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What do we know about climate change? How do we know it? And where are we headed?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Andrew King, ARC Future Fellow and Associate Professor in Climate Science, ARC Centre of Excellence for 21st Century Weather, The University of Melbourne

Hugo Abad / Getty Images

The 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference (sometimes referred to as COP30) is taking place in Brazil.

Amid all the talk with politicians, policy experts and scientists, it’s worth reminding ourselves of the state of Earth’s climate – a kind of long-term average of weather conditions – what’s driving the changes we’re seeing, and where we’re heading next.

We have understood the fundamentals of Earth’s climate for many decades, but scientists like us are constantly working to extend our knowledge.

In 2025, we have seen plenty of advances, including the ability to more clearly link individual greenhouse gas emitters with the impacts of their emissions.

The how and why of Earth’s changing climate

The planet we inhabit is changing. That change, especially since the start of the industrial revolution in the 18th century, is largely due to human activities.

Many different forms of data allow us to observe changes to the climate. We have long-running weather stations we can use to track temperature and rainfall changes, as well as newer technologies such as satellite imaging, which helps us see how sea ice is changing in the Arctic and Antarctic.

We can also make estimates of changes over much longer timescales using environmental indicators linked to temperature, such as tree ring growth, the air bubbles in ice cores, and coral formation.

Taking all these lines of evidence together, we can see major changes in the Earth system. These changes have accelerated in recent decades as humanity burned more and more fossil fuels, which release carbon dioxide when they burn.

Fossil fuels are substances such as coal, oil and gas which were formed millions of year ago from the remains of plants and other living organisms.

Why is this happening? We have understood for a very long time that carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas. This means when it is released into the atmosphere it acts to warm the planet because it traps heat, like a garden greenhouse.

Our fundamental understanding of the greenhouse effect came from the work of 19th century scientists including Eunice Foote, John Tyndall and Svante Arrhenius. Then, in 1938, Guy Callendar used a collection of weather station data to identify warming of the planet. Since then, the scale of the changes in Earth’s climate have only become clearer.

Since the 1970s, scientists have proven the link between our greenhouse gas emissions and global warming. Using observations and theoretical understanding, as well as newer tools such as computer models that simulate the world’s climate, global warming has been conclusively traced to humanity’s greenhouse gas emissions.

Science is uncovering how much humans are affecting the climate

More recently, we have gathered more observational data, increased our understanding of the climate system, and improved our ability to simulate the climate using numerical models. This has only increased our confidence in the human fingerprint on the changes to Earth’s climate that we are seeing.

It is also now possible to link regional and local climate changes to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions. We can even see the mark of human climate change in extreme weather events and their impacts. This is called event attribution.

These analyses are performed by using advanced weather and climate modelling that simulates these extreme events, then compares these extremes between sets of simulations with and without the effects of humans on the planet.

Just this year, scientists have gone further in showing not only that humanity’s collective greenhouse gas emissions are damaging the climate, but even company-level or individual project-level greenhouse gas emissions have detectable consequences. A trio of studies published in April, September and October this year linked emissions from fossil fuel companies and projects with big impacts.

The most recent of these papers showed that the approved Scarborough gas project off the coast of Western Australia is likely to result in hundreds of additional heat-related deaths and millions of lost corals, for example.

Where is our climate heading?

So the body of evidence that the climate is changing due to humanity’s actions is large and ever-growing. However, we haven’t yet taken the required steps to limit these changes by reducing our greenhouse gas emissions on a global scale.

In fact, our emissions remain at record high levels. We are still shifting the planet’s climate further away from its pre-industrial state into dangerous new territory.

But it isn’t all doom and gloom. Since the Paris Agreement of 2015 we have seen a shift in course. In the past decade, global greenhouse gas emissions haven’t increased as fast as they were expected to before 2015. Instead, it looks like emissions may be peaking and set to fall substantially through the 2030s.

So where does that leave us?

According to the latest UN Emissions Gap report, current policies still have us on a path for peak global warming of 2.8°C. If countries can fully enact their commitments to reducing emissions and reaching net zero, only then will peak global warming be limited to around 2°C.

Every time we avoid releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, we reduce future climate impacts and risks and leave the planet more habitable for future generations.

Millions of people will be hoping the outcomes of COP30 and subsequent meetings see more ambition and more action to help limit global warming and its impacts.

The Conversation

Andrew King receives funding from the Australian Research Council (Future Fellowship and Centre of Excellence for 21st Century Weather) and the National Environmental Science Program.

Aditya Sengupta receives funding from The University of Melbourne and ARC Centre of Excellence for 21st Century Weather.

ref. What do we know about climate change? How do we know it? And where are we headed? – https://theconversation.com/what-do-we-know-about-climate-change-how-do-we-know-it-and-where-are-we-headed-270070

Did Plunket founder Truby King really believe in eugenics? History isn’t that simple

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Barbara Brookes, Professor Emerita of History, University of Otago

Portrait of Sir Truby King by Mary Tripe, circa 1935. Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images

Four days after Plunket founder Sir Truby King’s funeral on February 12 1938, the Auckland Weekly News printed a montage of photographs showing the scale of the event.

Women members of the Plunket Society are shown keeping guard over his coffin. Men and women lined Wellington’s Lambton Quay to see his funeral cortège pass, while others thronged to Mt Melrose to see his casket being borne to the vault at the Karitane Hospital.

Coverage of Truby King’s funeral in 1938.
Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections

Every newspaper in the country noted his death and printed accolades about his service to the nation and the wider world. Prime Minister Michael Joseph Savage described him as a “zealous humanitarian”.

Yet 80 years later, King’s reputation has taken a battering due to his apparent association with now discredited ideas about eugenics. As one 2019 headline put it: “Plunket’s founder was an awful person obsessed with eugenics”.

The article suggested Plunket should apologise for the views of its founder, and has been used as a source for evaluating King in the NCEA level three history curriculum. Separately, I was asked to revise my entry in the Dictionary of New Zealand Biography (I declined).

So the question is, were those New Zealanders who celebrated the life and achievements of Truby King deluded?

The origins of Plunket

Eugenics is commonly used now as a term of opprobrium to describe selective breeding on the basis of “desirable” genetic traits and the weeding out of the “undesirable”.

Originally it simply meant “good in birth”, derived from the Greek eugenes. To understand how the term and the ideas it represents evolved so markedly, and how this applies to Truby King, we need to understand his historical context.

Consider the date he died: February 10 1938. He did not live to see the horror of genocide committed by the Nazi regime which has come to be associated with the term eugenics.

A nurse checks a child at the Hataitai Plunket Rooms, Wellington, c.1960s.
W. Cleal/National Publicity Studios via Wikimedia, CC BY-NC-SA

He lived before the establishment of the welfare state by the first Labour government, which instituted free maternity care, state-subsidised doctor’s visits and free hospital care.

There were no antibiotics to miraculously cure infections. There was no readily available and effective contraception.

In 1907, when the Society for the Health of Women and Children was founded (it was renamed the Plunket Society in 1914 after its patron, Lady Victoria Plunket), the infant mortality rate stood at 89 deaths per 1,000 infants. In 2024, the comparable figure was 5.8.

We are far less likely today to experience infant death, whereas in 1907 there was a good chance someone related to us would have.

Plunket offered a free service to urban-based new mothers at a time when doctor’s visits were expensive. Plunket trained Karitane nurses who helped stressed mothers, and provided Karitane Hospitals where they and their babies received care and support.

Women throughout New Zealand joined the organisation and were indefatigable fundraisers to help mothers and save babies.

Early eugenic ideas

If Truby King did think well of some forms of eugenics, he was far from alone. The Otago Daily Times reported that a preliminary meeting of the proposed Dunedin branch of the Eugenics Education Society drew “a large number of medical and university men, ministers, headmasters of schools [and] philanthropic workers…”.

Truby King, circa 1920.
Archives New Zealand via Wikimedia, CC BY-NC-SA

Truby King’s name does not appear in the list of officers or members of the Eugenics Education Society council. But while his name is also absent from any reports in its first year, the society was pleased to receive a letter from Āpirana Ngata, cofounder of the Young Māori Party and MP for Eastern Māori.

Ngata wrote that the party believed its own policies would be enhanced by “scientific principles, based on practical research” which he evidently believed to be the aim of the society.

In May 1911, the Society for the Health of Women and Children invited distinguished University of Otago professor William Benham to address its annual meeting.

Benham had recently become president of the Eugenics Education Society and used his platform to insist that “heredity is more important than environment”, and that if the right people didn’t reproduce, the “race” would deteriorate.

Truby King was quick to repudiate this argument and emphasise the importance of environment. If the public were led to believe heredity counted for everything and the environment for nothing, he suggested, it would lead to “masterly inactivity”.

By this he meant that while you could not alter an individual’s heredity, you could control the environment into which they were born. The best thing was to make that environment conducive to good health for every baby.

In the book Eugenics at the Edges of Empire, historian Diane Paul discusses how we can trace King’s concern about the differential birthrate between the “fit” and the “unfit”, and the “best sources” of population, in his speeches and written works.

But he did not regard “unfitness” as an unalterable trait. Rather, with the best start in life, all children would become “fit”. And there is no evidence he ever joined the Eugenics Education Society.

The past in context

Eugenic theories have to be viewed through the lens of history. It might help to think of these ideas in the early 20th century as being like water – flowing everywhere and adopted for different uses by different constituencies.

It would have been hard not to be caught in the tide of what was then thought of as a frontier of scientific knowledge. But Truby King was determined to swim against the tide of indifference to the social conditions he feared might be the result of an emphasis on heredity.

He wanted action to improve outcomes for infants and mothers. And those New Zealanders who lined the streets to mark his death believed he had succeeded.

Science, of course, advances. And there have been dramatic improvements in the understanding of genetics. These days, Te Whatu Ora-Health New Zealand offers fully funded prenatal screening to determine the risk of the fetus having certain chromosomal abnormalities, in order to allow women to make their own decisions about continuing a pregnancy.

To describe this as “eugenics”, a word now freighted with the horrors of Nazi state policy, would no doubt cause an outcry from those who have benefited from such screening.

In the contemporary condemnation of Truby King, I think we can see a failure of historical imagination of the kind prominent British historian E.P. Thomson called the “enormous condescension of posterity”.

Diane Paul suggests the term “eugenics” had such a wide compass in King’s era that it does no useful analytical work, but has become merely an emotive term.

One of New Zealand’s early women doctors, Frances Preston, once related the story of when Truby King, as Inspector of Asylums, paid a visit to the Seacliff Lunatic Asylum. He was given rooms near the entrance for his overnight stay. A conscientious night watchman noticed a sleeping man and locked the door.

When he found himself imprisoned in the morning, a furious King cried “Let me out, Let me out! I’m Sir Truby King.” The morning attendant assumed this was the raving of a patient and replied soothingly, “Yes, yes, we’ve got two more Sir Trubys upstairs.”

Just like the attendant who failed to recognise Truby King, it seems current criticism fails to discern the extremely broad meaning of the term eugenics a century ago, and King’s genuine motivations in founding what became Plunket.

New ideas about raising children, and the cushion of free hospital and maternity care, have made his ideas seem outdated. But we should not uncritically associate him (or besmirch his reputation) with a term that has come to stand for something else, the most extreme and appalling applications of which took place after his time.

The Conversation

Barbara Brookes does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Did Plunket founder Truby King really believe in eugenics? History isn’t that simple – https://theconversation.com/did-plunket-founder-truby-king-really-believe-in-eugenics-history-isnt-that-simple-269187

The ‘Bazball’ game style has revolutionised English cricket. Australia should be nervous

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ronnie Das, Associate Professor in Data Science, Sports Analytics and AI, The University of Western Australia; Audencia

The Ashes is one of cricket’s fiercest rivalries and dates back to 1882, when England lost to Australia for the first time on home soil.

So outraged were English cricket fans by the result that a newspaper carried a mock obituary of English cricket which stated: “the body will be cremated and the ashes taken to Australia”.

Since then, Australia and England have fought every two years to win “the Ashes” trophy, which is in fact an 11cm tall terracotta urn.

English cricket’s death and resurrection since 1882 will now face its latest challenge: the 74th Ashes series across five Tests in Australia, starting on Friday in Perth.




Read more:
Australia’s reluctance to rest its fast bowlers could prove disastrous during the Ashes


England has only ever won the Ashes in Australia 14 times during the entire history of the rivalry, with the most recent success in 2010/11.

But this England squad boasts a controversial style of Test cricket that has revolutionised Test cricket, not only in England but more broadly: “Bazball”.

What is Bazball?

Bazball is a phrase coined after Brendon “Baz” McCullum was hired as England coach in mid-2022.

Bazball was initially shorthand for a super-aggressive mindset, which went against England’s stereotypical defensive approach to Test cricket.

This high-risk, high-reward strategy has spurred England to some spectacular wins, but also brought about some disastrous defeats.

It’s not just blind aggressive cricket – it is a calculated playing style. It’s also a threat Australia should not underestimate, despite a remarkable 60% win rate in the past 20 Ashes series (12 series wins compared to England’s six).

Bazball in numbers

I have analysed historical data to show Bazball offers a genuine opportunity for England to regain the Ashes in Australia for the first time in 15 years.

Bazball’s primary strategy encourages England to bat with immense aggression.

After adopting this style of play, England’s Test cricket run rate has risen from 3.24 historically to nearly 4.86 runs per over (RPO) – a massive 50% increase in scoring rate.

Scoring more quickly puts pressure on opposition bowlers and fielders. It also provides more time for England’s bowlers to take the 20 wickets needed for Test victory.

This reflects more of a Twenty20 cricket mentality, rather than the defensive and survival-first orthodoxy that had long dominated Test cricket.

Beyond its entertainment value, Bazball has also delivered tangible results, validating this mindset.

After McCullum’s appointment, England’s Test match win rate has surged from 39.2% to 60.5% – a 54% relative improvement.

Before Bazball, England was winning fewer than two in every five Tests. Now they are consistently winning three or more in every five Tests.

Where Bazball truly wins games

Data show interesting patterns in Bazball’s effectiveness at changing the nature of Tests in critical moments, mostly when England bats in the second and fourth innings.

What is most extraordinary is what often happens in England’s fourth innings – historically Test cricket’s toughest batting challenge.

Since McCullum took over as coach, England’s run rate per over in fourth innings has risen by almost three runs, to 5.76 per over.

Previously, England had few victories when they were chasing a large total under pressure in the fourth innings. Now, the winning percentage has more than doubled (60% in the Bazball era compared to 28.1% historically).

This pattern is also evident in second innings, where England have scored nearly additional 90 runs on an average during the Bazball era.

The second innings of a game often works as a launchpad for consolidation and domination. Bazball’s sweet spot of 4.86 runs per over isn’t reckless – it’s the proven winning formula hidden in the data all along.

How Australia has performed against Bazball

At this stage there is not enough evidence to draw statistical conclusions about the impact Bazball has had on England’s performance against Australia.

However, the drawn series in England in 2023 featured some interesting dynamics that might just be an indication of what to expect this time around.

The pattern was unmistakable: every time England went into full attack mode, scoring more than 4.8 runs per over, they mostly won. At Leeds, they chased down a target at an incredible 5.08 runs per over. At The Oval, they opened with a strong 5.17 runs per over to seal victory.

But when the scoring rate dropped below 4.3 runs per over, particularly at Birmingham and Lord’s, Australia triumphed.

The drawn Manchester Test might be the most tantalising glimpse of what’s to come. England scored a record 592 runs at a steep 5.49 runs per over, playing cricket that looked more like a Twenty20 than a Test match.

If it wasn’t for the rain, England would likely have won the series.

England is likely to replicate this fearless approach in Australia. The first match is likely to set the tone, with pitch conditions at Perth’s Optus Stadium likely to favour England, while Australia is without two of its premier fast bowlers due to injuries.

England’s batters will have their work cut out – during the past five years, Australia has been the most difficult country in the world to face fast bowling.

Despite this, the hosts might face something they’ve rarely encountered during this series: an England side that genuinely believes it can win Down Under.

The Conversation

Ronnie Das does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. The ‘Bazball’ game style has revolutionised English cricket. Australia should be nervous – https://theconversation.com/the-bazball-game-style-has-revolutionised-english-cricket-australia-should-be-nervous-267864

What’s the difference between a home birth and a free birth?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hannah Dahlen, Professor of Midwifery, Associate Dean Research and HDR, Midwifery Discipline Leader, Western Sydney University

Layland Masuda/Getty Images

If you’re looking on social media for information and experiences of giving birth at home, you’ll find widely varied content.

On the one hand, you’ll find women who develop a relationship with their midwife over time and eventually have a “home birth” where they feel comfortable and safe.

Others choose to birth outside the medical system in a “free birth”. They might birth at home but feel compelled to forgo specialist skills and equipment.

While free births and home births sound similar, they come with very different potential risks.

What is a home birth?

Planned home births involve care from registered midwives. They care for women through the pregnancy, support them to give birth at home and continue this care for around six weeks following the birth.

Registered midwives either work privately or are employed by a hospital to provide home births.

Around 20 publicly funded home birth programs operate nationally for low-risk women who don’t live far from the hospital. Most set a maximum distance (time or kilometres) from the hospital so women can get there quickly if they need medical care or in an emergency.

Private midwives work for themselves and charge for care before, during and after a home birth. Women are able to get some money back from Medicare or through some private health funds.

