

The judge continued:

“The current charge, with respect, lacks the primary evidence to prove the elements of falsity. Whether they will have such evidence by the 12 June 2018 (the next hearing) is anyone’s guess. The reality is that they have failed to do so when the allegations were raised in 2012.”

Case ‘will be thrown out’
Dr Schram said: “It stands to reason the case will be thrown out at some point in time and my innocence will be established.

“All this is of course is damaging for police and the complainant – former pro chancellor Ralph Saulep….. Since the conditions for the settlement with the [current Unitech] Council, which included no criminal prosecution, have now been violated, I do not consider myself bound to this agreement.

“In any case, for justice to prevail and the people of PNG to be liberated from police abuse, I must describe the facts.”

Dr Schram said he and his wife Paulina “did not come to [PNG] to get rich but neither did we expect the financial ruin we are facing now.

“The legal fight with the [Unitech] Council for wrongful dismissal first and now the fight for my malicious prosecution by the police has drained all of our resources.”

He said he missed two job interviews because of his arrest and, when the charges are cleared, he will claim damages for “all the financial losses, opportunity costs and defamation of character I suffered”.

Dr Schram also said a parliamentary inquiry was warranted into police abuse in his case.

Police ‘need restructuring’
He concluded:

“Like for all of us academics, journalists and other knowledge workers who cannot return to the country, it makes us sad that until amends are made and the police have been restructured and [brought] under control, we will not be able to see our friends and our new and beloved family in PNG.”

When varying the bail conditions last week, Justice Mogish said it would be academic and career suicide for Dr Schram to abscond from bail and not return to PNG.

“I do not think any reasonable man would just walk away leaving a trail of serious allegations unanswered,” he said.

“His standing in the academic world would be seriously affected.”

Whether or not the judge’s words will be borne out, time will tell.

But it does seem that, given these dramatic circumstances, Dr Schram’s hopes for vindication are unlikely to be realised.

Small price to pay
Then again, Albert and Paulina Schram may feel this is a small price to pay.

They had found themselves is a totally powerless position on what appeared to be a trumped up charge in a country where they doubted the politics surrounding their predicament would allow justice to prevail no matter what the court decided.

This has emerged as something of a cautionary tale for outsiders who sail too close to Papua New Guinea’s political winds.

Keith Jackson is a retired journalist, broadcaster, administrator and media educator and has held senior positions in Australia and Papua New Guinea. This article was first published on his blog PNG Attitude and is republished by Asia Pacific Report with permission.

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Time for Xanana Gusmao to step up and fix Timor-Leste’s problems

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By Jose Belo in Dili, Timor-Leste

Timor-Leste’s parliamentary elections on May 12 have returned Xanana Gusmao to the Government Palace in Dili in an alliance that gives him enough votes to govern in his own right.

While Gusmao has won an election held only 10 months after the July 2017 poll, his CNRT (Party for Timorese Reconstruction Party) lost to FRETILIN (Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor) in the earlier election, albeit by a small margin. This forced him into an alliance with sometime rivals to secure the latest poll.

This suggests the people of Timor-Leste trust him, but they are not so happy with his previous government.

Timor-Leste voters sent a wake-up call to their leaders in the recent election. They are asking that the leaders, and most importantly, Gusmao, to continue governing but change their ways.

This all comes after a decade of high level government spending fueled by oil and gas riches. But questions remain. Has Timor-Leste gotten value for their money? Has the government’s spending priorities reflected the wishes and needs of ordinary Timorese voters?

Gusmao is seen as a leader with historical legitimacy, a man who has brought many good things to Timor-Leste since independence.

-Partners-

He resolved the 2006 political crisis, albeit despite being complicit in precipitating it, compensated petitioners, gave pensions to the veterans, initiated the beginnings of a social safety net for the poor, brought rural businesses into the private sector, brought electricity to the villages, and made many other positive changes.

Maritime victory
Most recently he won a victory for Timor-Leste’s maritime sovereignty with a boundary agreement with Australia although some see the deal as rushed for political expediency ahead of the recent poll.

But, there are complaints that the new government needs to address, and do so quickly in the first year of the new AMP (Alliance of Change and Progress) government.

Firstly, trust must be restored in the country’s leadership and to do that the lifetime pension for politicians needs to end. Office holders must likewise be held accountable through an annual declaration of assets.

Any forms of corruption must be stamped out among the country’s politicians and civil servants.

The people think, rightly, that leaders seek positions in order to make big salaries and look after themselves. Salaries and benefits need to be cut to reasonable levels. If the leaders give up benefits and stop corrupt activities then only then can the leaders ask people to work hard, sweat, and build a better country.

Secondly, the government must strengthen anti-corruption laws and pursue corruptors at all levels in Timorese society, from the remotest mountain village to Government Palace.

Looking ahead, Timor-Leste needs to move beyond its reliance on oil and gas and the government needs to prioritize the needs of the people who also need to become a community that can create wealth rather than just consume it.

Fund getting smaller
The Petroleum Fund was large but it is getting smaller and it will not last forever. Revenues from it could cease as early as 2026.

After ten years the country has built many things, but not enough for the land, human resources and environment. It is no small feat required of the people. We need to change focus.

Timorese are an agricultural people and it is a strength that needs to be prioritised and improved. More resources must be driven into building up the agricultural productivity and diversification. Funds need to be allocated to improving our farmers’ skills and their output so they can move from subsistence agriculture to agri-business.

Ordinary Timorese are not educated enough. Millions and millions have been spent on government scholarships to build the skills of technical experts, but the chiLdren have been left behind. The primary, secondary and tertiary educational institutions are underfunded and under prioritised.

The country would rather pay high tuition fees for international universities than improve the education of the 10-year-olds. This needs to stop or there will be a generation of Timorese who cannot contribute to the nation.

The country must change ways in the education sector to protect the future. School feeding programmes need improvement: a hungry child is not a child that can learn well.

The health of the people is poor, they are eating too much sugar and drinking too much beer. Timor-Leste need to dramatically improve public and preventative healthcare. The voters are asking for it.

Better health care
Rural clinics are an embarrassment. The country would rather send the rich and leaders to hospitals in Indonesia and Singapore than improve the standards of the children’s healthcare. It is not right nor is it wise. There can be no prosperity without good healthcare.

Timor-Leste needs to focus on its people in the rural areas. They need improved electricity access, improved rural roads, water and sanitation facilities. Improving these important assets will improve the ability of farmers and rural people to do business, the healthcare standards of people in the mountains and for schools to be where they should.

For sure, highways airports and bridges are important, but there needs to be a refocus on rural communities and their basic infrastructure needs such as water and sanitation.

About 65 percent of Timorese live next to or within sight of the sea. Timor-Leste has been negotiating maritime boundaries with Indonesia and managing new boundaries with Australia. With these boundaries come opportunities and challenges.

Future oil and gas resources need to be protected and developed very carefully. The fisheries can and should be an important source of sustainable income for Timorese for generations to come. The sea can also attract tourists to the coastal regions.

If Timor-Leste can protect and enhance its coastlines, tourists will be enticed to the villages creating jobs and income in a sustainable manner. But the sea can also bring problems. Rising sea levels, disasters, and smuggling. A coordinating ministry of maritime affairs is needed, just as Indonesia has done.

Again, there is much the Timorese need to do and they need to begin work today. The country just needs a trustworthy government to lead the way.

Jose Belo is an investigative journalist, publisher of Tempo Semanal and a commentator based in Dili, Timor-Leste. This article was first published by UCA News.

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India’s ‘tribal’ minister visits NZ for relationships but skirts rape culture

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India’s Minister of State for Tribal Affairs Jasvantsinh Bhabhor greeting members of the community on his first visit to New Zealand. Image: Vandhna Bhan/Te Waha Nui

By Vandhna Bhan in Auckland

India’s Minister of State for Tribal Affairs Jasvantsinh Bhabhor visited Auckland briefly last Saturday to talk about building international relations, but avoided comment on the country’s rape culture.

In light of recent events where two teenage girls living in rural India have been violently raped and then set on fire, Bhabhor declined to comment and restated his visit to New Zealand was solely relationship building.

India’s Tribal Affairs sector focuses on issues in rural Indian communities such as farming, education and cultural laws – which cover how community elders make their own laws surrounding rape.

In one of the past cases, the society’s elders said they had already punished the rapist and murderer with “100 sit-ups” so police involvement was not needed.

India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been criticised for his response and inaction over these incidents.

“Our government is committed to building cordial relationships to work towards the progress of all Indians,” said Bhabhor.

-Partners-

The brief stopover was en route to Samoa where the Indian government is working closely with Samoa’s medical centre.

First Samoan visit
High Commissioner Sanjiv Kohli said Bhabhor’s visit to Samoa is a first for any Indian minister in history.

“We have provided Samoa with their entire dialysis units and have even brought patients from Samoa to India for intensive surgeries.

“We are aiming to extend this aid to other countries,” said Kohli.

Twenty-eight-year-old Sukshant Nand who was present at the event said that the Indian minister failed to answer the big questions.

“The elephant in the room was rape culture in rural India which is a matter for Tribal Affairs, but here they are promoting their work in Samoa.

“There is work to be done in their own country,” said Nand.

Bhabhor said that they were taking “major steps” in areas such as demonetisation, GST, free electricity and electrification in rural communities.

However, it remained that both Bhabhor and Kohli were silent on rape issues.

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Tony Alexander’s Weekly Economic Overview – 24 May 2018

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Economic Analysis by Tony Alexander.

[caption id="attachment_11363" align="alignleft" width="150"] Tony Alexander, BNZ chief economist.[/caption]

Thursday May 24th 2018 – This week we start with a look at the data on retail spending growth and migration.

Both sets of data show things easing off but it would be premature to start getting down in the dumps about the economy.

Slowing Down? This week we learnt that during the March quarter core retail spending (excluding fuel and vehicles) rose by 0.6% in seasonally adjusted volume terms. This is a slowdown from unusually strong growth of 1.8% in the December quarter but it is too early to conclude that a new easing trend is necessarily in place beyond the pullback from the 2015-16 surge. Much of the slowdown will simply be a payback from the strong December quarter and if we average growth for the six month period the outcome of 1.2% a quarter is consistent with the average for the past year and a half. If we look at the best indicator of attitudes which consumers have toward how things are and where they are going we see that spending on store types selling mainly durable goods rose by 2.2% in the quarter. This was actually an acceleration from 1.5% growth during the December quarter. This again implies that treating the weak March quarter result as the start of an easing trend would not necessarily be correct. But as the graph above clearly shows, an earlier boom in spending growth has eased off slightly. Looking ahead we see an environment which will provide continuing support for growth in consumer spending. Demand for employees is very high so we would expect people to feel a high level of job security. Interest rates look set to remain low for a continuing very long time. Population growth remains strong (see below), and house prices continue to rise in most parts of the country though at slowing paces. House construction remains strong and that is good for sales of home furnishings etc. Yet there are reasons for retailers erring on the cautious side. Petrol prices have risen quite a bit recently and could go a tad higher. That saps spending available for other things. Of probably greater relevance for retailers however is the ongoing rise in competition from online sources, and the increased willingness and ease with which consumers can search for alternatives online. On top of that social media’s omnipresence means that bad stories about a retailer or their product can spread very easily. And any stories of sales weakness may build expectations of failure or deep discounting to such a level that people sit still simply waiting for such discounting to occur. Retailers also need to be aware of the increasing demand from consumers for environmentally friendly goods with a minimum of packaging. Plus staffing is becoming an increasingly problematic issue for many retailers. We more frequently see job vacancy signs in shop windows these days, and the rise in minimum wages will affect some. For others the issue might be the long-overdue crackdown on staff exploitation by some bad operators. This may be hitting others who following an inspection might lose staff who’s work visas have been discovered to be out of date. We also learnt this week that the population boost from net migration flows continues to ease off, largely because of a lift in the number of foreigners leaving the country. In April the net migration inflow amounted to 2,460 people which was down from 3,406 a year ago. The annual net migration gain now stands at 67,040 from a peak of 72,404 nine months ago. The speed of turnaround is so far fairly slow at an annual pace of near 7,000 but a small acceleration in the decline could be underway. Over the past three months the annualised net migration gain has fallen to 61,000 from 70,000 three months back. But we have to be careful about over-extrapolating monthly and even three monthly changes as things can move around quite a bit. This graph of monthly seasonally adjusted net inflows probably best shows the turnaround. Fundamentally speaking, a key driver for high net migration inflows of strong labour demand in New Zealand remains and is expected to persist for some years. This is highly relevant not just in terms of people coming in on work visas, but Aussies coming in at will and those of us already here choosing not to leave. The annual flow against Australia is interesting. It peaked at a record net loss of 40,000 people in 2012 but now stands at only a small loss of 162 in the past year. This is down from a gain of almost 2,000 in NZ’s favour late in 2016. The turnaround is minor but is likely to go further as jobs growth has been quite strong in Australia for the past year and a half with full-time employment in particular showing a turnaround from many weak years post-GFC. Housing I’ve been making number of presentations to people interested in the residential property market recently with more coming up. The questions people have are invariably centred around very specific things which have capacity to have some influence on the market. They ask about the changing brightline test, or the planned ban on foreign buying, or availability of bank finance. They are right at the coalface in the sector and their questions are quite specific. Rightly so. But that is not where I live my job. As an economist my job in every forum is to take people briefly away from their immediate concerns and try and show them the big long-term picture. Sometimes I say to audiences that I will speak about the things over which they have no influence but which will influence their outcomes. In the housing sector that means I am still writing and speaking about the same things I have been focussing on for a very long time. Consider this following collection of points. • “New Zealand has a shortage of dwellings and not an over-supply like the US, Ireland, Spain etc. That means the extent to which house prices would fall this cycle was always going to be limited. • Construction is at its weakest levels since 1965 near 14,000 per annum whereas 25,000 has been the average for the past decade. • Population growth is accelerating courtesy of rising net immigration (fewer people leaving so the mix is different from what we thought last year). • Interest rates are at very low levels – 40 year lows for floating mortgage rates. • The ability of housing construction to respond this cycle will be limited by the collapse of the finance company sector and its generous loans of money to property developers, plus tighter lending criteria by banks. • Investors have seen their equity investments and many others torn apart. The relative attractiveness therefore of housing from a psychological point of view has increased.” I wrote those comments in the August 20 2009 issue of the Weekly Overview. Here are some more detailed comments from the September 3 2009 issue. • “Average new house sizes are far larger than before so each “unit” of house involves 1.x units of older houses. With nothing else changing (ceteris paribus) average construction prices will be 1.x times higher. • There are more double income families now than in earlier years so price/income measures using average individual income measures are less relevant. One can easily adjust for this using household incomes however. • Average construction costs per meter are now higher than they used to be due to things such as tighter regulation of materials and construction personnel, compliance costs, insulation requirements, inspections, quarry availability and travelling distance for materials… • What we expect in a house is more than before – inside toilet(s), computer wiring, patios, … • Section sizes are smaller but land availability is worse than in the past so prices are higher. • Councils have not only moved to make section developers pay the full cost of services that will run to their area, but extras as well as a form of subsidy for existing ratepayers. • Availability of credit to individual buyers is far greater than in the old days so the pool of people who can consider making a purchase is greater than before, and if people choose they can access credit at an earlier age than before. • People’s awareness of the need to save for retirement has soared in the past 15 or so years so there is a constant nagging feeling that one needs to invest in something. Housing appears to be the default investment for Kiwis. • One could be wrong, but it appears harder in some locations to develop new subdivisions and therefore expand city boundaries (Auckland) than in the past. “ You can find these two old publications here: Page 7 in the former. https://www.mortgagerates.co.nz/files/WOAug20.pdf Page 10 in the latter. https://www.mortgagerates.co.nz/files/WOSept3.pdf And for your guide, here is the url containing our November 1 2012 listing of 19 reasons why Auckland house prices would keep rising. http://tonyalexander.co.nz/wpcontent/uploads/2013/02/WONovember-1.pdf Have any of the factors discussed above changed enough to alter the new housing fundamental of higher prices? From the first set we can note higher consents at 31,500 but population growth well exceeding anything we envisioned back then as net immigration flows have boomed. From the second list we can note that credit availability has tightened up for house buyers through LVRs and changes in bank self-imposed rules. But development finance has also tightened up. On the last point above, development of new subdivisions still looks like a nightmare. It is into the context of the long-term fundamentals like rapid population growth (see the net immigration graph trend line on page 3 above), hiking construction costs, desire/need to invest for long-term gain (that is the bit some people fail to grasp as they speak as if every investor were a speculator), and family changes that we need to place new developments. Some investors will be discouraged by the coming anti-investor legislation. But that won’t change the above fundamentals. Once the mix of investors has adjusted the availability of housing stock will worsen as young couples move out of family homes to displace tenants, rents will be higher because of higher costs, and the market will move back up again. Timing for Auckland? Probably within the next 18 months. Relevance for the rest of the country? Underpinning of recent price rises with upside potential slightly further down the track, but lost in the wash for the next 18 months as the lagged booms following Auckland’s earlier surge naturally end. Are You Seeing Something We Are Not? If so, email me at tony.alexander@bnz.co.nz with Housing Comment in the Subject line and let me know. If I Were A Borrower What Would I Do? Writing in this section has been a very boring exercise for some years and remains so even though we are seeing rises in US long-term interest rates. In theory such rises should place upward pressure on medium to long-term fixed interest rates in New Zealand. In practice we are yet to see that and it might take another 0.5% gain in the benchmark US ten year Treasury bond yield to cause a noticeable movement in average rates here. Were I still borrowing at the moment my inclination would be to fix at about the two year period with some spreading of forecasting uncertainty by locking some debt in for one year and a tad also for three years with some also floating to allow for cost-free early repayments should such become possible. Download document pdf 264kb
The Weekly Overview is written by Tony Alexander, Chief Economist at the Bank of New Zealand. The views expressed are my own and do not purport to represent the views of the BNZ. This edition has been solely moderated by Tony Alexander. To receive the Weekly Overview each Thursday night please sign up at www.tonyalexander.co.nz

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Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 25 2018 – Today’s content

Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 25 2018 – Today’s content Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage. [caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"] The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption] Parliament Danyl Mclauchlan (Spinoff): How the Bennett vs Mallard standoff exposes a paradox at the heart of politics Graham Adams (Noted): Be like Mike: Lessons the National Party could learn from Hosking Philip Matthews (Press Editorial): Questioning the nature of Question Time Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Mallard is something of a contradiction Richard Harman (Politik): Peace breaks out at Parliament Chris Bramwell (RNZ): Keeping House: The role of the Speaker explained Chris Trotter (Daily Blog): Testing The Speaker 1News: Watch: ‘Like being a ref in a sports match’ – Jacinda Ardern sticks up for Speaker after National lose confidence in him Lucy Bennett and Isaac Davison (Herald): National considers no confidence motion against Speaker Trevor Mallard Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): ‘It’s got personal’: Paula Bennett says Speaker Mallard has personal vendetta Anna Bracewell-Worrall and Emma Hurley (Newshub): Paula Bennett booted out of Parliament in chaotic Question Time Isaac Davison (Herald): Another day, another walkout: Paula Bennett kicked out after argument with Speaker Trevor Mallard Henry Cooke (Stuff): Paula Bennett kicked out of Parliament as National filibuster Question Time RNZ: Tempers flare between National and speaker in Parliament Henry Cooke (Stuff): National’s ‘deadline’ approaches for Speaker to respond over remark Newshub: Paula Bennett slams Question Time as ‘warped quiz show’ Laura Walters (Stuff): When politicians hijack the pro-truth ‘fact check’ Housing John Armstrong (1News): Labour’s record so far on affordable housing builds is pathetic Matthew Hooton (Herald): KiwiBuild descends into farce Jenée Tibshraeny (Interest): Twyford: ‘We don’t intend to be reckless’ Jason Walls (Interest): Treasury stands by its KiwiBuild forecast, despite strong Government opposition Ben Leahy (Herald): Housing New Zealand home sits vacant and overgrown for six months as Auckland waiting list hits 3286 Herald: Hutt City councillors vote to address homelessness in their own back yard Amy Diamond (Herald): Homeless Tauranga family of eight move into transitional housing Rob Stock (Stuff): New Zealand’s curtains crisis Rob Stock (Stuff): Power is a feminist issue: Women suffer more in our cold homes than men Government Isaac Davison (Herald): Phil Twyford has a big job to do – he may need to show a bit more humility RNZ: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern ‘deeply disappointed’ in Twyford over plane saga 1News: ‘He was visibly shaken’ – 1 NEWS political editor Jessica Mutch explains why Phil Twyford’s phone call from plane is a ‘big deal’ Tracy Watkins and Jo Moir (Stuff): Minister Phil Twyford apologises for Civil Aviation breach Craig McCulloch (RNZ): Transport Minister stripped of CAA role after phone call on plane Lucy Bennett (Herald): Phil Twyford offers to resign after inflight phone call Newstalk ZB: Twyford offers resignation after airplane phone call Listener: Is this the transformational government we were looking for? Brian Fallow (Herald): Budget buffer could come in handy Northcote by-election and online voting Alexia Russell (Newsroom): Ardern could be the difference in Northcote Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): New internal Labour poll for Northcote by-election bad news for Greens Jessica Tyson (Maori TV): Online strategy could see more rangatahi voting Auckland Now: Auckland Council pushes for online voting trial Human Rights Commission Dean Purcell (Herald): Big staff changes at Human Rights Commission Stuff: Dame Susan Devoy steps down from HRC Education and training Simon Collins (Herald): Shifting schools sets children back half a year – report Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): Stay of execution for deciles endorsed John Gerritsen (RNZ): Demise of school deciles cancelled for new plan RNZ: ‘Eventually decile system will go’ – Education Minister Roger Partridge (Stuff): An answer to New Zealand’s illiteracy enigma? Simon Collins (Herald): Builders seek an extra 2000 apprentices a year with new app Jennifer Eder (Stuff): Māori no longer ‘extra-curricular’ as bilingual school finds teacher Adele Redmond (Stuff): Auditor-general will not investigate concerns over charter schools’ closure, but other avenues remain Newstalk ZB: Dozens of Otago Uni support staff to lose jobs today Charlie Dreaver (RNZ): Victoria University name causes ‘issues for graduates’ Health Aaron Leaman (Stuff): Waikato DHB releases damning findings into SmartHealth Kyle MacDonald (Herald): Human Rights Commission complaint over David Seymour’s letter Herald: Cannabis law reform should consider the risks: Researcher Michael Daly (Stuff): Māori health boss calls for strategy to end cigarette sales Zane Small (Newshub): Challenging New Zealand’s harmful drinking culture Herald: Campaign ups the ante on drinking during pregnancy: ‘No alcohol means no risk to your baby’ Elspeth McLean (ODT): Concern at bowel cancers missed Nita Blake-Persen (RNZ): Nurses’ strike could still be on the cards as pay dispute continues Tova O’Brien (Newshub): Nurses preparing to strike this weekend – report Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Recommendations for nurses’ pay rise ‘fall short’ RNZ: Nurses panel recommends pay rise to avoid strike Newstalk ZB: Nurses want pay parity with teachers Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Nurses say independent panel ‘falls short’ – cautiously awaiting new DHB offer Isaac Davison (Herald): NZ Nurses Organisation says Government-appointed panel’s recommendation of 3% pay rise does not go far enough Oliver Lewis (Stuff): Canterbury DHB announces November opening for Christchurch outpatients building Euthanasia Alison Balance (RNZ): A citizens’ jury on euthanasia Anneka Smith (Hawke’s Bay Today): Legalising voluntary euthanasia a slippery slope: Geriatrician Nicki Harper (Hawke’s Bay Today): Unbearable suffering can be avoided with good, safe laws Hawke’s Bay Today: Palliative care experts say euthanasia goes against core belief that death and dying are ‘natural part of life’ Primary industries Kate Nicol-Williams (1News): Cockroaches, no toilets and murder – Greenpeace alleges horrifying conditions on overseas tuna fishing vessels Isaac Davison (Herald): Ministry of Primary Industries defends decision not to prosecute companies for overfishing RNZ: MPI defends not prosecuting over hoki catch Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Fishing giants under-reported hoki catch by ‘thousands of tonnes’ Michael Morrah (Newshub): Leaked report details dodgy commercial fishing practices Eric Frykberg (RNZ): Solution for M bovis goes down to wire, expected to cost $1b Gordon Campbell: On the M bovis outbreak RNZ: Sharemilkers lose everything after raising alarm about M bovis Conor Whitten (Newshub): First farmers to report Mycoplasma bovis now living in caravan in Australia Andrea Fox (Herald): Cattle disease – farmers’ long journey is just starting Andrea Vance (Stuff): M. bovis predicted to bring about the end of sharemilking in New Zealand Guy Trafford (Interest): Dairy Report: D-day looms for the M Bovis decision as farmers get ready for cow moving day Zac Fleming (RNZ): Kiwifruit packing company describes jobs as ‘s*** work’ Gerard Hutching (Stuff):Zespri nears goal of selling Chinese-grown kiwifruit under own label Poverty and inequality Sarah Robson (RNZ): New child poverty law too narrow – community groups Carissa Allen (Spinoff): I’m a single mum living in poverty Cate Broughton (Press): Anti-begging signs appear around Christchurch’s BNZ centre Bastion Point 1News: ‘We were right’ – Hone Harawira reflects on Auckland’s Bastion Point occupation, 40 years since police forcibly ended it Martin Johnston (Herald): Fires that shaped Auckland hapū history: Bastion Point, 40 years on Martin Johnston (Herald): Solemn dawn ceremony to remember the end of the Bastion Point occupation in Auckland Martin Johnston (Herald): Auckland’s Bastion Point after 40 years: events to honour protesters, foster reconciliation John Boynton (RNZ): Bastion Point: Dawn ceremony marks 40 years since evictions John Boynton (RNZ): Remembering Bastion Pt: ‘Straight out of a Nazi war movie’ Melanie Earley (Auckland Now): Dawn service marks 40 years since eviction at Bastion Point Kingi Taurua dies RNZ: Ngāpuhi elder Kingi Taurua ‘was a very iconic person 1News: ‘A great loss to Maoridom’ – Hone Harawira pays tribute to late Ngapuhi elder Kingi Taurua Stuff: Ngāpuhi elder Kingi Taurua has died after battle with cancer RNZ: Ngāpuhi elder Kingi Taurua dies after a short illness Justice and police RNZ: Cop should not have tasered man in the back – watchdog No Right Turn: The police put themselves above the law, again Kirsty Lawrence (Stuff): Police launch new app to target family harm call-outs Tracey McIntosh (Newsroom): A chance to leave mass incarceration behind Finance industry regulation Tamsyn Parker (Herald): Life insurance firms ordered to prove themselves clean Nikki Mandow (Newsroom): Show us you’re clean: regulators to life insurers Jenée Tibshraeny (Interest): FMA and RBNZ give life insurance companies until June 22 to prove they aren’t mimicking the misconduct of some of their Australian parents Michael Reddell: Conduct among the regulators International relations and trade David Parker (Herald): Advancing NZ’s interests at the OECD Stephanie Honey (RNZ): EU-NZ trade deal a bright spot in gloomy times ODT Editorial: New Zealand’s free-trade future Kirk Hope (Stuff): A progressive and inclusive agreement with EU will bring benefits Privacy Herald: Editorial: Global framework desirable for Google, Facebook and other tech giants to address legal and privacy issues Tim Murphy (Newsroom): Privacy in spotlight as Europe rules take force Cultural debates Te Aniwa Hurihanganui (RNZ): Moko artist defends controversial work Leonie Pihama (Spinoff): Moko kauae is the right of all Māori women. It is not a right for anyone else Hawke’s Bay Today: Toi Tangata commends increased use of te reo Māori, but questions use in fast food outlets Te Mata Peak Marty Sharpe (Stuff): Te Mata Peak track supporters postpone their walk and say their intention was ‘misconstrued’ Astrid Austin (Hawke’s Bay Today): Craggy Range track supporters postpone walk to allow discussions Environment Laura Dooney (RNZ): Govt needs to do more on climate change – report Moana Makapelu Lee (Maori TV): New report finds how NZ must adapt to effects of Climate Change Sam Clarke (1News): Families in limbo after projected sea level rise puts home building on ice – ‘Only good for grazing goats’ Arun Soma (1News): Environment Ministry warns against using biodegradable and compostable bags Sapeer Mayron (RNZ): Minister ‘inclined towards’ ban on plastic bags Southland Times Editorial: Te Araroa: shame about the ending? Jaqueline Rowarth (Herald): Nostalgia is a trap that won’t save the environment Chris Hutching (Stuff): Ngai Tahu negotiates tighter environmental controls over Lyttelton Port’s dredging plans Local government Nick Truebridge (Press): Question hangs over Christchurch residents’ say on $300 million rebuild fund Kelly Makiha (Rotorua Daily Post): Court rules Rotorua Lakes Council overcharged rates for 94 inner city leaseholders Laura Dooney (RNZ): Wairarapa rates increases may ‘force people from their homes’ Sam Kilmister (Manawatū Standard): Manawatū District Council officials reject rural rates hike amid public pressure Melissa Nightingale (Herald): Call for special support service in Wellington for Māori victims of sex abuse Virginia Fallon (Stuff): Kāpiti councillor determined to keep job, despite indecent assault verdict Paul Lochore (Herald): ‘PR whitewash from council’ about building consent process Bernard Orsman (Herald): Retirement village planned in residential neighbourhood tests Auckland’s Unitary Plan Simon Wilson (Herald): New hope for West Lynn Transport Mitch McCann (Newshub): Government under pressure to intervene as fuel prices creep towards $3 a litre Alice Peacock (Herald): The ‘Gull effect’ fuels huge discrepancy in Auckland petrol prices Jessie Chiang (RNZ): Midwife spent $11,000 on petrol in past year Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): Auckland Airport ‘a national disgrace’ RNZ: AirNZ takes fuel giants to court over pipeline damage Anne Marie May (RNZ): Half of recreational drone users ignore rules: report Tourism Jamie Morton (Herald): 1.7 million tourists in 12 months: Can New Zealand’s environment handle it? Sophia Duckor-Jones (RNZ): Tourists cause closure of South Island walking tracks Bruce Morris (Newsroom): Freedom camping: coming to a park near you Other Gill Bonnett (RNZ): NZ visas for Chinese bank’s clients fast-tracked Phil Pennington (RNZ): Engineer warns of lack of action over aluminium cladding Don Rowe (Spinoff): Minister pledges crackdown on offshore casinos that prey on Kiwi gamblers Holly Ryan (Herald): Foreign investment in New Zealand technology sector at record levels Phil Quin (Newsroom): Forget Folau – the kids are all right Sam Hurley (Herald): Minister of Defence was briefed on investigation into top military attaché in Washington Leith Huffadine (Stuff): Catholic Bishops lobbies Law Commission over proposed abortion law change Peter Matheson (ODT): Media blind to nature of religion Nicholas Jones (Herald): Forced adoption pain: ‘whoever is talking now is the tip of the iceberg’ Tracy Neal (RNZ): Kaikōura to ‘get on with it, get learning, and get back’ Sasha Borissenko (Newsroom): Tom Sainsbury uncensored Rebecca Howard (BusinessDesk): Adrian Orr says RBNZ needs to be ‘far more aggressive’ to shed gender imbalance Thomas Manch (Stuff): Survey of sexual harassment in legal profession reveals ‘concerning’ issue]]>

Bryce Edwards’ Political Roundup: Labour’s changing approach to Maori inequality

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Bryce Edwards’ Political Roundup: Labour’s changing approach to Maori inequality

[caption id="attachment_13635" align="alignright" width="150"] Dr Bryce Edwards.[/caption] That Maori face severe disadvantage in New Zealand is a given. The debate really lies in how to deal with this inequality and deprivation. Right now, a significant political shift seems to be occurring, in which the once-dominant ideas of targeted programmes and separate Maori political vehicles are being replaced by a more universal approach.  [caption id="attachment_15463" align="aligncenter" width="640"] Waka Waitangi. Image: Wikimedia.[/caption] The latest sign came in last week’s Government Budget, which was conspicuously lacking in funding for “Maori development”. According to John Tamihere, writing in the Herald yesterday, the Whanau Ora programme “received zero funding in Budget 2018” and “for the first time in decades, Budget 2018 actually took money away from Māori. Te Puni Kokiri loses $3 million of baseline funding over the next four years” – see: Where’s the money for Māori, Jacinda? Tamihere looks at targeted vs universal funding and concludes that, while both approaches “have merit”, there is a need to “actually target Māori problems, with Māori solutions”. In fact, he makes the case that mainstream funding ends up being race-based: “This targeted racist-style of funding has to stop. It’s called mainstream or white stream funding because more funding is thrown at the Māori problem by non-Māori to fix Māori.” Tamihere highlights two very different models for dealing with Maori deprivation and disadvantage. These are important public policy concepts which have informed how New Zealand government and politics have operated in recent decades. The universal approach is based on political strategies in which Maori are largely treated the same as other ethnicities, and problems are dealt with on the basis of need, in the first instance, rather than culture, race, etc. In this broad strategy, social services and targeted programmes are directed to those in poverty or with particular illnesses, housing needs, or whatever. The theory is that, by virtue of addressing those most in need, this will also benefit Maori because Maori are disproportionately represented amongst New Zealand’s most disadvantaged populations. In an electoral sense, under this more “mainstream” approach, Maori vote for or join political parties on the basis of policy, rather than on the basis of ethnicity, and perhaps even go on the general roll. The Maori-specific approach is based on political strategies which accept Maori issues require a unique answer due to the complex and distinct situation of Maori. This approach also places a greater emphasis on cultural practices and sovereignty issues. This means that the provision of public services should be tailored for Maori, and ideally designed and delivered by Maori. A major driver of this approach lies in the failure of mainstream solutions to alleviate Maori inequality. Under this Maori-specific approach, Maori vote for and join parties that are explicitly set up for Maori interests and aspirations. Of course, the reality is much more complex than this simple dichotomy, and combinations of both approaches are used by governments. Nonetheless, the “universal vs Maori-specific” dualism does give a sense of some of the complexities of Maori and ethnic politics in New Zealand over recent decades. Very broadly, New Zealand government and politics has traditionally employed a more universal approach. But this began to change quite significantly in the 1980s, when frustration grew with the plight of Maori and demands for new strategies grew. Universalism became discredited for some, and governments and others moved more towards Maori-specific public policy. I examine this shift in a column this week on the Newsroom website – see: Labour’s move away from Maori-specific policies. Labour’s shift away from “race-based” politics In an earlier Political Roundup in February, I covered the Labour Party’s signalled shift away from “culturalist” or “race-based” politics in dealing with Maori inequality – see: The real political controversy of Waitangi 2018. This looked at Jacinda Ardern’s declaration at Waitangi that the new government would take a universalistic approach: “We are specifically targeting things like poverty. An actual by-product of that is it will positively impact Maori.” At the centre of much of the change in Maori politics is new Labour MP and Minister, Willie Jackson, who is playing a key role in changing Labour’s approach. He’s written a very informative post at the Daily Blog, in which he defends the Budget, and explains the changes going on – see: The Budget and Māori. Jackson starts off explaining that Labour believes in both universalism and a Maori-specific approach: “people must be clear that Governments run dual strategies for Māori. The first one is a universal strategy and the second one is a targeted strategy. Anybody who thinks that a Government should just have a targeted strategy funding Māori programmes and kaupapa only, is deluded, and more than likely a member of the Māori Party!” He then explains that Maori-specific public policy approaches tend to be based around a traditional and cultural world in which most Maori don’t actually live: “Although some of us practice things Māori every day and our whole world is about te ao Māori, we are sadly in the minority. Most Māori kids don’t speak Māori, don’t go to Māori schools, most Māori families don’t engage with the marae and most of our people are not on the Māori roll. That’s the reality, and that’s what we have to deal with in politics. So with that being the case we have to have policies that deal with that reality”. Jackson also argues that Labour won all seven Maori seats on the basis of appeals to universalism and traditional economic or class-based politics, and saw it as a priority to deal with ameliorating material poverty and deprivation before focusing on cultural or sovereignty issues. This is in line with comments Jackson made following last year’s election: “This waffle about foreshore and seabed is exactly that. I think most of our people don’t care – that’s why they voted against the Maori Party. They care about housing, health and education” – see John-Michael Swannix’s Most Māori don’t care about foreshore and seabed – Jackson. For an in-depth examination of how Willie Jackson, along with Shane Jones and Nanaia Mahuta are changing iwi-government relations, see Graham Cameron’s excellent article from March, Labour to Iwi Chairs Forum: ‘Iwi leaders need to catch up with the new world’. He argues that the traditional iwi leaders are out of favour in the new Maori political landscape, and future influential Maori leaders will be those who can show that they can help transform the lives of the poor. Not everyone agrees with this new approach, of course. The Maori Party have provided the best challenges to it. Marama Fox questions whether the new approach is appropriate, saying “Universality does not work, has not worked. It will have some benefits, but it would be greatly increased if it was targeted in the right direction” – see Jenna Lynch’s Labour could face backlash from Māori voters. Likewise, Maori Party president Che Wilson says “Mainstreaming Maori issues has shown over the decades it doesn’t work” – see 1News’ ‘It’s extremely disappointing, you know?’ – Labour MPs under fire over lack of targeted spending for Maori. This news report suggests that other Maori-specific funding is also vulnerable: “Targeted Maori spending for things like broadcasting, community and economic development are also under scrutiny”. Finally, for another account that is challenging for the new government and its more universal approach, see Joshua Hitchcock’s Why Māori need an apology from the new Labour government.]]>

O’Neill defends PNG government responses over Bougainville

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Papua New Guinea’s government has defended its handling of preparations for the Bougainville referendum. Video: EMTV

By Meriba Tulo in Port Moresby

With just a year to go before the people of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville go to the polls to determine their political future, the Papua New Guinean government has defended its handling of preparations for this exercise.

During question time in Parliament yesterday, Prime Minister Peter O’Neill said the government, under his leadership, had done more for the Autonomous Region during his term than at any other time.

He said the next Joint Supervisory Body meeting would be of the utmost importance for the Bougainville referendum in June next year.

During question time, Member for South Bougainville Timothy Masiu asked a series of questions of the Prime Minister regarding the national government’s efforts in support of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville’s preparations for the referendum.

Of particular concern, according to Masiu, the recent appointment of a Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Bougainville Affairs, which he claimed would cause challenges for the region on conducting the referendum.

-Partners-

The Prime Minister emphasised the steps taken by the parties – the national government, and the ABG – to have the Chairman of the Referendum Commission in place, as well as agreeing on the all-important referendum questions.

While there has been some sentiments regarding possible independence for Bougainville, the Prime Minister was quick to point out that it would be difficult to let go of the Autonomous Region, especially at a time when there was need for unity in Papua New Guinea.

The national government and Autonomous Bougainville government are due to meet in June for the Joint Supervisory Body meeting.

This meeting, scheduled to take place in Arawa, is expected to iron out several issues relating to the referendum, including the all-important question, or questions, which will be put to the people of Bougainville.

Meriba Tulo is an EMTV reporter. This story was first published by EMTV News and is republished here with permission.

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PNG condemned for sorcery attacks, police brutality and over refugees

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Refugees and asylum seekers on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island have suffered repeated violent attacks and robberies by locals, says Human Rights Watch. Video: HRW

Pacific Media Watch Newsdesk

Papua New Guinea has been condemned for violent mob attacks on people accused of sorcery – especially women or girls, repeated assaults and robberies on refugees, failure to address police brutality and corruption in the latest country report by Human Rights Watch.

The New York-based rights watchdog flagged a Madang trial that began in March of 122 people accused of killing five men and two children suspected of witchcraft and serial attacks on women.

Almost 40 percent of the country’s 8 million people live in poverty, and the government is far too reliant on religious groups and non-government organisations to provide charitable services for the economic and social rights of citizens.

Among other key points of the chapter in its annual world report:

• The government has not taken sufficient steps to address gender inequality, violence, excessive use of force by police;
• Rates of family and sexual violence are among the highest in the world, and perpetrators are rarely prosecuted; and
• Papua New Guinea has one of the highest rates of maternal death in the world.

-Partners-

‘Electoral violence’
Last August, Peter O’Neill was reelected as prime minister following an “election marred by widespread electoral irregularities and violence”, Human Rights Watch says.

“Soldiers and extra police were sent to the Highlands in response to fighting triggered by the election, where dozens of people, including police, had been killed in election-related violence.

“Refugees and asylum seekers on Papua New Guinea’s Manus Island have suffered repeated violent attacks and robberies by locals, with inadequate hospital care on the island and no action by police.”

The watchdog says that more than three years after the 2013 Family Protection Act was adopted, Parliament in May finally passed regulations to implement the law, which criminalises domestic violence and allows victims to obtain protection orders.

However, police and prosecutors “rarely pursue investigations or criminal charges against people who commit family violence” — even in cases of attempted murder, serious injury, or repeated rape — and instead prefer to resolve such cases through mediation and/or payment of compensation.