Midwives are highly skilled and carry resuscitation equipment and medications to deal with emergencies, for instance, if the baby isn’t breathing or the mother is bleeding heavily.

What is a free birth?

When a woman chooses to have a free birth they make the decision to have a baby, usually at home, without a registered health professional such as a midwife or doctor in attendance. These are also called unassisted or wild births.

Those who plan a free birth may hire an unregulated birth worker or doula to support them at the birth. But they don’t have the training, regulation or medical equipment and skills needed to manage emergencies.

Women may have limited or no antenatal health care, so risk factors such as twins and breech presentations (the baby coming bottom first) aren’t detected beforehand and given the right kind of specialist care.

Free birth isn’t the same as when a baby comes too fast to make it to hospital. This is called being “born before arrival”.




Read more:
What to do when the baby is born before you get to hospital


How common are home births and free births?

In 2023, 97% of women give birth in hospital. Of these, three-quarters birthed in a public hospital; the rest went private.

A small proportion of women gave birth out of hospital, including in birth centres (1.5%), at home (0.7%), or in other settings (such as being before arrival at a hospital) (0.7%).

There was a slight increase in the number of home births in recent years, from 923 (0.3%) in 2019 to 2,081 (0.7%) in 2023.

It’s unclear how common free birth is, as data is not collected. But there is some evidence free births increased during the COVID pandemic and this trend has continued.

Are home births safe?

The research shows that for women with low-risk pregnancies, planned home births attended by competent midwives (with links to hospitals) are safe.

Private midwives are required to book a woman into the nearby hospital and share information with the hospital at the start of a pregnancy in case medical care is needed at any time.

Midwives across Australia follow national referral guidelines and safety and quality guidelines from the Nursing and Midwifery Board about when to consult or refer women for medical care. Around 12-35% of women who plan to give birth at home will be transferred to hospital. Some midwives can continue to care for women who need extra medical support in hospital.

Women with risk factors are recommended to not give birth at home as there is a greater chance of needing extra medical care for her or her baby. Risk factors include being pregnant with twins, having a baby in a breech position, or having high blood pressure.

For low-risk women and their babies, there is no difference in the risk of death between planned home and hospital births.

However, compared with hospital births, women who plan to give birth at home have a lower chance of having an episiotomy (a surgical cut to the perineum), a perineal tear, significant blood loss, or an infection. They are less likely to be induced, have a caesarean section, or have a forceps or vacuum delivery.

Women who have a home birth more often report positive experiences than in hospitals and tend to make the same choice for the next birth. A home birth can also be healing for women who have experienced a traumatic birth.




Read more:
More than 6,000 women told us what they wanted for their next pregnancy and birth. Here’s what they said


Why would a woman choose to have a free birth?

The main reason women choose to free birth is a previous traumatic birth or feeling coerced to make certain choices, such as being induced or having an episiotomy or caesarean section.

Sometimes, women can’t access a midwife to attend them at home. For others, the cost is prohibitive.

Others are motivated by a strong belief in their own capacity to give birth without professional support, with social media influencers impacting these decisions.

The risks of free birth are primarily are due to not having a trained midwife in attendance and the lack of skills to detect complications and transfer to a hospital, or to manage complications at home.

If you choose to birth at home, it’s important to have a registered midwife supporting you during labour to make this option as safe as possible.

The Conversation

Hannah Dahlen has worked as a private midwife in the past and attended homebirths. Hannah has received funding from the NHMRC to study the safety of place of birth.

ref. What’s the difference between a home birth and a free birth? – https://theconversation.com/whats-the-difference-between-a-home-birth-and-a-free-birth-268883

Engineered microbes could tackle climate change – if we ensure it’s done safely

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Daniele Fulvi, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Western Sydney University

Yuji Sakai/Getty

As the climate crisis accelerates, there’s a desperate need to rapidly reduce carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, both by slashing emissions and by pulling carbon out of the air.

Synthetic biology has emerged as a particularly promising approach. Despite the name, synthetic biology isn’t about creating new life from scratch. Rather, it uses engineering principles to build new biological components for existing microorganisms such as bacteria, microbes and fungi to make them better at specific tasks.

By one recent estimate, synthetic biology could cut more carbon than emitted by all passenger cars ever made – up to 30 billion tonnes – through methods such as boosting crop yields, restoring agricultural land, cutting livestock methane emissions, reducing the need for fertiliser, producing biofuels and engineering microbes to store more carbon. According to some synthetic biologists, this could be a game-changer.

But will it prove to be? Technological efforts to “solve” the climate problem often verge on the improbably utopian. There’s a risk in seeing synthetic biology as a silver bullet for environmental problems. A more realistic approach suggests synthetic biology isn’t a magic fix, but does have real potential worth exploring further.

Engineering microorganisms is a controversial practice. To make the most of these technologies, researchers will have to ensure it’s done safely and ethically, as my research points out.

What potential does synthetic biology have?

Earth’s oceans, forests, soils and other natural processes soak up over half of all carbon emitted by burning fossil fuels.

Synthetic biology could make these natural sinks even more effective. Some researchers are exploring ways to modify natural enzymes to rapidly convert carbon dioxide gas into carbon in rocks.

Perhaps the best known example is the use of precision fermentation to cut methane emissions from livestock. Because methane is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, these emissions account for roughly 12% of total warming potential from greenhouse emissions.

Bioengineered yeasts could absorb up to 98% of these emissions. After being eaten by cattle or other ruminants these yeasts block production of methane before it can be belched out.

Synthetic biology could even drastically reduce how much farmland the world needs by producing food more efficiently. Engineered soil microbes can boost crop yields at least by 10–20%, meaning more food from less land. Precision fermentation can be used to produce clean meat and clean milk with much lower emissions than traditional farming.

hand holding wheat
Engineered microbes have the potential to boost crop yields considerably.
Collab Media/Unsplash, CC BY-NC-ND

If farms produce more on less land, excess farmland can be returned to nature. Wetlands, forests and native grasslands can store much more carbon than farmland, helping tackle climate change.

Synthetic biology can be used to modify microbe and algae species to increase their natural ability to store carbon in wetlands and oceans. This approach is known as natural geoengineering.

Engineered crops and soil microbes can also lock away much more carbon in the roots of crops or by increasing soil storage capacity. They can also reduce methane emissions from organic matter and tackle pollutants such as fertiliser runoff and heavy metals.

Sounds great – what’s the problem?

As researchers have pointed out, using this approach will require a rollout at massive scale. At present, much work has been done at smaller scale. These engineered organisms need to be able to go from Petri dishes to industrial bioreactors and then safely into the environment. To scale, these approaches have to be economically viable, well regulated and socially acceptable.

That’s easier said than done.

First, engineering organisms comes with the serious risk of unintended consequences. If these customised microbes release their stored carbon all at once during a drought or bushfire, it could worsen climate change.

It would be very difficult to control these organisms if a problem emerges after their release, such as if an engineered microbe began outcompeting its rivals or if synthetic genes spread beyond the target species and do unintended damage to other species and ecosystems. It will be essential to tackle these issues head on with robust risk management and forward planning.

Second, synthetic biology approaches will likely become products. To make these organisms cheaply and gain market share, biotech companies will have an incentive to focus on immediate profits. This could lead companies to downplay actual risks to protect their profit margins. Regulation will be essential here.

Third, some worthwhile approaches may not appeal to companies seeking a return on investment. Instead, governments or public institutions may have to develop them to benefit plants, animals and natural habitats, given human existence rests on healthy ecosystems.

Which way forward?

These issues shouldn’t stop researchers from testing out these technologies. But these risks must be taken into account, as not all risks are equal.

Unchecked climate change would be much worse, as it could lead to societal collapse, large-scale climate migration and mass species extinction. Large scale removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is now essential.

In the face of catastrophic risks, it can be ethically justifiable to take the smaller risk of unintended consequences from these organisms.

But it’s far less justifiable if these same risks are accepted to secure financial returns for private investors.

As time passes and the climate crisis intensifies, these technologies will look more and more appealing. Synthetic biology won’t be the silver bullet many imagine it to be, and it’s unlikely it will be the gold mine many hope for.

But the technology has undeniable promise. Used thoughtfully and ethically, it could help us make a healthier planet for all living species.

The Conversation

Daniele Fulvi receives funding from the ARC Centre of Excellence in Synthetic Biology, and his current project investigates the ethical dimensions of synthetic biology for climate mitigation. He also received a small grant from the Advanced Engineering Biology Future Science Platform at CSIRO.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and are not necessarily those of the Australian Government or the Australian Research Council.

ref. Engineered microbes could tackle climate change – if we ensure it’s done safely – https://theconversation.com/engineered-microbes-could-tackle-climate-change-if-we-ensure-its-done-safely-266584

A new study shows little kids who count on their fingers do better at maths

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jennifer Way, Associate Professor in Primary and Early Childhood Mathematics Education, University of Sydney

Sydney Bourne/ AAP

If you ask a small child a simple maths question, such as 4+2, they may count on their fingers to work it out.

Should we encourage young children to do this? This seemingly simple question is surprisingly complex to answer.

Some teachers and parents might say, yes, it seems to help young children learn about numbers. Others might discourage finger counting, arguing it might slow the development of mental strategies.

A new Swiss study, released on Friday, shows kids who use finger counting from a young age perform better at addition than those who do not.

What does the research say?

There is a rich debate among researchers about the value of kids using their fingers to count.

Education psychologists say finger counting helps children think through strategies without overloading their working memory (how our brains hold pieces of information for short time while we work something out), until more abstract strategies are mastered.

Researchers in embodied cognition (learning through actions) argue associating fingers and numbers is “doing what comes naturally” and so, should be encouraged. Neuroscientists might also note similar parts of your brain activate when you move your fingers and think about numbers, which helps memory.

Several previous classroom studies have shown children who use finger strategies to solve maths questions perform better than children who do not, until around seven when the opposite becomes true.

So, before age seven, finger-counters are better. After seven, non-finger-counters are better.

Why does this happen? What does this mean for mathematics education? This has been a point of debate for several years.

A new study followed 200 kids

A new University of Lausane study has taken an important step in settling this debate.

The researchers say previous studies have left us with two possible explanations for the apparent change in the benefits of finger counting at about seven.

One interpretation is finger strategies become inefficient when maths questions become more complex (for example 13 + 9 is harder than 1 + 3), so children who use finger strategies don’t perform as well.

The other possibility is the children who are not using finger strategies at seven (and performing better than those who do) were previously finger-users, who have transitioned to more advanced mental strategies.

To untangle these contrasting explanations, the researchers followed almost 200 children from age 4.5 to 7.5 and assessed their addition skills and finger use every six months.

Notably, they tracked if and when the children started and stopped using their fingers. So, at each assessment point, it was noted whether children were non-finger users, new finger-users (newly started), continuing finger-users, or ex-finger users (had stopped).

What did the study find?

The study found that by 6.5 years most of the non-finger users were indeed ex-finger users. These ex-finger users were also the highest performers in the addition questions and were still improving a year later. The significance of this finding is that in previous studies, these high performing children had only been identified as non-finger users, not as former users of finger-based strategies.

In the new Swiss study, only 12 children never used their fingers over the years, and they were the lowest performing group.

Additionally, the study showed the “late starters” with finger-counting strategies, who were still using finger strategies at the age of 6.5 to 7.5 years, did not perform as well as the ex-finger users.

What does this mean?

The findings from this unique longitudinal study are powerful. It seems reasonable to conclude both teachers and parents should encourage finger counting development from preschool through the first couple of years of school.

However, the Swiss study focused on predominantly white European children from middle to high socioeconomic backgrounds. Would we find such clear outcomes in the average multicultural public school in Australia? We suspect that we might.

Our own 2025 study found a wide variety of finger counting methods in such schools, but when teachers paid attention to the development of finger counting strategies it supported children’s number skills.

What can parents do?

Parents can show preschoolers how they can use their fingers to represent numbers, such as holding up three fingers and saying “three”.

Help them practice counting from one to ten, matching one finger at a time. Once they get started, the rest should come naturally. There is no need to discourage finger counting at any time. Children naturally stop using their fingers when they no longer need them.

The Conversation

Jennifer Way received funding from NSW Department of Education, Strategic Research Fund
(2021–2024). ID: G212850.

Katherin Cartwright received funding from NSW Department of Education, Strategic Research Fund (2021–2024). ID: G212850.

ref. A new study shows little kids who count on their fingers do better at maths – https://theconversation.com/a-new-study-shows-little-kids-who-count-on-their-fingers-do-better-at-maths-270259

New data shows the ACT and Queensland economies are beating the rest of the nation

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra

The Australian Capital Territory and Queensland have won bragging rights for having the fastest growing economies in Australia in 2024-25.

Their growth was highlighted in annual data on gross state product (GSP), released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

GSP is the state and territory equivalent of gross domestic product (GDP), the most commonly used measure of the size of the national economy.

Across the nation, total GDP grew by 1.4% in the year to June 2025, with strength across the service sector offset by weakness in mining and manufacturing.

The mining sector was a drag

The fastest growing state or territory economy in 2024-25 was the ACT, which expanded by a robust 3.5%. It was followed by Queensland, which grew by 2.2%. They were the only states or territories to outpace the national growth rate. The others mostly grew by around 1%.

The ACT and Queensland were also, along with Tasmania, the only ones where GSP grew faster than population. These figures, given in real terms, exclude the impact of inflation.

The ACT, with a population of 484,000, has a larger GSP than Tasmania – despite the Apple Isle’s bigger population of 576,000.

Unsurprisingly, New South Wales and Victoria, the most populous states, have the largest sized economies overall. They account for 31% and 23% of our national economy. But their GSP grew only by 0.9% and by 1.1% respectively.

The differences reflect the different industry composition of the states. Nationally, the mining sector was affected by severe weather and unplanned disruptions. This held back activity in Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory.

Weakness in the manufacturing industry also restrained economic growth in some states. The ACT, with a services-based economy, was barely affected. It benefited from increased public sector activity, with public administration and safety rising 7.2%.

The near completion of some major transport projects caused construction to detract from economic growth in NSW. But this was offset by a strong harvest that boosted the agriculture sector, the Bureau of Statistics said.

While strong population growth led to housing construction providing a boost to the WA economy, residential construction was weak in Tasmania.

Favourable rural conditions meant that agriculture made a large contribution in NSW, Queensland, Western Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory. In contrast, a drought meant agriculture was a large detractor in South Australia.

Incomes differ across the nation

There are differences in real GSP per person across the states and territories.

Western Australia produces more per person due to its large mining industry. This produces large amounts of revenue, but employs relatively few people.

A similar pattern can be seen in the data on real gross state income per person. This also captures the impact of swings in the prices of exports and imports.

Again, the major industry where this is important is mining. This creates more volatility in the average incomes in Western Australia and the Northern Territory than in other parts of the country.

Western Australia’s recent good fortune in having high incomes from high mineral prices is shared by redistributing some of it to the other states and territories through the Commonwealth Grants Commission process.

In the same way, WA has been supported by the rest of Australia when it was poorer for most of the 20th century.




Read more:
The controversial GST deal with the states is under review. There are better alternatives


The Conversation

John Hawkins does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. New data shows the ACT and Queensland economies are beating the rest of the nation – https://theconversation.com/new-data-shows-the-act-and-queensland-economies-are-beating-the-rest-of-the-nation-270068

Cinema’s most notorious film: Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Salò turns 50

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer, Discipline of English and Writing, University of Sydney

Criterion Collection

Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom is turning 50. One of cinema’s most notorious films, Salò continues to be approached with trepidation – if approached at all.

Adapted from the equally infamous book by the Marquis de Sade, Salò is, ostensibly, Pasolini’s attempt to grapple with the violent legacies of Italy’s Fascist past. Yet it is much more than a history lesson.

In Salò, Pasolini tests the limits of what can be depicted. Terror and torture. Sexual assault and psychological savagery. Mutilation and murder.

According to film critic Richard Brody, Salò

is essential to have seen but impossible to watch: a viewer may find life itself defiled beyond redemption by the simple fact that such things can be shown or even imagined.

A polarising tale

Across four episodes inspired by Dante, Salò tracks a group of teenage abductees corralled into a rural villa by a clique of Fascist bureaucrats, where they are subjected to a catalogue of ordeals, each more dehumanising and terrible than the last.

Startled by the film’s extreme nature, many contemporary critics recoiled in response. Novelist Italo Calvino felt the film was irresponsible and unfocused. The New York Times dismissed Salò as “thin and superficial”, symptomatic of Pasolini’s increasingly “bitter” directorial sensibility.

As polarising now as on release, Salò – banned in Italy after a brief theatrical run – continues to exert a dark gravitational pull. Director Michael Haneke, who listed Salò in his top ten features of all time, describes how it

scared me so much that I was sick for 14 days. Completely wiped out. To this day, I haven’t drummed up the courage to watch it again. Never again did I look into such a deep abyss and rarely have I learned so much.

More recently, novelist Olivia Laing has woven Salò into the fabric of The Silver Book, portions of which unfold on the film’s set.

As Laing argues, Pasolini’s vision – the bleakest ever committed to celluloidperhaps – has retained its visceral charge because of its predictive quality:

He saw the future we’re now in long before anyone else. He saw that capitalism would corrode into fascism, or that fascism would infiltrate and take over capitalism, that what appeared benign and beneficial would corrupt and destroy old forms of life. He knew that compliance and complicity were lethal.

Pasolini understood these dynamics because he had lived through them.

Totalitarianism and life

Born in Bologna in 1922, mere months before Mussolini’s March on Rome, Pasolini grew up in a regime defined by acquiescence, chauvinism and vulgar displays of power.

His Italy was one where totalitarianism seeped into every crevice of everyday life.

Before turning to film, Pasolini had already become one of Italy’s most prolific and controversial cultural figures, turning out poems, novels and essays at a truly prodigious rate.

Openly gay and staunchly Marxist, he was admired abroad but treated with suspicion by Italy’s conservative establishment.

Salò was a furious rejoinder to his own Trilogy of Life – a series of raucous cinematic reworkings of The Decameron (1971), The Canterbury Tales (1972) and Arabian Nights (1974). The trilogy championed eroticism and communal pleasure, but Pasolini had grown disillusioned with how they had been received.

What had been intended as a celebration of bodily autonomy and pre-modern vitalism had, in Pasolini’s eyes, been assimilated by the very forces he despised.

Lamenting the absorption and commercialism of sexuality by consumer capitalism – which turned liberation into another commodity to be bought, sold and stripped of all subversive charge – he resolved to make a film that could not be recuperated by the marketplace.

He wanted to make a film that – in queer media historian Susan Potter’s reckoning – “could not be digested as entertainment”.

Salò was the result. Made during the Italian Years of Lead, an era marked by extremist political violence, the film looks back to the Nazi-backed Republic of Salò on Lake Garda.

Pasolini explained he set the film in 1945

because the end of the war marks the beginning of our own time, when eroticism is perverted into commerce.

Salò, he insisted, was “his first film about the modern world”.

A brutal end

Pasolini never saw Salò released. On November 2 1975, just weeks before the scheduled premiere, he was brutally murdered on the outskirts of Rome. The official narrative was that he had been killed in a nocturnal scuffle with a teenage sex worker. Almost immediately, however, cracks began to emerge.

The ferocity of the attack, the inconsistencies in the testimony of the young man accused of the crime and Pasolini’s blistering critiques of Italy’s political and cultural elites fuelled decades of suspicion that have never fully abated, with suggestions that the killing was a political assassination.

Salò played an unsettling role in all of this. During production, several film reels were stolen by a criminal gang demanding ransom. Pasolini refused, replacing the missing footage with alternate takes. Some have speculated a desire to recover this missing material may have led Pasolini to his ghastly fate.

Whether that is true remains uncertain. What is indisputable, half a century later, is that Salò has lost none of its appalling power.

Pasolini was not simply chronicling the past. He was warning us about the nightmarish realities of our late capitalist world, where violence is rife, the powerful act with impunity and the human body is just another resource to be exploited.

We ignore that warning at our peril.

The Conversation

Alexander Howard does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Cinema’s most notorious film: Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Salò turns 50 – https://theconversation.com/cinemas-most-notorious-film-pier-paolo-pasolinis-salo-turns-50-267432

Man charged after series of fires lit in Dunedin

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Police have arrested and charged a man with arson after a series of fires across Dunedin this week.

Police said the charges related to a deliberate fire at a vacant property on Lees Street at about 12.30am on Tuesday.

It was followed by a building fire on Harrow Street at about 11.30pm on Wednesday, and then a vegetation fire on Brighton Road at about 1.20am.

The 48-year old man appeared in Dunedin District Court yesterday charged with “wilfully setting fire to property knowing that danger to life was likely to ensue”, and was remanded in custody until his next appearance on 16 December.

Detective Senior Sergeant Nik Leigh said investigators were still looking into the circumstances around the fires.

“The arrest is a significant development for us; the investigation team has been chasing down a lot of leads but there’s still work for us to do.

“We’re grateful for those people who have provided information, but we still need to hear from anyone with information who has yet to reach out.”

Nobody was injured, but that didn’t make the fires any less serious, he said.

“Fire spreads incredibly quickly and it puts everyone at risk, from the public to emergency services.

“We treat these events seriously, and the arrest we’ve made in this case is a welcome development.”

Anyone with any useful information could update police online or by calling 105, with the reference number 251118/1721.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Black Stick Grace O’Hanlon named international keeper of the year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Grace O’Hanlon of the Black Sticks. © Photosport Ltd 2019 www.photosport.nz

Black Sticks player Grace O’Hanlon has been named the International Hockey Deferation (FIH) Women’s Goalkeeper of the Year for 2025.

It is the first time a New Zealander has won a senior FIH global award.

Stacey Michelsen’s Rising Star accolade in 2011 is the only other time a New Zealander has been recognised by the world body.

O’Hanlon delivered world-class performances at the FIH Nations Cup and Oceania Cup with New Zealand winning both events.

The 33 year old was also named both Player of the Year and Players’ Player of the Year at the Black Sticks Annual Awards, voted by team-mates, coaches, and staff.

“There is truly no one more deserving,” said captain Olivia Shannon.

“Grace is a once-in-a-lifetime generational player, she’s shaped and changed the way goalkeeping is played, inspiring not just our team but future Black Sticks as well.”

Women’s head coach Phil Burrows echoed the significance of her achievement.

“Grace’s win is a historic first for New Zealand hockey and a reflection of her outstanding year.

“Her performances, leadership and genuine care for her team-mates have been exceptional. Grace will be proud of this award, but even prouder of the part she played in our team’s success.”

New Zealand will host a four-nation tournament involving South Korea, Japan and the United States in Dunedin in January.

They will compete in the 2026 World Cup in Belgium and the Netherlands in August.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Lawyers bring own audio equipment to run-down Rotorua District Court, say upgrades needed

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rotorua District Court ranked the lowest in the nation for satisfaction with its facilities. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

A building which ties up the hands of justice – that’s how many feel about Rotorua’s courthouse which has suffered years of delays to a slated redevelopment.

Rotorua District Court ranked the lowest in the nation for satisfaction with its facilities in this year’s Ministry of Justice Court User Survey.

Crown prosecutor Amanda Gordon said things started off badly for people as soon as they arrived at the courthouse.

Jurors, victims, defendants and witnesses must all go through a single entrance.

“Everyone has to individually go through security which takes an enormous amount of time, so on a day … where it’s pouring with rain, people are sometimes standing outside in the rain for two hours.”

Rotorua criminal lawyer Scott Mills pointed out the many problems with this arrangement.

“On Monday mornings the jury line stretches right back to the corner. There’s simply nowhere for people to go. Witnesses, defendants and complainants are shoulder-to-shoulder in the same waiting areas, fights have broken out more than once.”

Rotorua’s courthouse. Supplied / Ministry of Justice

It was no better once people got inside.

“It just doesn’t meet standards, for example if you have a disabled defendant they can’t get to the cells – the stair access is really steep and narrow – so there’s no way people with mobility issues can be placed in the cells when they potentially should be,” said Gordon.

Because a new building kept being promised, Gordon said no one would spend money on proper fixes or upgrades.

It was so bad the lawyers bought in audio equipment themselves just so jurors could hear video evidence properly.

“The court system and the police system don’t work together very well, so the DVDs we provide the court, they can’t turn the volume up so the jury can’t hear what the witness is saying,” she said.

She said Rotorua should have another judge to cope with the level of cases, but there’s nowhere to put a judge and nowhere they could hear cases.

Gordon said this meant judges were bailing people who they might otherwise not, and people were waiting years to get justice.

“Some decisions that judges are making are becoming entirely focused on the fact that someone might have to spend three years in custody before they get a trial and that that’s not ok, and it’s definitely not ok,” she said.

“It’s a democratic right that people get tried in front of a jury of their peers and our courthouse doesn’t serve any of the participants.”

Victim advocate Louise Nicholas. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Victim advocate Louise Nicholas supported people going through the court in Rotorua and said it was not a pleasant place.

“I’m sitting there supporting a survivor and I’m having to kill cockroaches, and you are sitting in the courtroom and you look on the wall and there’s a cockroach running up the wall,” she said.

Nicholas said when vulnerable victims were facing an intense and anxious time, they were put into a hot room to give evidence via CCTV, with distracting noises just on the other side of the door.

“When you’ve got people walking up and down a corridor, they are loud, we’re having to stop – we’ve had judges actually bring out the registrar and say, ‘remove yourself, we are actually in trial here’,” she said.

She thought it was time to get a new courthouse building up and running.

“Justice really isn’t getting served here, because of that building,” she said.

Courts Minister Nicole McKee said she was well aware of the challenges at the Rotorua courthouse and the Ministry of Justice was developing plans for a future rebuild to ensure Rotorua had a modern, fit-for-purpose courthouse.

“Across the country, we are progressing upgrades and new builds for a number of courthouses. However, financial constraints mean we cannot do every project at once.

“In Rotorua, the ministry has already purchased land for a proposed new courthouse and is working with the local council to secure resource consent in early 2026. This will allow the ministry to move quickly once funding is available.”

But there was no money for it in Budget 25, despite land already being purchased and ministerial support for a property partnership project to build and maintain a new courthouse being signalled to investors at the NZ Infrastructure Investment Summit in March this year.

Courts Minister Nicole McKee. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

McKee said Rotorua was only one of several courthouses nationally that needed attention and emphasis had gone to courts in Auckland.

“Rotorua is on the list… it’s very, very much on our radar,” she said.

RNZ asked if working with cockroaches climbing up the walls was ok but McKee said those claims were unsubstantiated.

“That’s the first I’ve heard about it, is from you, however, I’ve lived in Rotorua, there’s cockroaches everywhere,” she said.

Mayor of Rotorua, Tania Tapsell said the community had waited too long for what was considered by many an urgent and necessary investment in a new courthouse.

“Rotorua is one of the busiest regional courts in the country and handles complex cases from a large wider region, we need to be showing that we take our justice facilities seriously and now is the time for the government to action that,” she said.

McKee said the government did want to do better for Rotorua and get it a new courthouse.

But critics said everyone was still waiting for the money to make it happen.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

The town that wants to turn its residents bald

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Kerikeri police officer has her head shaved as part of the 2015 world record head-shaving event. Peter de Graaf

A Far North charity is revisiting a world record it smashed 10 years ago with another attempt to turn a town bald.

On 20 November 2015, a total of 462 people had their heads shaved during a Bald Angels Charitable Trust fundraising event in Kerikeri.

The feat was later recognised by Guinness World Records as the greatest number of heads shaved in one hour.

So many people went bald at once – everyone from former MP Kelvin Davis and Rugby Sevens legend Eric Rush to police officers and schoolchildren – visitors to Kerikeri in the following weeks wondered if some strange illness was sweeping the town.

Bald Angels founder Therese Wickbom said that record would be remembered with another mass head shave this weekend.

Money raised would help fill kai boxes the charity planned to give to 400 families this Christmas, and buy presents for up to 1600 children.

If more money was raised than needed, any leftover funds would go to other projects helping vulnerable tamariki (children) thrive, she said.

Ten years ago Kerikeri’s Bald Angels set a world record by shaving 462 heads in an hour. Peter de Graaf

Wickbom did not expect to set a new record, with about 50 people signed up so far.

“But we hold the record now, and no one’s beaten it. No one’s going to beat that,” she said.

What she did hope to replicate from the 2015 event was the atmosphere.

“The thing that everyone remembers about that day 10 years ago was the sheer number of people and the wairua or the goodness in the room. It was palpable and it was so unifying,” she said.

“We’d love to recreate that again, and I don’t think we need 3000 people there to do that. I think we could do it with 100 or so people.”

Among those sacrificing their locks on Saturday, will be Forest and Bird’s Northland conservation advocate Dean Baigent-Mercer.

It would be a big change for Baigent-Mercer, who had been growing his dreadlocks for 20 years and was once described as “David Attenborough with dreads and attitude”.

Baigent-Mercer said he was taking part because even the most basic needs of many young Northlanders were not being met.

He hoped the money raised would help children who in later life would have to deal with difficult problems such as climate change and forest collapse.

Once described as “David Attenborough with dreads and attitude”, Forest and Bird conservation advocate Dean Baigent-Mercer will sacrifice his trademark dreadlocks this weekend. Supplied

“We need to look after the next generation so they can deal with the stuff they end up inheriting,” he said.

Wickbom said this weekend’s Shave 4 Kids Anniversary Challenge aimed to raise at least $40,000, with $24,000 already in the bag.

The 2015 head-shave raised $62,000 but Wickbom said times were tougher now.

The event would take place from 2-5pm on Saturday, 22 November, at the Turner Centre on Cobham Road, after the Kerikeri Half Marathon.

Entry was free, Wickbom said.

“But we would like people to koha, because this is about raising funds for vulnerable children.”

Anyone who wanted to take part in the mass head shave could register on the website or on the day.

Wickbom said the 2015 world record head shave was not only a great unifying event, it also left a visible mark on the town with almost 500 people losing their hair in the space of an hour.

Puzzled patrons at restaurant she owned at the time would approach her in a whisper and ask what was going on in Kerikeri, she said.

The Bald Angels’ kai boxes and Christmas gifts will be distributed to families selected by the charity’s partner agencies.

Those agencies included iwi social services, health providers, schools, Hospice, Plunket, Women’s Refuge and police.

The Bald Angels’ first mass head shave in 2012 raised $45,000 for children in the care of Hospice Mid Northland.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

F1: Isack Hadjar set for promotion, so where does that leave Liam Lawson?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Racing Bulls drivers Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar, 2025. PHOTOSPORT

Analysis: French driver Isack Hadjar is set to be promoted to Red Bull next year, with team advisor Helmut Marko giving him the tick of approval – so where does that leave New Zealand’s Liam Lawson?

Hadjar has impressed in his rookie season in Formula 1, not necessarily with his results but with his attitude and driving.

The 21-year-old sits 10th in the Drivers’ Championship, seven points ahead of Racing Bulls teammate Lawson.

Hadjar grabbed a podium finish at the Dutch Grand Prix, finishing third behind Oscar Piastri and Max Verstappen.

If a driver in the Red Bull stable wants to survive they have to impress team advisor Marko, and the 82-year-old Austrian is impressed with Hadjar.

On the F1 Beyond the Grid podcast Marko was asked if Hadjar had what it takes to win championships.

“Yes,” was Marko’s initial response.

“Most of the circuits are new for him and after three laps he is competitive.

“I followed Michael Schumacher and [Ayrton] Senna very closely and they didn’t need 50 laps or however many tests before they’re there.”

Isack Hadjar of Visa Cash App Racing Bulls F1 Team celebrates his third place finish at the 2025 Dutch Grand Prix. MPS AGENCY / PHOTOSPORT

So it appears the plan is to move Hadjar up to Red Bull alongside Verstappen. But who will fill the Racing Bulls seats?

Neither Lawson nor Yuki Tsunoda are contracted for next year, while Red Bull junior driver Arvid Linblad, who competes in F2, is the other contender.

Marko said Lawson’s promotion to Red Bull to start the 2025 season was a mistake and that he needed time to decompress. He has also acknowledged his ruthless approach.

Marko has also noted an improvement with Tsunoda in the second half of the season after the Japanese driver also struggled when he initially jumped into the Red Bull car.

The key person in the decision-making could be Red Bull principal Laurent Mekies. He was very supportive of Hadjar and Lawson when he was in charge at Racing Bulls, and his promotion to Red Bull is likely to mean he will have more of a say in their driver line-up.

Lawson has three races left to make as much of an impression as he can, starting with the Las Vegas Grand Prix this weekend.

The Racing Bulls cars have been good across most circuits this year, but not great, and in Nevada outright speed will be tested with the straight down the Las Vegas strip the second longest on the calendar at 1.9km.

Downforce and drag settings are critical, while the bumpy nature of the track also comes into play for set-up. The cooler temperatures (under 10C) make it challenging for tyre selection and wear.

Racing Bulls team-mates Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar, 2025 Belgian Grand Prix. FLORENT GOODEN / PHOTOSPORT

Lawson finished 16th in Las Vegas in 2024, but is coming off a seventh place finish in the last round in Brazil.

“The conditions are different to what we usually work with, so it makes for a super interesting race’” he said on the eve of the GP.

“As a street circuit, the start is often very slippery, feeling noticeably different to recent tracks we’ve been to, which have high grip.

“It’s going to be a tough race, but I’m really looking forward to kicking off the final triple header.”

The last two rounds are in Qatar and Abu Dhabi.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Sanctioned landlord ‘not the kind of guy that really wants to do the right thing’, neighbour says

Source: Radio New Zealand

The stovetop of a Lyttleton boarding house. MBIE

A Canterbury landlord sanctioned for failing to clean up and fix a boarding house would rather cop a fine than pay for maintenance costs, a neighbour says.

Murray Lawrence Hill, who had been warned multiple times that his property was not up to standard, has been ordered to pay $33,000, remove industrial rubbish and repair holes in the roof and walls of a boarding house in Lyttelton.

The Tenancy Tribunal took action against Hill, who had a long history of complaints, for failing to ensure his property was compliant.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment’s Tenancy Compliance and Investigations Team (TCIT) received a complaint from a member of the public in December 2023, who said the boarding house was in a serious state of disrepair, with rubbish rotting on the property.

A member of the public complained the boarding house was in a serious state of disrepair, with rubbish rotting on the property.

Alongside the rubbish removal and hole repairs, Hill was required to install glass planes in windows that were boarded up, install mechanical ventilation in the bathrooms and clean the kitchen and bathrooms to an acceptable standard.

The tenants were described as vulnerable and afraid to complain, for fear of being evicted.