Police often demand money (“for fuel”) from victims before acting, or simply ignore cases that occur in rural areas.

There is also a severe lack of services for people requiring assistance after having suffered family violence, such as safe houses, qualified counselors, case management, financial support, or legal aid, the report says.

Violent mobs
Violent mobs attacked individuals accused of sorcery or witchcraft, particularly women and girls.

In March, a trial involving 122 defendants began in Madang. The defendants were charged in connection with the killing of five men and two children suspected of sorcery in 2014, Human Rights Watch says.

The prosecution alleged that the men raided a village in search of sorcerers to kill, armed with “bush knives, bows and arrows, hunting spears, [and] home-made and factory-made shotguns.”

No further details were available at time of the watchdog’s report regarding the trial’s progress.

Papua New Guinea has one of the highest rates of maternal death in the world. Just over 50 percent of women and girls give birth in a health facility or with the help of a skilled birth attendant.

Although the PNG government supports universal access to contraception, two out of three women still cannot access contraception due to geographic, cultural, and economic barriers.

Abortion remains illegal in PNG, except when the mother’s life is at risk.

Police abuse rampant
Police abuse remained rampant in Papua New Guinea, says Human Rights Watch.

In May, police detained and assaulted a doctor at a police roadblock on his way home in Port Moresby. The case triggered a public outcry, but no one had been charged for the offence at time of writing.

Few police are ever held to account for beating or torturing criminal suspects, but in December 2016, a mobile squad commander was charged with the murder of a street vendor, six months after the alleged offence occurred.

A court granted him bail in January 2017. In September, police charged a former police officer with the 2013 murder of two people in Central Province.

Despite the ombudsman and police announcing investigations into the 2016 police shooting of eight university students during a protest in Port Moresby, at time of writing no police had been charged or disciplined and neither body had issued a report.

About 770 male asylum seekers and refugees from countries including Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Burma, and Iran, live on Manus Island.

Another 35 or so have signed settlement papers to remain in PNG, although only four of these are working and financially independent.

Temporary living
About 70 are temporarily living in Port Moresby. All were forcibly transferred to PNG by Australia since 2013, says Human Rights Watch.

Australia pays for their upkeep but refuses to resettle them, insisting refugees must settle in PNG or third countries, such as the United States.

Refugees and asylum seekers do not feel safe on Manus due to a spate of violent attacks by locals in the town of Lorengau.

Local youths attacked refugees and asylum seekers with bush knives, sticks, and rocks and robbed them of mobile phones and possessions.

Police failed to hold perpetrators to account.

In April, soldiers fired shots at the main regional processing center, injuring nine people including refugees and center staff.

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Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 24 2018 – Today’s content

Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 24 2018 – Today’s content Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage. [caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"] The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption] Parliament Tracy Watkins (Stuff): Politics gets ugly at Parliamentary Question Time 1News: Allegations Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern called ‘stupid little girl’ leads to extraordinary stoush in corridors of power Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Paula Bennett packs a punch in Parliament’s bear pit Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): National issues letter of ‘serious concern’ over Speaker Trevor Mallard Herald: National Party and Speaker in open warfare over ‘stupid little girl’ comment 1News: Video: Gerry Brownlee has ‘serious concerns’ over Speaker’s handling of alleged sexist comment made about Jacinda Ardern by National MP in the House Craig McCulloch (RNZ): National voices concern over Speaker’s actions Henry Cooke (Stuff): National accuses Speaker of ‘pushing’ the ‘stupid little girl’ story Anna Bracewell-Worrall and Emma Hurley (Newshub): Paula Bennett storms out of Parliament during Question Time Claire Trevett (Herald): Paula Bennett’s Parliament walkout: ‘Sick of being treated like a child’ by Speaker 1News: Video: ‘Nah, I’m leaving, what a waste of time’ – exasperated Paula Bennett walks out of parliament after disagreement with Speaker Trevor Mallard Laura Walters (Stuff): Paula Bennett storms out of Question Time, saying Speaker’s rulings are ‘dangerous for democracy’  Lucy Bennett (Herald): Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern brushes off ‘very sexist’ remark Newstalk ZB: Bridges: Name-calling part of parliament Henry Cooke (Stuff): Simon Bridges says ‘no evidence’ one of his MPs called Jacinda Ardern ‘stupid little girl’ Emma Hurley and Jenna Lynch (Newshub):‘Settle petal’: Ron Mark told off for ‘sexist remark’ 1News: Watch: ‘Settle petal’ – Ron Mark scolded for ‘sexist remark’ in Parliament Jason Walls (Interest): Politicians at the pub: David Seymour – New Zealand’s most coordinated MP? Madeleine Chapman (Spinoff): A critical analysis of parliamentary power sits Privacy and profiling Katie Kenny (Stuff): All you need to know about the proposed privacy laws Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): ‘Urgent’ algorithm stocktake will shed light on government profiling Possible referendum Benedict Collins (RNZ): PM won’t commit to law change if marijuana referendum successful No Right Turn: Bad faith Isaac Davison (Herald): Double whammy: Votes on legalising cannabis and euthanasia possible before the election Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Mega referendum: Kiwis could vote on euthanasia and cannabis at the same time Budget and tax Bryce Edwards (Newsroom Pro): Labour’s move away from Maori-specific policies John Tamihere (Herald): Where’s the money for Māori, Jacinda? Māori TV: 7mil to support Māori landowners Stuff: How much tax is the Government collecting? International relations and trade Fran O’Sullivan (Herald): Not the time to be a bull in a China shop Herald Editorial: EU trade nod sends pointed message Stacey Kirk (Stuff): What’s good for NZ is good for the Govt – free trade with Europe is a big deal Herald: What the EU free trade deal would mean for NZ Tom Pullar Strecker (Stuff): Kiwi businesses see meat in EU trade deal Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Q+A: NZ’s major step toward free trade with the European Union Henry Cooke (Stuff): Parker: EU deal unlikely to be worth as much as China FTA Henry Cooke (Stuff): Green Party cautiously optimistic on EU trade deal Charles Finny (Stuff): Successive governments can take a bow over free trade talks with EU Joseph Nunweek (Spinoff): How at-risk young Kiwis in Australia are failed by Canberra and by Wellington Newshub: New Zealand needs to ‘call out’ Australian Government on homeless Kiwis Health Isaac Davison (Herald): Ban cigarette sales by 2025 and encourage vaping to hit smokefree goal, MPs told 1News: Experts tell Government to ban cigarette sales by 2025 as smoke free goal ‘a train wreck for Maori and Pacifica’ 1News: Smokefree activist says a ban on cigarettes would be premature: ‘You make criminals of people previously addicted’ Aaron Leaman (Stuff): Waikato DHB releases damning findings in to SmartHealth Natalie Akoorie (Herald): SmartHealth review finds failed virtual health app cost taxpayers $25.7m Farah Hancock (Newsroom): ‘Swiss cheese’ health system loses heart data Samantha Gee (Stuff): Fight to eliminate seclusion use the focus of Nelson campaigner’s cause Janine Rankin (Manawatu Standard): Team effort needed to turn off the tap on mental distress Justice and police Sam Hurley (Herald): ‘Considerable concern’ at Google’s unwillingness to follow court orders – Privacy Commissioner Laura Walters (Stuff): Police Minister Stuart Nash will struggle to add 1800 extra police by 2020 Jared Savage (Herald): Deputy Commissioner Viv Rickard leaves police after job advertised Chelsea Daniels (Newstalk ZB): Fears for children’s safety over delays caused by lack of security at south Auckland courthouses Housing Jane Patterson (RNZ): Labour and National go head to head over KiwiBuild Colleen Hawkes (Stuff): Opinion: Tax ghost houses and pour the money back into affordable housing Jenée Tibshraeny (Interest): Westpac’s David McLean says flat house prices for 20-30 years would gradually correct housing unaffordability without igniting ‘economic carnage’ a big price drop would cause Gia Garrick (RNZ): Dispute over proposed Epsom complex boils over Melanie Earley (Auckland Now): Epsom residents back David Seymour over social housing letter Newshub: What Housing New Zealand actually wants to do in Epsom Newshub: New state houses should be in ‘appropriate areas’, not in my hood – Mark Richardson Samantha Gee (Stuff): Struggle for social housing keeping many families under the yoke of poverty Amy Diamond (Bay of Plenty Times): Family of eight with premature babies living in Tauranga motel Chris Harrowell (Manukau Courier): Development will create up to 300 new homes in Manukau, south Auckland RNZ: Council announces 300-home development in S Akl Stuff: Real Estate Institute: Help renters by regulating property managers Jo McKenzie-McLean (Stuff): Cromwell residents outraged a ‘workers’ motel’ approved for neighbourhood 1News: Decision to force Wellington tenant to hand over profits shows there are ‘consequences’ for subletting properties you don’t own on Airbnb Transport Grant Bradley (Herald): Wealthy Auckland suburbs worst hit by airport flight path trial – changes made Ryan Dunlop (Herald): More than a dollar separates cheapest and most expensive fuel in NZ Herald: Paying through the nozzle: The place where 91 is already more than $3 a litre Alice Guy (Rotorua Daily Post): ‘Ground zero’ Rotorua petrol prices ‘remarkable’ as nationwide prices hit record high Richard Harman (Politik): The website policy wonks winning over the Beehive Bernard Orsman (Herald): Phil Twyford opts for more expensive light rail over buses to Auckland Airport   Primary industries Conan Young (RNZ):Fishing industry’s lies revealed in leaked report No Right Turn: Pervasive criminality II RNZ: First NZ farm with Mycoplasma bovis uses vet 1600km away Rachel Stewart (Herald): Farmers angry with MPI over Mycoplasma bovis Jo Moir (Stuff): Cabinet expected to choose eradication over containment of M bovis Jo Moir (Stuff): Police assisting M Bovis investigation by issuing warrants Tova O’Brien (Newshub): Mycoplasma bovis could cost New Zealand $1 billion Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Here are the reasons you seriously need to start caring about Mycoplasma bovis Lucy Bennett (Herald): M. Bovis will not stop Gypsy Day, dairy industry’s annual moving day Nathan Guy (Newshub): The Mycoplasma bovis blame game achieves nothing Michael Hayward (Stuff): Canterbury farm that exploited workers under investigation for animal welfare issues Local government John Minto (Press): What is more important for Christchurch? A rugby stadium or social housing? Dominic Harris (Stuff): Elected council will return to Environment Canterbury next year Robin Martin (RNZ): Questions raised over mayor’s involvement in land-sale meeting Michael Barnett (Herald): Council, stay out of waste industry Ruby Macandrew (Dominion Post): Wellington City Council praised for plan to stamp out sexual assaults in the city RNZ: Kāpiti councillor found guilty of indecent assault RNZ: Kāpiti councillor convicted of sexual assault says he was set up Employment Gordon Campbell: On why we should be anxious about Artificial Intelligence Zac Fleming (RNZ): Kiwifruit ‘crisis’ – how hard is picking really? Donal Curtin: How competition benefits women’s pay Super Fund Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Government dismissive of Super Fund pay concerns Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): Super Fund wants exemption from law which would rein in CEO pay Herald: Super Fund fights for right to set chief executive’s pay Matt Whineray (Herald): Why light rail fits the super fund’s mandate Welfare, inequality and poverty Southland Times Editorial: Another season of shuddering indoor cold for many Kiwis MItchell Alexander (Newshub): Exclusive: Taxpayers to shell out millions to richest superannuitants Energy Pattrick Smellie (Stuff): To prepare for our electrical future: buy socks BusinessDesk: Cold, dry winters threaten move to renewables Education Simon Collins (Herald): School deciles survive for at least two more years as risk-based funding model is deferred Adele Redmond (Stuff): Government scraps plans to replace decile funding system for schools with risk index Lucy Bennett (Herald): Auditor-General will not investigate charter school complaints from Nikki Kaye RNZ: Auditor-General reject’s charter schools contract inquiry Matt Stewart (Stuff): Uni Association investigated allegations staffer sent penis pics to sexual violence workers Eric Crampton: Zero percent blues Critic menstruation issue Andrew Geddis (Spinoff): Is Otago University okay with censorship, or not? Philip Matthews (Press): Otago University: Critic and conscience or censor? Laura Cairns, Kyra Gillies, Sinead Gill, Laura Anderson, William Dreyer and Finn Campbell (Stuff): The menstrual magazine that broke the camel’s back Eleanor Ainge Roy (Guardian): Otago University seizes and destroys copies of student magazine that depict menstruation Genevieve O’Halloran (Noted): Otago University’s attempt to silence a women’s health issue was wrong – period. Hamish McNeilly (Stuff): University of Otago claims removing student period magazine was a staff member’s mistake Stuff: Controversial student magazine Critic goes up for auction on Trade Me Moko controversy Te Aniwa Hurihanganui (RNZ): Pākehā with facial moko divides Māori community Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Ummmm, are we really getting angry today over this moko kauae? Newshub: Ngāpuhi leader David Rankin defends Pākehā woman Sally Anderson’s moko Newshub: Moko not for Pākehā, say Māori artists and academics Herald: Pākehā woman with tā moko accused of cultural appropriation 1News: ‘White privilege’ – Maori academic dismisses legitimacy of Sally Anderson’s moko as ‘business branding’ RNZ: Pākehā woman with facial moko draws backlash Defence Isaac Davison (Herald): PM Jacinda Ardern welcomes ‘minor’ transparency success after Defence Force discloses deployment details Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Boost for veterans on the cards Michael Daly (Stuff): Yes, New Zealand is hard to invade. But experts say there are ‘many subtle ways to attack a country’ Stuff: Air Vice-Marshal Kevin Short is the new chief of the Defence Force RNZ: New chief of Defence Force appointed Environment Ged Cann (Stuff): Expert panel critical of government’s climate change planning Jamie Morton (Herald): How New Zealand should be getting ready for climate change Monica Gerth and Scott Lawrence (Stuff): Our kauri trees are not fine: please support the rāhui Business Katie May Ruscoe (The Wireless): Why New Zealand made fashion is hanging by a thread Paul McBeth (BusinessDesk): NZ small businesses less upbeat about the future Te Aniwa Hurihanganui (RNZ): Young, female and Māori: The new business leaders taking over Other Glenn McConnell (Dominion Post): We should be protesting, but instead we’re pushing angry react Peter Hosking (Newsroom): Drop the politics from human rights Bevan Marten (Newsroom): The insurance reform to pay attention to Nikki Mandow (Newsroom): RB launches window on banks’ financials Talisa Kupega (Maori TV): Treaty expert disputes Jones’ Tribunal claims Mike Watson (Stuff): Oil and gas workers to meet PM on a ‘just transition’ from oil and gas Martin Johnston (Herald): Historian: Māori chief should replace John Logan Campbell as ‘Father of Auckland’ Tom Furley (RNZ): Family’s 40-year campaign to retrieve a war diary Jessica Long (Stuff): Anzac heroes’ stories to return to New Zealand after 44-year fight RNZ: Growth in participation of NZers in Pacific arts events Dani McDonald (Stuff): Creative NZ finds teenagers don’t enjoy the arts as much, government injects $5m Zane Small (Newshub): Hawke’s Bay McDonald’s reveals chain’s first Te Reo menu Stuff: Hastings McDonald’s first in NZ to feature menu in te reo Māori David Farrar (Kiwiblog): A vexatious complaint]]>

Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 23 2018 – Today’s content

Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 23 2018 – Today’s content Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage. [caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"] The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption] Justice and police Craig McCulloch (RNZ): Lawyers back minister’s claims people on bail blocked from homes Anna Bracewell-Worrall and Jenna Lynch (Newshub): Housing NZ, police accused of ‘cooperating’ to refuse to bail prisoners Henry Cooke (Stuff): Andrew Little says those bailed are being ‘routinely’ denied state homes. Phil Twyford disagrees Chris Bramwell (RNZ): HNZ needs to change policy on bailed offenders – Little 1News: ‘Doing it once, and doing it right’ – Andrew Little signals overhaul of criminal justice system in face of rising prison populations Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Govt’s clanger on sorting out the justice system Stacy Shortall (Stuff): We should educate prisoners – it works RNZ: PM: ‘We don’t favour mega-prisons’ Timaru Herald Editorial: Taking the time to get a prisons solution right is not a luxury Tania Sawicki Mead (Spinoff): Hurray, the witless super-prison plan is dead. But what will be done instead? Sam Sherwood (Stuff): Prisons in Christchurch get first dibs on extra beds Arthur Taylor (Daily Blog): Explosive new allegations about Christchurch Prison Laura Walters (Stuff): National calls on NZ First to join forces on hardline law and order issues Claire Trevett (Herald): National puts heat on NZ First over likely repeal of ‘three strikes’ law Sam Hurley (Herald): Google ‘thumbs its nose’ at New Zealand courts – lawyer Anusha Bradley (RNZ): Domestic violence callout every four minutes in NZ Housing Russell Brown: Protecting privilege in Epsom Isaac Davison (Herald): Act leader accused of prejudice after warning Epsom residents about future neighbours with ‘mental health issues’ Emma Hurley (Newshub): Mental Health Foundation slams David Seymour’s ‘stigmatising’ letter Henry Cooke (Stuff): David Seymour slammed for letter saying social housing tenants may have ‘mental health issues’ Ryan Dunlop (Herald): Mental Health Foundation slams Act leader David Seymour’s letter to Epsom residents Richard Harman (Politik): Developers rush to get Kiwibuild cash Nikki Mandow (Listener): The seven big threats to KiwiBuild Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Phil Twyford backs down from ‘kids in Treasury’ statement Toby Manhire (Spinoff): No, Reuters, we don’t have tens of thousands sleeping in cars and on the street Chris Harrowell (Manukau Courier): Manukau Urban Māori Authority involved with south Auckland housing development RNZ: Housing confidence bounces back in new survey International relations and trade RNZ: EU-NZ free trade deal will bring ‘substantial improvements’ Herald: European Union gives green light to free-trade talks with Australia and New Zealand RNZ: NZ to begin free trade talks with EU next month Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): EU approves launch of NZ trade talks Jane Patterson (RNZ): Trade agreement with EU: ‘one of the best deals that we could do’ Daniel Boffey  (Guardian): EU talks with Australia and New Zealand deal blow to UK free trade plans RNZ: Peters to travel to meet Chinese counterpart Australia-NZ relationship Phil Pennington (RNZ): NZ family in Australia struggle to survive: ‘It’s just not fair’ RNZ: Govt won’t pick up the tab in OZ – PM Mānia Clarke (Māori TV): Mahuta says homeless kiwis in Aus should return home Primary industries Gerard Hutching (Stuff): Government to announce Mycoplasma decision Monday Lucy Bennett (Herald): Decision on whether to keep culling M. bovis infected cattle will be made on Monday RNZ: All Mycoplasma Bovis cases traced back to single farm 1News: Number of farms under Mycoplasma bovis regulatory control jumps by 29 in two weeks RNZ: Northland farmers: M bovis spread is inevitable Jason Walls (Interest): Simon Bridges says he doesn’t want to use Mycoplasma bovis as a ‘political football’ RNZ: All you need to know about Mycoplasma bovis David Farrar: Another win for NZ First donors Eugene Beingham and Paula Penfold (Stuff): Questions over carbon monoxide treatment leaving frozen fish looking fresh Health and disability Craig McCulloch (RNZ): Euthanasia bill a ‘Clayton’s choice for disabled people’ Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Government appoints new Director General of Health RNZ: Acting CCDHB chief executive named Health Ministry head Eugene Bonthuys (Southland Times): The erosion of rural healthcare in the south Janine Rankin (Manawatu Standard): Health deficit grows as board faces ‘brutal’ expectations 1News: ‘Why did her Budget take $100 million out of mental health?’ Simon Bridges and Jacinda Ardern engage in tense exchange over priorities Katie Doyle (RNZ): ‘Serious conversation’ needed with Netflix – Chief Censor Pam Jones (ODT): ‘E-mob’ to flood PM with pleas Emma Russell (Herald): $10,000 donation: What they thought a scam was an ‘absolute godsend’ Tess NIchol (Herald): Rising petrol prices a ‘kick in the teeth’, midwife says Marjorie Cook (Stuff): Work not yet done for Save Our Wanaka Midwives group Local government John McCrone (Press): Passing the baton: Christchurch drifting while its power questions unanswered? Todd Niall (RNZ): Stadium report debacle shows Goff still learning council politics Brian Rudman (Herald): We don’t need a stadium – we need the St James Bernard Orsman (Herald): Ombudsman looking into complaints against Phil Goff over stadium report RNZ: Ombudsman considering stadium secrecy complaints Jackson Thomas (Auckland Now): Finance minister: money the issue in Auckland waterfront stadium debate Jackson Thomas (Auckland Now): Auckland Mayor Phil Goff under investigation over hoarding of stadium report Collette Devlin (Dominion Post): No apology from councillor accused of being ‘heavy handed’ over prevention of sexual violence in Wellington Tracy Neal (RNZ): Formal complaint after councillor’s zoo defunding outburst Nelson Mail Editorial: Park deliberations anything but good natured Skara Bohny, Hannah Bartlett and Cherie Sivignon (Nelson Mail): Concerns raised about councillor’s conflict of interest over Nelson’s Natureland Evan Harding (Southland Times): 4.91 per cent rates hike ‘outrageous’ Julian Lee (Stuff): Christchurch mayor wants chlorination levels reduced after public outcry over taste, smell Tom Hunt (Dominion Post): Homeless in the Hutt: Council pledges action Michael Reddell: Wasteful and ill-disciplined councils Māori wards Māori TV: Palmerston North Mayor disappointed at vote against Māori ward Newshub: Hobson’s Pledge using ‘scare tactics’ to block Māori Wards – Te Ururoa Flavell Employment Max Rashbrooke (Stuff): The working poor: A falling share of profits blights staff’s lives Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): Holidays Act changes possible Tom Furley (RNZ): Why more employers are bringing skilled migrants to NZ Inequality and poverty Rob Stock (Stuff): Being cold and rationing heating is now ‘normal’ in New Zealand Rachael Le Mesurier (Idealog): How we can end the poverty gap within our lifetime Ben Mack (Idealog): Wish we’d thought of that: Innovative ways of addressing poverty from around the globe Budget Brian Easton (Briefing Papers): Accounting for the government Muriel Newman: A Change in Direction Elections Bill Ralston (Listener): Why the by-election in Northcote won’t improve its traffic woes Ele Ludemann: Electoral law isn’t working Te Mata Peak Aroha Treacher (Māori TV): Craggy Range demonstrators make way to council steps Astrid Austin (Hawkes Bay Today): Local iwi descend upon Hastings District Council building Andre Chumko (Stuff): Te Mata Peak track supporters claim weekend walk is not a counter-protest Waitangi Tribunal Jo Moir (Stuff): Waitangi Tribunal has turned into a ‘mortgage broker looking for new business’ – Jones Talisa Kupenga (Māori TV): Shane Jones making bold moves to strip Waitangi Tribunal of crucial powers Transport Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): The Auckland fuel tax always looked doomed, just not quite this quickly Tess Nichol (Herald): Record high prices could backfire on petrol companies, says Consumer NZ ODT Editorial: Prepare for higher pump prices Liam Dann (Herald): Petrol prices only going one way – for now Claire Trevett (Herald): Government not budging on fuel tax hikes as prices soar Tess Nichol and Ryan Dunlop (Herald): Petrol prices around NZ: How does your town shape up? Damian George (Stuff): Two-thirds of survey respondents say Wellington’s public transport is below par Defence David Fisher (Herald): Defence minister Ron Mark ‘very disappointed’ NZDF made errors while trying to explain errors on NZSAS raid Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Defence Force trucks to find peace in pieces Media RNZ: Job losses indicated for Māori Television Elena McPhee (ODT): Otago Uni: Destroying magazines ‘was a mistake Stuff: Otago University proctor to explain censorship decision to Critic – Te Arohi editor Critic: An Open Letter On The Removal and Destruction of Latest Issue of Critic Magazine by the University of Otago: 17 Former Critic Editors Joel MacManus (Spinoff): Critic editor: why we made the Menstruation Issue ODT: Artist behind ‘Critic’ cover had no intention to offend John Lewis (ODT): Menstruation issue of ‘Critic’ taken, destroyed John Lewis and Elena McPhee (ODT): Critic magazine seized by proctor Sarah Robson (RNZ): Uni magazine pushes boundaries with menstruation cover Education Lucy Bennett (Herald): Cannons Creek School disappointed voluntary donations not scrapped in Budget 1News: Nikki Kaye questions Education Minister over school donation election promise Florence Kerr (Stuff): Education Council reveals the number of teachers disciplined for sexual misconduct Jessica Long and Jo Moir (Stuff): Teacher shortages at new low, according to secondary principals survey John Gerritsen (RNZ): Latin and Sculpture Scholarship exams in doubt Stuff: How much does the Government spend on education in NZ? Laura Borrowdale (Stuff): All teachers share responsibility for sex education, let’s support them David Farrar: NZUSA troubles Ben Martelli (Spinoff): Auckland Uni is funding climate change – but they’d rather you didn’t know Energy Grant Bradley (Herald): New Zealand’s energy future: It’s electrifying Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): Electricity demand set to double in climate change fight, posing pressure on grid Alison Andrew (Stuff): Preparing for New Zealand’s energy revolution Moko controversy 1News: ‘She’s more Maori than you’ll ever be’ – husband defends his Pakeha wife Sally Anderson’s moko Tony Wall (Stuff): Moko kauae are the ‘sole right’ of Māori women: Indigenous Women’s Collective Carmen Parahi (Stuff): Tā moko is not a fashion statement or scribble – it’s about birthright Tony Wall (Stuff): Life coach Sally Anderson faces backlash over her facial moko, removes it from branding Arts Jacinda Ardern (Herald): Why I want arts and culture integrated into all areas of NZ society Herald: Arts survey draws surprise result from young New Zealanders Herald: What the arts sector wants from government Other Phil Pennington (RNZ): Quality of Chinese steel used in skyscraper questioned Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): Government signals insurance shake-up Benedict Collins (RNZ): NZ may vote on marijuana legalisation in 2019 Pete George: Government says it has no plans to reform the Official Information Act Murdoch Stephens (Spinoff): Why New Zealand can’t accept South African farmers in the refugee quota RNZ: ‘Nothing to fear’ with free Māori lessons at Chch restaurant Louis Day (Stuff):Sports Minister Grant Robertson pushing more support for professional women athletes Ngahuia Wade (Māori TV): 40 years on – Lens on Bastion Point Moana Makapelu Lee (Māori TV): Internet hate speech raises concerns Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Europe showing NZ the way on hate speech says Golriz Ghahraman David Williams (Newsroom): The next big climate challenges are social RNZ: Trust doubts benefit of retailers’ compost bag switch Derek Handley (Herald): It’s time for the New Zealand Enlightenment Herald: Most optimistic business leaders are young, female or Māori Mark Jennings (Newsroom): Israeli director to Palestine group: ‘Watch the film’ Diana Wichtel (Listener): Why Dame Anne Salmond is talking taonga]]>

Fiji Times Four ‘relieved’ sedition newspaper freedom ordeal is over

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Fiji Times publisher Hank Arts waves to supporters and the media after he and two senior officials of the newspaper and a letter writer were acquitted of sedition charges in the Suva High Court yesterday. With him is a Fiji Times director, Rajesh Patel (left). Image: Jovesa Naisua/Fji Times

By Geraldine Panapasa, editor-in-chief of Wansolwara

“Relief!”

That was the word from Fiji Times Ltd publisher Hank Arts after High Court judge Justice Thushara Rajasinghe acquitted him and the company Fiji Times Ltd, Fiji Times editor-in-chief Fred Wesley, Nai Lalakai editor Anare Ravula and letter-writer Josaia Waqabaca of sedition charges at the High Court in Suva yesterday.

Speaking to Wansolwara News immediately after the verdict, Arts said they were happy with the judgment and relieved the case was over.

READ MORE: Not guilty – newspaper acquitted of sedition

“We have always said we are not anti-government and our success today is a reinforcement and confirmation that we are a good newspaper. Our staff are incredible,” he said.

Today’s Fiji Times front page.

“Relief is the first comment I would make. We are so relieved and happy, but at the same time wonder how we had to go through all this—the human cost (of the case) is too high.”

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When asked what the next step was for him considering that fact that he had missed his daughter’s wedding and his own anniversary as a result of the court case, Arts said light-heartedly: “I need a beer now.”

On a more serious note, Arts said The Fiji Times would focus on its strengths moving forward as this year was election year and next year would mark the company’s 150th anniversary.

According to Justice Rajasinghe, the prosecution failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the article in question was seditious.

In his judgment, Justice Rajasinghe said he did not find any reason to disagree with the unanimous not guilty opinion of the three assessors.

Justice Rajasinghe found the intention of Waqabaca’s article was to have national reconciliation and he said he did not find any evidence that Arts or Wesley saw the article or knew about it before it was printed.

Fiji Times Ltd was charged with one count of printing a seditious publication while Arts was charged with one count of publishing in the Nai Lalakai an article, which had content with a seditious intention to promote feelings of ill will and hostility between classes of the population, namely non-Muslims and Muslims.

Waqabaca was charged with one count of submitting for publication an article written by him with a seditious intention, while Ravula and Wesley were charged with one count each of having aided and abetted the publication of a letter in the Nai Lalakai newspaper on April 27, 2016, by failing to prevent its publication.

Wansolwara News is the online publication of the University of the South Pacific journalism programme and a partner of the Pacific Media Centre’s Asia Pacific Report.

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Samoan opera singer sings praises for benefit of teenager hopefuls

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Proud Samoan baritone Samson Setu … encouraging young students to choose opera. Image: Te Waha Nui

By Leilani Sitagata in Auckland

A baritone studying at Auckland University has been touring New Zealand singing the praises of opera to teenagers.

The fourth-year music student, Samson Setu, says he was “dragged” into opera by a teacher who loved the sound of his voice.

“When I sang in the school choir my teacher pulled me aside because she thought I sounded like a 30-year-old man,” he says.

He is one of the 2018 Dame Malvina Major emerging artists working with New Zealand Opera.

The programme includes an opera-in-schools tour, where he has been visiting schools in New Zealand to inspire students in pursuing a passion in the music industry.

The head of education at NZ Opera, Joanne Cole, says Opera in Schools is part of its wider education and outreach programme.

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“It has been designed to break down the barriers that exist around opera and to bring new audiences to the genre.”

Setu says opera is not such a popular genre with youth-targeted stations as it’s not often on the radio so they don’t get the opportunity to hear it.

‘Looks elitist’
“From the outside it looks like an elitist art form and you don’t see many Pacific Islanders doing it.

“Sol3 Mio have made [opera] a bit more mainstream, they’ve opened the doors to this sort of music.”

He says the schools that are predominantly Pasifika have been extremely responsive to the tour so far.

Another University of Auckland music student, Denzel Panama, says opera is an amazing art form and sharing it with a young audience is special.

“I think a tour of this nature can only do good. It exposes so many young people to something that they might have never really experienced.”

The Opera in Schools programme is in its sixth year and travels to Wellington and Christchurch in July.

This article was first published on the AUT journalism studies website Te Waha Nui.

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Fiji newspaper sedition trial – Fiji Times Four found not guilty

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Not guilty … a Fiji Times celebration huddle outside the High Court in Suva today. Fiji Times editor-in-chief Fred Wesley is on the right. Image: The Fiji Times

Pacific Media Watch Newsdesk

The High Court in Suva has found the Fiji Times Ltd, its three senior executives and a letter writer not guilty of sedition, reports Timoci Vula in The Fiji Times.

High Court judge Justice Thushara Rajasinghe has found the Fiji Times Ltd, general manager Hank Arts, Fiji Times editor-in-chief Fred Wesley, Nai Lalakai editor Anare Ravula and letter writer Josefa Waqabaca not guilty and acquitted them accordingly in a jam-packed court room at Government Buildings in Suva today.

Vijay Narayan and Semi Turaga of Fijivillage report Justice Rajasinghe had ruled that the prosecution had failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the Nai Lalakai article was seditious.

The judge said he found the intention of Waqabaca’s article was to have national reconciliation.

Justice Rajasinghe said he did not find any evidence that Hank Arts saw the article or knew about it before it was printed.

The judge also said he did not find any evidence that Fred Wesley read or was aware of the article before it was printed, Fijivillage reports.

-Partners-

Justice Rajasinghe said he did not find any reason to disagree with the three assessors, reported Fijivillage.

All three assessors had earlier returned a not guilty opinion on all charges against Fiji Times Limited, publisher Hank Arts, contributor Josaia Waqabaca, editor-in-chief Fred Wesley and Nai Lalakai editor Anare Ravula.

All four had pleaded not guilty.

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Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 22 2018 – Today’s content

Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 22 2018 – Today’s content Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage. [caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"] The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption]   Mycoplasma bovis and farming Isaac Davison (Herald): M. Bovis costs likely to rise beyond $85m Isaac Davison (Herald): Cow cull carries on as Govt continues to focus on M. Bovis eradication 1News: ‘Hope absolutely remains’ to eradicate Mycoplasma bovis as bill expected to grow Andrew McRae (RNZ): PM not ready to admit defeat in cow disease battle Andrea Fox (Herald): ‘She came across like she cared’: Farmers on Ardern 1News: Cow disease ‘could cost New Zealand, much, much more’ than thought – PM Conan Young (RNZ): Mycoplasma bovis: The spread, cost and response RNZ: A timeline of the Mycoplasma bovis spread around NZ Richard Harman (Politik): Mycoplasma: How it spread from a Southland farm Keith Woodford (Stuff): M bovis: Leave it to the farmers to manage Andrew McGiven (Stuff): Government compo fair for farmers with Mycoplasma bovis cattle disease Jill Galloway (Stuff): Mycoplasma bovis puts spoke in wheel when everything goes right for dairy farmers this autumn Esther Taunton (Taranaki Daily News): Farmers urged to take care moving stock to prevent spread of cattle disease RNZ: Insight: Farming and the Fight Against Climate Change Steven Carden (Herald): Farm changes only way to go Doug Edmeades (Stuff): ‘There must be a way to tax farmers?’ ‘No Minister’ Katie Scotcher (RNZ): Organic producers call for national standard Ewan Sargent (Stuff): Horrible death threat hangs over pet rabbits Fishing industry Andrea Vance (Stuff): Government drops plan to restrict deep sea trawling, protect orange roughy Andrea Vance (Stuff): Bottom trawling for orange roughy has scientists worried Eugene Bingham and Paula Penfold (Stuff): Caught Eugene Bingham and Paula Penfold (Stuff): Forced labour fishing tainting tuna supply Paula Penfold and Eugene Bingham (Stuff): Can customers force change in how tuna is fished? Paula Penfold (Stuff): Inside the grim prisons of Vanuatu Housing Isaac Davison (Herald): Act leader accused of prejudice after warning Epsom residents about future neighbours with ‘mental health issues’ Stuff: Treasury is wrong, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says Herald: PM Jacinda Ardern scolds Minister Phil Twyford for calling Treasury analysts ‘kids’ Jason Walls (Interest): Phil Twyford slammed Treasury officials, calling them ‘kids… disconnected from reality’ – the Prime Minister says he went too far No Right Turn: Why is Labour building houses for the rich? Ben Leahy (Herald): ‘You trust Housing NZ’: Upset mother claims her state home had holes in its walls Herald: Rents across New Zealand soar, hit new highs Bonnie Sumner (The Wireless): Is it too late to join the urban exodus? David Hargreaves (Interest): ASB Housing Confidence Survey finds expectations in the housing market have improved sharply Stuff: New Zealanders feel better about housing market Matt Shand (Stuff): National housing scandal brewing Justice and police Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): Waikeria decision reopens painful debate 1News: Rising prison population a ‘complete failure’, as next step to be decided for Waikeria Prison – PM Isaac Davison (Herald): Govt scraps plans for Waikeria mega-prison, but no decision on back-up plan 1News: One billion dollar prison plans still up in air as PM says inmate population ‘at maximum capacity’ 1News: Waikeria Prison expansion is ‘unfortunately’ needed and Government is ignoring the reality of high inmate numbers – Simon Bridges Ruby Nyika (Stuff): Waikeria prison bed increase crucial, Ōtorohanga mayor and David Bennett say Janet Yiakmis (ODT): Deprivation in formative years reflected in statistics Michael Neilson (Herald): Father of teen Bailey Patmore, who died in police pursuit crash, questions chase policy Health and disability NZ Herald editorial: The troubling case of Ashley Peacock Stuff: How many NZ adults can’t afford to visit a GP? Natalie Akoorie (Herald): Confidential statements made to SSC in Nigel Murray investigation may have to be released RNZ: Quake-strengthen cost to one Middlemore building starts at $70m Herald: Middlemore Hospital’s Galbraith building marked ‘earthquake prone’ Stuff: Middlemore’s Galbraith building confirmed earthquake prone, fix will cost more than $74m 1News: Should tobacco-style warnings be placed on alcohol sold in New Zealand? 1News: Researchers call for mandatory warning labels on alcohol after study finds wildly variable standards John Gibb (ODT): Study finds alcohol labelling `highly deficient’ Chloe Winter (Stuff): NZ Alcohol Beverages Council says education is the answer, not labels RNZ: Rural health workforce reaching crisis point Emma Russell (Herald): Ground-breaking child-cancer trial kicks off in New Zealand 1News: ‘You just have to cope for your child’s sake’ – Kiwi parents suffering as hospitals struggle with shortage of neonatal beds Jarred Williamson (Stuff): Flu season: Over half of staff not vaccinated at two Auckland health boards Hamish McNeilly (Stuff): Man turned away from Dunedin bar: ‘I am not dumb … my speech is impaired’ 1News: Is Ebola a threat to NZ? Expert discusses the chance of an outbreak here State care of children and family violence RNZ: Young children pushed to the brink by family violence Jess Cartwright (1News): Families devastated about closure of support villages for kids with emotional trauma    Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Fact or Fable: The Govt’s claims on family violence funding Euthanasia Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): ‘End of life bill demeans the disabled’ Henry Cooke (Stuff): Campaigners want binding end-of-life choices allowed for in euthanasia bill RNZ: Mass of submissions delay euthanasia bill deadline Government Chris Trotter (Daily Blog): Budget 2018: Labour’s Pre-Emptive Capitulation To Kiwi Capitalism’s Discontent Alan Johnson (Daily Blog): Budget 2018 – Half of something and half of nothing Susan St John (Daily Blog): Does this budget turn the tide? Jenna Lynch (Newshub): Labour could face backlash from Māori voters Liam Hehir (Stuff): The country benefits from stable financial management 1News: ‘No’ – Simon Bridges laughs at the prospect of Winston Peters as PM Elections Claire Trevett (Herald): Sir Patrick Hogan’s election ad for NZ First under scrutiny RNZ: Electoral Commission looking into ad in horse racing mag David Farrar: Sir Patrick Hogan may be in trouble Eric Crampton: Costing policy Māori wards RNZ: Rejection of Māori wards: ‘It’s horrendous’ Moana Makapelu Lee (Māori TV): Four districts reject Māori wards Rotorua Daily Post: Whakatāne vote against Māori wards Jessica Tyson (Māori TV): Palmerston North votes against Māori wards David Farrar: You’re all racists No Right Turn: Palmerston North voters are racists too Local government Efeso Collins (Daily Blog): I’ve read the PWC Stadium report and it didn’t take me very long because so many words were redacted from the version I got! Jackson Thomas (Auckland Now): Auckland councillors ‘appalled’ by mayor’s handling of stadium report Dan Satherley (Newshub): Simon Bridges dismisses Auckland stadium talk as ‘weird’ No Right Turn: Conspiring against transparency Laura Dooney (RNZ): Wellington councillor fights for action on sexual assault Privacy and surveillance Rick Shera (Herald): Kiwis need right to be forgotten George Block (ODT): Claim: facial recognition at casino Richard MacManus (Newsroom): How we help Google train its robots Employment Chris Trotter: A Labour Code Worthy Of Inspection Jonathan Mitchell (RNZ): Employers told to pay minimum wage or risk prosecution Herald: Māori at greater risk of harmful work exposures than non-Māori Rob Stock (Stuff): Why women live longer than men, but retire earlier Logan Church (RNZ): OC work experience course: ‘I’ve found self pride’ Welfare Anna Bracewell (Newshub): Government scraps controversial contraceptive grants for beneficiaries Jo Moir (Stuff): National would scrap winter energy payment for pensioners and beneficiaries International relations and trade Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): US praises ‘Pacific reset’, warns over debt Eleanor Ainge Roy (Guardian): MP blames Pacific ‘failed states’ for New Zealand’s drug problems Stephen Jacobi (Stuff): China’s big idea – the Belt and Road initiative – will need Kiwi smarts Banking sector 1News: ‘We need to look at this’ – Finance expert suspicious as Aussie banks rake in $5 billion from Kiwis Tamsyn Parker (Herald): Second New Zealand bank swamped by fraud and transaction disputes Michael Reddell: Orr defends himself Education Herald: Teacher shortage worse than ever before, secondary school principals survey finds Farah Hancock (Newsroom): Teachers get the bill for school resources Dave Armstrong (Dominion Post): Want performance? Put money where your mouth is Madison Reidy (Stuff): Filipino students duped, depressed by education promises Adele Redmond (Stuff): Pink Shirt Day doesn’t put the responsibility for stopping bullying where it belongs Herald: Wintec to reopen investigation into allegations about its CEO Annemarie Jutel and Douglas Booth (Newsroom): Time to give humanities respect they deserve Migration Liam Dann (Herald): Falling migration eases pressure on Govt Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): Migration falls to two-year low, even as arrivals continue to climb BusinessDesk: NZ annual net migration slows as more non-Kiwis leave Lincoln Tan (Herald): Asian gay community finds refuge in New Zealand Transport RNZ: Fuel prices hit record in Wellington, South Island Tina Law (Press): Drivers incorrectly fined for speeding on Christchurch road for seven years Kurt Bayer (Herald): Drivers incorrectly fined for ‘speeding’ on Christchurch road for the past seven years Other Deena Coster (Stuff): Law change sought to protect Parihaka name and story Rebecca Stevenson (Spinoff): Online genius or tailspin troll? Meet Todd Scott, NBR boss and tweeter-in-chief John Drinnan: Dysfunctional HRC Targets Hate And Disharmony Tom Hunt (Stuff): Invite includes the quote: ‘The best party has women with a past and young men with a future’ Stuff: The Maori economy continues to grow Lynda Chanwai-Earle (RNZ): Disowned, displaced and discovered: NZ’s Japanese War Brides Grant Bradley (Herald): Getting New Zealand on the map: The cup of coffee with a $6m pay-off 1News: Watch: Mini Jacinda Ardern sends message as hologram at Techweek’18 Nicole Lawton (Stuff): Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern opens Techweek’18 in Auckland as a hologram Newshub: New Zealand would benefit from rumoured Harry and Meghan visit – Jacinda Ardern Herald: PM Jacinda Ardern: Prince Harry and Meghan welcome to visit NZ in October 1News: ‘Royals absolutely have a standing invitation’ – Jacinda Ardern all smiles on Harry and Meghan’s rumoured NZ visit]]>

US looks at defence, foreign policy and impact of Chinese aid in Micronesia

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Reagan Test Site at Kwajalein Atoll … implications for American defence and foreign policy interests of China’s economic aid in island nations under review. Image: RNZ Pacific

RNZ Pacific

The US Defense Department is to report to the US Congress by December 1 on a range of security concerns in the northern Pacific island groups that are affiliated with the US.

The department is reviewing the strategic importance of the Compacts of Free Association for the United States as part of a broad study of security issues related to the freely associated states of Palau, Federated States of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands.

All three nations have long-term treaties with the US that give Washington control of defence and security in an area of the North Pacific the size of the continental US.

The study is also evaluating the implications for American defence and foreign policy interests of China’s economic aid in these island nations.

The Congress directed the Defense Department to address security, defence and foreign policy issues related to the Micronesia area.

Concern over the impact of China in Micronesia is an underlying issue of the study.

-Partners-

China maintains diplomatic ties with the FSM, while Palau and the Marshall Islands are aligned with Taiwan.

This report is published under a content sharing agreement with RNZ Pacific.

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Tommy Suharto: Indonesians are ‘longing’ for return to Suharto rule

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Talk to Al Jazeera in the Field programme features Tommy Suharto.

Pacific Media Centre Newsdesk

The Suharto political dynasty is being revived in Indonesia, reports Al Jazeera.

Twenty years after the fall of the country’s notorious former President Mohamed Suharto, his youngest son is leading a new political party into next year’s elections.

Hutomo Mandala Putra, or “Tommy Suharto”, as he is commonly known, has been touring several Indonesian regions, even travelling to Solo to receive a royal title in an attempt to gain the support of would-be voters.

Suharto and his newly-formed Party Berkarya (Work Party) are focusing on the widening gap between rich and poor in Indonesia.

“We have gone through 20 years of reforms, but the situation has not improved,” he said. “Our national debt has increased, and the living conditions of our people have not improved significant[ly].”

-Partners-

Party Berkarya’s aim, according to Suharto, will be to “develop a people’s economy that will be controlled by the people and benefit the people to improve people’s welfare”.

Suharto is not worried that his father’s legacy of corruption and brutality will taint his campaign; he said that Indonesians were “longing” for the return.

Legacy of corruption
The United Nations and Transparency International have alleged that Mohamed Suharto stole more state assets than any other world leader, amounting to billions of dollars, a claim his son has denied.

“These figures are not true,” he claimed. “They have said that my father owns billions of dollars in Europe in a Swiss bank … nobody has provided any evidence. It was never proven.”

In 2015, Indonesia’s Supreme Court ordered the Suharto family to repay more than $400 million embezzled from a scholarship foundation, but the money is yet to be returned.

According to Suharto, the court’s ruling is impractical and does not take into account the government closure of a bank where much of the money was invested.

“How can foundations give money back to the government if these foundations are using donors’ money, not only [money] from the government, and this money has already been given to those receiving scholarships?” he says.

“The money that they are looking for is the money which was invested in Bank Duta. The bank has been closed by the government … [and] has bigger obligations towards its customers, of course, the customers are being prioritised.”

Tommy Suharto himself has been convicted of corruption but went into hiding to avoid jail. In 2002, he was again sentenced for ordering the murder of the Supreme Court judge who handed down his previous sentence.

Released early
He was released after serving four years of his 15-year sentence.

“I have done my term and, according to the laws, I now have the same rights as anyone else. I have the right to vote and the right to be elected,” he says.
Deadly paradise

More than one million Indonesians died during Mohamed Suharto’s rule, while thousands of others were jailed without legal process.

He stepped down in 1998, after 32 years in power, following a series of riots.

One thousand Indonesians are estimated to have died during the riots, which destroyed shopping malls and homes in the capital, Jakarta.

At least 150 ethnic Chinese women were raped in the violence, which began after the Asian financial crisis caused the stock market to crash, and escalated when soldiers shot four students at a university.

Military and political leaders said Mohamed Suharto had lost his grip and abandoned him, forcing him to step down.

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Keith Rankin ‘s Chart for this Month: Pregnancy Rates, New Zealand 1980 to 2017

Chart for this Month: Pregnancy Rates, New Zealand 1980 to 2017.

Analysis by Keith Rankin

Pregnancy rates have been dropping in New Zealand, especially since 2008. While pregnancy rates among women in their twenties have been dropping since 1990, all age groups shown reveal a clear change in trend since 2008. (While not shown, it is also true that pregnancy rates for women over 35 have stabilised over the last decade, following substantial rises in the decades before 2008.)

Pregnancy rate statistics include terminations, but not miscarriages. When pregnancy trends change in this way, it could be due to either a health epidemic (eg a sudden and exacerbating fall in sperm counts), a change in contraception culture, or a change in sexual mores.

Increased infertility – especially male infertility – may be a part of the story, though it will only be a small part. This health issue cannot explain the clear turning point in the data, after 2008.

Increased general use of contraception may be part of the decline in pregnancies from 1990, amongst women in their twenties. Most of that will be linked to family planning; fewer planned pregnancies rather than fewer unplanned pregnancies. The need to repay Student Loans and to avoid incurring Child Support (both which began around 1990) will be a part of that explanation relating to fewer planned pregnancies since 1990 of women in their twenties. These are unlikely to be factors in the sharp downturn after 2008.

The most likely reason for the post-2008 trend is changes in sexual mores, specifically involving a reduction in heterosexual intimacy. This new trend is opposite to (and longer-lasting than) the change in pregnancy rates that occurred in the late 1980s. In the late 1980s, more relationships broke up, in the face of financial pressure. Also, in response to the same financial pressures (for example, very high mortgage interest rates), there was a renewed wave of female entry into the labour force, meaning that many people were forming new relationships and liaisons, leading to increases in sexual activity.

A reverse of this may have been happening this decade. While the global financial crisis may have been a trigger for change, the direct social impact of that crisis in New Zealand has been substantially less than the impact of the economic changes of the late 1980s and early 1990s.

However – with young people having become substantially less mobile (and far more likely to still be living in their parents’ homes), and women in their twenties more focussed on long-term careers than on shorter‑term financial contingencies – then forming the conventional heterosexual relationships that led to most pregnancies will have been deprioritised.

Now, more women in their thirties, having prioritised careers in their twenties, may be choosing to persist with those choices (knowing they will likely experience a childless future), at least so long as the ‘right man’ does not enter their lives. Possibly fewer women with ticking biological clocks are choosing male partners they may have misgivings about.

Finally, there may be a new wave of social puritanism this decade, leading to a less permissive society than those societies that prevailed in liberal democracies from the 1960s to the 1980s. Puritan waves have always existed in history. The rise of the smart phone and social media may have triggered the latest wave, leading to increased ‘remote’ social contact and less intimate contact. Many may have been somewhat desexualised by the easy and more personal access to pornography, for example through the now ubiquitous smartphones and laptops.

Whatever the precise mix of reasons, significant socio-demographic change has been taking place; change that has largely gone under the radar.

Hot off the press – Wansolwara marks USP’s 50th anniversary

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Wansolwara supervising editor-in-chief Geraldine Panapasa, broadcast teaching assistant Eliki Drugunalevu and USP journalism programme co-ordinator Dr Shailendra Singh browse through the latest edition of Wansolwara alongside students Elizabeth Osifelo and Kritika Rukmani (right). Image: Koroi Tadulala/Wansolwara

By Elizabeth Osifelo in Suva

The first edition of the University of the South Pacific’s student journalist training newspaper Wansolwara for the year has hit the news stands and celebrates the institution’s half century of achievements as one of the most successful regional organisations with more than 63,000 alumni and 26 international accreditations.

The university has presented 64,000 qualifications over the past 50 years and more recently was seeking initial accreditation with the WASC Senior College and University Commission (WSCUC).

The 24-page special edition focused on USP’s 50th Anniversary and the “people power” behind the institution is one of two publications planned for the year and was printed as an insert in the Fiji Sun newspaper on Friday.

Wansolwara’s May edition hit the news stands today as an insert in the Fiji Sun. Image: Koroi Tadulala/Wansolwara News

Wansolwara supervising editor-in-chief Geraldine Panapasa said the publication was dedicated first and foremost to the people who had made USP what it has become today.

She said the first edition focused on academics, support staff and the people who, over time, had become a part of the USP family.

The second edition is expected to feature various graduates and their contribution to society.

-Partners-

Final-year journalism students worked closely with the editorial board on the production of the newspaper.

The editorial board comprises USP journalism programme co-ordinator Dr Shailendra Singh, broadcast teaching assistant Eliki Drugunalevu, Panapasa and student editor Drue Slatter.

The award-winning Wansolwara newspaper is the longest surviving student publication in the region with the largest circulation (more than 20,000) of any student newspaper in the Pacific and Australasia.

An e-copy of the publication can be found on www.wansolwaranews.com or on ISSUU.

Elizabeth Osifelo is a final-year journalism student at USP.

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Indonesian military joint plan for greater role in counterterrorism

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Members from the Indonesian military’s Armoured Division take part in a parade to mark the 72nd anniversary of the Indonesian military’s founding in Cilegon on October 5, 2017. Image: The Jakarta Post/Ricardo/AFP

By Marguerite Afra Sapiie and Nurul Fitri Ramadhani in Jakarta

Indonesia’s Presidential Chief of Staff Moeldoko has claimed that President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo had expressed his consent to bringing back to life the suspended military Joint Special Operations Command (Koopsusgab) tasked with countering terrorism.

The team, which included and will again include personnel of the Army’s Special Forces (Kopassus), the Navy’s Denjaka squad and the Air Force’s Bravo 90 special force, would be put on standby and be ready to be mobilised at any time when terror threats emerged, Moeldoko said.

“This joint force was well trained and prepared in terms of its capacity, and it could be deployed anywhere on the country’s soil as fast as possible […]. Its role would be to assist the National Police,” Moeldoko said.

READ MORE: Jokowi to issue perppu if House fails to revise terror law

His statement has followed a recent string of terrorist attacks that has thrust Indonesia into a state of paranoia.

The joint force was first established under Moeldoko when he served as the Indonesian Military (TNI) commander in 2015. The special command’s operations, however, were suspended under the leadership of Moeldoko’s successor, retired General Gatot Nurmantyo.

-Partners-

Further tasks of the special command would be discussed between TNI commander Air Chief Marshal Hadi Tjahjanto and National Police chief General Tito Karnavian, with the latter to have the final say on whether it needed the assistance of the TNI’s special team or not, Moeldoko said.

“This operation must be carried out for preventive purposes, so that the public can feel safe […]. We [the security apparatus] are ready to face any kind of situation, so people should put their trust in us and not worry,” he said.

Planned amendment
The revitalisation of the joint force did not require any new regulations, Moeldoko said, adding that the details about the command’s tasks would be adjusted with the planned amendment to the 2003 Terrorism Law.

The announcement came as the House of Representatives and the government began to clear up contentious articles that had caused deadlock in the deliberation of the Terrorism Law revision, including the legal definition of terrorism and the military’s level of involvement in counterterrorism operations.

A greater level of involvement has stirred debate among experts and human rights activists.

Seven ruling parties and the government had agreed on a definition of terrorism that included acts that had “political and ideological motives and threaten national security”, United Development Party (PPP) lawmaker Arsul Sani said.

More leeway
It is widely believed that such a definition would provide leeway for greater involvement of the TNI in counterterrorism efforts.

As the government and the lawmakers appear to be on the same page now, observers expect the bill to be passed into law in the near future.

Jokowi has recently said he would issue a regulation in lieu of law (Perppu) on the Terrorism Law if the House failed to conclude deliberations on the bill by June.

Members of a committee tasked with deliberating the bill said it was the leading opposition Gerindra Party and the Democratic Party, both political parties with strong military influence, that had demanded the inclusion of the contentious provisions.

“We support [the terrorism bill],” Gerindra chairman Prabowo Subianto said during his visit to the House.

Deliberation of the bill is believed to have been stalled mainly because of a tug-of-war between the TNI and the police, which led to division among political parties factions into pro-TNI and pro-police camps.

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Tongan PM seeks royal audience after lawyer’s constitutional advice on law

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Tonga’s King Tupou VI and Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pōhiva … vetoed laws issue. Image: Kaniva News

By Kalino Latu, editor of Kaniva News

The government of Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pōhiva has planned an audience with the King of Tonga after a New Zealand legal expert advised that the king had no right to judge the merits of legislation passed by Parliament.

A government spokesperson said the plan was made after cabinet accepted the New Zealand lawyer Dr Rodney Harrison’s recommendations.

Pōhiva told Kaniva News in a recent interview that six Amendment Bills were submitted by the Tu’ivakanō government in 2014 and were passed by Parliament.

However, when submitted to King Tupou VI in Privy Council for his approval and signature he rejected the new laws.

These amendments included Acts of Constitution of Tonga (Amendment Bill) 2014, Judicial and Legal Service Commission 2014, Tonga Police (Amendement Bill) 2014, National Spatial Planning and Management (Amendment Bill) 2014, Magistrate Court Amendment Bill 2014 and Public Service Amendement Bill 2014.

Pōhiva said the Amendment Bills 2014 were submitted by the Tu’ivakanō government after the constitution was reviewed by a Commonwealth constitutional law expert, Peter Pursglove.

-Partners-

As Kaniva News reported, Pursglove said that Tonga’s 2010 constitution did not uphold democracy, the Privy Council lacked any democratic composition or accountability and the judiciary lacked accountability and transparency.

Amendment bills left
Pōhiva said when his government came to power in November 2014, the Tu’ivakanō government had left these amendement bills for them to complete working on them.

He said they pursued some of these bills, including some that concerned the assignment of the Attorney-General to the Privy Council, which Pursgrlove said was unconstitutional.

In a response to a request by the Prime Minister’s office for an opinion on the legality of the Royal Assent Order 2011, Dr Harrison said it appeared there was a misconception that the king had the “power to grant or refuse the Royal Assent conferred by Clause 56 of the Constitution”.

Dr Harrison recommended that the government try to get the king to alter his views on his powers by “reasoned persuasion”. Seeking a judicial ruling is also an option.

The government spokesperon said the Prime Minister wanted to talk to the king first as he wanted to make sure the constitution was correctly interpreted and followed through.

He said the Prime Minister believed the king would consider Dr Harrison’s advice favourably.

Vetoed by king
Minister of Justice Vuna Fa’otusia said many of the amendments to laws and the constitution passed by Parliament were vetoed by the king because of the Judicial Committee.

The Judicial Committee was comprised of some law lords and was chaired by Lord Dalgety of Scotland. The minister said if the committee did not agree with laws and amendments to the constitutions which were already passed by the Parliament the king would reject those laws.

Dr Harrison said the Law Lords played no specific constitutional role and they did not have any constitutional function or role as scrutineers of legislation or the legislative process.

Royal Assent 2011:
56 Power of Legislative Assembly

The King and the Legislative Assembly shall have power to enact laws, and the
representatives of the nobles and the representatives of the people shall sit as one
House. When the Legislative Assembly shall have agreed upon any Bill which has
been read and voted for by a majority three times it shall be presented to the King
for his sanction and after receiving his sanction and signature it shall become law
upon publication. Votes shall be given by raising the hand or by standing up in
division or by saying “Aye” or “No”

This article is republished by Asia Pacific Report with permission.

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Gaza under siege – but Palestinians ‘will never give up’, says author

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Author Dr Ramzy Baroud speaking at the Auckland protest today … reclaiming the Palestinian narrative. Image: Rahul Bhattarai/PMC

By Rahul Bhattarai in Auckland

Palestinian author and a journalist Dr Ramzy Baroud vowed today that Palestinians would never be defeated by the Israelis and they would never cease to fight for their freedom.

“Sisters, brothers, comrades and friends, Gaza is under siege, their people are dying in droves, their children are denied the most basic human rights,” he told a rally of about 400 people protesting in Auckland’s Aotea Square in support of Palestinian human and land rights.

In the last 10 years of blockade, thousands of Palestinians had been killed by a “deliberate Israeli campaign of starvation, dehumanisation and disempowerment”, the author said.

Dr Baroud, in New Zealand on a tour to promote his new book, The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story, also spoke about the Palestinian holocaust caused by the Israelis, which was seldom fairly reported by mainstream media.

Protesters at the human rights for Palestine protest in Auckland today. Image: Rahul Bhattarai/PMC

The UN Human Rights Council yesterday voted to assign international war crimes investigators to probe last Monday’s killings of scores of Palestinians on the bloodiest day of protests in Gaza.

The resolution was supported by 29 countries, with only the US and Australia voting against. Fourteen countries abstained, including Britain and Germany.

-Partners-

Boycott sought
Middle Eastern Eye reported that 110 Palestinians had been killed in recent weeks in a report about the UN investigation.

Holding the protest in Auckland was an attempt to gain support from the NZ government, “to impose a boycott in their [Israeli] regime, on its economy, and on its political representation,” said Mike Treen, a spokesperson for Global Peace and Justice Auckland (GPJA).

Mike Treen speaking at the Auckland rally for Palestine today. Image: Rahul Bhattarai/PMC

The protesters then marched down Queen Street towards the US Consulate near Britomart chanting slogans such as, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”, “Freedom for Palestine”, and “Long live Palestine”.

About 60 Palestinian men, women, and children were killed by Israeli Defence Force (IDF) troops during protests over the US moving its embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv. Guatemala followed suit the next day.

May 14 marked the 70th year since the state of Israel was established.

That was a day of celebration for Israelis and Zionists but mourned by indigenous Palestinians as Al Nakba – “the catastrophe”, the day they lost their liberty.

A young Palestinian woman raises a fist in defiance at the Auckland rally. Image: Del Abcede/PMC

US embassy ‘wrongdoing’
In his speech, Dr Baroud spoke about the wrongdoings of the rightwing Israeli government and the Trump administration for moving the US embassy to Jerusalem.

Jerusalem is heavily disputed and highly controversial as it is regarded as sacred land by both the Jews and the Muslims.

Dr Baroud said the reason for global trip was to reclaim the Palestinian narrative, “an attempt at retelling Palestinian history from the viewpoint of Palestinian refugees”.

Since most mainstream media focused on the Israeli narrative rather than the “Palestinian facts”, he wanted to tell the story exactly as it was happening on the Gaza Strip.

Dr Baroud said many historians focused on Palestinian’s history through the “eyes of Israel, the Zionists and through the Western media”.