David Wilcox lived opposite the Cressy Terrace property and said Hill had converted it into a halfway home for paroled prisoners following the earthquakes.

Wilcox said the landlord was the type of person who considered property maintenance as an unnecessary business expense.

“It’s a waste of money to him,” he said.

“I mean, his tenants can’t complain. So he just takes the money and banks it and forgets about this kind of stuff.

“He’s just not the kind of guy that really wants to do the right thing. He just wants to bank his money.”

Duncan Wilcox lives opposite the Cressy Terrace boarding house. RNZ / Adam Burns

Wilcox said a $33,000 fine would be of little consequence to Hill, who he understood to have an extensive property portfolio.

“He’s probably a multi-millionaire, so it’s not going to really harm him.

“I think they need to have, not just the fine, but they need to have people come in and supervise, make sure it gets done, because he won’t do it.”

Although Wilcox agreed Hill was more “slumlord” than landlord, he said the boarding house was better for tenants who had no alternatives.

“Would we rather have them in here under some kind of control and management, or would you rather just have them in a tent somewhere in the central city.

“So I think anybody with that choice, they’d rather be here.”

A woman who lived on Cressy Terrace told RNZ it was good the tenants had somewhere to live, but objected to the conditions they were subjected to.

Rubbish at a Lyttleton boarding house. MBIE

When RNZ phoned Hill for comment, he swore at the reporter before asserting “at least they’re in a house”.

“They’re warm, they’ve got water, they’ve got hot water, they’ve got showers, they’ve got somewhere to cook. They’re not sleeping under a bridge, or shop doorways.”

He then ended the call.

TCIT national manager Brett Wilson said Hill had previously been issued warnings for the property.

“Despite receiving multiple warnings over a number of years, he failed to take meaningful steps to address these concerns until 2024/2025. His prolonged inaction over a four-year period demonstrates a deliberate and intentional disregard for his obligations.”

His failure to maintain the property to the required standard despite multiple warnings, had a direct and harmful impact on his tenants.

Wilson said landlords were running a business and if they wanted to operate a boarding house they must comply with their obligations under the Residential Tenancies Act.

He said Hill was an experienced landlord who had regular interactions with Tenancy Compliance and Investigations Team, Fire and Emergency New Zealand and the Christchurch City Council, and was aware of his obligations under the Residential Tenancies Act.

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Neighbour wins $30k payout over half-done, ‘blight’ of an apartment block in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

The half-finished apartment building in Auckland’s Epsom has been left derelict for the past six years. MELANIE EARLEY / RNZ

A man whose business sat right next to a half-finished apartment block is still waiting to be paid $30,000, after ageing concrete collapsed and blocked his driveway.

The Epsom Central Apartments Project halted six years ago, after Auckland Council found it had not complied with building consent.

The original partnership, Epsom Central Apartments LP, was put into receivership in 2022, and purchased by Xiao Liu, the director at the time, of a company named Reeheng Limited, in September 2023.

In September 2024, RNZ spoke to community members and business owners who described the building as a “blight on the Epsom landscape“, which at one point attracted rats and squatters.

Since then, Forrest Tan, who owned neighbouring business Just Laptops, said, not much had changed to the building – but he did take Reeheng Ltd to the disputes tribunal.

In 2024, Tan said ageing scaffolding and unsafe pieces of metal had started falling from the building. He said this included steel bars falling into his carpark and skewering a worker’s car.

Tan said his Manukau Rd shop had to close for three months until metal shuttering that was a further fall risk could be removed.

Since then, Tan said he and several affected parties took Reeheng Ltd to the disputes tribunal, but days before the hearing one of the directors got in touch wanting to settle.

“We agreed on a $60k group settlement,” Tan said, “but none of us ever received a cent.”

“Since then we had to each pursue a case individually.”

Tan said his business Just Laptops was awarded $30,000 by the tribunal in a ruling that has been seen by RNZ but there was still no payment.

The unfinished apartment block. MELANIE EARLEY / RNZ

The ruling ordered Reeheng Ltd to pay Just Laptops by October 17, 2024. A second ruling from July 30, 2025, said the money needed to be paid “immediately”.

“On an undefended basis and what was said today and supplied with the claim form, I have been satisfied Just Laptops is entitled to the loss of profits portion of its claim,” the ruling said.

This covered the loss of income from May 15, 2024 to June 21, 2024, while the shop was closed after a row of formwork for concreting collapsed over the driveway blocking entry, it said.

In August, Tan demolished his building in part to prepare for his rebuild, he said, and in part due to damage caused to the building by the concrete collapse.

“This would be an ideal time to demolish the next door building too if they were willing to act,” he said.

The lot next to the unfinished block is now empty. MELANIE EARLEY / RNZ

“My site is now clear, open space. I asked one of the directors to pass on the suggestion of demolition but no response.”

Tan said once his building goes up if any demolition for the apartment block did end up happening it would be “extremely difficult”.

“It’s a boundary-to-boundary structure on a busy stretch of road. Removing it safely will be a major challenge. I don’t know how this will end.”

Tan had been planning a new building on his site for years and said he received resource consent approval back in 2020 for a four-storey building.

“Due to skyrocketing costs we’ve had to scale back to three-storeys,” he said.

The stretch of Manukau Rd where the apartment block sits. MELANIE EARLEY / RNZ

Lack of progress ‘disheartening’ for local businesses

In the past year, Greenwoods Corner Epsom Business Association president Dominique Bonn, said scaffolding at the site had been largely removed along with the immediate risks to public safety – but no “meaningful” progress seemed to have occurred.

“Local businesses, including Exhibit Beauty, have observed a slow but steady dereliction of the property since construction ceased in 2019. The prolonged abandonment is not merely an eyesore-it actively affects nearby traders, residents, and how people perceive safety and security in our neighbourhood.”

Yvonne Sanders Antiques, who neighboured the site, had been broken into three times since then and there had been a rat infestation tracked directly to the site, he said.

“This lack of progress is hugely disheartening for local business and the wider area, which has so much local charm and character.

“Several stalled developments such as this cast a shadow over the area’s reputation and vitality.

“Greenwoods Corner Epsom Business Association is calling for greater clarity, accountability, and constructive intervention so that communities are not left to bear the long-term consequences of failed or abandoned private developments.”

Reeheng Ltd has been approached by RNZ for comment.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Mum Chelsey Field says children lost in Sanson fire her ‘absolute world’

Source: Radio New Zealand

August, Goldie and Hugo, taken five days before the incident. Supplied

The mother of the three children who died following a fire in the Manawatu town of Sanson has spoken out for the first time.

August, Hugo and Goldie died last weekend, in what police are treating as a murder-suicide.

Their father, Dean Field, also died.

Hugo, Goldie and August. Supplied

In a statement issued this morning, Chelsey Field said her children were her world and she doesn’t want their deaths to be the most defining factor of their lives.

“My babies were my absolute world. I have been a stay-at-home Mum since I had Hugo in 2020. Before that, I was an early childhood teacher and August came to work with me every day, and I am so glad I got this time with my darlings.

“I enjoyed so much quality time with them; trips to gymnastics, music groups, playgroups and play dates with friends. We had so much fun together and many holidays away. I will forever cherish all these special memories.”

She says she will cherish the special memories she had with her children.

Her dog also died in the blaze and the ashes of her stillborn daughter, Iris, were lost with the destruction of her house.

August (at six months) and mum Chelsey Field. Supplied

More to come

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

All Blacks side named: Love to start in heavily rotated team

Source: Radio New Zealand

Du’Plessis Kirifi celebrates with Ruben Love. Brett Phibbs / www.photosport.nz

Wales v All Blacks

Kick-off: 4:10am Sunday 23 November

Principality Stadium, Cardiff

Live blog updates on RNZ

Scott Robertson has made 13 changes for the final All Black test of the year, against Wales in Cardiff. Scott Barrett and Simon Parker are the only survivors from the loss to England at Twickenham, with and entirely new backline named. As expected, one of them is Ruben Love starting at fullback, which will be the 24-year-old’s first appearance on the tour.

That moves Will Jordan to the wing, alongside a returning Sevu Reece, while Damian McKenzie is promoted to starting first five. Beauden Barrett will sit this one out due to the leg injury he suffered in the loss to England, however it’s likely the combination of McKenzie and Love would’ve been initiated anyway.

READ MORE:

Judgement Day: Why just winning in Cardiff won’t cut it for the All Blacks

‘There’s no excuses from us’: Robertson on All Blacks’ inability to maintain pressure

All Blacks: Scott Robertson, Scott Barrett reflect on big loss to England

Grand slammed – what went wrong for the All Blacks against England

All Blacks crash to defeat against England

Ardie Savea gets his first test off of the year, but Peter Lakai is missing too with injury. Parker, Du’Plessis Kirifi and Wallace Sititi make up the loose forwards, with Christian Lio-Willie making a surprise return to the side after playing for the All Blacks XV for the previous three matches.

Christian Lio-Willie. John Cowpland / action press

Cortez Ratima takes over from the injured Cam Roigard at halfback and Finlay Christie comes onto the bench for his first test since the All Blacks’ record loss to the Springboks in Wellington.

There’s another new midfield combination, Robertson opting for veteran Anton Lienert-Brown to start at second five and Rieko Ioane at centre. Leicester Fainga’anuku drops back to the bench.

It’s an entirely new starting front row too, with Tamaiti Williams and Pasilio Tosi propping alongside Samisoni Taukei’aho and George Bower getting his first run off the bench alongside Fletcher Newell. George Bell will come off the bench for his first test of the season.

Wales have famously not beaten the All Blacks since 1953. Despite the All Blacks’ up and down form this season, the chances of that streak being broken are slim, as the Welsh are currently in one of the lowest points in their long history. New coach Steve Tandy guided them to a dramatic win over Japan last weekend, however it was only their second test victory in the last two years.

All Blacks team to play Wales

1. Tamaiti Williams, 2. Samisoni Taukei’aho, 3. Pasilio Tosi, 4. Scott Barrett (c), 5. Fabian Holland, 6. Simon Parker, 7. Du’Plessis Kirifi, 8. Wallace Sititi, 9. Cortez Ratima, 10. Damian McKenzie, 11. Caleb Clarke, 12. Anton Lienert-Brown, 13. Rieko Ioane, 14. Will Jordan, 15. Ruben Love

Bench: 16. George Bell, 17. Fletcher Newell, 18. George Bower, 19. Josh Lord, 20. Christian Lio-Willie, 21. Finlay Christie, 22. Leicester Fainga’anuku, 23. Sevu Reece

Unavailable for selection: Peter Lakai (calf), Tevita Mafileo (rib), Luke Jacobson (concussion), Samipeni Finau (family illness), Jordie Barrett (high ankle)

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

How grandparents feel about being the go-to childcare

Source: Radio New Zealand

When I turn up at her house, Virginia Taylor, 69, a retired Hamilton kindergarten teacher, has just returned from swimming lessons. Nickson, 3 ½, has damp hair and a post-swim appetite. Taylor opens a packet of crackers. Later she will negotiate a deal with him: if he sits quietly during our interview, he can access her iPad in the playroom. He happily trots off.

Nickson is the youngest of her 11 grandchildren who range in age from 19 to 3 ½. Seven are maternal and four are her second husband Phil’s grandchildren. Phil died four years ago.

While four grandchildren live in Australia, the others live close by. Taylor (who is known variously as ‘Grandma’, ‘Grandma Ginny’ and ‘Ginny’) cares for some regularly and others on an “on-call” basis. She looks after Nickson or his brother or both one day a week, or when the parents’ work boils over or when they just need a break.

Postcode lottery rampant in trauma care, South Island bears brunt of shortfall – specialists

Source: Radio New Zealand

A study earlier this year showed Christchurch Hospital’s specialist trauma admitting service failed to improve patient outcomes due to staffing gaps, limited operating hours and underfunding. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Specialists say the health postcode lottery is rampant when it comes to trauma care.

The South Island was bearing the brunt of a funding shortfall, according to a New Zealand Medical Journal editorial released on Friday.

Health NZ and the minister of health rejected the claims, and said South Island trauma patients were receiving “timely, quality care with strong outcomes”.

But the authors, senior staff from Christchurch Hospital – one of the busiest emergency departments in Australasia – said the trauma team faced “considerable operational challenges” thanks to underfunding, staffing gaps and data collection issues amid increased admissions.

Injury is the leading cause of death in New Zealand for those under the age of 44, with major trauma the second most common reason for hospitalisation. The South Island’s rates of traumatic incidents are higher than the national average,

However, trauma care had historically been viewed as the “poor cousin” of healthcare, and suffered from inadequate resourcing and attention, surgeon Dr Chris Wakeman said.

In August, Auditor General John Ryan tabled a report which showed elective services in the health system were often “not equitable or timely”, with the same level of clinical need qualifying for treatment in some districts, but not others.

“As a result, a person’s ability to access treatment is, to a significant extent, determined by where they live,” the report noted.

Auditor General John Ryan. VNP/Louis Collins

Wakeman said there was no question the same applied to traumatic injury care, and had done for some time.

“It does feel frustrating that we’ve published for more than 10 years about inequity between the two islands.”

Christchurch Hospital took patients from across New Zealand, but the ACC model for funding emergency departments was based on census population data, he said.

“We take neurosurgical patients from Dunedin, we take spinal patients from Taupō south – if you’re north of Taupō you go to Middlemore, if you’re south you come to Christchurch, we also take all the transfers from Nelson, Grey, Timaru.

“It does seem unjust that we can’t employ the amount of staff [we need] … we’ve had to close because we have no junior doctors to run the service.”

A study of almost 800 patients earlier this year showed the hospital’s specialist trauma admitting service failed to improve patient outcomes due to staffing gaps, limited operating hours and underfunding.

The service, established in January 2022, was “launched without adequate funding, resulting in significant staffing shortfalls, including limited trauma surgeon involvement (fewer than four hours per week), no dedicated house officer and restricted operational hours (Monday to Friday only),” according to the University of Otago research, co-authored by Wakeman.

The team had the worst nurse-to-patient ratio in the country and no funding for administration or data management support.

Combined with “the alarming lack of medical resourcing”, the service was under “critical strain”.

The authors also advocated for a more uniform approach to benchmarking, and noted that while many North Island hospitals had gone or were going through the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons’ Trauma Care Verification Program, no South Island hospitals had done so.

“If Health New Zealand – Te Whatu Ora is serious about ending the postcode lottery, then Christchurch should be expected to meet the same standards as Waikato.”

While Christchurch Hospital “would currently fail”, it would still provide “valuable, unbiased identification of service gaps and help guide the allocation of resources”, he said.

“If we go through a tick box and look at what we need, we would fail, but it would highlight the issue and put in black and white exactly what we need to do and what we need to aim for, and repeat verification would hopefully prove we’ve achieved our goals of improving trauma care in the South Island.”

Asked if the levels of underfunding was making the emergency department unsafe, Wakeman said he liked to think staff did a good job, “working hard and compensating”.

“But it makes it harder, and burnout is higher over the whole hospital,” he said.

Minister of Health Simeon Brown said South Island trauma patients continued to receive timely, quality care with strong outcomes at Christchurch Hospital. RNZ / Mark Papalii

At the start of the year, Health NZ urged people to avoid Christchurch Hospital’s emergency department unless it was “life threatening”.

On its social media page, the hospital said its emergency department was “extremely busy” with “large numbers of people coming in for care”, and asked people with non-life-threatening emergencies to go elsewhere “to reduce the pressure”.

Health NZ Te Wai Pounamu deputy chief executive Martin Keogh later said it was due to increased demand caused by surgical cases, and was “definitely not a staffing issue”.

The following month, RNZ revealed the hospital’s internal staff planning system showed the hospital had 120 fewer nurses than recommended, with the emergency department short 25 nurses.

But Health NZ spokesperson Hamish Brown said current resourcing levels “continue to meet demand”.

“Trauma patients who present to Christchurch Hospital are receiving the care they need, when they need it, and with good outcomes.

“The trauma team is focused on trauma admissions and is only one part of a wider multi-disciplinary team of highly trained and experienced clinicians who regularly provide care to trauma patients,” Brown said.

Minister of Health Simeon Brown said South Island trauma patients continued to receive timely, quality care with strong outcomes at Christchurch Hospital.

“To further strengthen trauma care across the South Island, Health New Zealand has reinstated its regional trauma network, working closely with the Trauma National Clinical Network to deliver a consistent, nationally standardised approach,” he said.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Recreational fishers oppose Hauraki Gulf fishing reforms, Shane Jones says ‘it’s a bit late’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ben Chissell, organiser of the One Ocean Protest in Auckland on 22 November 2025, fishing on the Hauraki Gulf, with his family. supplied

A convoy of recreational fishers are planning to drive from across Auckland’s Harbour Bridge on Saturday morning, protesting aspects of the Hauraki Gulf Marine Protection Act and other proposed fishing reforms.

The One Ocean protest began with a post Ben Chissell made on his NZ fishing community Facebook page in October. The Hauraki Gulf Marine Protection Act had just been passed, and frustrated with aspects of it, Chissell called for a demonstration. The idea was met with widespread support, meaning he then had to organise one.

“None of the four of us that are organising this have even been to a protest before. So yeah, it’s a bit of a unique way to jump into your first one,” he said.

Meetings with police and Auckland Transport followed and a route was agreed to, heading from Albany on Auckland’s North Shore, across the harbour bridge, and on to Mission Bay.