‘Central narrative’
This was the “central narrative” of this conflict between Zionists and Palestinians which needed to be re-taught, he said.

Dr Baroud also said that the long-term solution to resolve the conflict was to end Israeli colonisation of Palestine that had continued for decades.

“This system of apartheid, system of military occupation, has to end.”

According to UN resolutions, there were four key points that the Israeli government needed to follow – “the right of return of the Palestinian refugees, Palestinian freedom to travel, and an end to the apartheid system, and demolition of the apartheid wall.

“And the racist laws that have targeted Palestinians for over 50 years need to end.”

Dr Baroud said the occupation needed to come to an end in order for there to be a prospect of peaceful co-existence in the future.

The apartheid of colonisation had to be dismantled.

A Palestinian family at the Auckland solidarity rally today. Image: Del Abcede/PMC Palestinian children proudly hold up their flag in the rain at Auckland’s Aotea Square today. Image: Del Abcede/PMC
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Jale Moala: Fiji’s longest day – George Speight and the march of madness

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BRIEFING: By Jale Moala in Port Moresby

MAY 19, 2000: As editor of the Fiji Daily Post newspaper in Suva, I was expecting some big stories that day but nothing like what happened – today, 18 years ago. A march by radical indigenous Fijians had been planned and Parliament was sitting, with an Indo-Fijian Prime Minister leading the government benches.

My news editor and I made sure we had everyone in place, then went for breakfast.

Back in the newsroom I was told the march was getting violent and continuing on to Parliament, which got me worried. I quickly drove to pick up the children and, after seeing them home safely, returned to work, knowing for sure that I wasn’t going to be home for dinner.

Fiji had crashed into another coup, this time led by a man called George Speight and rogue soldiers from the Fiji Military Forces’ elite Counter Revolutionary Warfare Unit (CRWU).

There was an eerie calm in the newsroom, almost like the lull before a storm with people seeming to be expecting something bad to happen but pretending to be going about a normal day.

I quietly disappeared into the tearoom to make coffee. The sound of breaking glass brought me out and I said to myself, perhaps someone has broken something.

-Partners-

From my experience of past coups in Fiji I knew that there was always going to be violence no matter how much the coup perpetrators tried to paint over their actions using a noble brush.

Two sides
There were always two sides to the argument and one side was always going to get hurt, but even then I had not expected to see what I saw that day, with the situation deteriorating as quickly as I was seeing.

In a matter of minutes, maybe a short 30 minutes or less since I returned to the newsroom, our part of Suva had turned from nothing much to a seething, angry pit of senseless violence — all in the time it took to make a cup of coffee.

Hundreds of people, maybe a thousand even, I don’t know, filled the streets below our second-floor vantage point.

Shops were burning and men and women were smashing through glass windows and doors and looting every shop on the streets below.

A group of men led the way, breaking through doors and windows then moving on, allowing the throng behind to get in and take as they pleased in a free-for-all scramble for anything that could be carried away – TVs, shoes, clothes, stereo sets, food, anything.

There was cursing and shouting and the noise was deafening and frightening. The sound of breaking glass would haunt me for months after that.

Indo-Fijians had abandoned the city and fled for their lives, and many who had been unable to leave had gone into hiding in back rooms and anywhere, leaving their business at the mercy of this maddest march of madness; a few Indo-Fijians drove by still trying to get out, and some of them were forced to stop, dragged out of their car and assaulted.

I was really scared
I was scared, really scared, especially for the Indo-Fijian members of our staff. Our financial controller was Indo-Fijian, and a big man too, but when he came up to me in the newsroom and put out his hand, I knew he was afraid for his life and when I held his hand I felt him trembling.

Indo-Fijian members of the staff, especially women, like my young reporters, fresh out of university, had crawled under desks, crying, “I don’t want to die, I don’t want to die”.

Our newsroom was quickly turning into a sanctuary, too, with owners of shops and anyone nearby who had been slow to leave the city, seeking safety there. We called the police several times but no one came.

Our marketing manager, Lionel Heffernan, was a big man ­– strong — a farmer on his days off, and he walked up the stairs into the newsroom armed with a crowbar, presenting me with the first sign of a willingness to fight back.

We knew we had to do something, we had to protect our staff. We called all our indigenous Fijian staff members and briefed them and together we walked downstairs in silence.

Our offices were down a short alleyway and accessible only from the front, from the main street where the burning and looting were taking place.

Stood together in defiance
We closed the grill gate and everyone of us, men and women, stood together in defiance, completely blocking any access to our offices, and thereby providing as much protection as we could to those on the second floor.

Heffernan stood beside me, the crowbar clearly visible in his hand, saying words of encouragement.

There were men and women beside me with far more courage and strength than I could ever muster in several lifetimes and without them the outcome would have been very different. But the weak and the strong and the older and the young, we stood together that day, indigenous Fijians facing up to indigenous Fijians, until the sun started to go down and soldiers arrived to set up roadblocks and empty the streets.

Police Commissioner Isikia Savua and his officers finally turned up in a pointless show of useless force after the damage had been done and no one was about. Suva was already in ruins.

It was too dangerous after that to put out a newspaper, so we cancelled that night’s edition and, using only indigenous Fijian drivers, dropped everyone home, including those who had come off the street to seek safety.

As a journalist it is my job to report and not to judge but the events I witnessed that day affected me in ways that would swing me to one side and keep me there for a long time.

George Speight … jailed for life. Image: File

Terrorist act
That day was not political. It was a criminal and terrorist act and I decided that from then onwards our coverage of George Speight and the events that would follow would focus on terrorism, even though I knew that the course I was taking would bring me into a collision course with the terrorists themselves, some of whom I knew well, including Speight himself.

Finally darkness enveloped Suva and I got into the car and left. At home, my wife Maureen had used the beds to barricade the windows and put the children and everyone else to sleep on the floor in the hallway.

I walked in and hugged and kissed her then went down on my knees and kissed all our children and all the other children on the forehead.

Then I sat down and cried. A month later to the day, on June 19, 2000, I walked into The Southland Times newsroom in Invercargill, New Zealand, and signed on as a subeditor.

Jale Moala, one of Fiji’s most experienced and talented journalists, is currently night editor of The National daily newspaper in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. George Speight is currently serving a life sentence in prison for treason.

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Justice Rajasinghe to deliver Fiji Times sedition trial verdict on Tuesday

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Holding on … The Fiji Times publisher Hank Arts and his wife leave the High Court in Suva yesterday. Image: Jovesa Naisua/Fiji Times

By Litia Cava in Suva

High Court judge Justice Thushara Rajasinghe is set to deliver his verdict on Tuesday after the three assessors returned with a unanimous not guilty opinion against three senior management and editorial staff of The Fiji Times daily newspaper, a letter writer and the Fiji Times Ltd yesterday.

After three weeks of trial, Justice Rajasinghe will decide on whether the alleged seditious article that was published in Fijian language Nai Lalakai newspaper on April 27, 2016, was seditious and if it had an intention to cause feelings of ill will and hostility between different classes of the Fijian population:

  • The Fiji Times editor-in-chief Fred Wesley together with Nai Lalakai editor Anare Ravula are each charged with one count each of aiding and abetting the publication of a seditious  article,
  • Fiji Times Ltd publisher Hank Arts is charged with one count of publishing a seditious article in Nai Lalakai;
  • Letter writer Josaia Waqabaca is charged with one count of submitting for publication an article written by him with a seditious intention, and
  • Fiji Times Ltd is charged with one count of printing a seditious publication.
  • All pleaded not guilty.

READ MORE: The Fiji 4 – the case that tests press freedoms

The four accused with their lawyers outside the High Court in Suva yesterday. Image: The Fiji Times

While summing up the case, Justice Rajasinghe reminded the assessors that their main task was to assess and evaluate the evidence that was provided by all witnesses and to determine its credibility, reliability and truthfulness.

Fiji Village reports that Justice Thushara Rajasinghe told the assessors to read the Nai Lalakai article from the minds of reasonable and fair minded iTaukei readers.

He told the assessors to take into consideration under what circumstances the article was published and to consider the reaction of the readers.

-Partners-

Fiji Village’s report on YouTube.

Justice Rajasinghe told the three that he did not find the opinion of Permanent Secretary for iTaukei Affairs, Naipote Katonitabua, and linguist Professor Paul Geraghty would be much help to the assessors. Dr Geraghty had said that he did not have much interaction with the iTaukei community for the last 10 to 15 years as he was mainly teaching, while Katonitabua had said that he used to talk to the iTaukei community at times.

The judge told the assessors to consider the truthfulness of the answers given in the caution interview.

Litia Cava is a Fiji Times journalist.

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Fiji Times sedition trial assessors give unanimous ‘not guilty’ opinion

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The Fiji Times editorial and management team with their lawyers await the trial assessors’ opinions on the High Court steps in Suva tonight. Pictured in front are letter writer Josaia Waqabaca, Fiji Times publisher Hank Arts, Fiji Times editor-in-chief Fred Wesley, and Nai Lalakai editor Anare Ravula. Image: Timoci Vula/Fiji Times

By Talebula Kate in Suva

The three assessors in The Fiji Times sedition trial tonight returned a unanimous not guilty opinion on all counts.

They found Fiji Times publisher Hank Arts not guilty for the charge of publishing a seditious article in Nai Lalakai, a letter to the editor on April 27, 2016.

They also found Nai Lalakai editor Anare Ravula and Fiji Times editor-in-chief Fred Wesley not guilty for having aided and abetted the publication of a seditious article.

Letter writer Josaia Waqabaca was also found not guilty for the charge of submitting for publication an article written by him with a seditious intention, while the Fiji Times Ltd which was charged for printing a seditious publication was also found not guilty by the assessors.

High Court judge Justice Thushara Rajasinghe will deliver his judgment next week on Tuesday.

Talebula Kate is a Fiji Times reporter.

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Kilauea volcano ash rains down on Hawai’i with more blasts predicted

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USGS geologist Michelle Coombs giving a status update about Hawai’i’s Kilauea volcano. Video: USGS

Pacific Media Centre Newsdesk

Scientists are predicting an eruption that shot ash nearly 9 kilometres into the sky could be the first of a series of powerful explosions to rock Hawai’i’s Kilauea volcano, reports SBS News.

Hawai’i’s Kilauea volcano has spewed ash nearly 9 kilometres into the air and scientists have warned this could be the first of a violent string of explosions in the crater.

“This has relieved pressure temporarily,” USGS geologist Michelle Coombs told a news conference in Hilo.

“We may have additional larger, powerful events.”

VIEW MORE: What the Mt Kilauea eruptions mean for climate change

-Partners-

Residents of the Big Island were warned to take shelter from the ash fallout as toxic gas levels spiked in a small southeast area where lava has burst from the ground since the eruption began two weeks ago, authorities said.

Kilaue volcano larva flow on the island of Hawai’i today. Image: USGS

The wind could carry Kilauea’s ash plume as far as Hilo, the Big Island’s largest city and a major tourism centre, the County of Hawaii Civil Defense warned in an alert.

“Protect yourself from ash fallout,” it said.

Kilauea is one of the most active volcanoes in the world and one of five on Hawai’i’s Big Island.

It started erupting on May 3, prompting some 2000 people to flee from their mountainside homes.

Geologists said the 4:15am explosion was likely to be the first in a series of steam-driven explosions last seen in 1924, rather than “the big one” that nervous residents had been fearing.

A spike in toxic sulphur dioxide gas closed schools around the village of Pahoa, 40 km east of the volcano, where fissures have destroyed 37 homes and other structures and forced about 2000 residents to evacuate, health officials said.

National guard troops were forced to put on gas masks at a nearby road intersection, according to a Reuters reporter.

USGS geologists and staff were evacuated from the Kilauea summit shortly before the blast and a webcam showed a grey plume of ash and chunks of magma known as pyroclasts that showered the volcano’s slopes.

Another massive rockfall at Halemaʻumaʻu crater is captured on camera from the Volcano Golf Course. Image: Jeff Judd/PBS
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Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 18 2018 – Today’s content

Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 18 2018 – Today’s content Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage. [caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"] The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption] Below are the links to the items online. The full text of these items are contained in the PDF file (click to download). Budget Guyon Espiner (RNZ): Budget 2018: A ‘triumph of neoliberalism’ Tracy Watkins (Stuff): Labour unveils a National-lite Budget Bernard Hickey (Newsroom): Comment: The biggest missed opportunity in a generation Bernard Hickey (Newsroom): Budget 2018: Tighter than it looks Newshub: Budget 2018 doesn’t go far enough; Govt should drop rules – Bernard Hickey Rod Oram (Newsroom): Budget 2018 a patch-up job Matthew Hooton (Herald): Odd priorities in times of plenty Dene Mackenzie (ODT): Most gain, but minister too cautious Colin James (ODT): First Budget ‘hardly transformative’ Bryce Edwards (ODT): Budget doesn’t go quite far enough John Armstrong (1News): Budget went some way to meeting Labour’s unrealistic election promises Richard Harman (Politik): Applause for the Budget Gordon Campbell: On Budget 2018 Audrey Young (Herald): Not the sort of budget to get you dancing or raging against Audrey Young (Hearld): Jacinda Ardern was right about the Budget – not boring but not exciting Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): Labour’s first Budget keeps on giving Barry Soper (Newstalk ZB): The Budget that didn’t tell us anything we didn’t already know Press Editorial: No alarms and few surprises in Robertson’s first Budget ODT Editorial: Budget sets tone for future Claire Trevett (Herald): Budget 2018: Mixed verdicts on Labour’s ‘no-pizzazz’ Budget Jane Patterson (RNZ): Budget 2018: Is Robertson saving his firepower? Liam Dann (Herald): Subtle vision requires bold sales job Brian Fallow (Herald): Budget scrum an even contest Jane Clifton (Stuff): The surprise has gone, but at least we got a new script Henry Cooke (Stuff): Budget 2018: Robertson brings in light-blue Budget with red, green, and black lamingtons Jenna Lynch (Newshub): The Greens got shafted Isaac Davison (Herald): Budget 2018: Greens defend share of wins after NZ First gets triple the cash Spinoff: Budget 2018: the great Spinoff hot-take fry-up 1News: Analysis – Budget 2018: 1 NEWS’ Jessica Mutch and Simon Dallow break it down – ‘A little bit flat’ Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Foodie flair, but bland Budget on Robertson’s big day Tova O’Brien: Labour delivers a ‘Good Start Budget’ Newshub: Budget 2018: ‘There’s so much more to do’ – Newshub’s politics team Herald: Three views on Budget 2018 – Dame Tariana Turia, Sue Bradford, Ben Thomas Duncan Garner (Newshub): Mr fix-it drowning in cash, so why the broken promises? Mark Sainsbury (Newshub): This Budget was designed to soothe the worriers Max Rashbrooke (Stuff): Budget shows a government that has found only half its mojo Donal Curtin: Surprises are over-rated Eric Crampton (Stuff): Budget: The good, the bad and the risky Joseph Cederwall (Scoop): Budget 2018 – Foundations for the distant future? David Farrar: Budget 2018 No Right Turn: A downpayment Budget  – Government and opposition view Tracy Watkins (Stuff): Budget 2018: Like all good things, transformation takes time – Jacinda Ardern Stuff: Budget 2018: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern defends the 2018 Budget Stuff: Opposition leader Simon Bridges attacks Government’s 2018 Budget Sophie Bateman (Newshub): Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern rates her first Budget Emma Hurley (Newshub): Winston Peters’ bizarre rating, name for Budget 2018 1News: ‘I think he’s done a pretty damn good job’ – former Labour Minister Michael Cullen on Budget 2018 RNZ: Opposition heaps criticism on ‘epic fail’ Budget Isaac Davison (Herald): Budget 2018: Govt has ‘pulled anchor’ on economy – National Budget – Summaries Herald: Budget 2018’s greatest hits: Everything you need to know Grant Duncan, Christoph Schumacher, Martin Berka and Nicolette Sheridan (The Conversation): NZ budget 2018: gains for health, housing and education in fiscally conservative budget Craig McCulloch (RNZ): Budget 2018: Money for health, housing, schools Eleanor Ainge Roy (Guardian): New Zealand ‘people’s’ budget sees Ardern put billions more into health and education Stuff: Budget 2018 by the numbers: Who’s getting what Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Budget: Winners and losers of the Government’s first budget Chris Knox (Herald): Budget 2018: Winners and losers by the numbers Newshub: Budget 2018: The big winners and losers Claire Trevett (Herald): Grant Robertson’s Budget 2018: At a glance – what you need to know Budget – Revenue and expenditure Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): A booming tax take is clearing the way for Grant Robertson to hit the targets Jonathan Underhill (BusinessDesk): Budget 2018: Grant Robertson finds $24 billion extra spending Thomas Pippos (Herald): Budget 2018: The gift that keeps on giving – our economy Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): Budget 2018: Treasury beds in rising tax take, giving Robertson room to add billions in the future Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): Budget 2018: Tax crackdown to raise $183 million over four years Patttick Smellie (BusinessDesk):Budget 2018: Rising wages to push people into higher tax bracket, yielding Govt $5.7b Terry Baucher (Interest): Crunching the tax news – going into the 2020 election is when we might see changes in tax thresholds RNZ: Budget 2018: The fiscal nitty-gritty Dan Satherley (Newshub): Government’s promises can’t be kept without raising taxes – Chris Trotter Budget – Health Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): Budget 2018: Plugging the health gaps Stacey Kirk (Stuff): Budget 2018: Free and cheap doctors visits for vulnerable and children, but is the health funding enough? Jo Moir (Stuff): Health the big winner in Labour-NZ First Budget Chris Bramwell (RNZ): Budget 2018: Health spending more conservative than forecast Stuff: Budget 2018: What you need to know about the health boost Lucy Bennett (Herald): Budget 2018: DHBs get a big boost Emily Ford (Stuff): Budget 2018 brings hope for beleaguered Middlemore Hospital, DHB chairman says Emma Russell (Herald): Budget 2018: Doctors under the pump after cheaper access announcement Emma Hatton (RNZ): Cheaper GP visits will need publicity – medical centre Lucy Bennett (Herald): Budget 2018: Pharmac to buy all medicines for DHBs Te Aniwa Hurihanganui (RNZ): Budget 2018: ‘Kick in the guts’ for Whānau Ora Emma Russell (Herald): Funding boost into fixing hospitals: ‘only scratches the surface’ Damian George (Stuff): Health sector welcomes renewed Government investment following Budget announcement Herald: Govt rejects claim by National that its boost to health funding was larger Ben Uffindell (The Civilian): Budget 2018: Labour to pass increased cost of health onto Mark Richardson Budget – Education Simon Collins (Herald): Budget 2018: Relief for schools and preschools, but what’s happened to the promises? Simon Collins (Herald): Schools welcome operational funding boost but disappointed in lack of money for new teachers Karoline Tuckey and George Heagney (Stuff): Budget 2018: Teachers could walk, principal warns following lukewarm education slice Adele Redmond (Stuff): Teachers and unions disappointed by Budget education calls Jo Moir (Stuff): Budget 2018: Schools to get only a small rise in operational funding Herald: Budget 2018: Schools, early childhood centres get small increase John Gerritsen (RNZ): Budget 2018: Multi-million boost for special education Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): Budget 2018: Education a winner Lynn Grieveson (Newsroom): Budget 2018: Boost for learning support Herald: Budget 2018: Māori education and training in focus Budget – Children Tess Nichol (Herald): Budget 2018: Focus on child poverty with extra funding for new reduction units, Oranga Tamariki Tess Nichol (Herald): Budget 2018: Moves to end child poverty welcomed, but advocates say beneficiaries let down Tess Nichol (Herald): Budget 2018: Funding for vulnerable children receives mixed response Idealog: Budget 2018: As the goalposts shift towards wellbeing, here’s what the Government plans on doing to address child poverty Tess Nicol (Herald): Budget 2018: Relief for KidsCan as more funding comes through Budget – Housing Tess Nichol (Herald): Budget 2018: Good start but more needed to address housing crisis and child poverty, say Sallies and Union Jackson Thomas and Chris Harrowell (Auckland Now): Budget 2018: More homes but still not enough, Salvation Army says Mānia Clarke (Māori TV): State housing funding not enough David Slack (RNZ): Budget 2018: Betting the house on real economic change Pattrick Smellie (BusinessDesk): Budget 2018: Treasury halves forecast progress on KiwiBuild Jenée Tibshraeny (Interest): Government to borrow to build 5,000 new public houses over four years; Keeps cost projections for KiwiBuild the same Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): Twyford borrows big to build Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): Budget 2018: Twyford’s partial win Ben Leahy (Herald): Budget 2018: New housing funding praised, but industry figures urge Govt to act fast Anne Gibson (Herald): Budget 2018: KiwiBuild outlook disappoints but Twyford hits back Jackson Thomas (Stuff): Budget 2018: KiwiBuild will help steady Auckland housing market, experts say Henry Cooke (Stuff):Budget 2018: Government promises 6400 new state and social houses Isaac Davison (Herald): Budget 2018: 1600 more state houses to be built each year Anne Gibson (Herald): Budget 2018: 6400 new state homes, Judith Collins says ‘disappointing Budget – Law and order Isaac Davison (Herald): Budget 2018: Corrections gets boost to cope with fast-growing prison population Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): Budget 2018: Waikeria prison on hold Anna Leask and Sam Hurley (Herald): Budget 2018: Age for youth justice system increases to 17 to ease remand population Anna Leask (Herald): Budget 2018: $300m boost for police ‘commended’ by association Budget – Environment Henry Cooke (Stuff): Budget 2018: Largest boost to DoC since 2002 leaves Green Party smiling Jamie Morton (Herald): Environment: ‘greenest Budget ever’ says James Shaw Isaac Davison (Herald): Budget 2018: More money for predator control, biodiversity and green projects Budget – Immigration Lincoln Tan (Herald): Budget 2018: $34m to tighten screening of migrants coming to NZ Lincoln Tan (Herald): Budget 2018: Labour Inspectorate gets $8.8m boost for more inspectors Madison Reidy (Stuff): Immigration granted a $138m wish in Budget to end ‘outright slavery’ Budget – Defence Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Budget 2018: Defence wins, and loses Kurt Bayer (Herald): NZDF gets $360m funding boost, with extra $40m going to modernization Budget – Broadcasting Russell Brown (Public Address): Budget 2018: The broadcasting shambles Mark Jennings (Newsroom): RNZ’s big move muted by budget Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): No payday yet for RNZ from Labour Budget Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Budget 2018: RNZ boost in limbo Damien Venuto (Herald): Budget 2018: Media allocation falls short of $38M promise, Curran says more to come Budget – Canterbury rebuild Kurt Bayer (Herald): Megan Woods announces Canterbury’s rebuild to get $300m “shot in the arm” Herald: Budget 2018: Christchurch gets money for insurance tribunal, public inquiry and anchor projects Stuff: More money for Canterbury earthquake recovery Budget – Regions Melissa Nightingale (Herald): Wellington mayor Justin Lester welcomes Budget 2018 Collette Devlin (Stuff): City Mayor says Budget 2018 will complement Wellington’s work for homeless John Milford (Stuff): Better luck next time for Wellington Danielle Clent (Stuff): Has Budget 2018 delivered for Aucklanders? Harrison Christianson (Stuff): Budget 2018: ‘Smoke and mirrors’ on Auckland inequality Auckland Now: Budget 2018: ‘No surprises’ for transport in Auckland Budget – Sport Stuff: Budget 2018: Government announce $100 million ‘support package’ for America’s Cup Bernard Orsman (Herald): $100m for America’s Cup in Budget Tom Pullar-Strecker (Stuff): NZ First gets tax change for race horse investors through the gates Budget – Research and development Jamie Morton (Herald): Budget: Few surprises in Govt’s science and tech spend BusinessDesk: Budget 2018: Productivity Commission to investigate impact of disruptive tech Paul McBeth (Herald): Budget 2018: Govt sets aside $1b for tax rebates for research and development Greg Thompson (Spinoff): Budget 18 is stuck in the present. We need investment in innovation for the future Budget – Other Tess Nichol (Herald): Budget 2018: Government is failing beneficiaries, advocates say Herald: Budget 2018: Disappointment that Budget didn’t deliver cheaper fruit and vegetables BusinessDesk: Budget 2018: New watchdogs for election spending promises, RMA, and EQC disputes Aimee Shaw (Herald): Budget 2018: Little on offer for small business Jamie Gray (Herald): Budget 2018: Spending on M.Bovis could be too low – Fed Farmers Guy Trafford (Interest): Budget 2018 was a boring-as-usual effort offering little new direction for the rural community Eleanor Ainge Roy (Guardian): New Zealand finance minister in pre-budget food fight after opting to eat cheese roll Russell Brown: Budget 2018: The final tick Employment Mike Treen: Wage and time theft endemic – and could get worse RNZ: Auckland Council underpaid 17,500 staff Madison Reidy (Stuff):‘Pay staff properly’ – minister’s message to retailers accused of not paying staff 1News: People on ‘very low wages’ not always aware of their employment rights, ‘taken advantage of’ by employers – union Andrew Bevin (BusinessDesk): Briscoe to reimburse staff for unpaid end-of-day cash-up Madison Reidy (Stuff):Cotton On launches company inquiry into unpaid work Aimee Shaw (Herald): Cotton On Group to review its paid work practices, as tide of complaints swells to 1,500 RNZ: Desperate staff working for free but ‘it’s not really consent’ Nikki Mandow (Newsroom): More battles loom after Smiths City ruling RNZ: Site pulls down controversial ads below minimum wage RNZ: Barring migrant workers from joining union ‘a mistake’ Greg Lloyd (Spinoff): Where is the outrage over contracts banning workers from joining a union? Stuff: North Island unemployment rate worse than the South Island Kyle MacDonald (Herald): Women and young people most stressed in work place International relations and trade Max Harris and Oliver Hailes (Spinoff): Parliament must ensure we don’t sign away values for trade Martyn Bradbury (Daily Blog): Guess who’s back? Back Again? The Saudi Sheep Bribe is back – tell a friend No Right Turn: The gift that keeps on giving RNZ: Cooks opposition questions Chinese presence ahead of election Personal finance Rob Stock (Stuff): KiwiSaver is an accidentally racist savings scheme RNZ: Clients told to question financial advisors on bonuses Government Shane Cowlishaw (Newsroom): Government: ‘Hold your horses’ on transparency RNZ: Parliament flies rainbow flag Megan Gattey (Stuff): New Zealand becomes the first country to fly intersex flag at Parliament Karl du Fresne: The bottom-feeders and mischief-makers who infest the fringes of politics Primary industries Gia Garrick (RNZ): Farm debt bill passes first reading Jill Galloway (Stuff): Government body to decide on treatment or eradication of Mycoplasma bovis in the next two weeks Immigration Graham Adams (Noted): When will Phil Goff get to the heart of Auckland’s immigration woes? Gill Bonnett (RNZ): Immigration NZ tries to catch foreign sex workers in the act Health Phil Pennington (RNZ): Row over water contamination in US has NZ implications Rachel Thomas (Stuff): Foreign doctors struggling to get jobs in New Zealand Rebecca Reider (Nelson Mail): No reason to delay medical cannabis Findlay Buchanan (Idealog): Calling on cannabis: Hikurangi Group on how it plans to use marijuana to grow Ruatōria from the ground up RNZ: Parents warned over new season of Netflix series Local government Simon Wilson (Herald): Grandstanding councillors aren’t helping anybody RNZ: Activist to keep house as rates revolt ends Nicole Lawton (Auckland Now): Auckland city sleeper pods in violation of by-laws is shut down RNZ: Napier council staff start leave bank for sick colleague Other Sam Sachdeva (Newsroom): Super Fund board attacks pay restrictions Emma Hatton (RNZ): Online shoppers warned over ‘buy now, pay later’ options Stuff: Ngāi Tahu board now more than 50pc women Karl du Fresne: If we start banning people of bad moral character, where do we stop? Chloe Winter (Stuff): The Warehouse Group ditches single-use plastic bags at checkouts by end of 2018 Richard Benge (Stuff): Arts in prisons a ‘vital’ social investment Derek Burrows (Timaru Herald): Why is fuel so expensive in Timaru?]]>

‘Cheated’ PNG landowners threaten to close five fish processing plants

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Lae landowners have given the papua New Guinean government seven days to review existing agreements or they will close the disputed tuna fish canneries. Video: EMTV News

By Scott Waide in Lae

Landowning clans in the Papua New Guinean city of Lae are threatening to close down five fish processing plants if the government does not review the existing agreements that govern them.

The clans, which include the Ahi and the Busulum, say they have been cheated of development benefits.

Since the agreements were signed four years ago, they have received K5000 a year for the five portions of land they own.

The threat comes after three years of complicated wrangling with the government and the companies over landowner benefits.

If the landowners have it their way, Majestic Seafoods, Frabelle and three other fish processing factories will be forced to shut down next Tuesday.

-Partners-

Landowner company BUP Development is calling on the National Fisheries Authority (NFA) to review the existing agreements so that they receive more in terms of landowner benefits.

Bad deal
After four years, it has now become clear, landowners got a bad deal.

The landowners are paid a total of K5000 (NZ$2225) annually for the five land portions they leased to the companies. The deal was negotiated by the provincial administration at the start of the projects.

Apart from a K2 million (NZ$890,000) premium payment made several years ago, the landowners receive little else.

They are also not party to agreements between the state and the fish processing companies.

They also do not know what the terms of the state agreement are.

The landowner company since issued a 7-day notice to the government to come to Lae for negotiations.

They are demanding K20 million in compensation as well as a review of the memorandum of agreement they signed with the companies.

Scott Waide is EMTV’s Lae bureau chief and began his career with the television station in 1997 as a news and sports reporter and anchor. He has won several awards for his journalism. This article is republished with permission.

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PNG cellphone users given new SIM card registration reprieve

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Digicel staff members register customers at a temporary stand while others wait in Port Moresby. Image: Amanda H A Watson/Devpolicy Blog

By Amanda Watson

Papua New Guinea’s Communications Minister Sam Basil has decided to extend the deadline for mobile phone subscriber identity module (SIM) card registration by more than two months – to July 31.

This will give more time for citizens to register their mobile phones, thus ensuring that they are able to make phone calls, send and receive texts messages, and so on, after the new deadline is reached.

According to Loop PNG, Digicel, which has the bulk of the customers in the country, has registered more than 1.4 million subscribers. This leaves roughly 1.1 million subscribers on that network who are still to register.

READ MORE: Compulsory SIM card registration in Papua New Guinea

Digicel has been offering incentives to customers to register, such as free air time.

The other two telecommunication companies are also continuing to register their customers, and attempting to inform customers about the need to register through radio advertisements and other means.

-Partners-

Various countries have introduced mandatory SIM card registration.

In neighbouring Indonesia, the deadline was February 28, 2018, and then more than 100 million SIM cards were partially blocked, before a further deadline of April 30, 2018.

In that case, registration could be done online, through text messaging, at a call centre, or in person.

No identification database
However, in Papua New Guinea, people need to register in person as the country does not have an identification database.

Mobile phone users in PNG need to visit a store or an agent and have their photograph taken as part of the registration process.

According to The National daily newspaper, the devastating earthquake that hit several Papua New Guinean Highlands provinces in February, was one reason why the minister decided to further extend the registration deadline.

The initial deadline was on January 23, but this was extended to April 30.

Threatened deactivation of SIM cards on that day did not go ahead due to a court injunction, which is no longer in place.

The telecommunications regulator NICTA says its action is a necessary step in the process of registering mobile phone users in order to address harassment through anonymous text messages and phone calls, sharing of unwanted pornographic images, and other abuse of mobile phone services.

Dr Amanda H A Watson is a lecturer at the Development Policy Centre of the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University (ANU), and a visiting lecturer in public policy at the University of Papua New Guinea (UPNG) as part of ANU’s partnership with UPNG. She is also an occasional contributor to Asia Pacific Report.

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Tong Sang voted in as new French Polynesia assembly president

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Territorial President Gaston Tong Sang … elected two months after being given a one-year suspended jail sentence for abusing public funds. Image: RNZ Pacific

French Polynesia’s Territorial Assembly has elected the ruling Tapura Huiraatira party’s Gaston Tong Sang as its new assembly president for a five-year term, reports RNZ Pacific.

He secured the support of the 38 Tapura members, who have two-thirds of all seats in the chamber.

His election comes two months after he was given a one-year suspended jail sentence and a fine of $US20,000 for abusing public funds.

The conviction related to his actions as president in the previous decade when he led the To Tatou Aia Party.

Gaston Tong Sang remains the mayor of Bora Bora.

The only other candidate in the election was the Tahoeraa Huiraatira’s Teura Iriti.

Iriti had been a member of the French Senate for several months until a French court annulled her election three years ago because a march by her party’s supporters to the polling station on election day was deemed to amount to undue pressure.

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Tony Alexander’s Weekly Economic Analysis Overview 17 May 2018

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Economic Analysis by Tony Alexander. [caption id="attachment_11363" align="alignleft" width="150"] Tony Alexander, BNZ chief economist.[/caption] In this week’s Overview we take a quick look at the Budget then examine data showing the types of jobs showing strongest growth in numbers in recent years. We then correlate population growth projections with recent construction surges to see if any regions might have got a bit ahead of themselves. We finish off with thoughts regarding the temporary worries about investors pulling back from housing offset against the relentless growth in the housing shortage. EDITOR’S NOTE: For the full analysis report including graphs and data, go to: www.TonyAlexander.co.nz Not A Pre-Election or Reformist Budget The new Finance Minister Grant Robertson released his first Budget today and it was fairly much as expected. The fiscal numbers look good with a string of reasonable surpluses causing the net debt to GDP ratio to slowly decline below the targeted 20% within four years. This leaves headroom for extra spending in future budgets as long as the economy stays strong. The economic projections look reasonable and it would take a shock scenario to seriously threaten the fiscal outlook. There is a noticeable dearth of solid key measures actually announced in the Budget. Instead there are numerous statements of how things will be different going forward, and hefty increases in funding for health, education, housing, and infrastructure. There will be a new research and development expenditure tax deduction but beyond that little of direct relevance to the business community. From a traditional restrictive economic and fiscal analysis point of view it was boring. The Budget’s focus however is largely on allocating higher spending aimed at catching up the many groups of people who have been left behind by the firm performance of the economy in recent years. There is nothing jumping out suggesting that announcements in the Budget will provide any impediment to the good growth outlook which we have. The challenge for the new government will be meeting the aspirations of the various sectors and pressure groups seeking and/or receiving more funding, and ensuring the extra money is well spent. This was not a pre-election Budget, but neither was it a budget of big change which reformist governments or those needing to inflict pain to get fiscal numbers under control typically implement straight after being elected. The government has inherited an economy in very good shape with fiscal numbers reflecting good management through and after the GFC and effects of the Christchurch earthquakes. The new government has not come to power promising an agenda of radical economic change, much as one might think they did going by the still unusually low level of business confidence. If change is what the government intends making then the Prime Minister and other senior people have already repeatedly made it clear that this lies not so much in the field of economic management as in the social and environmental arenas. Issues like housing affordability and availability (where they will fail), the environment, access to good healthcare, the regions and infrastructure dominate. For additional information on increased spending allocations and the small number of new measures such as expanded access to the Community Services Card simply look at commentaries already readily available before this Overview went to print. Managers Galore Between the March quarter of 2013 and the March quarter of this year total job numbers in New Zealand grew by 403,000 or 18.5%. The following table shows this growth for different job types. Most growth has been for people classified as Managers and Professionals. We can look at this another way. Growth in job numbers for Managers was 19.9% more than the 18.5% for all NZ and accounted for 36.1% of all 403,000 jobs growth. Professionals grew according to their 2013 share of all jobs. All other job types under-performed to similar degrees. This tells us that the only job type growing radically different from market share is for Managers. People physically making or moving things around accounted for about 19% of all jobs growth. The Managers category is extremely wide and in the words of the statisticians “Managers plan, organise, direct, control, coordinate and review the operations of government, commercial, agricultural, industrial, non-profit and other organisations, and departments. Indicative Skill Level: Most occupations in this major group have a level of skill commensurate with the qualifications and experience outlined below. Bachelor degree or higher qualification. At least five years of relevant experience may substitute for the formal qualification (ANZSCO Skill Level 1); or NZ Register Diploma, or at least three years of relevant experience…” This helps explain why the government is trying to encourage more people to go to the university – at the cost of not rapidly boosting spending in other areas like health and homelessness. Jobs increasingly require high skills and qualifications. This does not mean university is however necessary for everyone because there are significant shortages of people in the trades sector. And the interesting thing about working in a trade is that it provides an opportunity after a few years for someone to go out on their own with the own business. Housing Last week I said we’d include Statistics NZ subnational population projections. We can run an exercise comparing projected population growth rates (vertical axis) against growth in dwelling consents issued over the past three years. As a rule we would expect to see a scattering of dots starting in the bottom left hand corner of the graph following, rising to the top right hand side. We would expect regions with high projected population growth on the vertical axis to have high growth in consent issuance measured on the horizontal axis. This is what we see by and large. Auckland has 56% projected population growth and consents have risen by 61% in the past three years. West Coast has a 7.3% projected population decline and consents have fallen 27.4%. Canterbury we can ignore because of the earthquake impact. But Nelson shows as having 19.1% projected population growth but a 9.6% fall in consents. That suggests thoughts of a housing shortage delivering price support and perhaps reinforces our positive interpretation of Nelson listings and asking price data discussed here two weeks ago. But look at the other end of the spectrum. Bay of Plenty has seen an 87% jump in consents but population growth from 2013-43 of 26% is projected. Northland and Manawatu-Wanganui also stick out. Northland has projected population growth of 19.4% but consents have soared 73.3%. Manawatu-Wanganui has population growth projected at 7.1% but consents have jumped 56%. Marlborough perhaps has overcooked itself as well. This analysis cannot much guide us toward estimates of shortages or housing excess supplies. But it can deliver to us a suggestion as to which parts of the country over the past three years could have got ahead of underlying demand growth with their construction surge. And maybe the most relevant way that manifests itself is a recommendation to buyers looking at these areas to not be in a hurry. Just as there are developments falling over and no longer stacking up funding-wise and cost-wise in Auckland, some already completed developments in some regions may not attract the buyer demand which had been anticipated. Every Week A Bigger Shortage Back to Auckland, discussion continues regarding the impact of the new government’s planned ending of using losses to offset tax bills from other work (ring-fencing), legislation favouring tenants, banning foreign buyers and so on. There is a common view that these anti-investor changes will fundamentally change the economics of the housing market and improve affordability through containing prices over an extended period of time. Such a view however will almost certainly prove wrong in the face of the strong underlying dominant driving forces which we have long emphasised here and elsewhere. Population growth is strong in Auckland. Every week on average an extra 800 people boost the population and need to find homes. But growth in dwelling supply has not kept up with growth in demand and whatever one’s estimate of the dwelling shortage was in 2012 or any year since, it is now bigger. The shortage will continue to get bigger in the next few years, especially because rising construction costs and council compliance red tape and delays are pushing some builders out of the sector, and because resources are in short supply. Each week there is a bang, bang, bang noise from extra housing demand. But for now the noise is covered up by ears tuned only to worries and expectations about what investors will do. Eventually however we will see that the number of investors quitting their assets is much smaller than people seeking cheaper housing want. When that realisation kicks through people will hear the persistent weekly banging again from a growing queue of people looking for something to buy. Eventually we will get a new price response. If the focus on some unhappy investors goes long enough, as I suspect it will, we will see the Reserve Bank ease LVR rules a little bit more. Such easing has become marginally more probable as a result of last week’s more dovish than expected Monetary Policy Statement and comments from the new Governor. When will ears start hearing the banging from frustrated buyers and renters? There is no way of knowing but it could happen within 12 months. (It is interesting to sense the frustration already growing amongst government MPs and other agencies, the highlighting of the huge jump in the state house waiting list.) Trigger? Not a new interest rate cut, but perhaps revelation of KiwiBuild failure to boost construction as many hope. Perhaps collapse or closure of some builders unable to profitably manage an environment of deep regulation, bureaucracy, uncertain flows of materials and staff, and rising costs. Related to this growing queue is news this week that officials are looking at shared equity schemes by which banks or government agencies will take part ownership of a property to help young buyers into home ownership. That represents a rise in demand. That means higher prices. Where does this all end some years from now? Recognition that home ownership is an unrealistic expectation for many people until perhaps much longer in their working lives than currently desired. More legislation making long-term perhaps lifelong renting a more comfortable proposition for people. A government scheme covering landlords for damage done to rental properties by tenants or perhaps certain categories of tenants. More managed fund construction of and investment in housing perhaps with contracts to make units available to government agencies. And prices will go higher. Later. Eco101. For your guide, Treasury are forecasting that average NZ-wide house prices will rise by 2.8% in the year to June 2019 then 2% the following year, 3.4% in the year to June 2021, and 3.7% the year after that. If I Were A Borrower What Would I Do? Nothing new really apart from some strong retail spending data in the United States causing a decent jump in ten year US government bond yields above 3%. This might place some mild upward pressure on NZ bank fixed borrowing and therefore lending rates. If so this would be consistent with the view we have all been expressing for a long time regarding tightening US monetary policy slowly pushing NZ fixed interest rates higher.

The Weekly Overview is written by Tony Alexander, Chief Economist at the Bank of New Zealand. The views expressed are my own and do not purport to represent the views of the BNZ. This edition has been solely moderated by Tony Alexander. To receive the Weekly Overview each Thursday night please sign up at www.tonyalexander.co.nz
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Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 17 2018 – Today’s content

Newsletter: New Zealand Politics Daily – May 17 2018 – Today’s content Editor’s Note: Here below is a list of the main issues currently under discussion in New Zealand and links to media coverage. [caption id="attachment_297" align="aligncenter" width="640"] The Beehive and Parliament Buildings.[/caption] Below are the links to the items online. The full text of these items are contained in the PDF file (click to download). Budget Tracy Watkins (Stuff): Will Labour pull a rabbit out of the Budget hat? Thomas Coughlan (Newsroom): How not to budget Chris Bramwell (RNZ): What to expect from the 2018 Budget – our experts weigh in Herald Editorial: Budget should not simply boast additional spending Claire Trevett (Herald): A Budget of hand-me-down ties and slogans Laura Walters (Stuff): Budget: How the Budget came to be, and other fun facts Richard Harman (Politik): A defining Budget for Robertson and Labour Patrick O’Meara (RNZ): Budget 2018: Stronger budget surplus forecast Audrey Young (Herald): Budget 2018: The ‘blathering’ is almost over as Govt set to reveal spending plans Sue Bradford (Pundit): Budget 2018: Backing empathy with steel? Herald: Budget 2018: Sue Bradford, Tariana Turia and Ben Thomas share views on today’s Budget Brigitte Morten (RNZ): Budget day: Christmas for the beltway Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): Government’s tilt at a second term starts with today’s Budget Daniela Maoate-Cox (RNZ): The finance minister’s budget diary Henry Cooke (Stuff): What the Budget will bring to the housing sector: More state homes Mānia Clarke (Maori TV): Sallies say budget must include extensive state home build 1News: What the government has already promised in run-up to Budget 2018 Henry Cooke (Stuff):A look back at the ‘mini-Budget’ from December – which may steal the show from today’s one Laura Walters (Stuff): Jacinda Ardern says Budget will also help middle New Zealanders feeling the squeeze Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): Budget 2018: What we all desperately want to know Newshub: Will Thursday’s Budget be rife with broken promises? Stacey Kirk (Stuff): GPs pushing for targeted package to help access for poorest in Budget Simon Collins (Herald):Budget 2018: ‘Our outgoings are bigger than our income’ Ryan Dunlop (Herald): Budget 2018 wishes for middle class Auckland family Tess Nichol (Herald):Budget Day: High income family Jane Patterson (RNZ): Budget 2018: The future demands of Defence David Williams (Newsroom):Irrigation funding cut to spout millions Michael Hayward (Press): What might the Budget bring for Christchurch? Jason Walls (Interest): Opposition Finance Spokeswoman Amy Adams is ramping up attacks on the Government as Budget day draws closer, her latest target is tax Amy Adams (Stuff): Labour’s Budget is one of wasted opportunities Newstalk ZB: Budget 2018: Bridges ‘It’ll be a budget of broken promises’ 1News: Finger-wagging Simon Bridges and Jacinda Ardern clash over funding priorities ahead of new government’s first Budget Employment Madison Reidy and Oliver Lewis (Stuff): Union releases list of employers allegedly making staff work overtime for free Zac Fleming (RNZ): Sixteen retail chains accused of underpaying staff No Right Turn: Wage thieves Michael Morrah (Newshub): Labour hire firm employee resigns after migrant worker investigation Madison Reidy (Stuff):Immigration permit importation of 138 Chinese tradies Teuila Fuatai (Newsroom): Fly-in Chinese workers approved for Auckland hotel build RNZ: Chinese workers granted visas to build Auckland hotel Rebecca Stevenson (Spinoff): Breaking: we’re treating our minimum wage workers like crap Eric Crampton: Minimum wages and the margin Susan Edmunds (Stuff): Worker demand up but wage inflation still MIA Sophie Boot (BusinessDesk): New law could stop costly union v Affco battle Benedict Collins (RNZ): No toilet breaks puts the public at risk – air traffic controllers Inequality, poverty and welfare Eva Corlett (RNZ): Man told he must quit free night class or face benefit cut Henry Cooke (Stuff): Why the promised Winter Energy Payment is coming two months later this year Michael Daly and Leith Huffadine (Press): No new clothes, no haircuts, no fresh veg – the harsh reality of being a working poor mum Stuff: Watch: Warning of slowing growth for NZ’s largest city Treaty of Waitangi and Crown-Maori relations Herald: Treaty Negotiations Minister Andrew Little concerned by lack of accountability on Te Arawa River Iwi Trust spending RNZ: Minister extends deadline for iwi to contest settlement Graham Cameron (Spinoff): Our message to Andrew Little: stop before you breach the Treaty of Waitangi Shannon Haunui-Thompson (RNZ): Anger at a Treaty process which pits iwi against iwi Jo Moir (Stuff):No freshwater rights for Māori on our watch: NZ First MP Shane Jones Chris Hutching (Stuff):Iwi commercial property interests continue to grow Housing Pattrick Smellie (Stuff): Kiwibuild’s naysayers have it wrong on two counts Tom Furley (RNZ): Kiwibuild homes now unobtainable for many Gia Garrick (RNZ): Housing providers struggle to meet skyrocketing demand Colleen Hawkes (Stuff): Is it time to address the question of empty ‘ghost houses’? Colleen Hawkes (Stuff): Minister of Housing blames National for empty ‘ghost houses’ Mike Hosking (Newstalk ZB): Govt painted into a corner on home ownership Jessica Long and Tom Hunt (Dominion Post); Children are the Hutt Valley’s invisible homeless, council told Local government Craig McCulloch (RNZ): ‘It divides communities – and no one wins from that’ Lucy Bennett (Herald): Former New Plymouth mayor Andrew Judd appears at select committee to fight for Māori wards Steve Elers (Manawatū Standard): Walkout on Māori greeting betrays prejudice, and ignorance in New Zealand culture Jimmy Ellingham (Manawatū Standard): Secret briefings on rates must stop; public deserves to know Janine Rankin (Manawatū Standard): Living wage promoted for city council workers RNZ: Man who damaged native trees will serve prison time Jackson Thomas (Central Leader): Penny Bright to bite the bullet and meet with council Jackson Thomas (Auckland Now): Auckland activist Penny Bright fails in last-ditch attempt to stop the sale of her home RNZ: Penny Bright loses bid to delay house sale Herald: High Court rules sale of activist Penny Bright’s house to continue Primary industries Richard Harman (Politik): Labour, NZ First, the Greens and National agree on debt relief Dominion Post Editorial: Living with M. bovis might be less painful all round Lois Williams (RNZ): Council fails to recover $50,000 in ‘dirty dairy’ case Stuff: Sheep and beef farmers aim to be carbon neutral by 2050 Parliament David Chaston (Interest): We analyse the MPs exposure to trusts, mortgages, and KiwiSaver. Yes, there are party differences, but some are not as pronounced as you might expect Herald: Dame Annette King receives New Year Honours in all-female ceremony Newstalk ZB: Annette King made a Dame as New Zealand’s longest serving female MP Justice and police David Fisher (Herald): Big Read: Justice path and bulging prisons – will NZ listen to scientist or sceptic? David Fisher (Herald): McVicar: Soft path will fail Ged Cann (Stuff): In depth: Lack of respect to blame for rising seriousness of assaults on police Jenny Ling (Stuff): Prison reform conference held in Russell Super Fund investment and Adrian Orr Peter Dunne (Newsroom): Finally, a Super fund investing at home as Kirk intended Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): Adrian Orr details lengthy attempt by NZ Super to invest in Christchurch rebuild Hamish Rutherford (Stuff): National leader says Reserve Bank governor should avoid political debate Michael Reddell: Very unwise and quite inappropriate Media Sophie Boot (BusinessDesk): Stuff cuts 24 jobs as it closes community, rural titles Stuff: Stuff closes 15 community titles and sells another Duncan Greive (Spinoff): With $38m on the table, TVNZ suddenly remembers how to do public broadcasting Te Aniwa Hurihanganui (RNZ): Challenge to keep up with competition – Māori TV Talisa Kupenga (Māori TV): Māori Television appears before Māori Affairs Select Committee Evening Report: RNZ enters content partnership with Pacific Media Centre International relations and trade Nicholas Jones (Herald): Exclusive: More Saudi sheep saga costs likely as legal action threatens Isaac Davison (Herald): EU refuses to waive immunity for diplomat Eva Tvarozkova in $20k rental dispute Anna Bracewell-Worrall (Newshub): EU puts up road block in diplomat rental stoush Health Sarah Robson (RNZ): Seismic risk of Middlemore’s Galbraith discussed in closed meeting Virginia Fallon (Stuff): Kāpiti and Otago camp closures will affect ‘country’s most vulnerable children’ Deidre Mussen (Stuff): Keytruda can treat more cancers than just melanoma Education Mohamed Alansari (Newsroom): Modern classrooms won’t fix education Phil Pennington (RNZ): Ministry has multiple claims against troubled building company Jessica Long (Stuff): Karori Campus demolition compliance certificate issued Human Rights Commission RNZ: HRC report: ‘Deep divide’ between staff and managers David Farrar (Kiwiblog): The Human Rights Commission review Alison Mau (Stuff): After Human Rights Commission harassment scandal, how can victims trust the process? Other Nikki Mandow (Newsroom): Trust us, we’re banks Lucy Bennett (Herald): National claims Internal Affairs slashing frontline staff investigating child exploitation material Tom Hunt (Stuff): GCSB peels back the covers on an active intelligence officer Lucy Bennett (Herald): Asbestos found in Reserve Bank building in Wellington Stuff: Wellington’s Reserve Bank building evacuated following asbestos find Katie Scotcher (RNZ): Law firms commit to tackle gender inequality in senior positions]]>

Timor-Leste finally has a government. But what happens now?

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By Guteriano Neves in Dili

After nearly a year of political deadlock resulting from a minority government, and a divisive political campaign, Timor-Leste is set to have a stable government after an early election, held last Saturday.

The forthcoming government will face an uneasy task in delivering on the promises made during the campaign.

The result of the election brought four parties to be represented in the Parliament. The Aliança de Mudança para o Progresso (AMP), led by resistance leader Xanana Gusmão, won an absolute majority in the latest polls, securing 34 seats out of 65 seats in the Parliament.

This will be sufficient to pass the programme and budget in the Parliament, both of which the previous minority government failed to do. Frente Revolucionáriu de Timor-Leste Independente (Fretilin) came in second, maintaining its 23 seats despite a significant increase in the number of votes.

The Democratic Party and Frenti Dezenvolvimentu Demokrátiku (FDD) – a new political force – secured five and three seats, respectively.

The result sets Timor-Leste up to end nearly a year of political impasse resulting from the previous minority government. The country can now expect have a stable government for five years to come.

-Partners-

Having a stable government is one thing, but delivering on political promises is another. The latter is not easy, given the context in Timor-Leste.

Strong opposition
At the macro political level, the government is expected to face strong opposition from the opposition bench in the National Parliament.

Outside of parliament, the government will face enormous pressure from the public to deliver the promises made during the campaign. This includes delivering good quality infrastructure, high quality public services — mainly education and health — and building an economy that can employ a significant number of the young population.

The last point is critical for Timor-Leste’s long-term peace and stability.

The biggest task is economic: striking a balance between current domestic consumption and long-term investment, in a context where the current government reserve is depleting.

In general, public and private consumption in Timor-Leste have been growing during the last 10 years, becoming the engine for non-oil economic growth. One could view the growing domestic consumption level as an increase in purchasing power and wellbeing.

However, this growth is primarily fueled by public spending, using petroleum revenue.

Increased consumption also incentivises the emergence of small private sector activities, primarily the wholesale and retailer industry in Dili. This sector provides a large proportion of jobs in the private sector, particularly in Dili, according to the Business Activities Survey.

Poverty line
Growing domestic consumption has also contributed to the reduction of the poverty level. Nonetheless, 41 percent of Timorese still live below the national poverty line, and many households still depend on the government’s cash transfer programmes.

Therefore, maintaining the current consumption level is important for short-term growth and maintaining the well-being of individual households.

Meanwhile, the public sector is the biggest contributor of investment in Timor-Leste.

Currently private sector investment is still less than 10 percent of the total non-oil GDP. Therefore, the government’s investment has been critical for economic growth during the last 10 years, and job creation in the construction sector.

In the last decade, the government focused its attention on physical infrastructure, primarily electricity and roads. There are political as well as economic reasons for this.

The public demand for infrastructure resonates throughout the country, and the existing infrastructure is deteriorating rapidly due to poor maintenance. The economic rationale is that public investment in infrastructure is necessary to enable an environment for the private sector to grow.

But Timor-Leste needs to give more attention to long-term investment in its people. Education and health services, particularly, serve this purpose.

Health, education challenges
In the last decade, as the government prioritised physical infrastructure, public investment in health and education has been relatively low by regional standards.

While there have been significant improvements in many indicators, the issues of malnutrition and education quality are still big challenges.

In education in particular, there is an immediate need to improve the basic supporting infrastructure. Teacher training is widely regarded as a critical issue, but it requires long-term approach.

The country will pay a high economic and social cost in the future if there is no significant improvement in these sectors.

Finally, the country also needs to work on its institutional framework to support long-term development. Various organisations, laws and regulations, and policy frameworks, both formally and informally guide the way actors behave by creating economic incentives.

The roles of different institutions are critical, including the parliament, judiciary, ombudsman office, and anti-corruption commission. The government also needs to strengthen internal control mechanisms to strengthen accountability and efficient use of existing resources.

Extra-parliamentary oversight mechanisms, such as investigative journalism, critical voices from NGOs and academics, and space for public participation, will contribute here.

Striking a balance
In order to strike this balance between short-term and long-term goals, the government needs to be realistic, pragmatic, and strategic in choosing instruments and setting targets. A significant proportion of domestic consumption is public consumption.

The government’s intervention could focus on unnecessary public consumption, where spending cuts can be made in order to improve efficiency in public spending.

As for physical infrastructure, it is necessary for the government to focus much of its attention on basic infrastructure, such as roads, water and sanitation, and the infrastructure to support public service delivery.

There is a need to revisit all investment projects, particularly big projects that do not have clear investment returns, which could become “white elephant” projects for the country in the future if the economy does not have sufficient capacity to operate and to maintain such assets in the long run.

In the last 10 years, thanks to petroleum revenues, the government was able to adopt a “frontloading fiscal policy” to boost domestic consumption and finance largescale public investment. Nonetheless, having disproportionate public spending creates loopholes for misappropriation of public resources, particularly when coupled with less efficient public administration.

Consequently, certain groups of people profit disproportionately from the contracts. Unnecessary spending discourages productive activities and inflates the prices of goods and services, thus affecting resource distribution within the economy. This adversely impacts the government’s intention to develop Timor-Leste’s non-oil economy.

Since petroleum revenues have declined steeply, there is a need to impose certain fiscal disciplinary measures to constrain the temptation posed by available cash in the Petroleum Fund.

Not appropriate
Budget cuts do not sound appropriate in a context where poverty is still significantly high, and public spending is the engine to keep the economy moving.

But without fiscal discipline, Timor-Leste would be more likely to repeat the same policy that has been ineffective in responding to the country’s needs.

The new government needs to be more pragmatic and realistic in deciding how much to spend, setting the sectoral priorities, and acknowledging the tradeoffs involved.

These tasks are not easy, but they are not impossible. It requires decision makers to be realistic in spending and setting targets, strategic in choosing their policy instruments, and courageous enough to bear the tradeoffs resulted from policy options.

Guteriano Neves is a Dili-based policy analyst. This article was first published by The Diplomat and is republished with permission.

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‘New dawn’ for Malaysia, pledges freed Anwar Ibrahim after full pardon

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Anwar Ibrahim’s royal pardon paves the way for a return to politics for the former opposition leader who was jailed three years ago for alleged sodomy. Video: Al Jazeera

Pacific Media Centre Newsdesk

Malaysia’s former Deputy Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has been released from prison after receiving a full pardon from the king yesterday, reports Al Jazeera.

Speaking at a news conference after being freed following the royal pardon, he thanked the Malaysian people for standing by “the principles of democracy and freedom”.

“Now there is a new dawn for Malaysia. I must thank the people of Malaysia. Malays, Chinese, Indians, Kadazans, Iban; the entire spectrum of our Malaysians, regardless of race and religion …

“They demand change and it is our duty now to ensure that this mandate given to Pakatan Harapan [political alliance] will honour this commitment,” the politician added.

READ MORE: Anwar Ibrahim’s dramatic rise and fall – and rise again

-Partners-

Anwar, who was initially scheduled to be released on Tuesday, walked out of the Cheras Rehabilitation Hospital, where he was temporarily confined after surgery, and later arrived at the residence of the king, Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Muhammad V.

An image published by the Malaysian news agency Bernama showed Anwar, 70, greeting newly elected Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, his ally-turned-foe-turned-ally.

Another image showed the king welcoming Anwar and his wife, Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, the deputy prime minister-designate.

Earlier, Mahathir arrived at the royal palace for the royal pardons board meeting to discuss Anwar’s release.

Future role
The question for Malaysia now is how Anwar will get along with Mahathir and what role he will play in the new government.

Anwar’s party, PKR, holds 48 seats of the 113 seats won by the Pakatan Harapan alliance on Wednesday, and he is widely tipped to succeed Mahathir once he steps down from office.

In 2015, Anwar was jailed for five years after being accused of sodomy, a charge he described as a politically motivated attempt by then Prime Minister Najib Razak to end his career.

Sodomy is illegal in Muslim-majority Malaysia, where the offence carries a jail term of up to 20 years.

Under Malaysian law, unless he is pardoned by the king, Anwar would be disqualified for five years from running for office after his release.

Anwar was also imprisoned for six years after being overthrown as Mahathir’s deputy prime minister in 1998 on earlier charges of sodomising his former family driver and abusing his power.

He was freed in 2004 after Malaysia’s top court quashed that sodomy conviction.

Falling out
Anwar previously had a falling out with Mahathir after he criticised some of his policies.

But his party eventually formed an alliance with Mahathir to take on Najib’s United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) for the election on Wednesday.

In recent weeks, Mahathir acknowledged the suffering of Anwar and his family.

“I know how Anwar feels. It was during my administration that he was sent to [prison]. It is not easy for him to accept me and shake my hand,” The Malaysia Insight quoted Mahathir as saying.

“And it’s not just Anwar but his family as well who felt pressure when he was jailed. They suffered for 20 years.”

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Duterte holding bilateral talks with PNG prime minister O’Neill

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Papua New Guinean Prime Minister Peter O’Neill being welcomed on a state visit to the Philippines in Manila yesterday. Image: Loop PNG

By Rosalie Coz in Manila

President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines was due to hold bilateral talks later today with Papua New Guinean Prime Minister Peter O’Neill who arrived in Manila yesterday on a three-day state visit to the republic.

President Duterte is expected to host a state banquet for O’Neill after their scheduled talks, reports UNTV News.

Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque said the visit was an important opportunity for the Philippines “to reaffirm and further strengthen the friendly and cooperative ties with Papua New Guinea”.

“With other similar histories and shared aspirations for greater peace, progress and prosperity for our peoples and region, the Philippines stands ready to work with Papua New Guinea for the mutual benefit and sustainable and inclusive growth of our nations,” he said.

Rice production expansion
Freddy Mou reports for Loop PNG that Prime Minister O’Neill said the Philippines was a world leader in rice cultivation, and the republic was interested in working with Papua New Guinea on expanding its local production.

O’Neill added that the engagement between Papua New Guinea and the Philippines went back to the 1800s when Filipino missionaries accompanied European Catholic priests to “live with our people”.

-Partners-

Papua New Guinea and the Philippines had had diplomatic relations for 43 years as nation states, and it was important that the two countries continued to strengthen their engagement.

There were now more than 35,000 Filipinos living in Papua New Guinea, making them the largest group of expatriates in the country.

Prime Minister O’Neill said many Filipinos provided services in sectors that included healthcare and education, as well as working in many businesses.

Papua New Guinea is this year’s host and chair of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC).

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