“We’ve got people coming from Kaitaia, Ahipara, Tauranga, Whitianga, Waikato, all over the show. We’ve got guys putting their boats on trailers, getting on the ferry from Waiki and Great Barrier and coming over. So it’s going to be a lot bigger than I guess even when we initially hoped.”

Even New Zealand’s best known recreational fisher Matt Watson was backing the protest with an online message of support. Fisheries Minister Shane Jones was less enthusiatic, telling First Up he’s unsure who the organisers of the One Ocean Protest are, but he thinks they’re unhappy with the Hauraki Gulf Marine Protection Act.

“My message to the recreational fishing industry is that their leadership, in particular LegaSea, was originally involved in the establishment of these marine restricted areas, which is impeding recreational fisheries in the Hauraki Gulf. So it’s a bit late for them to cry now, given their own leaders signed up to this policy some years ago.”

Fisheries Minister Shane Jones. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

LegaSea is a recreational fishing lobby group. Chisell said the One Ocean Protest was a seperate enitity.

One of the issues Chissell and One Ocean were protesting was the decision to allow some commercial fishing in two of the 12 high protection areas in the Hauraki gulf.

Tiff Bock of Seafood NZ said that would have minimal impact on the fishery as it’s limited to 5 ringnetters targetting kahawai and mullet over the winter months.

“It really is small scale. They go to a little bay and they set a net that is less than a metre deep and they circle it around the fish and then they pull it back in by hand. So we’re not talking big areas here.”

Chissell’s position was that if the Hauraki Gulf was so badly depleted that areas needed to be shut off, then no-one should fish them.

“The issue is not the size. The issue is the precedent that they can potentially set for these kind of things going forward, and with what they have done in the past and the promises that have been broken, there is no trust.”

The protestors were also concerned by a Fisheries New Zealand proposal last month to allow marlin bycatch to be sold commercially.

At present, commercial fishers couldn’t target marlin, and any that were accidentally caught must be returned to the water dead or alive.

Tiff Bock said that needed to change.

“It’s really common sense to say, we have cameras, we can verify that they’re only bringing back the ones that they’ve caught that are already dead. Why waste it?”

The Hauraki Gulf, viewed from Waiheke Island. 123RF

But recreational fishers were wary. Chissell cites the example of broadbill swordfish. He said when bycatch was approved for sale in 1991, the rate of accidental capture drastically increased.

Broadbill was eventually added to the quota management sytem allowing it to be caught commercially.

“At its peak in the early 2000s, there was 900 tons a year of swordfish being taken from New Zealand waters. This will happen with marlin if they are allowed to add any kind of commercial value to it.”

Jones was due to meet a group of recreational fishers on Sunday to discuss the issue.

“There’s a lot of old wives’ tales being thrown around,” he said. “There’s no intention to introduce marlin into the quota management system.”

Chissell said the protest was not against commercial fishing.

“At the end of the day, I know they want what we want as well. They want the same thing. No one wants to completely strip the ocean of every single fish. We all just have different opinions on how we do that, different values.”

But he’s determined to ensure recreational fishers’ voices were heard in fisheries management, even if it meant more protests.

“Everybody needs to have valuable input and be listened to.That’s the main thing. Because if you don’t, the next one we do is going to be bigger, and then if that doesn’t work, the next one we do is going to be even bigger to the point it starts getting international recognition. We’ll do it if we have to. It’s tiring, but I’ll do it.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Donald Trump’s tariff reversal delivers a major win for NZ farmers, but risks loom

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sophie Barnes

US President Donald Trump no longer has beef with some Kiwi exports, but others are still stuck paying a high price – and an economist warns it’s anyone’s guess how long the relief will last

A surprise backflip on tariffs from Washington delivered a rare win for New Zealand’s primary sector – but there are concerns that the removal could be reversed at any time.

New Zealand economist Brad Olsen doesn’t have high hopes it will lead to the permanent end of the tariff saga.

“I really don’t think this is the case,” the Infometrics principal economist tells The Detail.

“I’d love it. I’d love us to go back to, you know, a position where tariffs weren’t normal and expected, but in all of my conversations with those overseas, it’s a pretty constant view that tariffs are here to stay, in some way, shape, or form.

“You’d hope that maybe over time they get less intense, but there is a real focus domestically in the US, as the world’s largest economy, that they are still feeling the hit – or feeling a perceived hit – from challenges overseas in terms of import levels and wanting to do a lot more domestically.

“That means that any future administration will find it tough to unwind that full level of tariffs because immediately everyone is going to [pillory] them and say, ‘well, you are looking after other countries and you are not looking out for number one in the US’.”

The tariffs, part of Trump’s “America First” agenda, were introduced in April at 10 percent, then raised to 15 percent in August.

But less than a week ago, with relatively little fanfare, Trump announced that the tariffs on products representing around 25 percent of our exports to the US and worth about $2.2 billion annually, would be removed, effective immediately.

Put simply, America needs cheaper food, and New Zealand has it.

“It seems very much a political decision based around the cost-of-living challenges that US consumers have been facing,” Olsen says.

“You have a number of products that have been increasing [in cost], sometimes because of the tariffs, sometimes not, but being exacerbated often by those tariff costs.”

Potential wide-ranging benefits

The tariff removal is a win for New Zealand, but Trump’s famously changeable policies have meant the celebrations have been muted.

“Everyone is really chuffed by it,” Kate Acland, the chairperson of Beef and Lamb New Zealand and the New Zealand Meat Board, tells The Detail.

“It has come out of the blue, and like the tariffs came on out of the blue – well, overnight – this is something that has happened very suddenly as well. So, a bit of uncertainty about all these swings backwards and forth. But everyone is really happy. We are taking it. It’s a really positive time in the red meat sector.”

She says the tariffs haven’t been a cheap exercise for the red meat industry, which is a crucial source of our country’s economic growth, supporting rural communities and boosting our export performance.

“Since the tariffs came on in April, there’s been an additional tariff cost of $122 million, and at the 15 percent rate, we were forecasting it would be around a $300 million cost, so that’s really significant, given that previously we were on a tariff of 0.3 percent.”

The benefits of the tariff removal could extend well beyond farmland, orchard gates, and woolsheds. Rural communities that rely on the meat and horticulture sectors could see new investment, job stability, and a boost in confidence, and all before Christmas.

“This is great news for farmers and for the whole red meat industry,” says Acland.

While the unexpected tariff removal has injected fresh energy into the sector, there are some “losers” in both New Zealand and America.

“In general, US consumers are still going to get hit by tariffs because they haven’t all gone away,” Olsen says.

“The likes of the president maybe lose out, ever so slightly, because he’s had to change his view a little bit more but realistically probably not a lot of people are focussing too much attention on that because that focus on the cost of living is so intense.

“Here in New Zealand, it really is an overall win … but the losers in a sense are those who didn’t get the relief, they haven’t seen those changes in tariffs, and they are still having to protest their case.”

He says we are starting to see “parallels here in New Zealand where those pressures on some important goods are in focus”.

“The last couple of months, we have spent a lot of time in New Zealand talking about butter. Mince has now become the new butter. We are talking a lot more about that as a commodity now [that it’s 23 dollars for a kilo].

“That’s not a tariff-direct impact, but the president has, of course, been able to say ‘look, I’m making a difference there and taking off some pressure’. Of course, he added it in the first place.

“But from a consumer point of view, you are getting a bit of relief. From an exporter point of view here in New Zealand, you’ve got some more opportunity and room to manoeuvre and a better competitive environment with other exporters.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Manawatū, Bay of Plenty pharmacists pick up 1257 mistakes in prescriptions in a week

Source: Radio New Zealand

An audit at 68 pharmacies in Manawatū and Bay of Plenty found 26 percent of mistakes by prescribers – like doctors, midwives and dentists – had a high risk of patient harm. RNZ

  • 1145 reports submitted with 1247 “issues” identified
  • Dose issues most common (25.93 percent), followed by quantities, missing details and inappropriate medications
  • 26 percent of problems “high risk of harm” to patients
  • Pharmacists spent 347 hours in total resolving problems
  • Mean resolution time just under 19 minutes

More than one in four prescription errors picked up by pharmacists had a potentially serious risk of harm to patients, an audit has found.

In total, 68 pharmacies in Manawatū and Bay of Plenty took part in the week-long Script Audit – the first exploration of electronic scripts in New Zealand – using a purpose-built reporting app.

Midland Community Pharmacy Group chief executive Pete Chandler – who co-ordinated the audit and built the app for it using AI – said a major driver for the initiative was the tragic death of a two-month old baby in Manawatū earlier this year.

This came on top of long-standing concerns among pharmacists about system-wide clinical risk, he said.

“That was a wake up call for pharmacists around the country to the fact that if they miss something on the script, the consequences can be tragic.”

In Bellamere Duncan’s case it was an error at the pharmacy – but pharmacists say in most cases, they are the ones picking up problems.

Two-month old Bellamere Duncan died in Starship Hospital on 19 July, after an error at the pharmacy. Supplied

During the week-long audit, pharmacists reported 1257 problems in prescriptions sent by GPs, specialists, midwives, dentists and other prescribers.

The most common related to inaccurate drug doses, followed by wrong quantities, missing details or patients prescribed “inappropriate” drugs, which could interfere with other medicines they were taking, for instance.

Most disturbingly, 26 percent of mistakes had a high risk of patient harm, if the pharmacist had not intervened.

The estimated rate of “interventions” varied widely between individual pharmacies, ranging from problems found in fewer than 1 percent of scripts to some identifying problems with 11.25 percent of total prescriptions sent to them.

The report noted the pharmacies with the highest intervention rates were known to the leadership teams of Bay of Plenty Community Pharmacy Group and MidCentral Community Pharmacy Group as “highly competent and thorough in clinical checking”, which suggested it could reflect more robust identification.

“Pharmacists have become the default safeguard against electronic deficiencies and other prescribing issues, yet this safeguard is neither resourced nor acknowledged in current funding or workforce planning. This is happening at a time when pharmacists should be contributing far

more to reducing hospital and primary care pressures.”

Chandler said whenever there was a problem with a script, pharmacists had to contact the prescriber involved and sort it out – and that could take minutes, hours or even days.

“You can see the minutes ticking away into hours while the pharmacist is waiting for a response.”

This could involve trying to track down a junior doctor who had now finished a hospital shift, or getting through to a busy GP.

“Some things are just irritating rather than being unsafe. So if your barcode won’t scan, it’s a pain and it wastes time. If a patient’s details don’t come through on a script, it needs chasing up.

“There are a range of issues that can happen, but this is time that we really need to use for something else.”

Midland Community Pharmacy Group chief executive Pete Chandler.

Invisible work of pharmacists not funded

A smaller survey of 20 pharmacists by the Pharmaceutical Society earlier this year found 45 percent were making up to five clinical interventions every day and 6 percent were making up to 40.

North Shore pharmacist Michael Hammond, president of the Pharmaceutical Society, said problems with scripts were annoying for everyone involved, including the patient having to wait for it to be sorted out.

“There are supply chain issues as well, so we’re having to have conversations with patients about why something is out of stock and then go to the prescriber and explain they need an alternative, or they can only dispense one month’s supply.

“So there’s a lot of unseen activity by pharmacists that needs to be recognised and funded appropriately.”

While electronic prescribing had fixed the historic problem of illegible handwriting, this audit revealed that technology had spawned a new set of problems.

The report on the audit found training, knowledge of drug changes and the inherent complexity of patient care remained contributing factors.

“However, the scale and pattern of findings indicate that IT system flaws do appear to be responsible for a substantial proportion of script issues increasing the workload and risk for both pharmacists and prescribers.”

Pete Chandler said it was frustrating for everyone involved.

“Often what the GP thinks they’ve asked for is not what the pharmacist sees. And pharmacists are obsessively diligent in their work, they’re very careful people, so they will do what it takes to sort it out.”

GPs also frustrated

The College of General Practitioners medical director, Dr Prabani Wood, said none of the software systems available were completely fit-for-purpose.

College of General Practitioners medical director Dr Prabani Wood. Supplied / RNZCGP

“There aren’t really those fail-safe mechanisms in our electronic health systems that stop you from making a crazy error by multiplying the number of tablets you’re asking for by a factor of 10 or 100. That still doesn’t happen.”

While Health NZ was working towards a shared digital health record, it was almost impossible for busy GPs to keep up with which medicines were currently funded by Pharmac or subject to supply problems, she said.

“I did a prescription last week for a person with ADHD and they are on a number of different medications and different doses, a couple of which were available at their normal pharmacy and one that isn’t. So it gets quite tricky.

“The system is not in place to help things run more smoothly. For me, I think having easier communication between general practice and pharmacy would help.”

The report itself concluded that many of the problems reported could be significantly reduced with co-ordinated action and “a willingness to address root causes rather than relying on workarounds”.

Promising micro-improvements were already emerging, including a dedicated text-only line for pharmacy prescription enquiries at one GP practice.

However, systemic improvement would require some national level, some regional level and some local level (i.e. local pharmacy and general practice) quality improvement, including working with IT providers to improve their systems.

“This small snapshot validates the significant concerns pharmacists across Aotearoa have been signalling for years – that script issues are increasing, clinical risk is rising and the system is not responding to make at the pace required.

“Doing nothing is no longer a defensible option.”

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Killer Nathan Boulter investigated four years ago for rape allegations when he was 14

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nathan Boulter appearing at the Auckland District Court in 2011. NZPA / David Rowland

Warning: This story contains content some may find disturbing.

Convicted killer Nathan Boulter was investigated four years ago over an allegation he raped a 15-year-old girl when he was 14.

He was spoken to while serving time in Otago prison where he denied any wrongdoing, and said the sex between the two was not rape and that the woman was his girlfriend at the time.

Police said after reviewing all the available evidence, the matter did not reach the threshold to prosecute under the Solicitor-General Prosecution Guidelines.

Boulter – who had a long history of stalking and assaulting ex-partners – pleaded guilty last week to murdering a woman in Parklands, Christchurch, on 23 July.

The woman had been in a brief relationship with Boulter. After she ended it, he harassed, stalked and threatened her, making nearly 600 calls in two weeks, before hiding outside her home, then stabbing her 55 times with a hunting knife, as she arrived home with her children.

A police cordon at the scene on Lamorna Road, Parklands. RNZ / Adam Burns

It can now be revealed a woman went to police in 2021 with allegations that she had been raped and physically assaulted by Boulter while they were at Aparima College in Riverton in 2003.

A police report form detailing the allegations, seen by RNZ, said police investigated two allegations of historical sexual assault and one allegation of physical assault made by the woman.

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

The report said Boulter had “numerous convictions” and referred to his “violent offending” making national headlines.

In April 2021, the woman, then aged 32, went to the Hamilton Central Police Station with her partner to report a sexual assault.

During a preliminary interview she alleged she had been raped by Boulter on two occasions and was physically assaulted by him on one occasion.

The alleged attacks occurred over a one-two week period when she was 15 and he was 14.

“[The woman] stated that she had seen something in the media where Boulter’s adult offending was reported on and this has triggered an emotional response from her,” the police report said.

“She thought it was best to now report what happened to her as a young person as the offending had caused ongoing psychological damage.”

The report also said that when talking about the sexual assaults the woman’s position was “she only went along with it as she was fearful, felt coerced and was subject to Boulter’s control and pressure”.

The woman was formally interviewed by police a week later where she detailed the three incidents.

She described feeling “fearful, scared, and terrified” during the first incident.

A week later she alleged Boulter raped her again one night in her home.

“[She] described being in shock and panicking.

“She talked about being 15yrs, underage and not wanting to get into trouble.”

She said Boulter was “laughing, smiling, and smirking”.

“Before leaving, Boulter threatened to kill [the woman’s] father if she said anything.”

In April 2021, the woman went to Hamilton Central Police Station to report a sexual assault. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The third incident, an allegation of assault with a weapon, occurred when the pair ran away together days later.

The woman told police they spent about two days hitchhiking together, using her money to fund the trip.

While on the main street in Balclutha the pair had an argument and Boulter allegedly presented a knife and pressed it against the woman’s neck. She said she ran off and sought help at the Balclutha Pub where two women helped her.

The woman told police that she “went off the rails” in the years that followed.

Boulter was interviewed by Detective Jason Bishop from the Waikato Child Protection Team at Otago Prison on 24 June, 2021.

Boulter was formally cautioned and provided with legal advice. After speaking to a duty lawyer he declined to provide a statement.

“In response to the allegations Boulter denied any wrongdoing. He informed Detective Jason Bishop that [the woman] was his girlfriend during the period in question.

“Boulter stated that the sex that occurred between the two was not rape and commented on it being his first sexual encounter.”

The police report said that “notably” the woman had earlier described Boulter as being the first person she had sex with.

“She also commented on him being a popular classmate, appreciating him showing interest in her on occasion and talking about school camp where there was some positive interaction involving leg touching.”

The author of the report said it was their “personal belief that the requisite evidence is not present” to meet the Solicitor-General’s prosecution guidelines.

“In my opinion the required minimum standard for a prosecution is not attained and to do so would risk a possible miscarriage of justice.”

In relation to public interest, the author said there was “no doubt” the matter was serious enough that public interest could require a prosecution, but identified several matters to consider. This included where a prosecution was likely to have a “detrimental impact” on the physical or mental health of the victim, and where the defendant was a youth at the time of the alleged offending.

It was recommended the matter should be filed.

The woman told RNZ going to police in 2021 was “one of the hardest things I’ve ever done”.

She was “devastated”, when police told her they would not be laying charges.

“I felt misheard and abandoned. I lost faith in the justice system’s ability to protect victims and prevent repeated harm.”

The woman was referred to mental health services in June 2003 by the principal of Apirima College and a counsellor.

The counsellor’s referral, seen by RNZ, said the woman had been going through a “difficult experience as a result of a break-up with a year 10 boy in her class with whom she had a sexual relationship”.

“It is my impression that [the woman] has been subject to severe emotional and physical pressure from this youth in order to obtain sexual favours since the break-up.”

The woman was “fearful” of the possibility of Boulter returning to school following an extended suspension.

The counsellor noted that the woman’s father told them that he had spoken to the police.

Notes seen by RNZ said she was referred following concerns about her mood, self-esteem and PTSD after “an abusive relationship” with Boulter.

“Nathan has consistently been emotionally + physically abusive including slapping her around, pushing her to the ground at school, frequently stating he would kill himself if she did not comply to his demands.

“[The woman] has also been under pressure to give sex when she would otherwise wouldn’t have.”

The notes from the intake nurse also said Boulter had threatened to kill her, at which point her father contacted police and a protection order was put in place.

The woman said she was “devastated” when police told her they would not be laying charges. RNZ / REECE BAKER

The woman said police were notified of her allegations in 2003. However, a privacy act request she made did not find any record of any complaints at the time.

The woman told RNZ Boulter was “controlling, possessive, and violent”.

“I was terrified of him, but I felt trapped because no one seemed to take it seriously.”

She said she heard about Boulter being charged with murder from friends in Riverton.

“My heart sank,” she recalled.

“My reaction was one of grief, disbelief, and anger. It brought everything back. I was heartbroken for the victim and her family in Christchurch and it confirmed my fears that the warning signs were there all along, but no one intervened when they could have.”

She wants to see Boulter “locked up indefinitely”.

“I want people to understand that these patterns of harm don’t happen in isolation. When victims are dismissed or disbelieved, it allows offenders to escalate.

“I hope sharing this encourages better accountability, for schools, police, and communities to act decisively when young people report harm. Because if someone had acted 20 years ago, this story could have had a very different ending.”

Case ‘did not reach the threshold’

Waikato district manager of criminal investigations Detective Inspector Daryl Smith told RNZ police immediately began an investigation in 2021 when the woman came forward.

The investigation included interviewing both parties involved.

“Upon reviewing all the available evidence, the matter did not reach the threshold to prosecute under the Solicitor-General Prosecution Guidelines.”

At this stage, police had no intention to review the matter, Smith said.

“However if any further information comes to light then police will of course assess this and action any appropriate follow up as required.”

Where to get help:

Sexual violence

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Coalition lauds 38,000 fewer victims of violent crime

Source: Radio New Zealand

From left to right: Police Minister Mark Mitchell, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The coalition says its tough on crime approach is working as a new survey reports 38,000 fewer victims of serious violent crime.

The figure is close to double the government’s target of 20,000 fewer victims of assault, robbery or sexual assault each year by 2029.

The Justice Ministry’s latest Crime and Victims Survey has reported 147,000 victims of serious crime in the 12 months to August.

That’s 38,000 fewer than the last year, and 9000 fewer than the last update in May.

The government banned gang patches in public places and gave police more powers to disrupt gatherings this time last year.

Justice Minster Paul Goldsmith said decreasing victim numbers showed the coalition’s tough approach to law and order was working.

“That’s 38,000 families and individuals that don’t have to go through the trauma and horror of violent crime, so it’s good,” Goldsmith said.

“We’ve made good progress but obviously there’s still a long way to go.”

Quick statistics since the Gangs Act (2024) came into effect:

  • 182 patches seized
  • 643 insignia items seized
  • 178 firearms seized
  • 856 charges for Prohibited Display of Gang Insignia in Public Place
  • 255 finalised charges, 188 convictions.

Police Minister Mark Mitchell said he made no apologies for getting tough on law and order.

“One year ago, gangs were confronted with a new harsh reality – one where they can no longer behave as if they’re above the law by taking over our streets, intimidating the public, and making a mockery of our criminal justice system,” he said.

“This is tough legislation. That is the point. Gang members make up less than one quarter of one percent of the New Zealand adult population, yet are linked to about 18 per cent of serious violent crime.”

“The few examples where patches have been returned to gang members is not at all representative of just how successful these laws have been. The numbers speak for themselves.”

Goldsmith said the changes to gang laws were part of a broader crime strategy.

“The most important thing about the gang patch ban is that it has greatly reduced the intimidation and presence of gang members in public.

“There was a sense of them taking over some parts of the country, some small towns, and a sense of their presence was concerning to many New Zealanders.

“So, that’s helped on that front but the gang patch is one part of many different tools we’ve given the police to deal with gangs, which is also one part of a broader strategy, which is about restoring consequences for crime and holding people to account.”

He said victim numbers were still too high for his liking.

“I’m extremely mindful that we still have far too many New Zealanders being a victim of crime so we want to keep going much further and keep driving that level of crime down so that New Zealanders feel safe in their communities.”

Asked if it was time to set a new target, Goldsmith said it might be something he considered in the New Year.

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Paid firefighters to strike at midday, FENZ says it’s unwarranted

Source: Radio New Zealand

A firefighter at a strike in Auckland in August 2022. Supplied / Jemimah Peacocke

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) is calling on the professional firefighters union to call off strike action planned for Friday.

Paid firefighters will walk off the job for an hour at midday as the two parties continue to negotiate a new collective agreement.

Areas affected by the strike are Auckland, Hamilton, Palmerston North, Wellington, Christchurch, Timaru, Dunedin and Invercargill.

On Tuesday next week, the case was set to be before the Employment Relations Authority for an urgent facilitation meeting.

FENZ Deputy National Commander Megan Stiffler said striking was unwarranted given its meeting to discuss the case at the ERA and that they were continuing pay talks in good faith.

Professional Firefighters Union (NZPFU) national committee member David Phillips said it’d be prepared to call off the strike if the employer was willing to get around the table with meaningful solutions.

Phillips said that included problems with staffing and equipment.

“Whilst we have met with Fire and Emergency this week in bargaining, being on the bargaining team myself I can tell you it was disappointing … not surprising but disappointing.”

FENZ was offering a 5.1 percent pay increase over three years.

Stiffler said both were far apart in their offers at a meeting this week and that she was disapppointed the strike would go ahead.

Faulty brakes cause late response to Ōtara house fire

The firefighters union said a crew was seven minutes later to a house fire than it should have been because of a faulty handbrake on a truck.

It said the delay getting to the fire in the Auckland suburb of Ōtara on Wednesday morning could have been deadly if people had still been inside the home.

The union said the trip from the station to the scene should have taken just a minute, but instead it took eight because the handbrake on the truck jammed.

Phillips said it was a nightmare situation trying to get the vehicle moving while a house was going up in flames.

He said they were lucky no one was in the home at the time.

“As you can imagine if you are stuck in that house fire and you are waiting eight minutes instead of two minutes that is a long period of time and potentially a fatal period of time.”

He said it was the latest problem in an extensive list of fleet failures that the union had highlighted.

Fire and Emergency said it was hypocritical for the union to criticise an eight minute response when it was compromising public safety with a one hour strike at midday today.

Deputy National Commander Megan Stiffler said the fire broke out at 12.04 in the morning and when the Ōtara crew couldn’t respond because of the brake problem, a crew was sent from Papatoetoe and arrived at 12.12. A second crew from Ōtara arrived at 12.15.

She said fire trucks were large, complicated machines and sometimes they broke down despite regular servicing.

“We acknowledge we have an ageing fleet and that is why we have a fleet replacement programme underway.

“We’ve replaced 317 trucks since Fire and Emergency New Zealand was established in 2017.

“We have 78 more trucks on order, and plan to spend approximately $20m a year for the next five years to continue to replace our older appliances,” she said.

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Clinicians call for more regulation of home pregnancy, Covid tests to ensure accuracy

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealanders are buying home tests that may be no more accurate than flipping a coin. 123rf

New Zealanders are buying home tests for pregnancy, herpes, chlamydia and more that may be no more accurate than flipping a coin.

The tests, which give on-the-spot results, are called invitro devices used at point of care – and include RATS (rapid antigen tests) and urine pregnancy kits.

They had surged in popularity since the Covid pandemic but a paper in the New Zealand Medical Journal Friday said they were largely unregulated.

Last year, over-the-counter RAT tests for chlamydia, gonorrhoea and herpes-2 were “vigourously advertised and sold” in New Zealand.

But, they had not been verified, and overseas evidence on similar kits showed they performed poorly, the paper said.

In 2021, a pregnancy test was withdrawn for showing a high rate of false positives. In 2016, one that had been used professionally gave too many false negatives or inconclusive results.

One of the report authors, pathologist Samarina Musaad, said having inaccurate or inconsistent tests could have serious impacts.

For example, a false negative pregnancy test may mean some people could not make informed choices about their care – or they might have a procedure or medication that was not safe for pregnancy.

A false positive could be very disappointing – or cause a lot of anxiety – depending on people’s situations, she said.

A cabinet paper to former Health Minister Shane Reti last year said there were “low performance devices” available online and from major retailers but there was no public information about the volume being sold.

One test had a false negative rate of between 37 and 88 percent, the cabinet paper said.

“Given many STIs are asymptomatic even while the person is infectious, a false negative result may lead to a person and their sexual partners being falsely reassured that they do not have an infection and may affect their sexual behaviours in a way that increases the risk of transmission,” it said.

Musaad said the examples showed better regulation was needed.

“There are huge concerns from many clinicians that these tests are little more than the flip of a coin,” she said.

Many tests were easily available online at sites like Amazon and Ali Express.

On one hand, it was good for consumers to have choice but they also needed to be able to make an informed decision, Musaad said.

Under the current rules, anyone could bring anything into the country and use it, she said.

Sub-standard tests had sometimes also made their way into health clinics and found to be inaccurate when tested in labs, she said.

At the moment, Pharmac could fund tests for use even when they had not been approved as safe and reliable by Medsafe – something that needed to change, Musaad said.

Regulations minister David Seymour said Medsafe could not approve every product available, particulary if they were from international sellers.

But, Pharmac had its own procedures for assessing which tests would be funded, including expert advice about their suitability, he said.

People should make safe decisions when buying the tests, he said.

“For example, purchasing [point of care tests] from pharmacies is much safer than purchasing them online, because Medsafe can recall unsafe or ineffective products and remove them from shelves,” he said.

There was work underway into an approval process for the tests before they came into the country, he said.

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Police Assistant Commissioner Sam Hoyle also visited Jevon McSkimming after charges laid

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police assistant Commissioner Sam Hoyle. RNZ / Alexander Robertson

Police Assistant Commissioner Sam Hoyle was the senior staffer who visited Jevon McSkimming along with former Deputy Police Commissioner Tania Kura while he faced charges of possessing child sexual exploitation and bestiality material.

McSkimming pleaded guilty earlier this month.

The former deputy commissioner was arrested on 27 June.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers earlier confirmed to RNZ Kura and another member of the “wider senior leadership team” visited McSkimming while he faced the charges.

RNZ can now reveal the other staffer was Sam Hoyle who is the Assistant Commissioner chief capability and infrastructure officer.

RNZ understands Kura asked Hoyle to visit McSkimming with her. It’s understood the purpose of the visit was to do a welfare check on McSkimming.

Hoyle was not mentioned in the IPCA’s report released last week.

RNZ asked police if Hoyle had any comment.

Chambers earlier told RNZ he became aware Kura visited McSkimming in July.

“When I found out about that from concerned colleagues, I asked Tania Kura for an explanation and I expressed my disappointment in her,” Chambers said.

“To me it showed a total lack of judgement and very bad decision making. It was inappropriate for an executive member and a statutory deputy commissioner.”

Asked what Kura’s response was, Chambers said “she seemed surprised that I saw it as a problem”.

Chambers said it was for Kura to say why she visited McSkimming.

“However, it was my view there was no reasonable explanation.”

Asked whether it led to Kura’s retirement, Chambers said that was not discussed.

“A short time later, Ms Kura did announce she was retiring from NZ Police.”

RNZ approached Kura for comment on why she visited McSkimming, and whether it had anything to do with her retirement.

RNZ also asked her if she had any response to the IPCA’s report.

She replied, “sorry … not at this point. However for balance you could check how many other people have done the same”.

In response, Chambers said he was aware another member of the “wider senior leadership team” visited McSkimming along with Kura.

“I did speak to that person and expressed my disappointment at the decision making and lack of judgement.

“Mr McSkimming also had regular contact with a member of my leadership team appointed by me as a welfare point of contact, as is the usual process with Police.

“That was in an official capacity and was appropriate. That person did not visit his home and did not meet with him in person after charges had been laid.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Board directors believe economy is improving – report

Source: Radio New Zealand

Board directors were feeling positive about the economic outlook. (File photo) Supplied/ Kenny Eliason

Board directors have a strong sense the economy is improving, amid rising concerns about shareholder activism, while other emerging risks go largely unchecked.

The annual Director Sentiment Survey, by the Institute of Directors (IoD) in association with ASB, indicates 55 percent of directors thought the economy would improve over the next 12 months, compared with 52 percent last year and 28 percent in 2023.

“This is the highest level of optimism about the prospects for the national economy that we have seen since the survey began in 2014,” IOD general manager Guy Beatson said.

“Despite the improved outlook, boards continue to prioritise cost control, cashflow and productivity, reflecting uncertainty about the pace of recover.

“Directors are planning for steady recovery rather than rapid growth, with resilience and operational discipline top of mind.”

ASB Chief Economist Nick Tuffley said the biggest shift was in the number of of directors expecting the economy to get worse at 18 percent compared with 28 percent last year.

“Most of those people have moved into the neutral camp,” Tuffley said, adding there were two factors driving the improving outlook.

“One is the lagging impact of past and future interest rate declines, which will increasingly support household spending, the housing market and, eventually, construction.

“The other is the good run of export incomes in some key industries, although the fruits of this are likely to be gradual in coming through and concentrated in particular regions rather than felt nationwide.”

Shareholder activism seen increasing

Another emerging concern was an increase in shareholder activism, which was expected to increase over the next two years.

Beatson said 44 percent expected activism to have a moderate or high impact on their boards.

“The expectation of shareholder or member activism differs sharply across organisation types,” Beatson said.

“Directors in local authorities (33 percent), Māori organisations (23 percent), and government organisations (21 percent) anticipate shareholder or member activism having a high impact on their boards over the next two years.

“By contrast, only 9 percent of large private companies, 8 percent of not-for-profits, 9 percent of small companies, and just 2 percent of publicly-listed company directors say the same.”

Beatson said the variation in concern suggested activism was viewed less as a market-driven risk and more as a stakeholder or political dynamic, especially in entities with strong public accountability or partnership obligations.

Risk management

Boards were increasingly confident in their risk management with 69 percent saying their systems were appropriate, though some issues, such as succession planning needed more attention.

“Some emerging risks may not be getting the attention they warrant,” Beatson said.

Only 46 percent of boards regularly reviewed physical climate risks, such as storms or floods.

Just 20 percent monitored modern slavery risks, and privacy oversight remained limited, with 57 percent of directors reviewing data-protection risks.

“It seems awareness is ahead of action at this point, in some of these more recent and fast-moving areas,” Beatson said.

The 2025 Director Sentiment Survey drew on 900 responses from directors representing a cross-section of organisations, while nearly half (46 percent) were the chairs.

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Fiji Business Awards celebrate big achievements from humble beginnings

Asia Pacific Report

Entrepreneurs, professionals, families and community leaders from across Aotearoa New Zealand came together last night for the inaugural Fiji Business Awards NZ, reports Webfit News.

Hosted by the Fiji Business Network (NZ) at Auckland’s Remuera Club and backed by platinum sponsor Bunnings Trade, the evening was a reminder that many Fiji businesses in New Zealand have started from humble beginnings — often with little capital but a determined drive.

And these businesses are now creating jobs, mentoring others and giving back to the community on both sides of the Pacific.

The Fiji Business Network is a not-for-profit group of business owners and professionals with links to Fiji.

“Its focus is simple but powerful,” said one of the organisers. “Help members connect, share referrals, support start-ups, and invest back into Aotearoa New Zealand, Fiji, and the wider Pacific.”

Network president Atesh Bhej, managing director of the Biz Group of companies, told participants that many in the Fiji business community had arrived in New Zealand with  little money, worked long hours, and slowly built something strong for their families and communities.

“For many guests, this awards night was not only about trophies,” said network secretary Nik Naidu. “It was also about seeing their journeys recognised in public.”

Naidu and the network’s committee pulled together an impressive range of finalists and a strong judging panel, including former All Black Keven Mealamu (MNZM) and board member of several organisations such as Fit60 HQ Training and NZ Rugby.

Winners included Trivision Entertainment Ltd (Small Business of the Year) and Feroz Aswat of Auckland Copiers and Solutions Ltd (Business Leader of the Year).


Fiji Business Awards NZ 2025.           Video: Webfit News

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Grattan on Friday: Combatting the neo-Nazis is a ‘wicked problem’ for governments

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

When neo-Nazi leader Thomas Sewell appeared last week in a Melbourne court for a bail hearing, after jail time over the attack on an Indigenous camp, his supporters were there in force.

A lawyer in the building at the time reports how intimidating the security staff and others found the very presence of these men, dressed in their signature black clothing.

Earlier this month, footage of about 60 black-clad men outside the New South Wales parliament sent a chill through many Australians, certainly those with a sense of history.

The demonstrators had an anti-semitic banner (Abolish the Jewish Lobby) and chanted the Hitler Youth slogan “blood and honour”.

Among officialdom, the rally has had a galvanising effect. The federal government this week took one of the demonstrators, South African Matthew Gruter, into immigration detention, readying to deport him.

Home Affairs minister Tony Burke says he is having continuous conversations with agencies to ensure federal laws are adequate to deal with the neo-Nazis.

The NSW Labor government introduced legislation “to ban conduct which indicates support for Nazi ideology by invoking imagery or characteristics associated with Nazism”. NSW Attorney-General Michael Daley said in a statement that while the state already banned Nazi symbols, “the disgraceful rally outside the parliament […] highlighted the need to strengthen current laws”.

The move is controversial. NSW Council for Civil Liberties president Timothy Roberts had already said “you do not fight fascists with laws that erode civil liberties”.

In a speech early this month, ASIO boss Mike Burgess highlighted the threat, and challenge, the neo-Nazis are posing.

Burgess said that currently there were “multiple, cascading and intersecting threats” to Australia’s social cohesion. These were “fuelled by three distinct but connected cohorts: the aggrieved, the opportunistic, and the cunning”.

He put the neo-Nazis into the “opportunistic” category, pointing to how they had attempted to leverage the anti-immigration marches.

“The biggest neo-Nazi group, the National Socialist Network – or White Australia as it is rebranding itself – identified the demonstrations as a vehicle to raise its profile,” he said.

“It strategically and opportunistically exploited the organisers’ complaints about immigration and the cost of living.

“This is a key part of the network’s broader strategy to ‘mainstream’ and expand its movement by focussing on issues with broader appeal.”

The growing activities and more prominent presence of the neo-Nazis are raising issues for Australia’s democracy that are out of proportion to their small numbers. Combatting them is complicated, because it tests the interface between societal harm and political rights.

The neo-Nazis are now canvassing the prospect of registering a political party and running candidates for parliament. To register in NSW would require just 750 members, or 1500 to become a party federally.

If the neo-Nazis did get party status it is not impossible they could have a candidate elected to the NSW upper house, or even – a long shot, admittedly – to the Senate.

Assuming the neo-Nazis meet the criteria, any attempt to stop them registering a party would run up against the constitution’s implied right of political communication. As would an attempt to ban them.

Peter Wertheim, co-CEO of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, says the prospect of neo-Nazis in parliament “spewing their hate under the protection of parliamentary privilege is intolerable. It would put our country on the slippery slope to normalising racism.”

Wertheim proposes giving effect to Australia’s obligation under the International Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination “to declare illegal and prohibit organisations which promote and incite racial discrimination”.

But, he says, “any legislative action would need to be framed as a means of regulating or proscribing clearly-defined conduct, rather than specific persons and bodies”.

Rosalind Dixon, professor of law at UNSW, writing in the Sydney Morning Herald this week, argued the electoral registration laws should be revisited to give federal and state electoral commissions “express power to ban parties that espouse racial hate and vilification as founding policies and values”, or else do so through a demonstrated pattern of conduct.

That would likely run into opposition from the electoral commissions: the Australian Electoral Commission is on record as strongly opposed to proposals it should be a watchdog on truth in political advertising.

But Dixon suggests that such powers could be subject to robust judicial oversight, or possibly even given to courts under well-defined legislative criteria. This, she says, would address the concerns about politicisation of the AEC, and ensure that the power was subject to appropriate limits and oversight, necessary to meet constitutional requirements.

Liberal frontbencher Julian Leeser, prominent on Jewish issues, says parliament’s Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters should be asked to look at whether it is possible to restrict the neo-Nazis’ political participation. Leeser believes, on the basis of previous High Court cases, that a legal counterweight could be found to the right to political communications.

While the case for banning terrorist groups is obvious, trying to outlaw groups like the neo-Nazis, even if possible, is problematic, however attractive it sounds in theory.

Leaving aside arguments about free speech and association, driving these people underground could be counterproductive, helping them attract supporters and making them harder to track.

The neo-Nazis exploit feelings of alienation among a section of the community. Making martyrs of them could play into their hands.

State and federal laws to deal with hate speech have been strengthened as governments have grappled with threats to social cohesion in the wake of the attack on Israel in Octobers 2023, the ensuing Gaza war, pro-Palestinian demonstrations and encampments, and anti-semitic attacks.

These events have triggered a torrent of hate speech, particularly from the extremists elements among the pro-Palestinian activists.

Trying to stop hate speech turns into an ever-escalating pursuit. While action is desirable, at some point it runs into push back on grounds of free speech.

Finding ways to curb the presence of extremist groups such as, but not only, the neo-Nazis falls into the category political scientists call “wicked problems” to which there are no simple, direct answers.

It’s understandable to turn to new or strengthened legal remedies and, to an extent, appropriate. But it can only be part of the answer and often comes with unintended or unacceptable consequences.

In the end, these groups may be best countered more indirectly, by vigorously promoting positive measures that advance social cohesion in the community. But unfortunately that’s a long term answer to an immediate problem.

The Conversation

Michelle Grattan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Grattan on Friday: Combatting the neo-Nazis is a ‘wicked problem’ for governments – https://theconversation.com/grattan-on-friday-combatting-the-neo-nazis-is-a-wicked-problem-for-governments-269393

Bending over backwards for the right isn’t saving the BBC. It won’t save the ABC either

COMMENTARY: By Christopher Warren

There’s been skillful work in journalism’s dark arts on display in the UK this past week, as the nasty British right-wing media pack tore down two senior BBC executives. The right-wing culture warriors will be celebrating big time.

They reckon they’ve put a big dent in Britain’s most trusted and most used news media with the scalps of director-general Tim Davie and director of news Deborah Turness.

Best of all, the London Daily Telegraph was able to make it look like an inside job (leaning into a paean of outrage from a former part-time “standards” adviser), hiding its hit job behind the pretence of serious investigative journalism.

For the paper long dubbed the Torygraph, it’s just another day of pulling down the country’s centrist institutions for not being right wing enough in the destructive, highly politicised world of British news media.

Sure, there’s criticisms to be made of the BBC’s news output. There’s plenty of research and commentary that pins the broadcaster for leaning over backwards to amplify right-wing talking points over hot-button issues like immigration and crime. (ABC insiders here in Australia call it the preemptive buckle.)

Most recently, for example, a Cardiff University report last month found that nearly a quarter of BBC News programmes included Nigel Farage’s Reform Party — far more coverage than similar-sized parties like the centrist Liberal Democrats or the Greens received.

It’s why there are mixed views about Davie (who started in the marketing rather than the programme-making side of the business), while the generally respected Turness is being mourned and protested more widely.

BBC’s damage-control plan
The resignations flow from the corporation’s damage-control plan around an earlier — and more genuine — BBC scandal: the 2020 expose that then rising star Martin Bashir had forged documents to nab a mid-1990s Princess Diana interview. You know the one: the royal-rocking “there were three of us in the marriage” one.

The Boris Johnson government grabbed onto the scandal as an opportunity to drive “culture change”, as then Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden put it in an interview in Murdoch’s The Times. As part of that change, the BBC board (almost always the villain in BBC turmoil) decided to give the Editorial Guidelines and Standards Committee a bit of a hand, by adding an external “adviser”.

Enter Michael Prescott, a former News Corp political reporter before moving on to PR and lobbying. Not a big BBC gig (it pays $30,000 a year), but it came with the fancy title of “Editorial Adviser”.

Roll forward four years: new government, new board, new BBC scandal. Prescott’s term ended last July. But he left a land-mine behind: a 19-page jeremiad, critiquing the BBC and its staff over three of the right’s touchstone issues: Trump, Gaza and trans people.

It fingered the BBC’s respected Arab programming for anti-Israel bias and smeared LGBTQIA+ reporters for promoting a pro-trans agenda.

Last week, his letter turned up (surprise!) — all over the Telegraph’s front pages, staying there every day since last Tuesday, amplified by its partner on the right, the Daily Mail, helped along with matching deplora-quotes from conservative leader Kemi Badenoch and demands for answers from the Tory MP who chairs the House of Commons Culture Standing Committee.

The one stumble sustaining the outrage? Back in November 2024, on the BBC’s flagship Panorama immediately before the US presidential election, snippets of Trump’s speech on the day of the January 6 riot had been spliced together, bringing together words which had been spoken 50 minutes apart.

Carelessness . . . or bias?
Loose editing? Carelessness? Or (as the cacophony on the right insist) demonstrable anti-Trump bias?

The real problem? The loose editing took the report over one of the right’s red lines: suggesting — however lightly — that Trump was in any way responsible for what happened at the US Capital that day.

Feeding the right’s fury, last Thursday the BBC released its findings that a newsreader’s facial expression when she changed a script on-air from “pregnant people” to “pregnant women” laid the BBC “open to the interpretation that it indicated a particular viewpoint in the controversies currently surrounding trans identity”.

Even as the British news media has deteriorated into the destructive, mean-spirited beast that it has become, outdated syndication arrangements mean Australia’s legacy media has to pretend to take it seriously. And our own conservative media just can’t resist joining in the mother country’s culture wars.

An Australian Financial Review opinion piece by the masthead’s European correspondent Andrew Tillett took the opportunity to rap the knuckles of the ABC, the BBC and “their alleged cabals of leftist journalists and content producers”, while Jacquelin Magnay at The Australian called for a clean-out at the BBC due to its pivot “from providing factual news to becoming an activist for the trans lobby and promoting pro-Gaza voices”.

Trump, of course, was not to be left out of the pile-on, with his press secretary Karoline Leavitt calling the BBC “100 percent fake news” — and giving the UK Telegraph another front page to keep the story alive for another day. Overnight, Trump got back into the headlines as he announced his trademark US$1 billion demand on media that displeases him.

It’s not the first time Britain’s Tory media have brought down a BBC boss for being insufficiently right wing. Back in 1987, Thatcher appointed ex-Daily Mail boss Marmaduke Hussey as BBC chair. Within three months, he shocked the niceties of British institutional life when he fired director-general Alastair Milne over the BBC’s reporting on the conservative government.

Here we are almost 40 years later: another puffed-up scandal. Another BBC head falling to the outrage of the British Tory press.

Christopher Warren is an Australian journalist and Crikey’s media correspondent. He was federal secretary of the Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance (MEAA) until April 2015, and is a past president of the International Federation of Journalists. This article was first published by Crikey and is republished by Asia Pacific Report with permission.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Two dead after crash near Timaru

Source: Radio New Zealand

State Highway One north of Timaru is closed after a fatal crash. RNZ / Tim Brown

Two people have been killed and another seriously injured after a crash between a car and a truck north of Timaru on Thursday evening.

Emergency Services were called to the scene on State Highway One near the intersection of Brosnan Road at about 5.10pm.

Police said two people died at the scene while a third was airlifted to hospital in a serious condition.

Officers are investigating the scene and the road is expected to stay closed until later on Thursday night.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

All Blacks named: Love to start in heavily rotated team

Source: Radio New Zealand

Du’Plessis Kirifi celebrates with Ruben Love. Brett Phibbs / www.photosport.nz

Wales v All Blacks

Kick-off: 4:10am Sunday 23 November

Principality Stadium, Cardiff

Live blog updates on RNZ

Scott Robertson has made 13 changes for the final All Black test of the year, against Wales in Cardiff. Scott Barrett and Simon Parker are the only survivors from the loss to England at Twickenham, with and entirely new backline named. As expected, one of them is Ruben Love starting at fullback, which will be the 24-year-old’s first appearance on the tour.

That moves Will Jordan to the wing, alongside a returning Sevu Reece, while Damian McKenzie is promoted to starting first five. Beauden Barrett will sit this one out due to the leg injury he suffered in the loss to England, however it’s likely the combination of McKenzie and Love would’ve been initiated anyway.

READ MORE:

Judgement Day: Why just winning in Cardiff won’t cut it for the All Blacks

‘There’s no excuses from us’: Robertson on All Blacks’ inability to maintain pressure

All Blacks: Scott Robertson, Scott Barrett reflect on big loss to England

Grand slammed – what went wrong for the All Blacks against England

All Blacks crash to defeat against England

Ardie Savea gets his first test off of the year, but Peter Lakai is missing too with injury. Parker, Du’Plessis Kirifi and Wallace Sititi make up the loose forwards, with Christian Lio-Willie making a surprise return to the side after playing for the All Blacks XV for the previous three matches.

Christian Lio-Willie. John Cowpland / action press

Cortez Ratima takes over from the injured Cam Roigard at halfback and Finlay Christie comes onto the bench for his first test since the All Blacks’ record loss to the Springboks in Wellington.

There’s another new midfield combination, Robertson opting for veteran Anton Lienert-Brown to start at second five and Rieko Ioane at centre. Leicester Fainga’anuku drops back to the bench.

It’s an entirely new starting front row too, with Tamaiti Williams and Pasilio Tosi propping alongside Samisoni Taukei’aho and George Bower getting his first run off the bench alongside Fletcher Newell. George Bell will come off the bench for his first test of the season.

Wales have famously not beaten the All Blacks since 1953. Despite the All Blacks’ up and down form this season, the chances of that streak being broken are slim, as the Welsh are currently in one of the lowest points in their long history. New coach Steve Tandy guided them to a dramatic win over Japan last weekend, however it was only their second test victory in the last two years.

All Blacks team to play Wales

1. Tamaiti Williams, 2. Samisoni Taukei’aho, 3. Pasilio Tosi, 4. Scott Barrett (c), 5. Fabian Holland, 6. Simon Parker, 7. Du’Plessis Kirifi, 8. Wallace Sititi, 9. Cortez Ratima, 10. Damian McKenzie, 11. Caleb Clarke, 12. Anton Lienert-Brown, 13. Rieko Ioane, 14. Will Jordan, 15. Ruben Love

Bench: 16. George Bell, 17. Fletcher Newell, 18. George Bower, 19. Josh Lord, 20. Christian Lio-Willie, 21. Finlay Christie, 22. Leicester Fainga’anuku, 23. Sevu Reece

Unavailable for selection: Peter Lakai (calf), Tevita Mafileo (rib), Luke Jacobson (concussion), Samipeni Finau (family illness), Jordie Barrett (high ankle)

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Thousands attend world’s largest indigenous education conference in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Indigenous peoples are leaving the world’s largest indigenous education conference (WIPCE) feeling inspired, uplifted and strengthened.

Over the week thousands of indigenous educators descended on Aotea Centre, Tāmaki Makaurau, for the World Indigenous Peoples’ Conference on Education 2025 (WIPCE).

Alongside keynote speakers and hundreds of presentations, discussions over the week-long hui have centred on kotahitanga (unity), shared strategy, and the reaffirmation of Indigenous sovereignty.

Miriam Zmiewski-Angelova (Choctaw, Cherokee descendant, Black) alongside her daughter Nitalusa (5-years-old) and son Nashoba who celebrated his 11th birthday on Thursday. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Miriam Zmiewski-Angelova (Choctaw, Cherokee descendant, Black) travelled from traditional Duwamish territory in Seattle.

Her mahi (work) with Hummingbird Indigenous Family Services brought her to WIPCE as a kaikōrero (speaker).

She told RNZ this week’s experience in Aotearoa has been “life changing,” especially sharing memories and learnings with her tamariki (children).

“We need to do more to make sure that there’s representation of indigenous folks, especially in the places that the education systems are happening in.”

She said it’s an experience “that we don’t have enough of.”

“Many times we’re at these conferences, and we’re desperately trying to find each other. I would love for a conference like this to be every year.”

Barbara Dude (Tlingit) and Margaret Katzeek (Central Council Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska) are leaving WIPCE feeling inspired and hopeful. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Barbara Dude (Tlingit) and Margaret Katzeek (Central Council Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska) travelled to Aotearoa from Juneau, Alaska.

They told RNZ they are leaving the conference feeling incredibly inspired.

“It feels like we’re in the right place at the right time, and we needed to hear all these messages,” Dude said.

“Auckland is a big city, and so, I really didn’t know what to expect, but the people and hosts are just amazing.

“To be immersed in the singing and the dancing and rituals, the ceremony has been so uplifting.”

Katzeek said they hope to take back home with them the teachings and words from their ancestors, and other indigenous nations.

“The value of belonging has been really prevalent and that’s something that we really care about – making sure that our kids feel like they belong – so taking that energy back home is really important.”

Lee Breaker (Siksika Nation, Canada) says his first experience in Aotearoa has been beautiful. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Lee Breaker (Siksika Nation, Canada) is what he calls a ‘knowledge keeper’ of his peoples First Nations reserve.

This was his first visit to Aotearoa, and he said a big takeaway was experiencing a taste of te ao Māori.

“The Māori people are beautiful,” he said.

“I am learning about the culture of the Māori people right now. And right now, I believe it’s similar to what we do… especially the spiritual side.”

In their culture, they have the traditional practice of powwow – a gathering of Native American and First Nations peoples that involves dancing, singing, and celebration to honour and maintain tikanga, or traditions.

“What we do is a passion. It’s something that I can’t explain.

“We put our heart into our ceremonies back at home. And I see that [Māori] put a lot of heart into their ceremonies here too, learning to sing the songs and learning to understand the dance.”

Te Matatini 2025 champion Kereama Wright says kaupapa like WIPCE are hugely important. Marika Khabazi / RNZ

Kereama Wright (Te Arawa) is a senior member of Ngāti Whakaue – the winning haka rōpū of Te Matatini 2025.

They were set to perform at Te Ao Pūtahi – a free festival taking place alongside the conference in Aotea Square.

He told RNZ kaupapa like WIPCE is hugely important, as it brings indigenous people from across the world together.

“We might be experiencing unprecedented attacks on our culture and on our language and on our lands, but we are better together. We are stronger together,” he said.

This year Wright has been to around six different countries, and he said that as a result of Hana-Rāwhiti Maipi-Clarke’s viral haka in response to the Treaty Principles Bill, people identify him as Māori wherever he goes.

“That’s why I think it’s important that we come together as indigenous people, so that we can share the trauma, so that we can share the success stories, so that we can share models of education and models of political discourse that might be beneficial to other indigenous cultures.”

He said it’s also important to come together as one to give each other some “awhiawhi, hugs and kisses.”

Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Te Tai Tokerau leader Hone Harawira told RNZ, the importance of language revitalisation remained a core focus of the week-long hui.

“The language is the portal to your independence,” he said.

“Without an understanding of the reo, you can’t truly understand rangatiratanga, you can’t truly understand those principles which make us the special people that we are.

“You can learn about them in an academic way, but if you follow the reo, you can hold on to its principles.”

He encourages whānau to not “just chase around the edges,” and instead have the courage to challenge themselves to be a bit better every day, so that our children, our grandchildren, our great-grandchildren can see role models that they can feel comfortable aspiring to.”

“Charge into the reo, build your next generation so that those who do take over have something that we just struggled to have.”

The next WIPCE will take place in Hawai’i in 2028.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Nearly five million tyres collected in first year of recycle scheme

Source: Radio New Zealand

Adele Rose, the CEO of 3R Group that manages the Tyrewise Scheme. Supplied

The equivalent of 4.8 million rubber car tyres have been collected in the first year of a recycle scheme.

Tyrewise is governed by a charitable trust and funded by the fee that is charged on the sale of all new regulated tyres in Aotearoa.

There are now 86 public collection points around the motu.

Tyrewise said a year into the scheme illegal dumping of tyres has been slashed, along with the number of tyres going to landfill.

Adele Rose, the CEO of 3R Group that manages the Tyrewise Scheme, told Checkpoint the number of tyres recycled had continued to steadily tick up, today reaching close to five million.

Currently, around half of the recycled tyres remain within the country.

“About half of them go to Golden Bay for use as an alternative to coal and their cement production.”

While rubber being burnt is not usually seen as a sustainable method, Rose said a unique process is used at Golden Bay to ensure it is clean.

“It’s actually a really unique method of combustion. It’s called hot disc and it actually literally as it sounds, it’s two very hot discs that heat up the tyres.

“There’s also clinker that’s formed as a result of the tyres being combusted and that clinker goes in as an add mixture into the production of cement and that’s what enables Golden Base cement to produce their low carbon cement product.”

The tyres are used in low carbon cement products. Supplied

She said there is rigourous air quality testing to ensure that it is a clean burning method.

The remainder of the recycled tyres are then shipped offshore.

“Then there is about 20,000 tonnes which are exported offshore to verified markets… for a whole range of things like rubber for matting and various other products like that.”

Rose hopes that the number of tyres being recycled onshore would increase over the coming years.

“The scheme has only been going for a year and you can’t magically produce the domestic market within one year,” she said.

“That volume will be reducing as our market in New Zealand can utilise the rubber.”

The trust is currently focusing on using the recycled tyres for rubber roading.

“That will take about 18,000 tonnes of tyre crumb so you can see there’s a really awesome balance there, where we can stimulate your own market, we can reduce the amount that’s been exported.”

Rose said construction is another key area they hope to use the recycled rubber in.

“Anything you can imagine that has rubber in it, like engineered materials, building materials, paved materials.”

Tyrewise is aiming to have 80 percent of tyres transformed into products that can stay in New Zealand by 2028.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

RSF calls on Samoan PM to lift ‘unacceptable’ ban on Samoa Observer

Pacific Media Watch

The Paris-based global media freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders has called on the Samoan Prime Minister to lift the ban preventing the daily newspaper Samoa Observer from attending government press conferences.

“The measure is totally unacceptable — it comes after one of its journalists filed a complaint over violence committed by the PM’s security officers,” said RSF in a post on its BlueSky news feed.

Samoan Prime Minister La’aulialemalietoa Leuatea Polataivao Schmidt “temporarily” banned the Samoa Observer on Monday from engagements with him and his ministers, triggering a wave of condemnation from Pacific and global media freedom organisations.

#Samoa: RSF is calling on the Prime Minister to lift the ban preventing the daily #SamoaObserver from attending government press conferences. The measure is totally unacceptable — it comes after one of its journalists filed a complaint over violence committed by the PM’s security officers.

[image or embed]

— RSF (@rsf.org) November 20, 2025 at 5:47 AM

As other criticism of the Samoan Prime Minister continued to flow during the week, former prime minister and leader of the Samoa Uniting Party, Fiame Naomi Mata’afa, said the ban was a “clear attempt to silence scrutiny” and a serious decline in Samoa’s democratic standards.

Quoted in the Samoa Observer today, Fiame said that when a person held public office, transparency was an obligation, not a choice.

She warned that democracy weakened not through a single dramatic event, but through a series of actions that slowly eroded transparency and silenced independent voices.

Fiame said the banning of a major newspaper like the Samoa Observer could not be viewed as a simple administrative decision.

“It is an act that strikes at the heart of media freedom, a right that allows the public to understand and question those who hold power,” she said.

Fiame reflected on her own time as prime minister, noting that no journalist or media organisation had ever ever been shut out, regardless of how challenging their questions were.

She said leadership required openness, accountability, and the ability to face criticism without fear or restriction.

Meanwhile, the Samoa Observer’s editor, Shalveen Chand, reported that the Journalists Association of [Western] Samoa (JAWS) had also urged Prime Minister La’aulialemalietoa to reconsider the decision and lift the ban on the newspaper’s journalists from attending his press conferences.

JAWS said in a statement it was deeply concerned that such bans might “become the norm” for the current government and for future governments.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Canterbury landlord ordered to pay $33,000 and repair boarding house

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Tenancy Tribunal warned the landlord multiple times. MBIE

A Canterbury landlord, who had been warned multiple times that his property was not up to standard, has been ordered to pay $33,000, remove industrial rubbish and repair holes in the roof and walls of a boarding house in Lyttelton.

The Tenancy Tribunal took action against landlord Murray Lawrence Hill, who has a long history of complaints, for failing to ensure his property was compliant.

Tenancy Compliance and Investigations Team national manager Brett Willson said Hill had previously been issued warnings for the property.

“Despite receiving multiple warnings over a number of years, he failed to take meaningful steps to address these concerns until 2024/2025. His prolonged inaction over a four-year period demonstrates a deliberate and intentional disregard for his obligations.”

His failure to maintain the property to the required standard despite multiple warnings, had a direct and harmful impact on his tenants.

Wilson said landlords are running a business and if they want to operate a boarding house they must comply with their obligations under the Residential Tenancies Act.

Living room in a Lyttleton boarding house. MBIE

Alongside the rubbish removal and hole repairs, he was required to install glass planes in windows that were boarded up, install mechanical ventilation in the bathrooms and clean the kitchen and bathrooms to an acceptable standard.

It is the first time the Tenancy Tribunal has ordered a landlord to pay pecuniary penalties and Wilson said the amount reflected the seriousness of the intentional and ongoing nature of the breaches.

Wilson said where possible, the team works with landlords to achieve compliance and allow tenants to remain in their homes, but where a landlord is not willing to engage, then it would take further action up to and including an application to the Tenancy Tribunal.

He said Hill was an experienced landlord who had regular interactions with Tenancy Compliance and Investigations Team, Fire and Emergency New Zealand and the Christchurch City Council, and was aware of his obligations under the Residential Tenancies Act.

The investigations team received a complaint from a member of the public in December 2023, who said the boarding house was in a serious state of disrepair, with rubbish rotting on the property.

Rubbish at a Lyttleton boarding house. MBIE

The tenants were described as vulnerable and afraid to complain, for fear of being evicted.

Investigators visited the house and raised the issue with the Tenancy Tribunal, as two prior warnings had not resulted in any action.

At a case conference in March this year, Hill said he had completed some of the work required, but he failed to provide evidence of it.

At a subsequent site visit, investigators found some work had been done but there was still industrial rubbish outside the house that needed to be removed, part of the ceiling in the hallway was leaking and rotting, the stairway wall was in need of repair and parts of the guttering were broken and leaking in several areas. A smoke alarm was also missing outside one bedroom.

The Tenancy Tribunal found Hill failed to ensure the property was in a reasonable state of cleanliness and repair, failed to comply with the healthy homes standards for ventilation, draught stopping and moisture ingress and drainage, and failed to comply with smoke alarm regulations.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Foodstuffs South Island fined for selling recalled hummus

Source: Radio New Zealand

Foodstuffs South Island was sentenced in the Christchurch District Court. 123rf.com

Foodstuffs South Island has been fined $39,000 for selling recalled hummus.

The dip was recalled in 2023 over the possible presence of salmonella.

Foodstuffs South Island was sentenced in the Christchurch District Court, after selling 39 units of the recalled hummus to consumers.

The deputy director-general for NZ Food Safety, Vincent Arbuckle, said the hummus should have been removed from shelves, and there was a significant failure in the company’s recall system.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Turkey will host COP31, Australia will play a role. So where does that leave the Pacific?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Eliza Northrop, Director UNSW Centre for Sustainable Development Reform, UNSW Sydney

After a long and deadlocked bidding process for Australia and Pacific Island nations to co-host the UN climate summit (COP31), the event will now be hosted by Turkey. Australia’s Climate Minister, Chris Bowen, will reportedly take a key role as “COP President for negotiations”. More details are yet to emerge.

The announcement is more complex than expected, even for the often labyrinthine world of global, multilateral event negotiations. But what will this arrangement mean for Australia’s commitment to partnering with Pacific nations in delivering COP31?

COP31 was expected by many to be the first “Pacific COP”, offering Australia an opportunity to rebuild its credibility on climate action and support Pacific island nations on the frontline of the climate crisis. The challenge of the original COP31 bid was always how to ensure it wasn’t an Australian summit with symbolic Pacific participation. Now, the situation is even more complex.

This new arrangement could still amplify Pacific leadership on the world stage and demonstrate the value in regional action. But with Turkey the official host country, and Australia serving as the COP31 President, where does this leave the Pacific? Will a proposed pre-COP meeting in a Pacific country be enough?

Pacific climate leaders

Pacific nations have been leading on ambitious, science-based climate action for decades, despite contributing only a fraction of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Their track record speaks for itself. Pacific diplomacy secured the landmark 1.5°C temperature limit in the Paris Agreement. While this target is existential for Pacific islands facing rising seas, it is globally relevant to ensuring all countries avoid the worst impacts of climate change. Australia’s own vulnerability is clear from its first national risk assessment released in September this year.

More recently, law students based in Vanuatu led the efforts that resulted in the International Court of Justice’s advisory opinion on the obligations of states with respect to climate change. This landmark legal opinion found the 1.5°C temperature target is legally binding. All states, in particular the largest emitters, must take ambitious emissions reduction measures in line with the best available science, the court found.

The Pacific has also led efforts to recognise the role of oceans in global climate policy. Pacific islanders recognise what science confirms: healthy oceans are essential for limiting global warming and supporting the health and prosperity of coastal communities.

Pacific nations have long advocated for a holistic approach that links climate action with ocean and nature protection – most recently through the Blue Pacific Ocean of Peace Declaration that advances a distinctly Pacific framework for regional security and cooperation.

For the Pacific, climate action isn’t an economic policy debate – it’s a matter of survival. This urgency has translated into genuine innovation and ambition that Australia can learn from.

The question for COP31 now becomes: how does Australia honour its commitment to the Pacific in a host country on the other side of the world?

With Pacific nations, such as Papua New Guinea, expressing disappointment a co-hosted COP31 hasn’t eventuated, Australia will have to deliver. The Pacific was strong in its support for the initial COP31 hosting bid, and should not lose out in this new arrangement.

Based on today’s news, Australia will be in charge of the negotiations but perhaps not the broader action agenda, which could rest with Turkey. Australia needs to ensure COP31 still offers the opportunity to lift the climate talks to the standard of Pacific climate leadership and innovation and walk the talk alongside their Pacific partners. The fight for 1.5°C is both a legal obligation and a fight for survival.

The opportunity

Retaining the COP31 Presidency role provides an opportunity for Australia to advance an agenda that speaks to the priorities of the Pacific – to elevate Pacific-led perspectives and priorities on Indigenous and traditional knowledge, ocean stewardship and a fossil-free future.

A focus on the ocean plays to both regions’ strengths. They share compelling reasons to ensure COP31 delivers game-changing outcomes for ocean health, marine ecosystem protection and finance for coastal resilience.

Regional partnerships aren’t supplementary to effective climate action, they’re foundational. The pre-COP negotiations, to be hosted in the Pacific, should reflect this shared commitment in the COP31 agenda and funding commitments.

Australia’s credibility on climate won’t come from any one conference. It will come from Australia demonstrating it can listen, learn, and amplify the voices of nations that have been leading on climate action all along. Even without hosting COP31 in the region, Australia needs to maintain its commitment to partnership with the Pacific on climate action.

The Conversation

Eliza Northrop receives funding from UK Government Blue Planet Fund, Bloomberg Philanthropies and Oceans 5.

ref. Turkey will host COP31, Australia will play a role. So where does that leave the Pacific? – https://theconversation.com/turkey-will-host-cop31-australia-will-play-a-role-so-where-does-that-leave-the-pacific-270280

Criminal investigations begin into three police staff over ‘misuse and inappropriate content’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Six of 20 staff have been stood down since they were identified in a rapid review of Police information security controls. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Criminal investigations have begun into three police staff in relation to “misuse and inappropriate content”, RNZ can reveal.

RNZ earlier revealed several police staff were under investigation, including an officer who has been stood down after inappropriate material was found on a police-issued device.

It follows an audit of staff internet usage sparked by the resignation of former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming who recently pleaded guilty to possessing objectionable publications, including child sexual exploitation and bestiality over a four-year period.

Acting Deputy Police Commissioner Jill Rogers told RNZ on Thursday six out of 20 staff under investigation in relation to “misuse and inappropriate content” had been stood down.

“Those six are being investigated for serious matters, ranging from potentially accessing objectionable material, or accessing inappropriate material while also subject to separate misconduct matters.”

Some of the staff being investigated may have had legitimate purposes for accessing material, which police would verify through their inquiries.

“Criminal investigations are being conducted into three of the cases.”

Police were not able to disclose the ranks of those under investigation.

  • Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz
  • Rogers earlier told RNZ a “small number of users of concern” were under investigation.

    RNZ asked for clarification but did not receive a response from police.

    On Wednesday, Rogers said police continued to progress investigations into about 20 cases of misuse and inappropriate content as part of the ongoing audit of staff use of police devices.

    “Employment processes are underway in some of these cases while others are still at the preliminary stages of investigation.

    “We can assure the public appropriate action will be taken in every case and cannot rule out charges if the Solicitor General’s guidelines for prosecution are met.

    “We are unable to comment further while these processes take their course.”

    Rogers earlier confirmed to RNZ a police officer had been stood down from duty for “inappropriate content on a police device”.

    “The officer is under employment investigation for serious misconduct, relating to inappropriate, but not objectionable, material on a police-issued device. The alleged misconduct was uncovered through following recent audits of staff internet usage.”

    Police Commissioner Richard Chambers. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

    Police Commissioner Richard Chambers earlier told RNZ the misconduct being investigated was uncovered as a result of the new monitoring measures introduced following the Rapid Review of the settings for police devices, launched after McSkimming’s resignation.

    “I sought that review because of my concern that such conduct was not being detected. This offers some reassurance that we now have the necessary tools to detect potentially inappropriate behaviour.”

    Police Minister Mark Mitchell earlier told RNZ he had not been briefed on the allegations, but expected police to “take action on any matters that involve inappropriate behaviour”.

    The investigation into McSkimming led to concerns that staff could bypass internal controls and “exploit vulnerabilities to access inappropriate content”.

    The concerns prompted Chambers to order a “rapid review” of police’s information security (INFOSEC) controls to ensure police had sufficiently strong controls to prevent or detect the misuse of police technology and equipment for non-work-related purposes.

    A summary of the review said the main risks were; weaknesses in technology configuration, lack of visibility over user activity and gaps in governance.

    The report included key findings and recommendations in relation to each of the risks.

    There was “inconsistent application” of internet access policies across different workgroups as well as a “lack of robust filtering mechanisms” to consistently prevent access to unauthorised websites.

    The review also found there was “insufficient monitoring of internet usage to detect and respond to potential security threats and inappropriate usage”.

    Other findings included unmanaged devices being used for operational activities and inadequate monitoring of user activity and network traffic.

    There was an absence of centralised logging and analysis tools to detect anomalies and potential issues and “insufficient resources allocated to continuous monitoring and incident response”.

    The review also said there was a lack of “clear governance structures and accountability” for INFOSEC controls, with “inconsistent enforcement” of security policies and procedures.

    The report called for “improved oversight and coordination among different workgroups”.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand