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Warehouse Group half-year net profit up a third to $15.7 million

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Warehouse says its net profit for the six months ended 1 February rose by third on the year earlier, though revenue was little changed. SUPPLIED

Retailer The Warehouse has reported an improved first half net profit despite tough trading conditions.

The retailer, which operated Red Sheds, Noel Leeming and Stationery, said net profit for the six months ended 1 February rose by third on the year earlier, though revenue was little changed.

Chair John Journee said there was clear evidence the group was on the right path, though trading conditions were challenging.

“There is still more to do to restore sustainable returns, and this will take time,” he said, adding work was underway to reinstate dividend payouts to shareholders.

Key numbers for the six months ended 1 February compared with a year ago:

  • Net profit $15.7m $11.8m
  • Revenue $1.612b vs $1.61b
  • Underlying profit $26.9 vs $19.5m
  • Gross margin 32.3 percent vs 32.5 percent
  • Interim dividend NIL vs NIL

Chief executive Mark Stirton said were encouraging signs improvements were resonating with customers.

“We are seeing customers respond as we get the basics right and deliver clearer value through better ranges and a stronger experience in stores,” Stirton said.

“Our Black Friday, Christmas and Back to School events performed well across the half, while severe weather events in January impacted retail spending overall and affected summer seasonal and outdoor categories at The Warehouse.”

Warehouse Stationery and Noel Leeming saw improved gross profit margins, while the Red Sheds continued to face margin pressure.

“Group gross profit margin declined in the first quarter, driven largely by The Warehouse, where we deliberately cleared aged and seasonal stock, saw softer sales in higher-margin categories, and faced freight pressures. Positively, gross profit margin momentum grew in the second quarter, up 30 basis points, and the quality of sales improved,” Stirton said.

Brand sales for the six months ended 1 February

  • Red Shed sales up 0.5 percent to $949.5m – same store sales up 1.2 percent
  • Stationery sales up 5.7 percent to $116.1m – same store sales up 1.8 percent
  • Noel Leeming sales down 1.2 percent to $542.2m – same store sales down 1.3 percent

The company’s recent changes to operations were aimed at cutting the cost of doing business to less than 31 percent of sales, though would see about 270 head office jobs disappear.

Stirton said disciplined cost control was a key driver of the improved result, with operating profit increasing 38 percent.

Expansion

He said the Group will open new The Warehouse and Noel Leeming stores in Mangawhai in mid-2027 – the first new The Warehouse store since 2023.

“Mangawhai has evolved from a seasonal holiday destination into a growing year-round community. Opening new stores allows us to employ locally and better serve a community that is expanding.”

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

Are you worried about your preschoolers’ anxiety? Here’s how to help

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alison Fogarty, Psychologist and Research Fellow in the Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development, Deakin University

New research on a group of Australian preschoolers suggests more than 40% are dealing with an anxiety disorder.

The study, led by Monash University and published in the journal of Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, was based on interviews with the mothers of 545 three- and four-year-olds.

It found 48% of the group met criteria for a mental health disorder, with 43% meeting the criteria for an anxiety disorder. This included separation anxiety, social phobia, specific phobias (for example, fear of the dark) and generalised anxiety disorder.

While these results seem shocking, the researchers note they should be “treated as preliminary and with caution”.

Other research tells us it’s quite normal for young children to experience some level of anxiety.

How can parents protect their children from anxiety? And how can you tell if they – and you – need more help to manage their mental health?

Some worries are normal

Anxiety is a natural response to a perceived threat, uncertainty or stress. It typically involves feelings of worry, nervousness or unease, along with body reactions such as increased heart rate, muscle tension and stomach issues.

Some degree of anxiety and worry is completely expected in preschool-aged children. Research tells us mild anxiety can even play a protective role — it helps us learn to identify and respond to potential threats.

Common worries and anxieties experienced at this developmental stage include fear of separation from caregivers, new people or situations, loud noises, the dark or nightmares and transitions (for example, going from home to daycare).

In the new Australian study, which we weren’t involved with, the most common form of anxiety for preschoolers was “specific phobias” – 31% of children met criteria for specific phobias. As the researchers note in their paper:

fear responses to scenarios such as the dark, storms, dentists and doctors may be considered normal in preschoolers at low frequencies […] these may be relatively transient compared to other disorders.

This suggests some preschoolers will grow out of some of their childhood worries with time.

What can parents do to help?

There are lots of things parents can do, both proactively and in the moment, when anxiety and worry show up for children.

Talk openly about emotions

Especially when things are calm. This might include reading books and chatting about what anxiety feels like in our body, when it might show up, and what can help. Doing this before your child is overwhelmed helps normalise these feelings, so when anxiety does arise, they have the language and context for it.

Great examples include the books The Huge Bag of Worries by Virginia Ironside, Hey Warrior by Karen Young, and The Feelings Series by Tracey Moroney.

Validate concerns

When you notice your child is worried, gently name what might be going on for them.

Resist the urge to immediately reassure them (for example, saying “you’ll be fine”). Instead, acknowledge and validate the feeling. This helps your child feel understood and shows them their emotions are manageable with your support.

For example, you might say:

It sounds like you might be feeling nervous about going to swimming today. That makes sense, it’s OK to feel worried about new or tricky things.

Practise regulation strategies when times are calm

Strategies such as slowing down our breathing, spending time outdoors, or patting a pet can help manage anxiety.

Try and practise them before anxiety peaks. Make them part of your everyday routine and model them yourself. When children see adults using these tools, it reinforces that everyone has big feelings and there are positive ways to handle them.

Support brave behaviour

Anxiety commonly leads to avoidance. While avoidance can see anxiety symptoms reduce very quickly in the moment, it tends to make anxiety worse over time.

Try and gently encourage your child to engage in the things they feel anxious about. It is often beneficial to start with situations your child feels less anxious about to build their confidence.

For example, if they are anxious about swimming lessons, encourage them to sit by the edge of the pool to start. This doesn’t mean pushing your child. Instead, give your child time and space and stay alongside them as they take small steps. For example, you might say:

I can see this feels hard. How about we try joining in just for the first activity — I’ll stay right here with you.

Let your child know you are proud of them when they do things even when they are feeling anxious.

Signs you might need more help

While anxiety and worry are emotions that all children experience, some of the signs your child might benefit from some additional support include:

  • anxiety is stopping your child from attending or enjoying kinder, preschool, daycare or other social situations

  • anxiety is impacting every day life, including your child’s sleep or eating

  • anxiety is causing significant and ongoing distress and emotional overwhelm for your child or the family more broadly

  • anxiety is frequently showing up for your child and lasts for more than a few weeks.

Where can you get support?

Making an appointment with your child’s GP is a great first step. They can provide support and referrals to a paediatrician, psychologist or other type of therapist, such as a play therapist or occupational therapist.

You can also talk to your local maternal child health nurse. They can help you understand whether your child would benefit from additional support, and discuss referral options with you.

Free resources are also available for parents on the Raising Children Network (the federal government’s parenting website) and Emerging Minds, a site dedicated to children’s mental health.

ref. Are you worried about your preschoolers’ anxiety? Here’s how to help – https://theconversation.com/are-you-worried-about-your-preschoolers-anxiety-heres-how-to-help-279320

Compulsory super is higher than ever at 12%. But cutting it would hurt low-paid workers most

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mark Melatos, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Sydney

A central element of Australia’s superannuation system is the superannuation guarantee (SG). This is the compulsory 12% of an employee’s earnings that an employer must pay into the employee’s nominated superannuation fund.

The compulsory contribution rate has risen steadily from 3% when it was introduced in 1992 to 12% since July 1, 2025. Since July 2022, employers must pay the super guarantee to all employees, even the lowest-paid.

The expanded coverage of the superannuation guarantee, as well as the rise in the rate, has coincided with increased HECS/HELP debts for university graduates, reduced housing affordability and a post-pandemic cost-of-living crisis that has reduced real wages.

This has led to concerns that the current 12% rate might be too high, especially for the young and those on lower incomes.


CC BY-NC

It’s easy to put off thinking about superannuation when retirement is years away. In this five-part series, we ask top experts to explain how to sort your super in a few simple steps, avoid greenwashing, and set goals for retirement.


A reality check

Australia’s retirement savings system is based on three pillars:

  • compulsory superannuation
  • the age pension, and
  • voluntary retirement savings, which includes, notably for many Australians, the family home and additional superannuation contributions above the mandated minimum.

Australia’s total superannuation assets – which include both compulsory and voluntary contributions – were worth A$4.5 trillion in December 2025, while housing assets have been valued at $11.9 trillion.

For comparison, government assistance for seniors, such as the age pension, totals about $100 billion every year.

Hence, contrary to the media attention it receives, superannuation plays an important – but not dominant – role in retirement savings.

More specifically, arguments that a lower compulsory super rate would help younger people save to buy a house are not realistic for two reasons.

First, even reducing the 12% rate by half – an extreme measure – would only add approximately $4,500 a year to take-home pay for someone on the average ordinary time annual income of $106,600.

While such a small amount is a drop in the housing affordability bucket, the power of compounding ensures that it adds significantly to one’s superannuation balance at retirement.

Moreover, just as with government support for first home-owners, any addition to take-home pay will likely simply inflate house prices for first-home buyers, while also leaving them with less superannuation than otherwise.

In short, reducing the superannuation guarantee rate will not improve housing affordability.

Trade offs to consider

Determining whether the 12% rate is too high or too low is a thankless task.

The most pertinent question is how individual workers wish to trade off their current spending against their desired living standard in retirement.

The answer varies hugely from person to person. It depends, among other things, on:

  • their personal preferences
  • the standard of living they experience during their working life
  • their life expectancy
  • how long they plan to work, and
  • the long-term performance of financial markets and the global economy.

The superannuation system, let alone the compulsory contribution, is not designed to address this trade-off, certainly not on its own.

Many Australians save too much for retirement

According to the Productivity Commission, the original objectives of the super guarantee were to provide an adequate (not desired) level of retirement income, relieve pressure on the age pension, and increase national savings.

However, Treasury’s Retirement Income Review found that members of a large super fund who died “left 90% of the balance they had at retirement”. Another study found that “at death, age pensioners leave around 90% of the assessable assets they had at the point of retirement”.

The Grattan Institute argues such households:

will have a higher living standard in retirement than they enjoy in their working lives. That is, the rate of compulsory super contributions is higher than it should be, making Australians poorer during their working lives when they are typically under higher rates of financial stress.

To blame an excessive super rate for over-saving is curious.

Superannuation only accounts for 21% of Australia’s wealth, and much of this is voluntary contributions above the compulsory rate taking advantage of concessional taxation treatment. Property ownership accounts for 51% of wealth holdings, and business and financial assets a further 20%.

The super guarantee is little more than a bit player.

a person stacking coins on top of a table

Retirement budgets vary hugely from person to person. Towfiqu Barbhuiya/Unsplash

If one wishes to apportion blame for retirement over-saving, the favourable tax treatment of super, property and shares are more likely candidates. Moreover, the super guarantee does not seem to significantly crowd out household saving outside the super system.

Most low-income earners are likely to rely substantially on government support – mainly the age pension – to guarantee an adequate standard of living in retirement.

Moreover, such households are likely save little outside super; for example, they are unlikely to own property or shares. So while a 12% rate may not be individually optimal, even for less wealthy households, it potentially plays an important role in topping up their retirement savings.

The real issue is inequity

Perhaps the real concern about the 12% rate relates to its economic incidence – who, ultimately, bears the cost.

While mixed, there is evidence that employers pass on the costs of compulsory super by paying their workers lower wages, forcing them to trade off lower spending now for higher retirement savings. But it does not necessarily follow that employers would pay higher wages if the rate were reduced.

Lower-paid, lower-skilled workers are more likely to be affected this way, since they face stiffer competition for their jobs and have less bargaining power with their employers.

While the rate is almost certainly too high for some workers and too low for others, it is just one plank of a very complex savings system.

ref. Compulsory super is higher than ever at 12%. But cutting it would hurt low-paid workers most – https://theconversation.com/compulsory-super-is-higher-than-ever-at-12-but-cutting-it-would-hurt-low-paid-workers-most-276378

Nvidia’s new AI tool is giving female game characters a makeover – and gamers are pushing back

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sian Tomkinson, Media and Communication Scholar, Edith Cowan University

Last week leading chipmaker Nvidia announced DLSS-5 (Deep Learning Super Sampling), a new artificial intelligence (AI) rendering tool it describes as a “breakthrough in visual fidelity for games”. The software takes low-resolution images and uses AI to upscale them, adding what Nvidia calls “photoreal lighting and materials”.

The tool is designed to make video games look more photorealistic, but the examples Nvidia chose to show off the technology revealed something unexpected: the AI doesn’t just makes images sharper and glossier, it also makes characters significantly more conventionally attractive.

The growing backlash is about more than makeup. It points to a broader anxiety about what happens when AI is given control over creative decisions – and whose idea of “better” gets encoded in the algorithms.

A ‘beauty filter’ for games?

Nvidia showcased the technology using Grace Ashcroft, the protagonist of the recently released Resident Evil Requiem.

Before-and-after comparisons showed the software changing her hair colour, adding defined eyebrows, lip tint, and facial contouring. Some gamers quickly labelled it a “beauty filter”, criticising the way it applies what looks like heavy makeup and reshapes her face to be more conventionally attractive.

Two versions of an image of a woman in a video game - one with more detail and more conventionally attractive.

Resident Evil Requiem’s Grace, without DLSS-5 (left) and with (right). Nvidia / Capcom

The choice of Grace to showcase the technology is worth examining. Resident Evil Requiem features all kinds of monsters and gritty characters, and Nvidia could have used any of them.

The decision to highlight a young, conventionally attractive female character and then make her more glamorous feels pointed. Representation of women in games has been a flashpoint issue for years.

Female characters in games are poorly treated

Historically, female characters in games were depicted as either helpless and weak, or as sexualised objects secondary to a male lead.

The 2000s brought more varied female characters, but attempts at greater diversity triggered a fierce backlash in 2014 during the Gamergate harassment campaign. Women and minorities in and around gaming were targeted with abuse, doxxing, and threats of rape and death.

The debate has continued since. Some players were furious at the muscular depiction of Abby Anderson in The Last of Us: Part 2, claiming her physique was unrealistic and demanding she be made more conventionally attractive.

DLSS-5 adds a new dimension to this debate. Rather than designers making deliberate choices about how characters look, an algorithm can quietly override those choices in a particular direction.

Looksmaxxing game characters

The specific changes DLSS-5 made to Grace’s face also echo the manosphere’s looksmaxxing trend.

Originating in incel communities, looksmaxxing is built on the idea that certain facial features are biologically more sexually desirable to women, prompting some men to pursue techniques that alter their own faces to increase their “sexual market value”. Seeing a piece of software automatically apply similar logic to a female game character raises uncomfortable questions.

At left an image of a bald, bearded man labelled DLSS-5 OFF. At right the same man wearing makeup and pouting, labelled DLSS-5 ON.

A satirical image showing the hypothetical effect of applying the ‘beauty filter’ of DLSS-5 to the warrior Kratos from the game God of War. PurpleDurian7220 / Reddit

Gamers have noticed, and many are responding with humour. The software has been mocked as “yassifying” characters, with one widely shared meme applying the same treatment to God of War’s hulking protagonist Kratos, complete with blue eyeshadow, pink blush, and plump lips. The joke lands because it makes the gendered absurdity obvious.

This reaction mirrors how some gamers once responded to criticism of Aloy, the protagonist of 2017’s Horizon Zero Dawn. After complaints that Aloy was “woke” for not wearing heavy makeup or conforming to conventional beauty standards, some gamers sarcastically created “unwokified” versions of the character to make the same point in reverse.

Bad news for game designers, too

A second, distinct complaint about DLSS-5 is that it undermines the artistic choices of developers.

Rather than simply sharpening what is already there, the software uses algorithms to alter textures and lighting. The results can have that familiar AI aesthetic: glossy, smooth, bright and generic.

A dark, gritty game like Resident Evil Requiem can end up looking like a luxury skincare ad. In at least one case, in EA Sports FC, the filter changed a real-life player’s likeness so dramatically they became completely unrecognisable.

The future of game visuals – and who controls it

It is worth noting that DLSS-5 can genuinely improve visual quality in many games, enriching environments and bringing older character models to life.

Nvidia has also pushed back against critics, with chief executive Jensen Huang insisting DLSS-5 is not a filter and that developers retain control over how it is applied.

But the backlash reveals a real tension. Many players objected to Nvidia selecting a young female character and using AI to make her more conventionally attractive and sexualised. Many others objected to AI overriding the deliberate creative choices of game developers.

Both concerns push against the same force: tech companies’ drive to deploy AI as broadly as possible, and to define “better” visuals on their own terms.

ref. Nvidia’s new AI tool is giving female game characters a makeover – and gamers are pushing back – https://theconversation.com/nvidias-new-ai-tool-is-giving-female-game-characters-a-makeover-and-gamers-are-pushing-back-279244

IBS diets don’t work for everyone. New research shows why – and it’s not just about the food

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jessica Biesiekierski, Associate Professor of Human Nutrition, The University of Melbourne

If you’ve ever tried a diet to fix gut symptoms, you’ll know it can be hit or miss. One person swears it changed their life. Another follows it carefully and feels no better.

This is especially true for irritable bowel syndrome, or IBS. It’s a common condition that causes stomach pain, bloating and changes in bowel habits.

Many people with IBS are told to try the low-FODMAP diet. This reduces certain carbohydrates (known as FODMAPs) that the gut absorbs poorly. These are fermented by gut bacteria, producing gas and drawing water into the bowel, which can trigger symptoms.

Reducing FODMAPs – found in foods such as onions, garlic, apples, wheat and some dairy products – can help ease symptoms. The diet usually involves restricting these foods for a short period, then slowly reintroducing them to identify which ones trigger symptoms in each person.

For many people, it works. But for many others, it doesn’t. Our new research helps explain why.

We found the effectiveness of a low-FODMAP diet for IBS doesn’t come down to food alone, but also how the gut and brain work together.

Different levels of gut sensitivity

IBS affects how the brain and gut communicate. Signals travel between them, shaping how sensitive the gut is and how strongly symptoms are felt.

A simple way to think about it is as a volume dial. For some people, the gut is turned up, so even normal digestion can feel uncomfortable or painful. For others, the dial is lower.

Food matters, but it is only part of the picture. The brain can also turn symptoms up or down, influenced by stress, anxiety about gut symptoms, and expectations about how the body will respond.

To understand this, we studied 112 adults with IBS over six months as they completed the three phases of the low-FODMAP diet. Participants worked with a dietitian through restriction, reintroduction and personalisation, allowing us to track how symptoms changed as foods were removed and then reintroduced.

We measured symptoms, quality of life and psychological factors such as anxiety and expectations. We used statistical modelling to identify response patterns and what predicted improvement.

Man holds bok choy in front of an open fridge door while looking at his phone
The brain can turn symptoms up or down. Oscar Wong/Getty Images

What we found

Some people improved quickly and stayed better. Others improved only slightly, or not at all, even after completing all phases of the diet. We found psychological factors played a major role in whether the diet worked.

Importantly, the difference was not just what people ate, but how they thought and felt about their symptoms and treatment.

People who believed the diet would help were more likely to improve. This is called “treatment expectancy” and is seen across health care.

People with high gut-focused anxiety were less likely to improve. This means they were very worried about their gut and more sensitive to normal sensations, like gas or movement in the bowel.

People who felt more in control of their symptoms also tended to do better.

These factors often changed before symptoms improved. This suggests the brain may help drive changes in symptoms.

This doesn’t mean IBS is “all in your head”. The symptoms are real and can have a big impact on daily life.

The gut and brain are closely linked. Stress and anxiety can change how sensitive the gut feels and how strongly symptoms are experienced – for example, many people notice “butterflies” in their stomach during stress.

What does this mean?

Right now, IBS treatment is often trial and error, with diet changes commonly tried first, followed by psychological therapies if needed.

Our findings suggest we may need to rethink this approach.

Some people may benefit more from psychological approaches, such as stress-reduction or cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). These can help people reframe unhelpful thoughts about their gut, reduce anxiety, and gradually face foods or situations they fear may trigger symptoms.

Others may respond well to diet alone. And many may need both.

If we can identify these differences earlier, for example by assessing anxiety or expectations, we could better match people to the right treatment.

This research marks a shift in how we understand IBS. It’s not just a food problem. It’s shaped by the interaction between diet, the gut and the brain.

For people living with IBS, this could mean fewer restrictive diets, less frustration and faster access to treatments that work.

For clinicians, it opens the door to more personalised care, where treatment is tailored to how a person’s gut-brain system is working.

In the end, improving IBS care may not be about finding the perfect diet. It may be more about understanding how the gut and brain work together, and using that to guide the right treatment.

ref. IBS diets don’t work for everyone. New research shows why – and it’s not just about the food – https://theconversation.com/ibs-diets-dont-work-for-everyone-new-research-shows-why-and-its-not-just-about-the-food-278887

What is consciousness? Michael Pollan spent 4 years looking for the answer

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nick Haslam, Professor of Psychology, The University of Melbourne

Psychology, it’s said, has a long past but a short history. A popular version lists three stages.

First, around the turn of the 20th century, psychologists tried to capture the stream of conscious experience in the net of introspection. The behaviourists then declared the mind off limits, arguing that psychology should study observable behaviour rather than subjective experience. Finally, the emergence of computers spurred the cognitive revolution of the 1960s, which brought the mind back in from the cold, in a new science of information processing.

This narrative arc is appealing, but substantially wrong. Introspection was never a dominant method in psychology. Psychologists continued to study mental processes throughout the behaviourist dark age. And some argue the story leaves out a crucial fourth stage. Cognitive psychology may have made great strides in understanding the mind as computation – neuroscientists helping to figure out the brain’s hardware – but it failed to grasp something vital.


Review: A World Appears: A Journey Into Consciousness – Michael Pollan (Allen Lane)


Enter the study of consciousness – the subject of a new book by accomplished journalist and academic Michael Pollan. For the past few decades, philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists have tried to redeem this once-taboo concept and uncover its secrets. That effort has been driven by the belief that mainstream cognitive science cannot solve the so-called “hard problem” of how and why subjective experience arises.

The study of consciousness has been enormously successful in attracting intellectual talent and public attention. Many specialist academic journals have been founded and blockbusters written. Distinguished scientists from other fields – Nobel Prize-winning biologist Francis Crick and physicist Roger Penrose among them – have beaten a path to this new scholarly El Dorado.

Michael Pollan: splendidly intelligent, humane and curious. Michael Pollan

All this cerebral effort has been less than enormously successful. No consensus view has formed on the nature or underpinnings of consciousness, on what kinds of entity possess it, or even on how the field’s key questions and concepts should be defined. New theories of consciousness sprout faster than they can be weeded out by evidence – and philosophers continue to hold radically different views on its metaphysics.

Pollan’s book, A World Appears, wades into this morass in search of clarity. He is the author of numerous books on the intersection of nature and culture, with special emphasis on food, plants and psychedelics. This book is the product of an extended quest to understand consciousness – he wonders if it might be “a socially (and scientifically) acceptable proxy for the search for the soul”.

It is a splendidly intelligent, humane and curious exploration of some truly confounding ideas.

The basement of consciousness

Pollan divides his book into chapters on sentience, feeling, thinking and the self. These labels struggle to contain the many overlaps and blurred boundaries between these concepts: consciousness studies is a minefield of contested definitions.

The “sentience” chapter begins by attempting to “furnish the basement of consciousness”. Here, Pollan presents some astonishing work by researchers who cheekily describe themselves as “plant neurobiologists”, knowing that plants lack nervous systems.

Some plants show evidence of goal-direction, recognition of genetic relatedness, and responses akin to pain, sleep and anaesthesia. When damaged or stressed, some produce ethylene, an anaesthetic that inhibits their movement in response to touch. Root-tips can navigate mazes in search of nutrients, like subterranean lab rats seeking cheese.

Greenery that first appears static and inert looks very different when we imagine a being with its head in the ground, operating on a different timescale, he writes. In slow motion, a vine’s growing tendril seems to manifest a sense of purpose.

Some plants show evidence of goal-direction and responses akin to pain, sleep and anaesthesia. Karola G/Pexels

What might the ethical implications of plant sentience be? Would we be obliged, as the botany professor in Samuel Butler’s 1872 satire Erewhon argues, only to eat plants that “had died a natural death, such as fruit that was lying on the ground and about to rot, or cabbage-leaves that had turned yellow in late autumn”. Must we “plant the pips of any apples or pears […] or […] come near to incurring the guilt of infanticide”?

Perhaps the implications are less extreme than Butler suggests, but the findings Pollan lays out might make us less anthropocentric – and zoocentric – in our moral concern.

Pollan’s discussion of “feeling” explores the ways consciousness is grounded in the body and tied to emotion. Challenging views that locate it in the brain’s more recently evolved cortical regions, Pollan speaks to researchers who ground it in the more “primitive” brain stem. Subjective feeling may be the body’s way of making the mind keep it alive, he writes, alerting us to departures from a desired internal state and enabling us to problem-solve our way forward.

If consciousness is embodied and affective, building a conscious machine might seem a fool’s errand. Pollan talks to scientists who aspire to do just that – and believe success is imminent. Pollan’s scepticism is undisguised. He questions the equation of consciousness with software and doubts that feeling, unlike thinking, can be simulated.

“The consciousness [AI enthusiasts] are hoping to install in computers depend on feelings that will be weightless absent the vulnerabilities of our mortal flesh.”

Mysteries of the mind

Pollan’s discussion of “thinking” explores the contents of consciousness. His doubts are again on display. Can we really “step outside the stream of consciousness in order to observe it from its banks”? And can the stream be separated into distinct elements and quantified?

Pollan compares the attempts of a psychologist to sample inner experience with those of phenomenologists – philosophers who hope to understand the structure of the subjectivity – and writers of modernist fiction. He concludes that this most basic of questions – what is on our minds? – remains a mystery.

In a final chapter, Pollan investigates our sense of self: “the crown of consciousness” to some and a seductive illusion to others, notably David Hume and the Buddha.

The self remains elusive: “to look for the subject is to treat it as an object, which is to negate it.” Pollan considers ways of escaping the self through psychedelics, hypnosis and meditation, before entertaining the possibility of pure awareness in the absence of an experiencing self.

Scientists or sages?

Pollan is an astute and amiable guide through this strange territory. He talks with many of the leading figures in the study of consciousness.

They include Australian philosopher David Chalmers, Portugese-American neuroscientist Antonio Damasio (who argues emotions are a crucial component of decision-making), and American developmental psychologist Alison Gopnik, as well as many lesser-known ones.

He engages deeply with their ideas and spares his interlocutors no hard questions. He makes it clear to them (and his reader) when he is unpersuaded, as when one psychologist informs him his inner life seems a little empty. He is knowledgeable about the science of consciousness, but also determined to give the humanities their due.

Pollan talks to leading figures in the study of consciousness, including developmental psychologist Alison Gopnik. Wikipedia

If anything, Pollan aligns himself more with the poets, Romantics and sages – and their psychedelic fellow travellers – than with the scientists and academic philosophers. One grasps the subtle truth of subjective experience, while the other is often reductive and obscure.

The book closes with a stay in a Zen retreat in search of “unthinking presence”, which reinforces the message that seeking first-person encounters with experience is more illuminating than engaging in third-person academic studies of it.

Pollan’s reservations about the academic study of consciousness are perhaps a little unfair. Is the fact that neuroscientists have proposed 22 accounts of consciousness really “a pretty good indication that the field is flailing”? Should we wring our hands and rend our garments because philosophers hold radically incompatible accounts of consciousness: an emergent property of brains, an illusion, or a fundamental attribute of the universe, like gravity?

Perhaps the question of consciousness doesn’t have a single answer. As Francis Crick found when he leapt confidently into the field of consciousness studies after co-discovering the genetic basis of life, some big, juicy questions are less scientifically tractable than others.

Consciousness studies may be expanding in a hundred directions rather than converging on a singular truth – and that may be a good thing.

The dream of a final theory

The fruitfulness of consciousness studies could be a valuable preparation for a later process of Darwinian selection. Just as neural connections proliferate in the developing brain and are then pruned back to enhance cognitive efficiency, exploring the broad field of conceptual possibilities before homing in on an integrating theory may optimise the pursuit of knowledge.

Consciousness may be like the proverbial elephant with the blind men. Alternative theories palpate different parts of the beast, perhaps enabling a better understanding of the whole to emerge.

Alternatively, there may be no elephant. Like morality or mental illness, consciousness may be an umbrella concept that refers to a multitude of different phenomena. If this is the case, we should be thankful for the findings of consciousness researchers.

These may never cohere into a unifying account of their target, but they shed new light on many other things along the way – from plant sentience to human perception, and from inner speech to artificial intelligence.

Pollan warns his readers that his book is likely to make them more confused and less sure of what they know. That’s how he felt when he finished writing it. A World Appears is a delightful read for anyone who enjoys being intelligently befuddled by a master of the craft.

ref. What is consciousness? Michael Pollan spent 4 years looking for the answer – https://theconversation.com/what-is-consciousness-michael-pollan-spent-4-years-looking-for-the-answer-278888

Share prices, sports results … CO₂ levels? The case for reporting climate stats every day

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Elspeth Tilley, Professor of Creative Communication, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University

In today’s CO₂ news, global atmospheric carbon is at 429.46 parts per million. That’s one point lower than yesterday and 79 above the recommended planetary boundary.

That’s not something we hear routinely in news bulletins, of course. But such numeric snapshots – what’s up, what’s down and overall trends – are very familiar from daily reports of everything from stock markets to sports.

Might there be an argument for applying the same format to planetary health? Some media organisations already think so, including updates on atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO₂) levels in their regular coverage. But the practice remains far from mainstream.

It makes sense for news outlets to report this way, however, because humans understand trends better than abstractions or hard-to-visualise phenomena.

A brief summary of share price movements, for example, may not be the full financial story. But it does provide a regular barometer of likely changes to things that affect us – like fuel prices, mortgage payments or retirement savings.

The data is often easily available to news outlets, easy to visualise graphically, simple to slot in alongside weather and sport, and audiences are used to it.

Familiarity is the key. Stocks, weather and sports scores are “ritualised media information” – habits that shape our collective awareness. They help our brains judge an issue’s importance by how often it appears in our information environment.

Media scholars have shown how an issue’s visibility influences public opinion and government attention. Numbers crystallise this “agenda-setting” process, prompting questions about why those numbers are rising or falling, which policies influence them, and who is responsible.

In other words, what gets reported and how it’s reported matter. Societies prioritise what they notice most, and they can manage what they measure.

Connecting climate to everyday life

The fact we haven’t ritualised the reporting of atmospheric carbon readings – a key measure of global warming – isn’t because we lack data.

The Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii has tracked atmospheric CO₂ since 1958. The Stockholm Resilience Centre provides measures of CO₂ as well as forest cover, ocean acidification and Arctic ice.

It might be argued such numbers aren’t as relevant to people’s everyday lives as interest rates and stock markets. But that’s increasingly not the case. Environmental statistics help track changes that do and will affect us.

Links between climate change and extreme weather, rising insurance costs, transport disruptions and food prices are intricate and changeable. Daily atmospheric CO₂ reports compress the complexity of a multifaceted problem into something we can grasp more readily.

Of course, there’s a risk the very numbers that focus our minds could narrow them. Climate communication research shows repeated negative news can cause “climate fatigue”.


Read more: Climate doomism is bad storytelling – hope is much more effective at triggering action


But it doesn’t all have to be bad news. While atmospheric carbon levels are 150 parts per million above the preindustrial average, there are also good numbers to report, such as the drop in chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) since the Montreal Protocol in 1987.

Climate fatigue is caused less by too much climate news, and more by reporting that frames climate change as an irreversible catastrophe, leaving people feeling overwhelmed and powerless.

Climate communication experts recommend pairing realistic updates with news of visible action such as policy shifts, community adaptation, technological change or Indigenous stewardship.

There is now a small but growing group of “good news” outlets doing just this: Reasons to be Cheerful (founded by artist and musician David Byrne), Positive News and Fix the News report numbers related to tangible initiatives such as new hectares of forest reserve or revived populations of threatened species.

Normalising environmental awareness

To help prevent people tuning out repetitive data that changes slowly, reporting can frame the numbers in different ways – how fast they’re moving compared with past decades, the distance from specific carbon budget goals, and whether they’re moving faster or slower than predicted.

Contextual stories can connect the data to regional consequences and human stories of local climate action success. That casts the CO₂ updates as indexes of active response rather than passive observation.

For public broadcasters with mandates or charters to provide public interest journalism, the fit is obvious.

Regular CO₂ news would also balance the default reporting of economic indicators that can be perceived as prioritising markets over ecosystems. Presenting environmental numbers in the same way helps normalise attention to ecological stability.

And by realistically connecting those numbers to hot-button issues like the cost of living and healthcare, climate awareness becomes less about ideology or “climate wars” and more about the practical challenges of maintaining a habitable planet.

ref. Share prices, sports results … CO₂ levels? The case for reporting climate stats every day – https://theconversation.com/share-prices-sports-results-co-levels-the-case-for-reporting-climate-stats-every-day-278202

A Bible Belt track without a pulse – it’s no surprise fans hate the 2026 FIFA World Cup song Lighter

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brent Keogh, Lecturer in the School of Communications, University of Technology Sydney

The release of the first FIFA World Cup 2026 song Lighter by American country artist Jelly Roll, Mexican singer Carín León and Canadian producer Cirkut, has left an odd taste in the mouth of fans, like waking up in the back of a Chevy truck after accidentally downing a bottle of bargain-bin bourbon.

As the United States, Canada and Mexico prepare to host the World Cup in June, the change in genre from “world-infused” pop to Bible Belt-style country-rock reflects the awkwardness of the tournament being hosted in an increasingly isolationist America.

Themes of unity and diversity

Since the early 1990s, FIFA World Cup songs and anthems have usually reflected something of the local flavour of the host country while simultaneously promoting the ideals of global unity.

For example, the 2022 song Hayya Hayya promotes the ideal that “we are better together”. It vibrates with the rhythmic complexity of North African folk traditions, before moving into a more commercial reggae groove.

Jennifer Lopez and Pitbull’s 2014 song, We are One, incorporates Brazilian inflections in an otherwise characteristically in-your-face Pitbull dance track. Nevertheless, the global sentiment remains: “it’s your world, my world, our world today, and we invite the whole world, whole world to play”.

Similarly, Jason Derulo’s 2018 World Cup track Colors (also a Coca Cola promotional song), celebrates national pride – “I’m going to wave my flag” – while also declaring “there’s beauty in the unity we’ve found”.

Where is the excitement?

Though Lighter is a collaboration between the three host countries, it marks a significant musical shift from the characteristic European, Latino and “World” inflected pop of previous songs.

There have been other stylistic shifts in the past. The 2006 World Cup track was Time of Our Lives, a slow operatic pop ballad by Il Divo and Toni Braxton.

But Lighter isn’t another example of this. It isn’t a ballad – yet it still lacks the high energy buzz of fan favourites such as Shakira’s Waka Waka (2010 South Africa World Cup), Santana’s Dar Um Jeito (We Will Find a Way) (2014 Brazil World Cup) and Ricky Martin’s The Cup of Life (1998 France World Cup).

The usual rhythmic vitality of a World Cup song is stripped back to a country-rock dirge with an odd, almost tokenistic Spanish bridge – an offering that might more appropriately feature in a Trolls World Tour. Fans are not having it.

As one user in the YouTube comments asks: “La emoción, la pasión y el ritmo mundialista, dónde está todo eso?” (“The excitement, the passion and the World Cup rhythm, where is all that?”).

Roll between the Lord and the Devil

Lighter has also been criticised for its religious allusions. One listener bemoans: “It’s a football tournament, but let’s make a song about church choirs, Chevy trucks, chains and muddy boots”.

Although past World Cup songs have contained religious allusions, Lighter’s odd sense of the sacred is more like trying to pass off a Lord Elrond action figure as a statue of Saint Anthony.

The song is replete with the forced language of a sinner’s conversion (“chains don’t rattle no more”, “lay my burdens down”), as analogous to the flow-state of a footballer, free from whatever personal or collective trials that might have been holding them back.

As in many a good country song, the protagonist is involved in a cosmic battle for his soul.

Jelly Roll is “praying [his] way out of […] hell”. He even has a run in with the Devil, although he doesn’t trade his soul for musical talent. Rather, he escapes the Devil’s attempts to “catch” him as his boots have left the ground.

You could be forgiven for questioning whether this song was about football at all, or whether it is more reflective of Jelly Roll’s own personal conversion story (he has recently been open in proclaiming his faith in Jesus).

In Lighter, the collective “we” of previous World Cup songs has been replaced with the individualistic “I” – the local taking precedence over the global.

The elephant in the room

Now, to be fair, there are some aspects of Lighter that align with the values of its predecessors. One key theme of the song is the sense of the fight, of overcoming obstacles, and gaining individual freedom. This aligns with FIFA’s stated purpose of the song, which it says was “created for the most inclusive FIFA World Cup in history”.

However, with ICE agents likely to be haunting football stadiums like dementors – and strained relationships between the US and neighbours such as Venezuela, Mexico, Canada and Cuba (not to mention Iran) – it is questionable whether FIFA’s goals of inclusivity will be felt and realised.

Instead, Jelly Roll and Carín León’s country-rock tune seems to more accurately reflect the current US administration’s isolationist approach to global foreign policy: we know we’re in the world, but we’d rather not be.

Perhaps the next World Cup song in 2030 will bring back the excitement, passion and rhythm that fans love, and reiterate the globalist ideals of the game. For now, Lighter remains a missed penalty shot.

ref. A Bible Belt track without a pulse – it’s no surprise fans hate the 2026 FIFA World Cup song Lighter – https://theconversation.com/a-bible-belt-track-without-a-pulse-its-no-surprise-fans-hate-the-2026-fifa-world-cup-song-lighter-279111

Could this energy crisis be worse for the global economy than COVID?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adi Imsirovic, Lecturer in Energy Systems, University of Oxford

Despite reports of negotiations between the US and the Iranian regime, the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed to most oil tankers, with only a small number of vessels being allowed to pass. The result is a loss of roughly 11 million barrels per day (mbd) of oil and petroleum liquids to the global market. This represents just over 10% of global supply.

At first glance, a 10% disruption may not sound catastrophic. But in oil markets, even a 10% imbalance between supply and demand can have very large economic effects.

To understand the scale of the disruption, it is useful to compare it with the height of the COVID pandemic in 2020. During global lockdowns, empty roads, grounded aircraft and deserted bus and railway stations became normal as travel and economic activity collapsed. At that time, global oil demand fell by about 8mbd, the largest demand shock in history.

Today’s situation is the opposite. Instead of a collapse in demand, the world is experiencing a large supply shock. But the impact on everyday life could end up looking similar: reduced travel, higher transport costs, slower economic activity and pressure on household budgets.

The reason is that both oil supply and oil demand are very inflexible in the short term. People still need to drive to work, goods still need to be transported and aircraft still need fuel. When supply falls suddenly, prices must rise significantly to force demand down.

For now, the release of emergency oil stocks is helping to cushion the initial impact, particularly in developed economies. Members of the International Energy Agency (IEA) are required to hold emergency stocks equivalent to at least 90 days of oil consumption, and several countries also maintain strategic petroleum reserves.


Read more: These are shaky times for oil markets. An expert explains what a prolonged war will mean for prices


Countries such as the US, China and Japan can therefore offset supply disruptions for a limited period. However, these reserves are not a long-term solution. If the conflict continues for months rather than weeks, stockpiles will be depleted.

The situation is much more serious for developing countries. Many countries in Asia, Africa and South America hold very limited commercial reserves and are much more vulnerable to supply disruptions and price spikes. For these economies, elevated oil prices quickly translate into higher food prices, inflation and economic instability.

The first shortages would probably appear not in petrol, but in diesel and jet fuel. Gulf oil producers are major exporters of middle distillates, and their crude oil grades produce large quantities of diesel and jet fuel when refined.

Jet fuel could be one of the first commodities to be hit. Benjamin_Barbe/Shutterstock

Diesel is particularly important because it fuels trucks, ships, construction equipment and agricultural machinery. So a diesel shortage affects food supply, construction, mining and global trade – not just transport. Petrol shortages would follow as crude oil supply tightens further, and eventually shortages would spread across all petroleum products.

Oil is not just used for transport fuel. It is also a key input into petrochemicals for the production of plastics, fertilisers, chemicals, synthetic materials and many industrial processes. This means the effects of a major oil supply disruption spread across the entire economy.

Shortages or price increases could affect everything from food production and packaging to electronics, construction materials and clothing. The economic effects of an oil shock are therefore much broader than simply higher petrol prices.

Protectionism could make everything worse

One of the biggest risks during a supply crisis is export restrictions and protectionism. Governments often try to protect domestic consumers by freezing prices and banning exports of fuel or crude oil, but this usually makes the global shortage worse.

Government price freezes only discourage production and supply, and encourage consumers to keep burning fuel. Protectionism is even worse. There are already signs of this happening – some countries (China, for example) are restricting exports of petroleum products such as diesel and jet fuel. When countries hoard fuel, global markets become tighter and prices rise even further.

The biggest risk would be if the US restricted oil exports in order to protect domestic consumers. The US is now the world’s largest oil producer, producing more than 20mbd of oil and petroleum liquids. But it is also one of the world’s largest consumers. However, it still exports significant volumes, particularly to Europe.

The US has banned oil exports before. In 1975, following the Arab oil embargo (when in 1973 Arab states refused to supply oil to countries, including the US, that had supported Israel in the Yom Kippur war), the US banned exports of crude oil. The ban was lifted only in 2015. If such a ban were introduced today, it would be likely to cause major supply shortages and price increases, especially in Europe.

If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed for a prolonged period, or if the conflict escalates further, global losses of exports from the Persian Gulf could approach the 20mbd of oil and petroleum products.

Under these circumstances, the economic and social effects could be severe. Transport could become more expensive and less frequent, air travel would be severely curtailed, inflation would rise and economic growth would slow significantly. In extreme scenarios, the disruption to daily economic life could resemble the COVID period (and probably worse). But this time it would be caused by a shortage of energy.

For now, markets are relying on emergency stock releases and hopes of a geopolitical de-escalation. But if not, the world economy could face an unprecedented energy shock, with far-reaching and unpredictable consequences.

ref. Could this energy crisis be worse for the global economy than COVID? – https://theconversation.com/could-this-energy-crisis-be-worse-for-the-global-economy-than-covid-279284

‘I didn’t come here to get rich’: new research on the lives of Ukrainian women in Georgia’s surrogacy boom

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Olga Oleinikova, Associate Professor and Director of the SITADHub (Social Impact Technologies and Democracy Research Hub) in the School of Communication, University of Technology Sydney

“I didn’t come here to get rich. I came because I had no other way to keep my son safe and care for my displaced family”.

Anna is a 28-year-old woman from eastern Ukraine. She fled the country in 2023 after Russian troops invaded. Two years later, she agreed to become a surrogate in Georgia for wealthy foreign couples.

We met Anna, who was already pregnant, in a quiet apartment that had been rented for her by a surrogacy agency on the outskirts of the capital, Tbilisi.

Our multidisciplinary team was in Georgia to conduct a pilot research project examining the small country’s rapidly expanding surrogacy industry.

We conducted in-depth interviews with Ukrainian women to better understand their motivations for entering surrogacy arrangements, their experiences within the system, and the social, economic, and legal factors shaping their decision-making and wellbeing.

We also analysed publicly available policy and regulatory documents from the government to examine how the sector operates. We paid particular attention to emerging regulatory challenges, gaps in oversight and the state’s efforts to balance economic opportunity with ethical and human rights considerations.

The shifting geography of surrogacy

Surrogacy laws vary widely around the world. Some countries, including Australia, prohibit commercial surrogacy. Others allow it under specific conditions. These differences create cross-border markets, where intended parents travel abroad to access services that are restricted, expensive or unavailable at home.

Before Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Ukraine was one of the world’s largest commercial surrogacy hubs. Estimates suggest between 2,000 and 2,500 babies were born each year through surrogacy arrangements.

War disrupted the industry. Clinics closed or relocated. Travel became dangerous. Media outlets reported on intended parents struggling to reach newborns and surrogates displaced by fighting. Georgia became a safe alternative.

The Beta Fertility clinic run by the New Life Georgia surrogacy agency in Tbilisi in November 2023. Photo by Marie Audinet / Hans Lucas via AFP

International surrogacy has been legal in Georgia since 1997. That’s when the country adopted legislation allowing both gestational (a woman carrying an embryo not genetically related to her) and traditional surrogacy (a woman carrying an embryo for another couple using her own egg). The first children were born through gestational surrogacy around 2007.

The country’s clear legal framework – recognising intended parents as the child’s legal guardians from birth and granting no parental rights to the surrogate – has been a key factor in its appeal.

Costs are also significantly lower than in the United States. As independent international surrogacy consultant Olga Pysana told us:

In the last year, surrogacy in Georgia cost approximately US$55,000 to $85,000 (A$78,000 to A$120,000), whereas surrogacy in the United States can cost as much as US$250,000 (A$350,000).

With international demand surging in the 2010s, Georgia (a small country of 3.7 million people) quickly became unable to meet the needs of so many parents with local women alone. So clinics began recruiting potential surrogates from abroad, including from Ukraine, Central Asian countries, Russia, Belarus, Thailand and the Philippines.

Mobile surrogates

Several of the women we interviewed had previously worked with Ukrainian agencies. After the invasion, recruiters contacted them again – this time offering placements in Georgia.

Displacement has produced a new and economically vulnerable workforce. We describe these women as “mobile surrogates”: women who move across borders to provide reproductive labour in response to war, economic crises or changing surrogacy laws. “If there was no war, I would never have left,” Anna told us.

Most of the women we interviewed had lost homes, jobs or partners. Many were supporting children and extended family members across borders. Anna had worked in a shop before the war, then cleaned houses in Poland. “Surrogacy in Georgia pays in nine months what I would earn in years,” she said.

Our research found that surrogates are typically paid around US$20,000 (A$35,500) in instalments. For families displaced by war, this amount of money can cover rent, relocation costs and schooling.

A surrogate undergoes an ultrasound scan at the Beta Fertility Clinic in Tbilisi, Georgia, in November 2023. Marie Audinet/Hans Lucas/AFP/Getty images

But the arrangements come with strict contractual conditions. Women may face limits on travel, their diets and daily routines. Some live in shared apartments organised by agencies.

Independent legal advice is rare. Anna signed a contract in a language she did not fully understand, but felt she had little alternative: “I just needed something stable. I couldn’t keep moving from place to place”.

Georgia’s legal framework says little about labour standards, housing conditions or long-term health support for surrogates after birth. The result is an imbalance: strong protections for intended parents, and weaker safeguards for the women carrying babies.

A draft bill was introduced in 2023 aimed at curbing paid surrogacy for foreigners, due to growing concerns about the commercialisation of the industry and potential exploitation of surrogate mothers. However, it is still pending. As of early 2026, surrogacy remains legal in Georgia for foreign heterosexual couples.

Three trends we are seeing

First, reproductive markets are highly responsive to crises. When Ukraine’s industry became unstable, demand shifted rapidly to Georgia. Global fertility markets operate like other transnational industries: when one site contracts, another expands.

Second, economic inequality shapes who participates. Displacement and financial insecurity increase women’s willingness to enter demanding reproductive arrangements.

Third, the surrogates bear the brunt of regulatory ambiguities and associated risks and challenges. This includes dealing with contracts and medical procedures in languages they don’t understand.

Reform is needed

In Georgia, clearer labour protections are essential: minimum housing standards, transparent payment schedules, and mandatory, independent legal advice in a language surrogates understand. Health coverage for the women should also extend beyond birth.

The major markets for surrogacy services, including China, the US, Australia, Israel, Germany and others, should also review how their citizens engage in overseas surrogacy. This includes stronger regulation of agencies marketing abroad and clearer ethical guidance for intended parents.

Finally, greater international coordination is needed. Shared standards for cross-border surrogacy would improve transparency and accountability in a rapidly expanding and loosely regulated global market.

As demand grows, the central question is not whether cross-border surrogacy will continue, but whether it can be governed in ways that safeguard fairness, transparency and the rights of the women whose bodies sustain it.

ref. ‘I didn’t come here to get rich’: new research on the lives of Ukrainian women in Georgia’s surrogacy boom – https://theconversation.com/i-didnt-come-here-to-get-rich-new-research-on-the-lives-of-ukrainian-women-in-georgias-surrogacy-boom-276173

Cricket: Amelia Kerr and Jacob Duffy triumph at NZ Cricket Awards

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s Jacob Duffy Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz / Photosport Ltd 2025

Amelia Kerr and Jacob Duffy have taken the top honours at the New Zealand Cricket Awards.

White Ferns captain Kerr secured an unprecedented fourth-straight Debbie Hockley Medal while Duffy claimed the Sir Richard Hadlee Medal.

Amelia Kerr of New Zealand White Ferns. www.photosport.nz

Kerr helped the Wellington Blaze to their third-straight Super Smash title, and topped the run-scoring for the White Ferns in T20 internationals with 354 runs at an average of 70.

Duffy took 25 test wickets at an average of 16, including three five-wicket hauls in just four tests.

The Southlander delivered over 150 overs in the three-test series against the West Indies, more than any other New Zealand bowler, highlighted by a marathon 43-over stint against the West Indies in the first Test at Christchurch.

Duffy also picked up the Test Player of the Year award and the Winsor Cup for men’s first-class bowling, becoming one of the few players to claim three major awards in a single evening.

Former New Zealand player, board director, board chair, and NZC chief executive Martin Snedden was recognised with the Bert Sutcliffe Medal for outstanding services to cricket.

[]h2026 New Zealand Cricket Awards Winners

  • Debbie Hockley Medal: Melie Kerr
  • Sir Richard Hadlee Medal: Jacob Duffy
  • Bert Sutcliffe Medal for Outstanding Services to Cricket: Martin Snedden
  • Test Player of the Year: Jacob Duffy
  • Men’s ODI Player of the Year: Daryl Mitchell
  • Women’s ODI Player of the Year: Brooke Halliday
  • Men’s T20I Player of the Year: Tim Seifert
  • Women’s T20I Player of the Year: Melie Kerr
  • Men’s Domestic Player of the Year: Henry Nicholls
  • Women’s Domestic Player of the Year: Jess Kerr
  • Super Smash Men’s Player of the Year: Katene Clarke
  • Super Smash Women’s Player of the Year: Jess Kerr
  • Redpath Cup (men’s first-class batting): Henry Nicholls
  • Ruth Martin Cup (women’s domestic batting): Kate Anderson
  • Winsor Cup (men’s first-class bowling): Jacob Duffy
  • Phyl Blackler Cup (women’s domestic bowling): Jess Kerr
  • Umpire of the Year: Chris Gaffaney

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

The regions next in line for flooding as heavy rain heads south

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Kiripaka, Northland. Supplied / Stella Matthews

MetService says there’s a strong likelihood of several regions being upgraded to red heavy rain warnings as a damaging storm sweeps across the country.

Northland and Whangārei are currently in a state of emergency, which will last for seven days.

Although rainfall is set to ease for both regions, others may soon be in the flood firing line.

So which regions are preparing for the worst?

Tauranga

Tauranga City Council is also warning people of landslide risks.

An orange heavy rain warning remains in place for Tauranga through to 1am on Saturday.

The warning has a high chance of being upgraded to a red warning.

Due to earlier rainfall and slips, it said there was an increased risk of new landslide occurring and more damage at sites which had already experienced slides.

“If you learn or suspect that a landslide is occurring or is about to occur in your area evacuate immediately if it is safe to do so.

“Seek higher ground outside the path of the landslide. Getting out of the path of a landslide or debris flow path is your best protection.”

Adams Avenue, between Pilot Bay and the Maunganui Rd roundabout, would be closed to vehicles from 5pm due to the heavy rain warning.

“This is a precautionary approach following geotechnical advice about the current risks on Mauao from anticipated rainfall.

“The road will not be opened until the rain event has passed and we have expert advice regarding the safety of the area.”

Bay of Plenty

Bay of Plenty Civil Defence is warning of possible land slides and for people to stay inside if possible.

Up to 180 millimetres of rain is expected, with the region’s orange warning likely to be upgraded to a red.

MetServices said surface flooding and road closures are expected.

Visit MetService, NZTA or the council website for updates, the region’s Civil Defence said.

Coromandel

Meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane said there was a high chance of the Coromandel’s orange rain warning being upgraded to red.

A heavy rain warning was in place for the area from 4pm Thursday until at least 6pm Friday.

MetService said expect up to 80 to 120mm of rain on top of what has already fallen.

It said rain up to 200mm was also possible for the Coromandel Peninsula.

Auckland

All of Auckland is now under orange rain and wind warnings, with a low chance of being upgraded to red warnings.

Auckland Civil Defence said residents should prepare for flooding and stay up-to-date via MetService and the NZTA website.

Taranaki / Central North Island

MetService says to expect 100 to 150mm of rain on Taranaki Maunga before noon Friday.

Strong winds are expected in Taupo and Taumarunui, with a heavy rain watch on the former until 10pm Friday.

Taihape, Whanganui and South and Central Taranaki can also expect strong wind through to about 9am.

East Cape

There is a heavy rain watch in place for Gisborne north of Tokomaru Bay, and Bay of Plenty north of Te Kaha, with a moderate chance of upgrading to warning status.

Nelson/Tasman

Residents in the Nelson and Tasman districts are being asked to prepare for severe weather, with up to 250 millimetres of rain expected in some areas.

An orange heavy rain warning is in effect for Tasman northwest of Motueka until 4pm Friday, with a a high chance the warning will be upgraded to red.

Nelson Tasman Civil Defence said the rain was settling in on Thursday, and people should be careful around rivers and streams, and on the roads.

Rest of South

Orange heavy rain warnings are also in place for the Richmond and Bryant ranges, as well as parts of Westland, south Canterbury, and north Otago.

MetService said up to 90mm of rain could fall in North Otago and Canterbury.

There was a minimal chance of the warning upgrading to red, it said.

Red weather warnings ‘no joke’

National Emergency Management Agency’s (NEMA) director of civil defence emergency management John Price confirmed further red warnings for parts of the country were likely.

“Red weather warnings are real and no joke, and I’m urging people not to put themselves in harm’s way, as your life safety is critical.

“MetService only issues red warnings for the most extreme weather events. Heavy rain and severe winds can cause flooding and landslides, which can kill or cause serious harm.”

Price urged people to “trust their danger sense” and not be foolish.

“If you get into trouble and need rescuing, you’ll be holding up emergency services who need to be looking after our most vulnerable.”

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

Association mulls compulsory science for Year 11 students

Source: Radio New Zealand

AFP

The head of the science teachers association says Year 11 students could benefit from compulsory science lessons.

The government is considering making the subject mandatory, along with English and maths, when it abolishes NCEA level one in 2028.

Jayatheeswaran Vijayakumar, who is also head of science at Edgewater College, told RNZ compulsory Year 11 science could help more teens into careers in science and technology.

He said it would also ensure young people were better prepared to be science-literate citizens.

But he said there was a strong risk some students would be bored.

“If learners’ experiences are irrelevant or overtly academic, they might not necessarily engage with the learning and then we could have high levels of disengagement,” he said.

“If it’s poorly designed, it could actually reinforce some of the inequities that already exist in STEM pathways and this could really disenfranchise more learners from taking science.”

Vijayakumar said making science compulsory at Year 11 would require good teachers and resourcing.

Education Ministry figures indicated most Year 11 students already studied science.

They showed there were 69,108 Year 11 students in 2025 with 45,500 enrolled in science, 3426 in physics, 2404 in chemistry and 3507 in biology.

Vijayakumar said students had to actively opt out of the subject at his current school, but at his previous school it was optional.

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F1: Liam Lawson still having trouble with new car, but rule change could help

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ F1 driver Liam Lawson PHOTOSPORT

Liam Lawson concedes driving remains difficult as he and the majority of the grid struggle with the new electrical element in their Formula 1 cars.

After a two-week break the championship heads to Japan for the third round, with Mercedes well clear after finishing one-two in Australia and China.

The FIA has announced that it is tweaking the energy management rules to allow drivers to push harder.

The maximum energy teams will be allowed to harvest from their hybrid power units to recharge their batteries during Saturday’s grid-deciding session will be reduced to 8 megajoules (MJ) from 9 MJ. The change means drivers will be able to push more and focus less on recovering energy.

Lawson admitted because of the new hybrid cars, driving has changed, especially in qualifying.

“There are more consequences when you get it wrong, like use too much energy, it can be quite punishing,” Lawson told F1.

NZ F1 driver Liam Lawson at the 2026 Chinese Grand Prix. ALBERTO VIMERCATI / PHOTOSPORT

“We used to go into weekends spending all of our time setting up the car and optimising the car balance, right now it is energy management and trying to get the most out of that because there is so much lap time in it.

“Last year qualifying was fun, this year it is easy to overdrive it and use too much [energy] and make a mistake because it is new it is quite different and difficult.”

The 24-year-old Racing Bulls driver is coming off a double-points haul in China (sprint and GP) and sits ninth in the standings with eight points.

Mercedes driver George Russell tops the standings with 51 points.

Meanwhile, former F1 driver Jolyn Palmer believed Lawson was benefiting from the absence of Helmut Marko in the F1 paddock.

Marko retired as Red Bull advisor following the 2025 championship and is understood to have been the leading figure in the decision to demote Lawson from Red Bull after just two rounds last season.

New Zealand Racing Bulls driver Liam Lawson at the 2025 Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka. Eric Alonso / PHOTOSPORT

Palmer, who drove for Renault in the 2016 and 2017 seasons, is now an F1 broadcaster and was asked about Lawson’s start to the 2026 season without Marko involved.

“He was a big presence that could be really hard on young drivers coming through, but he was also a benefit to those who could thrive and become a world champion,” Palmer said about Marko on the F1 Nation podcast.

“Liam obviously saw the brunt of that last year. But it did remind me of the resilience that he’s got, and I think you have to say he’s a tough guy, Liam.

“We’ve seen it in his wheel-to-wheel battles; he’s not afraid to flip the bird to whoever does him wrong in a Grand Prix.

“And also, it took him a while to get up to speed with Racing Bulls last year as well. It wasn’t instantaneous, but he got there, and he had some good drives.

“The same thing in Melbourne. It would have been really easy for him to say, ‘Oh no, Lindblad’s here. He’s getting all the credit from Australia.’ But he drove really well in China, getting points in the sprint and the Grand Prix, and it will settle him down for the year as well.”

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Bill to give police new powers to move and detain introduced to Parliament

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police Minister Mark Mitchell. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

  • A new bill would give police new powers but just how far it goes will now be fought over in select committee.
  • The Privacy Commissioner says it sets the bar too low, but a Justice Ministry push for more safeguards was rejected.
  • A criminal procedure expert warns it leaves so much up to police discretion it will likely land them in lots of court challenges.
  • A hurry around the bill led to limited consultation with the public, Māori and over impacts on children.

A big step towards mass surveillance or restoring common sense powers to police to collect evidence and fight crime?

A bill just introduced to Parliament delivers new powers to police to move or detain someone, but just how far it goes depends who you listen to.

Alarm and reassurance were both in play when Mark Mitchell tabled the Policing Amendment Bill at its first reading before a nearly empty Parliament on Tuesday evening.

“I want to be very clear that this bill will not provide additional powers to police that could be construed as enabling mechanisms for mass surveillance of the New Zealand public,” the Police Minister told the House.

Labour’s Camilla Belich. ©VNP / Phil Smith

Labour’s Camilla Belich retorted that it was too vague to be sure.

“We don’t want a situation where we have an Orwellian society of mass surveillance, where there is unreasonable collection of personal data, which is then in some instances used to charge people with offences and … there isn’t enough detail in this bill to date that … should assure the House that situation will not arise,” she said.

The bill allowed for police to record short live videos in public if they judged that was justified.

Law professor Gehan Gunasekara bridled at Mitchell’s repeated statements that the bill “restored” police powers.

“It doesn’t restore the status quo. It changes the status quo,” he said.

Law professor Gehan Gunasekara. Supplied

‘Safeguards’

The bill in a preamble said two events “have together narrowed the law” so that police now had less power to photograph or record people in public than a regular person.

One was official inquiries sparked by RNZ in 2020 exposing how officers for years had casually snapped tens of thousands of people, mostly Māori teenagers.

Ruled illegal, the practices were curtailed – albeit reluctantly and soon after police won bipartisan political support to change the law amid a rise in ramraids on shops.

That change had taken till now, but not before a Supreme Court ruling last year further narrowed what officers could do, according to the bill.

ACT’s Todd Stephenson gave qualified backing to reverse that.

“This bill does clarify and expands the police’s power to collect, record and use information, including images, sounds, for lawful policing purposes,” he said in the debate.

But with a kicker.

“Our support is conditional on ensuring that there is strong privacy protections and safeguards against mass surveillance powers.”

ACT’s Todd Stephenson. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

‘Low bar’

The Privacy Commissioner was not convinced about the safeguards, saying the bill set a “low bar”.

“It permits collection of people’s information for ‘an intelligence purpose’ which is not defined and establishes a low bar for police to meet (the police employee collecting the information only has to ‘consider that the information will or may support the Police in performing a function’),” said Michael Webster in a statement.

The Justice Ministry meantime had recommended tailormade safeguards.

But that was “deemed unnecessary” because the bill was not displacing any privacy principles or the Commissioner’s powers, said the bill disclosure statement.

However, the ministry largely supported the bill and said it did not breach the Bill of Rights Act.

Webster’s office in 2021 made one of two investigations of police taking so many photos so casually.

The Privacy Act did not permit “baseless or indiscriminate collection”, he said, but now the bill sought to set up a broad authorising framework.

“Overly broad or insufficiently clear intelligence gathering powers will impact on the privacy rights of everyday New Zealand[ers] and has the potential for chilling effect on people’s civil and political rights.”

Privacy Commissioner Michael Webster. VNP / Phil Smith

Green MP Tamatha Paul said at the first reading that maybe Mitchell was right when he said the bill would not impact everyday New Zealanders: “Maybe he’s right, because this bill is going to impact Maori.

“Rather than tightening up the practice and protecting children, they’re changing the law to make it legal,” she said.

Green MP Tamatha Paul. VNP / Phil Smith

Police did make changes over several years as ordered by the Privacy Commissioner but failed to find a technology solution to identify and delete all the unlawfully taken photos.

Council of Civil Liberties’ Thomas Beagle saw not power restored to police but a power grab.

“It is trying to give the police whatever they want at the price of the people of New Zealand,” he said.

“It’s expanding surveillance powers for police drastically by allowing them to use any form of recording [of] visual or audio data that they can capture from public or private places without any oversight.”

‘Time pressures’

“Time pressures” meant there had been little or no consultation with the public or Māori or consideration of Te Tiriti, said the disclosure statement, and a regulatory impact statement (RIS).

Police consulted Te Puni Kokiri, which raised these concerns.

For the same reason, impacts on children and teenagers had not been delved into – even though the bill arose in part from officers photographing and fingerprinting them.

“This proposal is not seeking to legislate any additional protections for the collection, use, and retention of personal information on children and young people,” said the RIS.

Existing protections combined with police seeking “to ensure operational policy and guidance is aligned with our legislative obligations” was enough, it added.

Police would deal with any disproportionate impacts, the disclosure statement said.

Children’s Commissioner Dr Claire Achmad said she had real concerns especially for mokopuna and rangatahi Māori, “given the previous breaches of their rights by the exercise of police power in photographing them”.

A police policy team talked to her office and invited more feedback “but due to very short time-frame provided by police, this was not possible”.

Children’s Commissioner Dr Claire Achmad. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

‘We’re striking the balance’

The Police Association’s Steve Watt said it was not over-reach.

“Look, it is important to consult a wider group when these types of bills come out. However, I’m sufficiently satisfied that there’s safeguards in place that minority groups won’t be targeted as a result,” Watt said.

“Ultimately … what this does is it gives our officers certainty around the information that they can collect and store as part of their day-to-day duties.

“We’re striking the balance between what was occurring in the past but allowing the freedom and ability for police to be able to perform their duties and functions appropriately.”

He echoed Mitchell in stating that internal and external controls were adequate – Mitchell noted the establishment of the Inspector-General of Police role sparked by the McSkimming scandal – and how any information gathered could be tested in the courts.

Police Association president Steve Watt. RNZ/ Phil Pennington

But criminal procedure expert professor Scott Optican of Auckland University said that was the problem.

“The definitions are vague, the reasonable standards are vague, and I think it’s going to invite continuing challenges in court,” said Optican.

“I don’t think it does the police any favours.”

Giving police general intelligence-gathering powers was a laudable goal, but should be done after wide consultation to arrive at “proper standards, clear guidance that adequately balances the need for criminal investigation against the protection of personal privacy, [and] that creates standards of reasonableness that we all understand and live with”, he said.

Part two

The bill is in two parts: The first is on intelligence gathering; the second would give police new powers to declare a wider range of public areas off limits earlier, before, say, boy racers kicked off or other public disorder, including the power to fine people $1000, get their details or if they refused, to fine or jail them for up to three months.

Part two would “deter antisocial driving behaviour”, the bill said.

But it also would let a constable temporarily close off a place if they believed on “reasonable grounds” that “public disorder exists or is imminent at or near the place”, or a danger to a member of the public.

It “expands the police’s existing temporary closure powers to include circumstances that are broader than vehicle-related offending, as well as expanding the geographical size of areas that may be subject to temporary closure”.

Beagle said that was unreasonable and open to abuse, for instance, to close off protests.

“This, combined with the police powers to move on homeless people, are reducing the right to be in public places,” he said.

The bill has now gone to select committee to be reported back to Parliament on 27 July.

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

Wellington Water seeks tender for fixing smelly Seaview wastewater treatment plant

Source: Radio New Zealand

Breaches of odour consents at Wellington Water’s Seaview wastewater treatment plant have upset locals for years. RNZ / Krystal Gibbens

The Hutt Valley’s wastewater treatment plant is upgrading blowers and pipes at risk of failing because they are old or too small.

Wellington Water is upgrading the smell-prone Seaview plant at the same time as it deals with the Moa Point plant crisis.

A tender due on Friday aimed to install new blowers and diffusers for the aeration system.

It said this was all part of upgrades to improve compliance and meet community expectations.

Breaches of odour consents have upset locals for years.

The tender said the equipment was “currently at risk of failure due to its age and insufficient capacity for future peak process load”.

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Association supports compulsory science for Year 11 students

Source: Radio New Zealand

AFP

The head of the science teachers association says Year 11 students could benefit from compulsory science lessons.

The government is considering making the subject mandatory, along with English and maths, when it abolishes NCEA level one in 2028.

Jayatheeswaran Vijayakumar, who is also head of science at Edgewater College, told RNZ compulsory Year 11 science could help more teens into careers in science and technology.

He said it would also ensure young people were better prepared to be science-literate citizens.

But he said there was a strong risk some students would be bored.

“If learners’ experiences are irrelevant or overtly academic, they might not necessarily engage with the learning and then we could have high levels of disengagement,” he said.

“If it’s poorly designed, it could actually reinforce some of the inequities that already exist in STEM pathways and this could really disenfranchise more learners from taking science.”

Vijayakumar said making science compulsory at Year 11 would require good teachers and resourcing.

Education Ministry figures indicated most Year 11 students already studied science.

They showed there were 69,108 Year 11 students in 2025 with 45,500 enrolled in science, 3426 in physics, 2404 in chemistry and 3507 in biology.

Vijayakumar said students had to actively opt out of the subject at his current school, but at his previous school it was optional.

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Private healthcare provider IntraCare hit by cyber breach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Unsplash / RNZ

Private healthcare provider IntraCare has been affected by a cyber breach, with its IT systems now offline and 28 patients’ surgeries deferred.

The company, which specialises in “image-guided precision medical diagnostics and interventions”, said it became aware of the breach on Friday, March 20, and immediately shut down its IT systems.

The company said it had deferred 28 patient procedures, but due to the complexity and nature of the incident, it would take some time to ascertain whether individual patient records had been affected.

It had also been unable to contact all patients directly as its database containing their contact details had been shut down.

Information about how many patients were on its book was commercially sensitive, a spokesperson said. But according to its website, the company treated more than 2000 patients each year.

It said independent Australasian cybersecurity experts, CyberCX, had been tasked with a forensic investigation, and the company was being supported by an all-of-government group of experts and IT professionals.

It was also working closely with Health NZ, the National Cyber Security Centre and the police, and was in regular contact with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner.

“Our investigation remains ongoing as we work at pace to determine the full extent of the incident. At this stage, we are not in a position to confirm what information, if any, may or may not have been impacted.”

With systems offline, there might be delays in appointments or scheduling, it said.

It was “taking all possible steps to prevent any misuse of information,” and “communicating openly and transparently as more information becomes available”.

“We sincerely apologise that this incident has occurred and for any concern it may cause.”

Health NZ chief information technology officer Darren Douglass said the health agency was aware of the incident.

He confirmed they had a Cyber Security Incident Management Team in contact with IntraCare “to offer support”.

It directed any further queries to Intracare.

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

Move to strip upbringing info from alcohol and drug court reports angers lawyers, counsellors

Source: Radio New Zealand

An Alcohol and Other Drugs Treatment Court sitting in 2022. RNZ Insight/Teresa Cowie

A move to strip family background information from alcohol and drug reports used in court has angered some defence lawyers and counsellors.

The Ministry of Justice said the change had been introduced to improve the consistency, quality and cost-effectiveness of the reports, and to improve justice services.

But it has come as a surprise to critics who were calling it a shock backwards step, and an “injustice” to judges and New Zealanders.

An alcohol and drug counsellor and a defence lawyer were concerned it undermined the Sentencing Act, made it harder to get people into the right rehabilitation, and increased the likelihood of reoffending, creating more victims and more cost down the line.

Alcohol and drug reports were used to help inform judges about whether an offender had addiction issues and whether they needed help.

The reports could also indicate the source of those problems and help inform sentencing and rehabilitation decisions.

When writing them, counsellors interviewed offenders about their history of alcohol and other drugs usage and their willingness to engage with rehabilitation services.

A study from 2016 showed in New Zealand more than 50 percent of crime was committed by people under the influence of drugs and alcohol. Ninety-one percent of prisoners had a lifetime diagnosis of a mental health or substance use disorder and 62 percent had this diagnosis in the past 12-months.

Why are the reports important?

Alcohol and drug counsellor, Roger Brooking, had been writing those reports for 20 years. He told RNZ nine times out of 10, when someone ended up with an alcohol and drug problem, it was because of things that happened to them when they were children.

He said a significant percentage of clients in the justice sector were born into a family where – for example – the parents were alcoholics or drug addicts, or the parents had mental health problems.

“I would include all that information in the report, explaining to the court or to the judge, these are the person’s background circumstances which led to their use of cannabis at the age of nine, alcohol at the age of 12, and methamphetamine at the age of 15, and that’s why they now appear in court.”

Co-chair for Te Matakahi, the Defence Lawyers Association New Zealand Elizabeth Hall told RNZ the reports were “incredibly useful” because they explained and unpicked why someone might have alcohol and drug issues.

“This idea that it’s just a choice that people make is so wrong,” she said, “alcohol and drug addiction issues are often a symptom of mental health struggles, they’re often a symptom of trauma.”

Defence Lawyers Association co-chair Elizabeth Hall. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

She said she had seen the “huge value and the economy of having these reports prepared”.

“Once the report’s prepared, it doesn’t just inform only the sentence in court. It also then gets handed on to community probation or to the Corrections Department. It gets filtered through that person’s entire dealing with a sentence, with the work on rehabilitation, and it’s a resource available in the future.”

As well, Section 8 of the Sentencing Act 2002 states the Court must take into account the offender’s personal, family, whanau, community, and cultural background in imposing a sentence or other means of dealing with the offender with a partly or wholly rehabilitative purpose.

The change

Earlier this month, the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) announced it had set up a new Approved Alcohol and Other Drug (AOD) Report Writers Service.

In a statement to RNZ, Lance Harrison, group manager (acting), commissioning and service improvement from MOJ explained it was doing so to improve the consistency, quality and cost-effectiveness of these reports, and to improve justice services.

The ministry was also aware of differences in report costs between courts and legal aid funded reports, and said it was “responsible for ensuring public funds are used efficiently and effectively”.

And the ministry acknowledged MOJ had received feedback from judges some reports were not up to standard, and had received feedback some report writers were not qualified for the work.

As part of the updated service, MOJ included guidance for a template that stated “the report should not include information on personal, family, whānau, community and cultural background relying on section 27 Sentencing Act 2002″.

Harrison said the new report template and guidelines were developed to ensure consistent quality and provide judges with key information.

He said the template focused specifically on alcohol and drug-related information about the participant and judges would continue to receive information from multiple sources to inform sentencing decisions. The Sentencing Act would not be underminded, Harrison added.

“Within their scope of practice, the approved report writer may include brief information about the offender’s mental health history as relevant.

“Approved report writers will continue to be able to exercise their professional discretion about the information they choose to include in the report, as they hold the relevant expertise,” Harrison stated.

Harrison also told RNZ there were other avenues to raise information about a participants’ personal, family, whānau, community or cultural background information relying on section 27 of the Sentencing Act 2002, for example “oral submissions or privately-funded reports”.

“The Ministry’s view is that AOD reports should not be used as a vehicle for presenting general information provided for under section 27 of the Sentencing Act 2002.”

Ultimately, MOJ said the change to the reports was part of ongoing efforts to improve justice services.

The criticism

But Brooking was “stunned” when he was alerted to the change, and “devastated” by it.

“It’s not something that judges would agree with, it’s not something that addiction specialists would agree with, because if you’re only putting in information about alcohol and drug use into these reports, they’re not going to be of much use at the end of the day.”

Alcohol and drug counsellor, Roger Brooking. Supplied

And he was not reassured writers would be able to “exercise discretion” because that information would not necessarily be available to those applying to be part of the service. He was also concerned about the reliance on Section 27 cultural reports to raise information about a defendants background.

He pointed out the government had scrapped funding for those reports. Now, Brooking said, a very small number of defendants a year might be able to fund a cultural report privately.

“They would have to have wealthy parents or have stashed away funds from drug dealing that the cops didn’t find.”

He said it was misguided to think Section 27 was still a “viable mechanism” to provide background information.

Brooking said he already struggled trying to get defendants into rehabilitation programmes because the waiting lists were so long, “now my job has been made even harder”.

Hall called it an “incredibly frustrating retrograde step”, and that it was also “grossly insulting to the expert practitioners” who wrote the reports.

“It’s like asking a doctor to give a diagnosis, but without explaining what the symptoms are, how the disease has come about in the first place, what’s been tried, what probably will work, what probably won’t work.”

She said it was shortsighted and would result in “shoving the problem further down the road”.

“The Ministry of Justice takes a very short term approach on what it considers to be financially efficient,” she said.

Hall said cost saving on a report that undermined the ability to provide rehabilitation to someone before the court would make it more likely that person re-offended, causing more victims and more cost.

She said there would “absolutely” be an economic outcome in terms of replication of work down the line.

“It’s an injustice to the judges who are being charged with the responsibility of sentencing New Zealand citizens, and it’s an injustice to the community at large, because if sentences aren’t effective in reducing a person’s risk of reoffending, then that plays out in community with further victims going forward.”

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Around the world for a jersey: The extreme travel of New Zealand’s athletes

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Football Ferns training session in Honiara. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

  • Sailors representing New Zealand stopped off in the most countries (8) of any team in the last 12 months.
  • New Zealand cricketers went to Zimbabwe for the first time in nine years and spent nearly three months in the subcontinent.
  • Footballers travel the longest distances to be with the national teams.
  • Basketballers play in locations other New Zealand sportspeople do not.

Each year, New Zealand athletes crisscross the world, some come close to circumnavigating the globe, and some stop off in places athletes in other codes never will.

In the coming months athletes will take detours, extend travel days and deal with cancellations as they do their jobs while travel is disrupted by the Iran war.

Costa Rica, Taiwan, Spain, Mexico, United States, Australia and Solomon Islands are the places where Football Fern Maya Hahn has put on her boots for the national team in the last 12 months.

The globe-trotting midfielder plays club football in Germany and after committing to New Zealand for senior football in 2025 she has been a regular in the squad.

Where the Football Ferns play in any given year comes down to a number of factors. Fifa and Oceania Football Confederation decide where the Football World Cup qualifying tournaments are held, for instance last month in Solomon Islands, and New Zealand Football negotiates with other national associations to get games during the set international windows each year.

Scoring the winner with her first senior international goal behind closed doors in a tiny Costa Rican stadium, the unplayable pitches in Taiwan, facing Venezuela at a popular Spanish training hub, a heavy defeat at a sold out Australian stadium and surviving the heat of the Solomon Islands are some of the tales Hahn can tell from the first year of her Football Ferns career.

“Through football, you’re able to go to all these crazy random countries and travel all over the world, places you might not even typically choose to go to,” Hahn said.

“Definitely, I need to plant a rainforest or something with my carbon footprint now.”

Maya Hahn on her debut tour in Costa Rica in 2025. www.photosport.nz

Hahn quickly found out that not everything goes to plan in international football and sports administration works differently in different parts of the world. Scheduled to make her debut at Costa Rica’s Alejandro Morera Soto Stadium, the host nation caught the Football Ferns off guard by switching venues to a smaller stadium a day before kick off and limiting supporters for game two.

Her next trip, to Taiwan, did not result in any competitive football being played after the pitches were deemed too dangerous to play on, meaning the games in April last year were cancelled.

“There were some issues with the field and what was promised and what they had said that would be available and it wasn’t really at the same standard,” Hahn said of the Taiwan tour.

“We were just training and using the time to connect as a team. So that was definitely a different experience and not one that we expected, especially when you travel that far.”

Games against Venezuela at Estadio Nuevo Mirador in southern Spain did provide an off-field highlight for Hahn and her team mates.

“There was a lot of like English teams there. [Manchester City and Norway striker] Erling Haaland was there at the same time as us as well.

“It was crazy. He just shows up in a Lamborghini and then he’s kicking a ball around with his girlfriend on the field while we’re in the gym.”

Manchester City striker Erling Haaland photosport

To get back to New Zealand for next month’s Fifa Women’s World Cup 2027 Oceania Qualifiers, Hahn has an even longer route than normal.

Unable to transit through Dubai, as she normally would, Hahn will now play an away game for her club side Viktoria Berlin in Munich on the Sunday, stay overnight then board a flight for Vancouver and then arrive in Auckland on Wednesday and play in the World Cup qualifiers semi-final in Hamilton four days later.

“I think our managers with the travel agency, they do a good job of making sure we’re well looked after and getting the best connections possible. But that’s definitely a lot of work, I think.”

All White Ben Old, who plays for AS Saint-Etienne in France, was among the players who experienced the current travel conditions in reverse, coming to Auckland for this week’s Fifa Series.

“France to Frankfurt, Frankfurt to Singapore, Singapore to Auckland, I landed at 1am [on Monday] and I had my game at 8pm on Saturday [France time] I had my flight in the morning at 6am so I didn’t sleep because it’s so hard to sleep after a game.”

All White Ben Old © Bildbyrån Photo Agency 2025 © Photosport Ltd 2025 www.photosport.nz

Bucket list locations or places not on the radar

The global nature of basketball means New Zealand’s national teams, from age-group to senior sides, play in locations that other New Zealand sportspeople do not.

Tall Blacks coach Judd Flavell and many of his roster had never been to the Micronesian island of Guam before playing a World Cup qualifier there this month.

The New Zealand team was only in the United States territory for a short period of time, arriving from the Philippines, playing the next day and then heading back to their respective bases around the world after a big win.

In the last 12 months the Tall Blacks have also been to Saudi Arabia, Australia and the Philippines.

Tall Black Jordan Ngatai, now based in Japan, has played for New Zealand since 2013.

He was one of the few current players who had been to Guam – “a mini Hawaii, with a similar type of vibe” – before, just one of a number of places basketball has taken the 33-year-old including Lebanon, Jordan, Korea and Hong Kong.

Sometimes the Tall Blacks were met by relaxed vibes other times security was amped up.

Police escorts to stadiums for Fiba tournaments are common and sometimes complex.

“The last World Cup we were at [in the Philippines] we had a police escort from our hotel to the arena but the arena was only a 10 minute walk but we had to catch the bus because it lead around to the player’s entrance a process that would of took a 10 minute walk, or not even that, was a 10 to 15 minute bus ride.”

Seeing much beyond the basketball court, training gym and hotel is not always possible

“Whenever we do get our little days off we make the most of it as, yes, we’re there for basketball, but as people, as human beings, we want to explore different cultures and explore the country that we’re in.

“I feel like we try and do, sometimes the most touristy things, but also some of the things that the locals kind of do as well.”

Turkey, for the coffee and markets, and Lebanon, for the fans, have been memorable for Ngatai.

Ngatai said a stadium of less than 7000 people in Beirut sounded more like 25000 fans.

“Just by the drums that were playing, the whistles, just the whole environment of them yelling.

“I remember it was our first time at Asia Cup and we were performing our haka and from start to finish, the boys could not hear me.

“I just said that my main message before we did it was just try and I’m going to be as loud as I can, just try and hear it and copy the person in front if you can’t hear.

“So we got through it, it was good, but that’s probably one of the loudest environments I’ve been in from that aspect of it.”

On Lebanon’s return trip to New Zealand the players wondered if the New Zealand fans were “ok” given how quiet they were in comparison to other basketball playing countries.

“People probably think that Tall Ferns and Tall Blacks just go play in the same countries but there’s two different ways of the women’s side and the men’s side of how they can qualify for the World Cup and so they get to probably see more of South America and the other side of Europe compared to what we get to see.”

Tall Ferns captain Tayla Dalton spoke to RNZ from a hotel in Puerto Rico before the World Cup qualifiers tipped off this month. The team had been in a training camp in Melbourne before travelling as a group to San Juan.

“It’s stunning, it’s so pretty we’re staying right on the beach so we’re so spoilt,” Dalton said of the Caribbean island.

“I’ve gone and played in Mongolia and Belarus places I would never have gone to without basketball but Puerto Rico is a good one let me tell you that.”

The Tall Ferns had also been in China in the middle of last year for the Asia Cup.

Sailing around the world

Black Foils sail past the Statue of Liberty in New York. Bob Martin for SailGP

SailGP gives competing boats a ‘home’ event.

This year the series has moved to align with the calendar year, but in the 2024/25 season the Black Foils were off-shore in Dubai, Australia, United States, Brazil, England, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Spain and Abu Dhabi.

In January this year New Zealand started the series in Perth had a crash, got the boat back together for their home race in Auckland before having another crash which has prevented them competing in the following events in Sydney or Brazil in April.

If the Black Foils are back in the water by the Bermuda Grand Prix in May, the team will then travel to United States, Canada, England, Germany, Spain, Switzerland, Dubai and Abu Dhabi all before the end of November.

Sailors can return home between some legs of the racing or just travel on with their boat to the next location if time is tight.

Across the sporting disciplines New Zealand teams took part in last year – the eight different locations took the sailors to the top of the charts for miles covered.

Months on the road

Sri Lanka’s Pawan Tathnayake is stumped by Black Caps wicketkeeper Tim Seifert during the T20 World Cup Super 8 match in Colombo. www.photosport.nz

Cricketers, from this part of the world, across their careers get to know India well.

Some members of the Black Caps spent nearly three months in the subcontinent this year with a white ball series against India followed straight after by the T20 World Cup hosted by India and Sri Lanka.

Coach Rob Walter, at the airport after the World Cup about to board his flight back to New Zealand for the series against South Africa, reflected on the time away from home.

“It was a pretty intense nine weeks to be fair in India and Sri Lanka.

“That’s the nature of the beast right now in international cricket and understanding we also have to take care of our players. Those guys left everything out there from a World Cup point of view.”

Eight World Cup players were rested for the home series against South Africa.

“You still need to be in a mental space to put your best foot forward for your country when you’re competing and [I’m] trying to ensure that that’s the case.”

The cricket calendar is decided years in advance by the International Cricket Council via the Future Tours Programme.

Politics can also play a part, particularly when India and Pakistan are involved.

In 2025 the Black Caps played in Pakistan, Dubai and for the first time in a decade played ODIs in Zimbabwe.

The Middle East hosted more cricket in recent years as a neutral venue but traditionally New Zealand was scheduled to play in other major cricket playing nations.

Next month, New Zealand will play T20s in Bangladesh, followed by Tests in England in June.

It is not unusual for cricketers to spend long periods way from home. New Zealand Cricket gave former Black Caps coach Gary Stead a break in 2020 after he had spent just four of the last 16 months at home.

Similar to the Black Caps, the White Ferns were in India and Sri Lanka late last year for a global tournament and will head to England for a World Cup warm up series before the T20 World Cup starts there in June.

Rugby and netball playing nations

New Zealand celebrate with the trophy after their victory in Manchester, England www.photosport.nz

New Zealand’s traditional codes have a regular rotation of places they go to play.

The Silver Ferns stick to Commonwealth countries.

In a disrupted end to 2025 the netballers played the Constellation Cup in Australia and then had a quick turnaround to the Northern Tour in England and Scotland.

Argentina, Australia, United States, Scotland, England and Wales was where the All Blacks went in 2025.

All places they had played before and, minus Argentina, will play in again this year.

The All Blacks perform the haka before their test with Wales in Cardiff, 2025. Chris Fairweather/Huw Evans Agency

This year they will also tour South Africa to play professional franchise sides as well as the Springboks.

The Black Ferns’ away games were in Australia in the Pacific Four Championship last season as well as the Rugby World Cup in England in August and September.

Next month the Black Ferns play in the Pacific Four Series in the United States and Australia.

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Why Israel and the US are in lockstep – and why that might be changing

Source: Radio New Zealand

US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House in Washington, DC on September 29, 2025. ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS

As the Iran war affects the global economy, Americans are asking if their ties with Israel look like the tail wagging the dog.

The United States was one of the first countries to recognise an independent Israel in 1948, and since then their ties have deepened.

But in the last two years, two conflicts – in Gaza and in Iran – into which America has poured billions in the form of military aid into Israel – have had a sizeable effect on the way young Americans in particular are seeing that relationship.

They’ve seen horrific images on social media of victims in Gaza, an attack on Iran that has been deemed illegal under international rule, and it’s causing huge economic hardship and disruption.

US President Donald Trump seems to be looking for an offramp from the Iran conflict but Israel differs on the next steps – they’re no longer quite as in lockstep as they used to be.

Today on The Detail we speak to two foreign affairs experts, Otago University’s Professor Robert Patman and geo-political analyst Dr Geoffrey Miller, about the special relationship between the two nations, and why it might be changing.

“The United States sees Israel as one of the few democracies in the Middle East region,” says Patman.

“It sees Israel as a very close strategic partner, and that closeness is symbolised by the fact that the United States provides about $4 billion in military assistance every year to Israel.

“Interestingly in terms of diplomatic goals they have drifted a bit, but with the advent of the second Trump administration the relationship has got even closer. And Mr Trump and Mr [Benjamin] Netanyahu seem to have an exceptionally close relationship.”

A crucial factor in explaining the closeness between the two countries is the Israeli penetration of domestic politics in the US.

“AIPAC – the American-Israeli support lobby – [is] a very powerful, influential group in United States politics. The Israeli lobby funds both major parties, Democrats and Republicans, and that’s been a factor going back to the 70s.

“Israel I think by the 70s realised it had to become a player in American domestic politics, and it has successfully done so.

“Although interestingly since the Gaza crisis, AIPAC has become, at least when it comes to funding Democratic candidates for office, much less visible because there is certainly a change of opinion within the United States amongst young people, particularly in progressive politics.

“Sometimes closeness to AIPAC is seen as a disadvantage, particularly with the ICJ [International Court of Justice] indicating that war crimes were committed in Israel’s reaction to the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.”

Patman believes it was a catalyst in the transformation of many young people’s views about Israel.

Another issue for Americans is their President’s inability to be clear about the reasons for invading Iran, including that it was to stop a threat – when last June after another skirmish in Iran, Trump said the threat had been obliterated.

Dr Geoffrey Miller Supplied

Religious basis

Miller says some of the connection is based on religion.

“The idea of Christian Zionsim, the belief that the return of Jews to the Holy Land is a Biblical pre-requisite for the second coming,” he says.

“The Republican Party [in the US] relies very heavily on Evangelical voters, and particularly from the 1970s onwards there was a real push from Evangelicals to demand greater support for Israel as part of Republican candidates’ platforms.

“It’s just been a truism that if you want to be successful in politics and you are on the Republican side you have to support Israel very, very, strongly. Even on the Democratic side that has largely become a truism.”

He says Israel on its part sees the United States as the only true friend they can rely on.

“European countries place far more conditions on support than the United States does. When it comes to weaponry, for example, many European countries wound down sales to Israel after October 7; limited supplies and so forth. The United States did not.”

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Jobseekers and advocates disturbed as companies screen applications with AI

Source: Radio New Zealand

Thomas Lefebvre / Unsplash

Advocates say the use of AI to screen job applications is dehumanising and creates bias.

The technology is used by companies like McDonalds and Woolworths to process applications en masse, but handing the reins to a computer has Unite Union’s assistant national secretary Gerard Hehir uneasy.

“AIs are basically black boxes, because they’re not just implementing the code, they are learning and developing their own logic and system, it basically becomes a black box” he said.

“No one actually knows, at the heart of it, an AI system, how it actually makes a decision.”

Though the technology had first been marketed as a way to eliminate bias, Hehir said it had done the opposite.

“Time and time again over recent years we have seen, and there’s been in-depth studies, that of course the processes themselves often reflect the biases of those that wrote them and designed them,” he said.

“Far from actually removing the bias, they reinforce or even amplify the bias.”

Hehir said AI worked best when it was screening applicants against clear requirements, such as having a driver’s licence or the correct visa.

But he feared some companies were using AI to make subjective decisions about an applicant’s personality.

“If it’s used to assess hard, measurable criteria, no, not a problem. But when it’s making evaluations like what’s your emotional response to a question or whether you sounded a bit stressed or depressed or something like that, that is a major problem, I think it is dehumanising.”

Feedback on teen’s personality

Kapiti mum Louise Hinton had been helping her 16-year-old son apply for jobs, but was shocked when the AI used by Woolworths gave unsolicited feedback about his personality.

The AI told her son he would struggle with distractions, and didn’t like to try new things, all based on a short text conversation.

“I’m worried about his confidence, he’s dyslexic and he does have the barriers and he’s also colourblind,” Hinton explained

“For him to have that feedback, it was kind of tearing strips off him. It’s like, well, why would you want to go through that again?”

Hinton said using AI instead of a real person felt cheap.

“Just lazy, soul-destroying,” she said.

“These internationally run companies, well, the staff on the ground have no say in anything. They’re not on the ground level, they’re not talking to real people, they’re not understanding the needs and wants, they’re just all behind computers, looking at data.”

Project Employ, an organisation that trained neurodiverse New Zealanders and helps them find work, had similar concerns.

Its employment programme lead, Emily Norton, said AI created a barrier for many of the people she works with.

“Anybody who is a little bit outside the box is really disadvantaged. I don’t know exactly what the AI is looking for, but I’m guessing that it’s things like extroversion and eye contact and smiling and being articulate, and all of that’s so hard for our grads,” she said.

AFP/ NurPhoto – Jonathan Raa

‘A slightly perverse situation’

Dr Andrew Lensen, a senior lecturer on AI at Victoria University, said the technology had radically changed the employment process on both sides.

He said jobseekers were using AI to generate their applications, while employers were using AI to read them.

“We sort of ended up in a slightly perverse situation where we have people who write lots of applications with AI and then we have employers who are using AI to screen applications,” he said.

“So you kind of end up with AI screening AI, which is a little bit dystopian, right?”

Lensen said being involved in hiring decisions himself made him understand the need for a human touch.

“More often than not, it’s not until you actually meet someone and talk to them that you get a good sense of, first of all, whether they’re a good fit for the job and whether the job’s a good fit for them, but also how much of what they said on their CV or application is actually true in practice,” he explained.

Woolworths told RNZ it regularly reviewed its tools for bias and offered non-AI alternatives to candidates who requested them.

“We use AI tools to help manage the initial stages of recruitment for some roles, but AI does not make hiring decisions; those are always made by our hiring leaders,” a spokesperson said.

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Easter egg prices jump again

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Easter egg prices have increased again as the price of chocolate pushes up costs.

A survey of pricing shows a 325g bag of Cadbury marshmallow eggs is now on special for $10 at Woolworths, down from $13.

Last year, it was $8, down from $12. The same pack was $9.90 at Woolworths in 2022, or $6.50 on special.

Cadbury eggs seem now usually include mini eggs rather than chocolate bars.

Last year, these were on special for $9.90 at Woolworths, down from $15, and a pineapple lumps egg was $12. This year, all of the Cadbury gift box eggs are $13, down from $16.50.

Shopping around might help – Pak’n Save had 325g bags of Cadbury marshmallow eggs for $7.99 on Thursday and a pineapple lumps gift box egg for $7.49. A Caramilk gift box egg was $9.79.

Westpac senior economist Satish Ranchhod said Easter eggs felt more expensive from a shopper’s perspective.

“Global cocoa prices have come down over the past year, but are still pretty high compared to history,” he said.

“We also tend to see prices for boxed – or fancier – chocolates spiking around this time of year. However, Easter eggs aren’t on sale all year round.

“I still think standard chocolate blocks are the best value – albeit not as much fun as the traditional egg shape. Easter eggs and boxed chocolates typically sell for much higher per unit prices than a standard chocolate block. And the chocolate blocks are often nicer chocolate depending on what you by.”

123RF

Otago University’s Murat Ungor said the price increases reflected earlier cocoa price rises.

“Cocoa commodity prices hit their highest levels in nearly 50 years in 2024. Although prices have since fallen by nearly 70 percent from that peak, retail prices have not adjusted as quickly.

“We can point to two economic mechanisms: forward contracting and supply chain lags, and incomplete cost pass-through.

“First, chocolate manufacturers often purchase cocoa months in advance through futures contracts. This means their effective input costs reflect historical prices rather than current spot prices, effectively decoupling retail prices from current market conditions.

“Second, even as cocoa prices have corrected sharply, manufacturers and retailers face no immediate commercial pressure to reduce shelf prices in step. There is a tendency for retail prices to rise quickly when input costs increase, but fall slowly when those costs decline.”

He said there were cost pressures on other ingredients, such as sugar, and the cost of labour had risen, too, which could push up prices.

Stats NZ said in its most recent food price update that a block of chocolate was $6.88 per 250g in February, up 20.3 percent annually.

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Next generation of Blues inspired by Joeli Vidiri’s brilliance

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Blues and Fijian Drua will in future play for the Joeli Vidiri Memorial Trophy whenever they meet in Super Rugby. PHOTOSPORT

There were few sights in the late 90s more thrilling than Joeli Vidiri in full flight during the early days of Super 12.

The blockbusting winger ignited excitement alongside a superstar Blues team.

Often overshadowed by his wing partner and close friend Jonah Lomu, Vidiri’s impact cannot be understated.

He formed a lethal combination with Lomu, helping propel the Blues to the most feared, exciting, and successful side in the first years of the competition.

But like Lomu, Vidiri battled kidney issues his whole career.

Vidiri against the Cats in 1999. Photosport

His condition forced him into retirement from rugby in 2001 after beginning dialysis treatment. Tragically, Vidiri passed away in California in 2022 at just 48-years-old.

As a tribute to the late legend, the Blues and Drua will play for the Joeli Vidiri Trophy in their round seven Super Rugby clash on Saturday night.

Blues coach Vern Cotter said the side was shown a video package of Vidiri this week, showcasing his sensational career with the franchise.

“It’s always emotional around that stuff. You get to share a little bit more for people that don’t know his life, how he saw things, and the challenges that he went through as a man. It’s just one of those things that it’s about humanity, life, it’s pretty cool.”

Cotter said the Fijian flyer was a generational talent.

“He could play today. He was a a great, great rugby player, the skillset he’s got.”

Vidiri playing for the All Blacks in 1998. Photosport

Vidiri debuted for Counties Manukau in 1994 and the Blues in their inaugural Super Rugby season in 1996.

He scored 43 tries in 61 appearances for the Blues and was a part of a backline that included Lomu, Eroni Clarke and Carlos Spencer.

The sight of a rampaging Vidiri sparked awe in some of the younger players not born when he was at the peak of his powers.

“When we saw the highlights of what he was doing, I think it inspired the players that’ll go out for us this weekend.”

Joeli Vidiri playing for Fiji in 1994. ALAN_LEE

Making his All Blacks debut off the bench in 1998, Vidiri scored with one of his first touches at Eden Park against England.

As part of the inaugural presentation, the Vidiri family will play a central role in match-day proceedings, with a special on-field moment planned to award the trophy.

Cotter said that much like Vidiri, the Drua can be incredibly dangerous if given an inch.

“Just Fiji and rugby. It can be hot and cold during the game. When it’s on, you’ve got to shut them down. You can’t give them any air, otherwise the fire will spread. So it’s just about being structured and well organised.”

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Super Rugby preview: Vidiri legacy honoured, Carter to centre for Chiefs

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Blues and Fijian Drua will play for the inaugural Joeli Vidiri Trophy this weekend. Photosport

The final piece of the All Black’s puzzle now awaits.

With Dave Rennie’s coaching squad assembled, the new crew will now turn their attention to the players they will task with resurrecting the national side.

Their next audition comes in round seven of Super Rugby Pacific, where the men from the capital still lead the pack. The Hurricanes sit in top spot with a game in hand and will host a resurgent Reds side fresh off an upset in Fiji.

All Black flyer Leroy Carter will start at centre for the Chiefs as they travel to Perth to take on a flailing Force outfit.

The late, great Joeli Vidiri’s legacy will be celebrated as the Blues and Fijian Drua battle for his namesake trophy at the ground where he electrified crowds in the late 90’s and early 2000’s.

Though buoyed by his All Blacks promotion, Tana Umaga has the unenviable task of dragging Moana off the bottom of the ladder as they host the Highlanders in Albany.

The defending champion Crusaders have the bye.

Selection notes

Highlanders halfback Nic Shearer has been given the No.9 jersey for his first match in Super Rugby, with Folau Fakatava dropping out of the 23 altogether.

Giant lock Fiti Sa will bring his 2.03 metre frame off the pine for a Chiefs debut while Damian McKenzie has been moved to fullback with Josh Jacomb taking the reins at 10.

Paula Latu will get his first Super Rugby cap off the bench for Moana, as will loose forward Jed Melvin for the Blues. Highlanders centre Jonah Lowe plays his 50th Super Rugby match.

Injury ward

The Chiefs are without All Blacks Tupou Vaa’i and Wallace Sititi with midfielders Daniel Rona and Lalakai Foketi also sidelined.

Julian Savea’s return for Moana Pasifika lasted just five minutes last weekend before dislocating his shoulder, while Tom Savage sits the week out with a head knock.

For the Highlanders, Mitch Dunshea’s calf is still at least two weeks from full fitness with Cam Millar still out with concussion.

The Blues have three players out with concussion; Laghlan McWhannell, Sam Nock, and Zarn Sullivan, with All Blacks Dalton Papali’i, Stephen Perofeta and Hoskins Sotutu all joining the side’s growing injury list.

Callum Harkin is also missing this week for the Hurricanes after failing an HIA at the weekend.

Key stats

  • The Hurricanes have won the last 10 on the trot against the Reds.
  • Brumbies flanker Charlie Cale leads the try scorers with eight.
  • Moana Pasifika are on a five-game losing streak.
  • Force lock Jeremy Williams leads the pack for lineout steals with seven.
  • Quinn Tupaea at the Chiefs tops the turnover charts with eight.
  • The Blues have never lost to the Fijian Drua.

Moana Pasifika vs Highlanders

Kick-off: 7:05pm Friday 27 March

North Harbour Stadium, Auckland

Live blog updates on RNZ

Moana Pasifika:

1. Abraham Pole 2. Millennium Sanerivi 3. Feleti Sae-Ta’ufo’ou 4. Veikoso Poloniati 5. Allan Craig 6. Miracle Faiilagi (c) 7. Niko Jones 8. Dominic Ropeti 9. Joel Lam 10. Jackson Garden-Bachop 11. Glen Vaihu 12. Lalomilo Lalomilo 13. Tevita Latu 14. Solomon Alaimalo 15. William Havili.

Bench: 16. Samiuela Moli 17. Malakai Hala-Ngatai 18. Paula Latu (*debut) 19. Alefosio Aho 20. Ola Tauelangi 21. Siaosi Nginingini 22. Patrick Pellegrini 23. Tevita Ofa.

“I have great belief about what we’re trying to do here and the movement behind Moana Pasifika, I still do, and will always have a place in my heart with this club and this movement,” – Coach Fa’alogo Tana Umaga.

Highlanders:

Ethan de Groot 2. Jack Taylor 3. Angus Ta’avao 4. Oliver Haig 5. Tomas Lavanini 6. Te Kamaka Howden 7. Veveni Lasaqa 8. Hugh Renton (cc) 9. Nic Shearer (Super Rugby debut) 10. Reesjan Pasitoa 11. Jona Nareki 12. Tanielu Tele’a 13. Jonah Lowe 14. Caleb Tangitau 15. Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens.

Bench: 16. Henry Bell 17. Daniel Lienert-Brown 18. Rohan Wingham 19. Will Stodart 20. Sean Withy 21. Adam Lennox 22. Andrew Knewstubb 23. Timoci Tavatavanawai (cc).

“They are a big, physical side that play a direct style of game, and we will need to meet that challenge. In this competition every week is a tough game,” – Highlanders coach Jamie Joseph.

Hurricanes vs Reds

Kick-off: 4:35pm Saturday 28 March

Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington

Live blog updates on RNZ

Hurricanes:

1. Xavier Numia 2. Asafo Aumua 3. Tyrel Lomax 4. Caleb Delany 5. Warner Dearns 6. Devan Flanders 7. Du’Plessis Kirifi (cc) 8. Peter Lakai 9. Cam Roigard 10. Ruben Love 11. Fehi Fineanganofo 12. Jordie Barrett (cc) 13. Billy Proctor 14. Bailyn Sullivan 15. Josh Moorby.

Bench: 16. Vernon Bason 17. Siale Lauaki 18. Pasilio Tosi 19. Isaia Walker-Leawere 20. Brayden Iose 21. Ereatara Enari 22. Lucas Cashmore 23. Jone Rova.

“We’re really looking forward to playing a top-quality side in the Reds, who have won four games on the bounce,” – Hurricanes coach Clark Laidlaw.

Blues vs Fijian Drua

Kick-off: 7:05pm Saturday 28 March

Eden Park, Auckland

Live blog updates on RNZ

Blues:

1. Ofa Tu’ungafasi 2. Bradley Slater 3. Marcel Renata 4. Josh Beehre 5. Sam Darry (c) 6. Torian Barnes 7. Anton Segner 8. Malachi Wrampling 9. Taufa Funaki 10. Beauden Barrett 11. Caleb Clarke 12. Pita Ahki 13. AJ Lam 14. Cole Forbes 15. Payton Spencer.

Bench: 16. James Mullan 17. Mason Tupaea 18. Sam Matenga 19. Che Clark 20. Jed Melvin (debut) 21. Finlay Christie 22. Xavi Taele 23. Codemeru Vai.

“The Drua are a dangerous side when you give them space. They play with a lot of flair and confidence, so for us it’s about being accurate, controlling the tempo and making good decisions under pressure,” – Blues coach Vern Cotter.

Western Force vs Chiefs

Kick-off: 9:35pm Saturday 28 March

HBF Park, Perth

Live blog updates on RNZ

Chiefs:

1. Jared Proffit 2. Brodie McAlister 3. George Dyer 4. Josh Lord 5. Naitoa Ah Kuoi 6. Samipeni Finau 7. Luke Jacobson (c) 8. Simon Parker 9. Xavier Roe 10. Josh Jacomb 11. Etene Nanai-Seturo 12. Quinn Tupaea (vc) 13. Leroy Carter 14. Emoni Narawa 15. Damian McKenzie.

Bench: 16. Samisoni Taukei’aho 17. Ollie Norris 18. Sione Ahio 19. Fiti Sa 20. Kaylum Boshier 21. Cortez Ratima 22. Kyle Brown 23. Kyren Taumoefolau.

“We don’t take the Force lightly, especially on their home patch and after the loss to the Brumbies last week it’s important we get the little things right on Saturday,” – Chiefs coach Jonno Gibbs.

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‘No response’: Jevon McSkimming yet to pay back taxpayer funded hotel stays during affair

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Disgraced former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming has not replied to a request to pay back up to 10 taxpayer-funded stays at hotels during his affair, three weeks on.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers wrote to McSkimming on 4 March asking him to pay back the funds.

The request came after the Independent Police Conduct Authority released a summary of its investigation into McSkimming’s decision to invite a woman he was having an affair with – Ms Z – to stay with him in hotel accommodation paid for by police, on numerous occasions, primarily in 2016.

On Wednesday, Chambers confirmed to RNZ that “as yet there has been no response to my request”.

“I continue to hope Mr McSkimming will do the right thing.”

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

In Chambers’ letter, obtained by RNZ under the Official Information Act, he referred to the IPCA’s report in relation to his “overnight stays in Wellington hotels with Ms Z”.

“You have confirmed that 8-10 times you stayed with Ms Z in Wellington hotels at the expense of police, but ultimately the taxpayer. The IPCA made an adverse finding in this respect.

“It is appropriate for you to reimburse police for these 8-10 hotel stays, and you are asked to reimburse police as soon as possible. You have knowledge of the hotels in which you stayed and the approximate cost at the time.”

Chambers said he welcomed McSkimming’s response and “swift reimbursement”.

The hotel stays

The IPCA had not been able to review McSkimming’s credit card expenditure, and relied on the evidence of the complainant, McSkimming, his former executive assistant and one of his supervisors at the time.

“In 2016 and 2017, Mr McSkimming’s workplace was at Police National Headquarters in Wellington. He lived about 60-70kms away.”

McSkimming and his executive assistant at the time told the IPCA that he was regularly required to attend functions or late meetings in Wellington or catch early morning flights.

“On those occasions, his executive assistant would book accommodation at a Wellington hotel, paid for by police. The rationale for these bookings was explained to us as being to avoid a long drive home after a work event, or where he was required to attend a social function to ensure he was not having a drink and then driving.”

McSkimming told the IPCA he thought Ms Z stayed with him eight to 10 times.

“This is corroborated by Ms Z. Mr McSkimming breached policy by not informing his senior manager approving the travel that she would be staying with him. If he had done so, we consider it highly likely that approval would have been declined.

“In any case, whether or not he informed his manager, he breached the Police Code of Conduct by staying in hotels at Police expense and inviting the woman with whom he was having a sexual relationship to join him. If he had paid for the hotels himself, that would have been a different matter. However, the fact that the hotels were paid for by police gives rise to the perception that he was using taxpayer money to further a clandestine affair, thus bringing police into disrepute.”

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Civil Defence teams to assess damage caused by latest storm

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Kāeo township NZTA/Supplied

Civil Defence teams are heading out in Northland to assess how much damage the latest storm has caused.

A red heavy rain warning expired at 4am Friday and the Far North and Whangārei remain under a state of emergency for another six days.

Kaitaia is cut off and some people in remote parts of Kaipara, Hokianga, Whangaroa and the southeastern Bay of Islands have evacuated because of rising waters.

Around 17 marae welfare centres were set up for people in remote communities.

Road closures include two sections of State Highway 1 at Kaitaia, and sections at Whakapara, Mangamuka and Rangiahua. State Highway 10 is closed at Kaeo, State Highway 12 at Waimamaku, State Highway 15 at Parakao, Pakotai and Kaikohe. Two dozen local roads are closed in the Far North and nine in Whangārei due to slips and flooding. People are urged to avoid unnecessary travel and are advised not to drive through floodwaters.

MetService said Kaitaia had 193 millimetres of rain, more than double the town’s average monthly rainfall for March. Kerikeri received more than a month and a half’s worth of rain and Auckland more than a month’s worth.

Toto Nicholson says the local Pak’nSave, McDonalds, car wash and Bells Produce store in Kaitaia are inundated with water from the Awanui River which runs behind the area. Supplied / Toto Nicholson

River levels across Northland exceeded their flooding risk, with many spilling onto roads. Data from the Northland Regional Council showed that at least nine rivers went over their warning level for potential flooding.

A Northland woman said the flooding was the worst she had seen in years. Stella Matthews had to walk through floodwaters to reach her home near Kiripaka. She said sheds, vehicles and paddocks on her property were inundated by waist-high floodwaters.

Far North mayor Moko Tepania said the storm was worse than the flooding in January, because it had been more widespread. He hoped to get a better idea of how communities have fared on Friday.

He said in January, floodwaters swept mud through homes on Northland’s east coast, damaged roads and triggered landslides and the latest storm had presented more challenges.

“We’ll be requesting funding from central government just to help our people out. Just from that January event alone, we have had over $240,000 in applications for relief funding for our whanau. We know that this is more widespread and we’re going to have whanau that need that and we’ll have to start helping once this weather clears.”

Assessment teams would be out on Friday morning to gauge the extent of the damage and Tepania said a mayoral relief fund would be set up on Monday.

State Highway 1 is closed at the slip-prone Mangamuka Gorge in the Far North as a safety precaution. Supplied/NZTA

Storm moves towards Coromandel, Bay of Plenty

Fire and Emergency said extra resources were on the ground in Coromandel and the Bay of Plenty, as storms move on from the North.

Director of operations Brendan Nally said crews would stay ready to respond as the risk moved down into the Coromandel and Western Bay of Plenty.

“We’ve got extra resources that we have pre-positioned and sent in to support the local staff,” he said.

“Those specialist resources have been busy, so we were well ready for this event.”

Nally said they were keeping an eye on another turn in the weather expected toward Monday.

Meanwhile, he was urging locals to stay safe and warned motorists against driving in flood waters.

“Our specialist water teams and our [urban search and rescue] teams have been pulling cars out of flooded areas, or getting people from areas that have been surrounded and marooned from floods,” he said.

In one case, three people had been rescued from a car trapped in flood water on Thursday, Nally said.

“It’s one of those things that we see in floods, people, generally, underestimating how difficult it is to cross flooded areas.”

Nally said the safest thing was not to drive on flooded roads.

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These Waikato hydro lakes are supposed to be safe to swim in, but a toxic algae problem is getting worse

Source: Radio New Zealand

In a finger-like branch of Lake Ohakuri the water is as green as the grassy paddocks surrounding it.

It’s thick with algae. The microscopic plant-like organisms lack leaves or roots, but possess a prodigious ability to feast on nutrients and with the help of sunlight, multiply exponentially, turning clear water into a murky, and sometimes toxic, spinach soup.

As unappealing as the water looks, today is a “good” day. On bad days, the algae clump together like old friends embracing, creating snot-like mats of slime. On really bad days, there’s a stench of rot and death.

Despite a legislated vision for the water to be safe to swim in and talks starting more than a decade ago to reduce nutrients in the river, summer algal blooms plague Lake Ohakuri and other hydro lakes along the Waikato River.

Swimming in this water is dicing with illness.

Peter Withers co-owns a five acre block on the Whirinaki Arm of the lake. It was intended to be a summer bolthole, but the water conditions here are frequently poor.

A pontoon moored off the shore bobs hopefully in the green water. It was built to support summers of fun, but there are days when the pontoon stays dry. Withers swims here sometimes, but not on the days when it’s radioactive green, or when the snot clumps have formed.

Yes, sometimes the water gives him a sore throat, he says, but he likes to think he judges the conditions well enough to not get seriously ill. He’s careful about not putting his head under.

He’s far more cautious when it comes to his children; they are often banned from entering the river completely. Algae can produce toxins which attack the liver.

Peter Withers RNZ / Farah Hancock

Leanne Archer lives further around the lake. She describes the water as often neon-green, and sometimes smelling of rot. She would like to spend summer enjoying the lake but the potentially toxic algal blooms means she keeps her distance. Her dog Misty loves to swim, but has to be kept inside. The few times she escaped and played in the water she became sick, “vomiting and vomiting,” says Archer.

Katrin Halbert is another Lake Ohakuri local with a dog. On its worst days she says the Whirinaki Arm of the lake is fluorescent green. “You know, The Hulk, The Incredible Hulk, when it turns green, it’s like that.” Last year one of her dogs drank from the lake and within half an hour started vomiting. The days of walking her dogs in the reserve are over, she says.

Leanne Archer and Katrin Halbert RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Toxic algae can be fatal for dogs. Misty became sick after brief exposure to the water. Supplied

For dogs, cyanobacteria can be lethal even when the toxins are at a level below what would trigger a public health warning.

There’s a bevy of organisations playing a part in the Waikato River.

Mercury Energy runs the hydro electric power plants that slow the river’s flow. The Waikato Regional Council grants resource consents and sets the rules for land and nutrient use in the catchment. The Waikato River Authority is responsible for the legislated vision of a river that is safe to swim in. Joining them are property owners dotted along the river including farms, forests and industry.

All the big players are aware of the algal blooms, but each says it’s following the rules. An algal bloom working group they belong to has met for the past three years, but frustrated locals aren’t seeing any concrete action. They have taken to documenting lake conditions on a public Facebook page. It’s littered with images of sunny days and lurid green water.

The toxic problem

Before the Waikato River was dammed, a drop of water could travel its 425 kilometre length in seven days. Today that same drop, beginning in the clear waters of Lake Taupō, is slowed by a chain of hydro lakes. By the time it reaches Port Waikato it is murky brown, and the journey has stretched into weeks.

The eight hydro lakes along the river act as batteries for Mercury Energy, holding water to generate power and producing around 10 percent of New Zealand’s electricity.

There are eight dams along the Waikato River RNZ

Some locals think the dams and how water levels are managed contribute to conditions conducive to algal blooms. Others point to weed spraying and say the nutrients released as the weeds in the lake die, turbo charge algae growth.

Some blame a continual flow of nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, seeping in from the farms, horticulture and industry in the area. Climate change gets a mention too, warm weather and tempestuous summer storms can sweep even more nutrients from land into the river system, providing a banquet for algae growth.

Algae aren’t necessarily bad; they’re an important part of freshwater ecosystems, providing food for the invertebrates that fish feed on. But sunshine, warm temperatures and slow water flow, combined with an abundant supply of nutrients can lead to population booms known as blooms.

The boom turns to a bust when conditions change. This might be a drop in temperature or when the algae have consumed all the nutrients in the water. As the algae decomposes its cells collapse and cyanotoxins can be released.

Not all types of algae produce toxins, but the ones that do can make the water poisonous, triggering asthma and hayfever, skin rashes, stomach upsets, tingling around the mouth, headaches, breathing difficulties and visual problems.

Worryingly, data from the Waikato Regional Council shows the proportion of cyanobacteria (the type of algae that is toxic) in the hydro lakes it monitors is slowly increasing during summer months and becoming the predominant algae.

It’s the amount of cyanobacteria present which can trigger a public health alert.

Upper Waikato Algal Blooms Working Group

At Lake Arapuni, one of the last hydro lakes on the river, Ryan Fynn keeps his dog in his ute when he meets us. It’s never allowed near the water when it looks green.

His first memory of the lake was as a four-year-old, standing on the front of his uncle’s water skis. Back then they piped the water from the lake straight to their house as drinking water. Now, it’s a different story.

Some days, when the wind blows in the right direction it drags a scent from the lake, which he describes as “sewagey”, into his windows. This summer the algae was “like a big, thick mat” his boat struggled to get through.

Ryan Fynn RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

He’s battled to get satisfactory answers from the Waikato Regional Council. “They just fob everyone off.”

Fynn thinks part of the problem stems from how long water is held in the lakes by Mercury Energy, the company which runs the hydro dams. The longer it’s held, the longer the algae has a chance to grow, he suggests.

When RNZ meets Fynn on 3 February, the water looks clear, but a sign warns there are high levels of cyanobacteria.

It’s the same sign that was seen by RNZ on a sunny Sunday in January. That day, the water also looked clear and children splashed happily next to the sign.

Keeping people safe

Data doesn’t lie, but the data Waikato Regional Council uses to assess whether the water is poisonous doesn’t necessarily give a full picture of what’s going on day-to-day.

Toxic conditions could occur more often than what has been recorded without triggering public health warnings and sometimes health warnings remain in place when water conditions have improved.

Only four lakes (Ohakuri, Maraetai, Karāpiro and more recently Arapuni) are tested for cyanobacteria once a month between November and April. Tests are done on a Monday and results come back Wednesday. If toxin levels exceed safe recreational thresholds signs are put up, and a public health warning is given. Testing is supposed to increase to at least every seven days.

Weekly sampling from December to March is done at the same four lakes, but this measures a pigment only found in cyanobacteria, not the toxin itself. The council is yet to work out how to use this result to estimate whether toxin levels breach guidelines.

Separate state of the environment monitoring is done at six points along the river. These monthly samples don’t test for cyanobacteria, but do test for nutrient levels such as nitrogen and phosphorus, which are nutrients algae feed on.

Rob Dexter is part of Let’s Be Clear, a charity aiming to help improve water quality. He has reservations about what can be learnt from snapshots in time like this.

The way he describes it, monthly cyanobacteria testing is like testing a person with diabetes once a month and saying those readings are indicative of their daily blood sugar levels.

When it comes to human health, he’s doubtful the current system of infrequent testing with a 48 hour turnaround time for results – then another lag before warning signs are erected – is adequate. Blooms may have ceased before the signs go up, or have moved further down river.

He wants continuous monitoring, with real-time data, including webcam images, shared openly.

While technology for continuously monitoring cyanobacteria doesn’t exist in a cost-effective way, he argues “surrogates” can be used. Combined with weather and flow, the likelihood of a bloom could be modelled. When cloud cover isn’t an issue satellite images can also show blooms from space, which he says could be used in conjunction with webcam images.

Dexter has installed real time monitoring systems on private properties along the river at his own cost. They have shown spikes of nitrogen entering the water after major storms, such as Cyclone Gabrielle. An algal bloom occurred in the weeks after the storm.

He believes resource consents should be evaluated against Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato, the legislated vision and strategy for the Waikato River, established as part of a Treaty settlement. The vision calls for water that is safe to swim in and take food from along its entire length.

“I believe almost every decision on the Waikato River is being made based on inadequate data sets that weren’t designed for the intent that it’s been used for.”

A sign warning to check for toxic algae at Lake Ohakuri. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Institutions are following the rules, but are the rules fit for purpose?

Mercury Energy, the Waikato Regional Council and the Waikato River Authority have defined roles and rules, and while organisations say they are meeting them, this is not stopping the ongoing appearance of blooms.

Emily Collis is the operations lead at Mercury Energy. The company is aware of the algal blooms that plague the hydro lakes but she doesn’t accept that the power company is part of the problem.

“At this stage, there’s no evidence to suggest that the way we’re managing the river is contributing.”

The company repeatedly told RNZ it operates within the rules of the resource consents that dictate the amount of flow and the lake levels. Its contractual agreement to supply electricity also plays a part in the way it manages the lakes.

Collis has heard the suggestions that flushing the lakes will clear blooms, but doesn’t feel that would solve the problem.

“We haven’t done any particular studies that we would then go and share or publish or anything like that. But because we are active on the river every day, we do have observations that tend us to believe that even if we were in high flow conditions, a lot of the algae blooms will not move simply because of their location in those slower moving areas,” she says.

The spraying of diquat to kill weeds that can clog the dam turbines is a sore point for locals, who say they notice blooms after spraying.

Mercury says it has used diquat for 17 years and algal blooms have not always occurred after its use.

Research completed by NIWA, (now Earth Sciences New Zealand) showed weeds release a large amount of nutrients when they die. It suggested more research was needed to understand the effects in a lake system. When asked if Mercury would fund research into this Collis indicated the company was “open to opportunities”.

Is she at all concerned the company will lose social license in the communities it operates in? Mercury has a hydro stakeholder manager who is often in the community helping people understand Mercury’s role in the river, she says. The company also tries to support communities with funds and sponsorships of the Waikato River Trail.

Mercury points to Waikato Regional Council as the agency responsible for the management of the river’s water quality.

The council’s science manager Mike Scarsbrook says the organisation is worried about the changes seen in the river. He says the blooms are becoming more frequent and more severe.

“It’s not a good space for us to be in. We are working towards improving the health and wellbeing of the river, but we’re certainly seeing worrying signs.”

Climate change plays a role, but the blooms also need nutrients to grow, he says. This can come from nitrogen and phosphate washing in from farms, or other enterprises dotted along the river.

The council is proposing significant changes to how the land surrounding the river is used, which include measures to reduce the nutrients entering the water. Proposed plan change 1 is the council’s answer to meeting Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato’s legislated vision of water that is safe for swimming and food gathering.

The plan change was first notified in 2016 and applies to approximately 10,000 properties and covers more than a million hectares within the Waikato and Waipā river catchments. Over a decade on, it’s still not enacted. Currently it sits with the Environment Court, caught up in a slew of appeals, although interim decisions made by the court look promising for the plan’s future.

If it does come into effect, change won’t happen overnight. Improvement has been given an 80-year runway, meaning the reduction in nutrient levels in the river isn’t expected to be reached until 2096.

A drone shot from above Lake Ohakuri showing algal blooms on the water. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Not everybody thinks the reductions will have an effect. Former Fish and Game water scientist Adam Canning previously told RNZ the nutrient reduction targets in the plan were watered down to a level he described as maintaining the “status quo”.

“It’s pathetic. And we don’t have to achieve it for 80 years. 2096. I’ll be dead.”

Canning doesn’t believe the reductions will ensure the water is safe for swimming and food gathering, achieving the legislated vision of Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato.

Chief executive of the Waikato River Authority Antoine Coffin is the man in charge of Te Ture Whaimana o Te Awa o Waikato. The Authority has iwi and Crown representatives on its board and distributes funding for restoration projects. It sets the vision for the health of the Waikato River.

“We’ve been set up as a voice for the river,” says Coffin.

But having a voice isn’t the same as having teeth. The authority’s vision sits above other legislation, such as the Resource Management Act, but the authority doesn’t have enforcement powers. It can’t compel Mercury Energy to increase water flow to see if that affects blooms, demand the council’s new plan be put in place before the Environment Court process runs its course, or tell farmers to cut back on fertiliser.

Asked whether the Waikato River Authority was taking a leadership role on algal blooms, Coffin does not directly answer, but says long-term solutions, such as the council’s new plan are important. He doesn’t think the plan will fix everything, “but it’s a good start”.

Continuing algal blooms, “would be an antithesis to the vision and a strategy for the river,” he says.

He’s part of the Upper Waikato Algal Blooms Working Group. Other members include Waikato Regional Council, Raukawa, Ngāti Tahu – Ngāti Whaoa Rūnanga Trust, Te Arawa River Iwi Trust, Taupō District Council, Let’s Be Clear Trust, Mercury Energy, Tūwharetoa Māori Trust Board and Dairy NZ.

The group met twice in 2024 and once in 2025 and 2026. Its aim is to reach an understanding of the drivers of the algal blooms and, according to a memo from a September 2025 meeting, “to advance a Response Plan for managing the impacts of harmful algal blooms in the Upper Waikato – within the context of existing interventions to manage water quality, such as the Waikato Regional Council Proposed Plan Change 1, and Te Ture Whaimana o awa o Waikato.”

One of the things the group is working on is communication. “Together, we are also working to improve public understanding of risks, in particular, what specific language will help people to heed those risks – we understand that many people still use the water even when health warnings are in place,” a council statement said.

Coffin is confident the working group is more than a box-ticking exercise but says getting alignment between the various groups, each with their own mandate, is a “conundrum”.

Community takes control

For locals, the stance of the big players, ranging from denying any impact, to having their hands tied by rules, offers little comfort. They’re yet to see any improvement as a result of the working group.

Hope Woodward is a councillor for the Mangakino-Pouakani ward of the Taupō District Council.

“Heartbreaking,” is a term she uses repeatedly about the water condition, and she’s agitating for action.

She’s attended working group meetings and suggested a survey be conducted to understand how the water quality affects the community. The Waikato Regional Council agreed to her idea, she says, but when she asked when it would be done the council’s response was, “in the next fiscal year, funding dependent”.

She set up a survey herself using an online tool that cost $50. Eighty-one of the almost 100 people who completed it said poor water quality stopped activities. At least 41 percent of those who responded to the survey said they or their pets had been sick after being in contact with the water.

Almost half of the comments touched on perceived inaction and fragmented responsibility.

“There seems to be nothing happening, we complained two years ago and nothing changed,” one respondent wrote.

“Somebody needs to take accountability and fix it,” another commented.

Hope Woodward Supplied / Hope Woodward

Woodward says the issue affects public health, livelihoods, tourism, property values and wellbeing.

“I think the responsible entities just need to stop having all these discussions that have no resolutions whatsoever. It just seems that nobody wants to take any accountability for what’s gone on.”

She wants farming consents to be checked, and she’s keen for more research to be done into the effect of Mercury spraying weeds in the lakes. She can’t identify a single thing being done now that will stop another summer of blooms.

“There’s a lot of data gathering and discussion happening, which is important, however we now need to see that translate into real, on the ground action.”

The working group’s eventual response plan will only satisfy the community if it’s backed by accountability and delivery, she says.

Karl Hitchcock RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

At Lake Maraetai in Mangakino, Karl Hitchcock says the blooms have gotten worse since he bought his property.

“We’ve got pictures of the lake. It’s just glowing in the dark. It looks radioactive.”

It makes wakeboarding and swimming unsafe and there’s a flow-on effect for the community. Businesses which rely on the weekend recreational visitors are struggling, people just don’t bother coming anymore. There’s only one upside, he jokes. “It’s good for the swimming pool, because all the locals will swim in the swimming pool, right?”

He’s been one of the key voices on the community Facebook page encouraging people to send in photos of water conditions and looking for opportunities to improve the situation.

Hitchcock has looked into whether a fund administered by the Waikato Regional Council might be applied to pay for webcams at the lakes, but was told it probably wasn’t the right fit for that particular fund. He had hoped giving the ability for people to see whether the water was pea soup green, or covered in scum might prevent wasted trips to the lake.

The council told RNZ webcams are one of the options the working group is considering, along with drone footage, community reporting via photo and satellite imagery.

He’s now planning to apply for funding from Mercury Energy to try an ultrasonic treatment for the lakes where blooms occur. This would consist of a solar-powered floating unit that emits sound waves that kill algae.

Without some concrete action he thinks next summer, “will only be worse”.

The river is an asset to farmers, recreational users and the country’s power generation capability. “Obviously, we’re generating a lot of power from the dam, and everybody wants cleaner, cheaper power, but we all just need to get together and fix it.”

He’s another fan of more data being gathered to help drive decisions about how to improve the water quality.

“When the water comes out of the Taupō gates, it’s crystal, it’s pristine, it’s so good up there. But then when it comes down here, it’s green, and it doesn’t need to be.”

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

Live weather: More rain, gales for upper North Island, parts of South

Source: Radio New Zealand

Heavy rain and winds continue as a deep sub-tropical low continues to make its way across the country, particularly from Northland to Bay of Plenty.

A period of large northeast waves is also expected with strong to gale-force winds.

Northland east of Kaikohe from Doubtless Bay to Whangārei remains under a red heavy rain warning, with the remainder of Northland under an orange heavy rain warning.

Auckland, Westland District, Coromandel Peninsula, Bay of Plenty, Taranaki, Tasman, Canterbury and North Otago are also under orange heavy rain warnings.

Orange strong wind warnings are in place for Auckland, Coromandel Peninsula, Taihape, Whanganui and parts of Taranaki.

It comes after Northland and Auckland received more than a month of rain since wild weather hit the regions on Wednesday.

A number of highways and local roads were closed across the upper North Island.

Further flooding and slips were still possible, MetService warned.

Follow the latest updates in our live blog above.

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

As it happened: Floods close highways as heavy rain hits North Island

Source: Radio New Zealand

States of Emergency have been declared in Whangārei and the Far North

The Whangārei District Mayor Ken Couper said with communities isolated and more heavy rain forecast, declaring an emergency means Civil Defence had access to emergency powers to protect life and property.

He said that includes ordering evacuations, closing roads and public places and removing aircraft, vessels, vehicles.

Whangārei District Civil Defence Controller Victoria Harwood, said at this stage, it’s not known whether the emergency powers will be used.

Northland Civil Defence is urging Northlanders to take the current weather event seriously.

The States of Emergency will be in effect for seven days beginning 2.00pm, Thursday, 26 March.

A red weather warning remains in place for Northland east of Kaikohe from Doubtless Bay to Whangārei, with the worst of the downpours expected to hit on Thursday afternoon.

Marae in the region have been opened for those in need of support, and Fire and Emergency has deployed 19 specialist rescue personnel to Northland and Auckland.

MetService said the heaviest rain and largest volumes were likely to be in the upper North Island, from Northland to western Bay of Plenty.

Downpours, flooding, and slips were also possible on Thursday and Friday.

Fire and Emergency assistant national commander Ken Cooper warned residents in upper parts of Northland to be ready in case the situation deteriorated.

“For that upper part of Northland, the intelligence we’ve got is there’s a large amount of rainfall over a very short period of time. I would certainly advise people to be prepared, if they’re in low lying areas or near rivers, be prepared to move.”

Cooper said anyone concerned about a risk to life or property should call 111.

Northland Civil Defence expected the worst of the rain to hit the northeast coast on Thursday night.

In a post on social media, it warned residents not to go into flood water, to avoid unnecessary travel, and to be aware of slips.

“Leave immediately if you notice cracks in the ground, leaning trees or power poles, unusual sounds, or sudden changes in streams,” it said.

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Corruption reporting project mourns the loss of Dan McGarry, pioneering Pacific editor and investigative journalist

Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific.

OBITUARY: By Aubrey Belford, Australia and South Pacific regional editor of OCCRP

The Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) is deeply saddened to announce the passing of Dan McGarry, the organisation’s Pacific editor, who died yesterday in Brisbane, Australia, at the age of 62.

A veteran journalist and a pillar of the Pacific media community, Dan was instrumental in establishing and leading OCCRP’s investigative efforts across the region.

Dan joined OCCRP in late 2021 to help spearhead its first dedicated Pacific programme. A Canadian by birth, he spent more than two decades in the Pacific, eventually becoming a citizen of Vanuatu.

His deep love for the region was matched by an unparalleled knowledge of its political and social landscape, making him an essential voice for transparency and accountability.

“Words cannot convey how devastated we are by this loss,” said OCCRP editor-in-chief Miranda Patrucic. “Dan was so much more than an editor who worked with local journalists and helped build our reporting teams, including our media member centres Inside PNG and In-depth Solomons.

“He was beloved because he truly cared about the mission and the people he worked with. He possessed a bottomless well of patience and is irreplaceable as a mentor and leader.”

Dan’s life was defined by a multifaceted set of talents. Beyond his rigorous investigative work, he was a dramatic actor in theatre and television and a self-described “tech geek” who pioneered new ways to integrate technology into journalism.

When I moved back to Australia to start OCCRP’s Pacific programme, Dan’s name was the one everyone mentioned first. He had years of what was often a lonely experience fighting for press freedom and the public good in the region and he was instrumental in every single investigation OCCRP has done in the region.

He was formerly media director of the Vanuatu Daily Post.

He is mourned not just by his family, but also by the second family he built among the Pacific’s journalists.

Dan fell ill several weeks ago while on a work assignment in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. He was evacuated by jet ambulance to Australia for specialised medical care. Despite the best efforts of medical teams, he passed away peacefully with family by his side.

OCCRP remains committed to honoring Dan’s legacy by continuing the vital investigative work he championed and by providing ongoing support to his family.

Read some of Dan’s reporting

Korean Doomsday Sect Gets Rich in Fiji With Government Help

Chinese ‘Miracle Water’ Grifters Infiltrated the UN and Bribed Politicians to Build Pacific Dream City

Mystery Deepens as Second Narco-Sub Washes Ashore in Solomon Islands

Influencer Andrew Tate got Vanuatu Passport Around Time of Arrest on Rape Charges

Solomon Islands PM Has Millions in Property, Raising Questions Around Wealth

This article was first published on Café Pacific.

Grattan on Friday: Albanese government struggles under the ‘stress test’ posed by Middle East war

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

Crises “stress test” governments and countries. Memories remain vivid of COVID, which put immense pressures on the Australian economy, the federation and Commonwealth and state budgets.

The domestic crisis triggered by the Middle East war is well short of – and certainly less frightening than – the COVID emergency. But it is imposing major strains on supply chains, businesses, federal and state governments and the public.

The immediate “stress test” for the Albanese government comes from the hit to fuel. But the test is also wider, extending, for example, to how it handles its relationship with the United States and its volatile president.

The executive director of the International Energy Agency, Fatih Birol, visiting Australia this week, warned, “the world is facing the greatest global energy security threat in history”.

The fuel crisis has raised issues for the government on multiple fronts, including over the level of Australia fuel reserves, how effectively ministers can negotiate to secure more supplies, and what plans to put in place to deal with the increasingly difficult days ahead.

The government has insisted Australia has enough supply – declaring the problems are soaring demand and distribution faults. Its messaging has been less than optimal, with Energy Minister Chris Bowen initially downplaying the crisis too much and on occasion sounding tetchy.

Australia has about a month’s worth of petrol, diesel and jet fuel. Over the years both sides of politics have been willing to run this stock at limited levels, although some experts say much larger reserves should have been in place.

At present, most of the scheduled ships bringing fuel supplies are arriving; the several that have been cancelled have been replaced and some extra deliveries added. The government has been in contact with other countries to try to ensure the supply chain holds.

In its initiatives, the government has appointed a national fuel coordinator, released fuel stock and changed fuel standards. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission is investigating suggestions of anti-competitive behaviour and price gouging.

NRMA spokesman Peter Khoury says while the government was a bit slow to act in response to early price spikes in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, it has now done all it can.

Motorists, farmers, and transport and other businesses finding it hard to access fuel (especially diesel) are not comforted by reassurances that overall supplies are fine. They’re also impatient with exhortations to buy “only what you need”.

Across the country, hundreds of petrol stations are out of fuel, totally or partially (a complicated picture affected by regional and distributional factors).

So far, state and federal governments are holding off on drastic measures such as rationing.

Although Anthony Albanese has had one national cabinet meeting, there are loud calls for a “national” approach and for the federal government to be seen to be more in charge. Albanese has scheduled another national cabinet for Monday.

Whether and when the fuel crisis deepens or eases depends on factors out of Australia’s control – especially on what Donald Trump and Iran do from here on.

The crisis has impacts on the May 12 budget, both negative (pushing growth and job gains down) and positive (more revenue from war-driven profit windfalls in LNG and coal exports). Given the cost-of-living crisis, it is also bringing pressure on the government to take big policy decisions on fuel – notably, to lower fuel excise and impose a super profits tax to take advantage of increased gas exports.

At first blush, both proposals appear attractive. A closer look makes them less so, or at least more complex.

It might look fair to reduce excise, but it would complicate the inflation-fighting task of the Reserve Bank, and taking excise rates back up later would be unpopular.

The NRMA’s Khoury opposes cutting the excise on two grounds: that it would potentially reduce funds spent on roads, and that any reduction could be quickly swallowed by further changes in oil prices.

Anyway, the government is making it clear it is not intending to cut the excise.

Boosting the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax to capture super profits from gas exports would be a popular move supported by many on the left (the Greens) and the right (One Nation). And the tax does need changing. But there is a counterargument. Birol captured the dilemma.

“The real owners of these resources are the citizens of this very country. And I very much hope and expect that the citizens get the fair share for the richness of this country in terms of their resource endowments and their exports and the resulting revenues,” he told the ABC.

On the other hand, “one of the major assets of Australia is being a reliable and predictable country in terms of having the investors here investing in gas, minerals and others. I would be very careful not to take steps in order to cast a shadow on this predictability and reliability.”

Japan’s ambassador to Australia, Kazuhiro Suzuki, warned this week, “Japanese investors are saying, so if there’s a surprise, they just go to other countries”.

The US–Israeli attack on Iran drew immediate support from the Australian government. Now Albanese is making it clear he wants to see the war end quickly. Last week he said, albeit prematurely, “I’m hopeful that you can see an end point. The objectives of denying Iran the opportunity to have a development of a nuclear weapon have been secured.”

The government has dispatched an aircraft and accompanying personnel to the Middle East in response to a request that came formally from the United Arab Emirates. The government insists it is only participating in a defensive, not an offensive, way. It is a distinction many observers reject (and Iran has certainly done so).

Australia belatedly signed a statement from more than 20 countries, including the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan and Canada, flagging they would be willing to contribute to action to keep the Strait of Hormuz open (although this would be only after bombing ceased).

As the war has dragged on, the Albanese government has watched developments, and Trump’s capricious conduct, with growing alarm. The war has seen the Australian government walking a delicate path in alliance relations.

ref. Grattan on Friday: Albanese government struggles under the ‘stress test’ posed by Middle East war – https://theconversation.com/grattan-on-friday-albanese-government-struggles-under-the-stress-test-posed-by-middle-east-war-278792

Former Vanuatu Daily Post media director Dan McGarry leaves legacy

Vanuatu Daily Post

The Vanuatu Daily Post is deeply saddened to learn of the sudden passing of Dan McGarry, our former media director. McGarry was a fearless investigative journalist, photographer, and software professional who made a lasting contribution to the development of the Daily Post.

He managed media content across the company’s publications, website, and social media platforms, while also shaping the wider media landscape in Vanuatu.

Before formally joining the organisation in 2015, he wrote regular columns under the pseudonym Graham Crumb.

VANUATU DAILY POST

Prior to joining the Daily Post, McGarry was part of the Pacific Institute of Public Policy (PiPP), an independent, non-profit, regionally focused think tank based in Port Vila. He also worked with Computer Network Services (CNS) as technical manager during its early years.

Reports indicate that McGarry, 62, fell ill following a trip to Papua New Guinea earlier this month and was evacuated to Brisbane.

He faced complications during recovery and remained in critical care in recent weeks. At the time of his passing, McGarry was serving as Pacific editor for the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP).

McGarry was a leading voice in Pacific journalism, driven by a strong sense of justice and commitment to the public good.

He is survived by his wife and children. His passing leaves a profound gap in the media community.

The Vanuatu Daily Post extends its heartfelt condolences to his family during this difficult time and stands with them in mourning this loss.

Republished from the Vanuatu Daily Post.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

The regions that could be in the flood firing line next

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Kiripaka, Northland. Supplied / Stella Matthews

MetService says there’s a strong likelihood of several regions being upgraded to red heavy rain warnings as a damaging storm sweeps across the country.

Northland and Whangārei are currently in a state of emergency, which will last for seven days.

Although rainfall is set to ease for both regions, others may soon be in the flood firing line.

So which regions are preparing for the worst?

Tauranga

Tauranga City Council is also warning people of landslide risks.

An orange heavy rain warning remains in place for Tauranga through to 1am on Saturday.

The warning has a high chance of being upgraded to a red warning.

Due to earlier rainfall and slips, it said there was an increased risk of new landslide occurring and more damage at sites which had already experienced slides.

“If you learn or suspect that a landslide is occurring or is about to occur in your area evacuate immediately if it is safe to do so.

“Seek higher ground outside the path of the landslide. Getting out of the path of a landslide or debris flow path is your best protection.”

Adams Avenue, between Pilot Bay and the Maunganui Rd roundabout, would be closed to vehicles from 5pm due to the heavy rain warning.

“This is a precautionary approach following geotechnical advice about the current risks on Mauao from anticipated rainfall.

“The road will not be opened until the rain event has passed and we have expert advice regarding the safety of the area.”

Bay of Plenty

Bay of Plenty Civil Defence is warning of possible land slides and for people to stay inside if possible.

Up to 180 millimetres of rain is expected, with the region’s orange warning likely to be upgraded to a red.

MetServices said surface flooding and road closures are expected.

Visit MetService, NZTA or the council website for updates, the region’s Civil Defence said.

Coromandel

Meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane said there was a high chance of the Coromandel’s orange rain warning being upgraded to red.

A heavy rain warning was in place for the area from 4pm Thursday until at least 6pm Friday.

MetService said expect up to 80 to 120mm of rain on top of what has already fallen.

It said rain up to 200mm was also possible for the Coromandel Peninsula.

Auckland

All of Auckland is now under orange rain and wind warnings, with a low chance of being upgraded to red warnings.

Auckland Civil Defence said residents should prepare for flooding and stay up-to-date via MetService and the NZTA website.

Nelson/Tasman

Residents in the Nelson and Tasman districts are being asked to prepare for severe weather, with up to 250 millimetres of rain expected in some areas.

An orange heavy rain warning is in effect for Tasman northwest of Motueka until 4pm Friday, with a a high chance the warning will be upgraded to red.

Nelson Tasman Civil Defence said the rain was settling in on Thursday, and people should be careful around rivers and streams, and on the roads.

Rest of South

Orange heavy rain warnings are also in place for the Richmond and Bryant ranges, as well as parts of Westland, south Canterbury, and north Otago.

MetService said up to 90mm of rain could fall in North Otago and Canterbury.

There was a minimal chance of the warning upgrading to red, it said.

Red weather warnings ‘no joke’

National Emergency Management Agency’s (NEMA) director of civil defence emergency management John Price confirmed further red warnings for parts of the country were likely.

“Red weather warnings are real and no joke, and I’m urging people not to put themselves in harm’s way, as your life safety is critical.

“MetService only issues red warnings for the most extreme weather events. Heavy rain and severe winds can cause flooding and landslides, which can kill or cause serious harm.”

Price urged people to “trust their danger sense” and not be foolish.

“If you get into trouble and need rescuing, you’ll be holding up emergency services who need to be looking after our most vulnerable.”

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

Young mum facing life-threatening stem cell transplant delays for cancer treatment

Source: Radio New Zealand

Loran, her husband and two sons, aged one and three. Supplied

A young mum facing life-threatening delays for cancer treatment may be forced to raise more than $1 million for a stem cell transplant overseas.

At only 29-years-old, Loran Geddes was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia in November last year.

Her symptoms started long before that – around July, but as a busy mum to two young boys, she managed to cast them aside.

She was bruising a lot but worked rearing calves. She was tired all the time, but her kids kept her up at night. She had night sweats, but even her doctor told her that because she was breastfeeding, this was likely to be hormonal.

It wasn’t until chest pains that she’d had for two weeks became so bad that she couldn’t lie on one side that knew something was wrong.

After her diagnosis, Geddes was put straight on a waiting list for a stem cell transplant.

Shortly after beginning chemotherapy, it was found her cancer had mutations, putting her in a high-risk category, and making an allogenic stem cell transplant the only possible way to treat her leukaemia.

Despite this, she was told May was the earliest she would be able to receive the transplant.

In order to get the treatment, she must be in remission, which she achieved in January after her second cycle of chemotherapy.

She had a donor from the UK lined up, after she discovered neither of her siblings or anyone in the New Zealand database was a match.

But instead, she sat and waited, undergoing two more rounds of preventative chemo.

After Geddes completed her third cycle of chemo, she met with her haematologist, who delivered the blow that her transplant date had now been pushed out to August at the earliest – nine months after her diagnosis.

“Those words from the doctor were the hardest things to hear. We’ve remained really positive throughout this whole journey. And hearing you go home and sit and wait now was terrifying.

“The waiting for a transplant is really risky for me. These delays put me in a position of potential relapse.”

Geddes is worried that the delay could ultimately cost her life.

Loran, her husband and two sons, aged one and three. Supplied

“The delays could be the difference between me living or dying, unfortunately.”

“My most critical time is within the three months following my last chemo treatment and my stem cell transplant is not scheduled until at least six months post my last sort of chemo. So a bit daunting sitting and waiting.”

Patients left in limbo by funding boost

Geddes hasn’t been given a definitive reason as to why her transplant date was pushed out another three months, but it ultimately all comes down to waitlists.

Stem cell transplants can only be done in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch – Geddes is on the Auckland list, but all three have hefty wait times.

“They don’t have the capacity for patients. They haven’t had the funding previously.

“They’ve now received some funding, but it’s going to take a couple of years for them to catch up on the waitlist and improve waitlist times, which is not obviously going to help me at this current point.”

In November 2025, the health minister announced a $27 million funding boost for stem cell transplants, to recruit to the specialist workforce, increase hospital capacity, and upgrade infrastructure.

The year prior, a $6.11 million investment was made to enable Health New Zealand to begin improvements immediately.

While Geddes said it is great that funding has been allocated, it is doing little for people in her situation.

She wants to know exactly where that funding has gone, and said each time she has asked the answer has been vague.

“I’d really like to know where some of the funding has been used so far. I know they received about 6.1 million in 2024 and then the following 27.1 million in 2025.”

“I understand that money is only just being rolled out now, but I’d love to know where that first initial 6 million has gone.

“I think they’ve had a good couple of years now to have implemented something to have helped some sort of procedure to decrease these wait times.”

Executive national director clinical at Health New Zealand, Richard Sullivan, said while the initial $6.11m investment has made a material difference to those waiting for a stem cell transplant, demand still exceeds capacity.

That investment has gone towards appointing 21 new full-time staff in Christchurch, and 26 full time staff in Auckland, with another five still to be appointed in May.

Sullivan said the investment has meant 125 allogeneic transplants were delivered in 2025, up from 114 in 2024.

But for patients like Loran, that does little to help.

The further $27 million will be implemented over the next three years with an aim to increase allogenic transplants to 161 over 2027 and 2028.

Health Minister Simeon Brown said ensuring patients who need stem cell transplants can access this life-saving treatment is a priority for him.

Health Minister Simeon Brown. RNZ / Mark Papalii

When announcing the funding late last year, Brown said every New Zealander deserves access to timely treatment that can save their life.

Geddes said that statement is “ridiculous”.

“It does not apply to myself in this situation. And I’m sure there are a lot of people in my situation at this current time that would laugh at that statement.

“It hasn’t improved wait times. It’s not going to save our lives. They don’t look at it case by case. It is solely just when you’re added to a wait list.”

The million dollar price tag for survival

For Geddes, August isn’t an answer. If she relapses any time before her transplant she will have to undergo chemotherapy again until she in remission.

There is no option to have the transplant done privately in New Zealand, meaning she is now looking overseas to Australia.

“If we look to go to Australia into their public system, it could take just as long because we would have to be eligible for Medicare and all sorts of other things.”

The only other option in Australia would be to go private – the treatment alone would cost around $1.2 million.

That doesn’t account for the cost of Geddes, her husband and two young sons relocating for around eight months.

It’s a price tag that is far out of reach for the family.

“We would have to do a lot of fundraising and see if we could get other family members to help us or friends to help us get there because as my husband and I and our kids, realistically it’s not possible.”

The family have set up a give a little to help fundraise and enable them to explore any other options that may get Geddes the treatment she needs.

She said the health system here has left her feeling has left her feeling overlooked and ignored.

“The fact that we’re having to look outside of this country for other options to try and save my life, I feel like we’re pretty failed by this healthcare system and this country.

“I know there must be a lot of people in my situation, and I just wish there was a few more people that would speak up about it. More people in my situation, if they spoke up and made a bit of noise, that potentially, it wouldn’t be so overlooked or ignored.”

While she now must search for another option that may help her chances of survival, all Geddes wants to do is to get back to her kids and normal life.

“I have a one-year-old and a three-year-old, two little boys. And for my life, I would love to see them grow up. I’d love to get back into work. I’d love to get back into activities that I enjoy. Just being a part of the community again and contributing to my kids’ lives.”

Funding needed, but hasn’t come soon enough

Health New Zealand told Checkpoint they are currently working to develop waiting time standards for stem cell transplants.

As of December 2025 there were 228 patients on the wait list, like Loran 110 of these were allogeneic, meaning they require a donor.

Between March and November last year, patients in Auckland waited an average of 184 days for a transplant, including 82 days of waiting after they were medically ready.

Sullivan said Loran’s treatment delay is the result of nationwide capacity constraints for stem cell transplants.

While the new funding will reduce the waitlist over the longer term, Health NZ recognises this doesn’t help Loran right now.

At this stage she is scheduled to get her transplant no later than mid-August at Auckland Hospital, however, the Auckland team will continue to look for opportunities to bring this forward.

Along with increasing the number of transplants delivered annually, the $27 million of funding will go towards 79 full time staff; 23 in Auckland, 31 in Wellington, and 26 in Christchurch.

Auckland and Wellington will also see increased inpatient space, with eight new beds decided to oncology/haematology patients in Auckland.

Brown told Checkpoint he expects Health New Zealand to continue prioritising this work, including recruiting to the specialist workforce, increasing hospital capacity, and upgrading infrastructure so that more New Zealanders receive stem cell transplants when they need them.

Blood Cancer New Zealand said Geddes’ situation is very concerning.

“A timely transplant would give her a real chance of returning home to her family and being there for her two boys. In many comparable countries, this would be the expected pathway. A wait of this length is neither clinically nor ethically acceptable.

“Whilst last year’s budget increase showed responsiveness to the waitlist issue, it is deeply distressing that this has not come soon enough for patients like Loran.”

While the funding boost is necessary step, they said it does not address immediate risk for patients currently waiting.

They said they would continue advocate for further urgency so future patients aren’t placed in the same situation as Geddes.

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

‘Lifesaving’ North Canterbury eating disorder facility can’t attract government funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

Warning: This story contains reference to suicide.

  • Residential eating disorder facility says without funding from Health NZ, only those who can afford the cost can access care.
  • Two former patients and their families share their eating disorder stories, and how Recovered Living NZ helped them.
  • Labour calls on government to fund community organisations with proven track record; minister says he expects funding to be directed where it’s needed.

A North Canterbury eating disorder residential facility that’s proved a lifesaver for those admitted there can’t attract government funding, leading to concerns about who can access care.

Recovered Living NZ offers a different experience from the public system, catering for only nine people at a time in residential care that’s far removed from beds on a mental health ward.

Patients live in the facility and can stay for months, but this comes at a cost of about $1050 a night.

The not-for-profit charity has a contract with ACC for sensitive claims patients, but has been passed over for Health NZ funding to open the service to more people.

Family borrows to afford treatment

Gabby Greally’s in no doubt about Recovered Living’s effect on her.

“I think it saved my life and I think that’s the case for a lot of other people I know who went there. They provided treatment that I think the public service is too strained to give me, and that goes for a lot of people.”

Admitted there in July 2024, Gabby was initially reluctant, but she had run out of options in the pubic system, where she’d initially faced a seven-month wait to see a specialist.

Mum Genevieve said a psychologist told them about Recovered Living.

“She became so sick to the point that she had no other option. She had to go to residential care. She was medically unstable.

“That gave us the mandate as parents to say, ‘Either you go or we’ll have to try something more drastic,’” Genevieve said.

Because there’s no funding to go through the public health system, Gabby’s family dug deep to pay for her stay.

“The funding situation is difficult. We didn’t have the money. We had to borrow the money. So many other parents are in that situation. The girls down there, most of them weren’t wealthy.

“People were remortgaging their houses and things like that. It’s pretty unobtainable for most people…

“For Gabby, we’ve got a girl who either would not be here or who would be in and out of the public system for the rest of her life, and instead now we’ve got a girl who’s well and engaged and will contribute so much to New Zealand in the future.”

Gabby said Recovered Living offered more than just eating and weight restoration, focusing too on exercise and reintegrating to everyday life after six months at the facility. There was group and individual work.

Now, the 21-year-old’s studying law and environmental studies at Victoria University in Wellington as well as working in hospitality, progress that seemed unthinkable two years ago.

“The public service is doing a fantastic job considering how strained they are, but I think they need more support through different routes,” she said.

“I think the nature of eating disorders is very complex and the fact we have only one route to go doesn’t reflect their complexity.”

‘You’d do anything to help your child’

Amanda Holland’s daughter Bridie also went to Recovered Living, for five months in 2024, followed by months of part-time programmes after years battling an eating disorder as a teenager.

Bridie was on a waiting list for over a year to see a specialist in the public sector, only for that relationship to eventually fall over when the specialist said they couldn’t help Bridie because she didn’t want to be helped.

Her condition worsened when she moved to Christchurch from Nelson to study at university, and she was hospitalised twice.

Her mum is telling her story with Bridie’s permission.

“Bridie attempted to take her life while she was home with us for holidays and ended up in the ICU at Nelson Hospital,” Amanda said.

“She was very, very unwell in the ICU when they admitted her. They just brought her back…

“She was in ICU overnight while they monitored her.”

Bridie was discharged after less than a day. She and her family had nowhere to turn to for help.

“How do you get help? How do you advocate for them? How do you keep your children safe when they’ve got a mental health conditions that’s destroying them?

“It’s such a lost, helpless feeling watching them unravel and not being able to help.”

Amanda heard about Recovered Living through her sister, but the family had to find the means to pay for what turned out to be $195,000 of care.

“You’d do anything to help your child, anything at all. A thousand bucks a day, that’s just money isn’t it when it gets to that?

“The cost was what it was. We were fortunate that we had some retirement funds that we were able to liquidate to pay for her care,” Amanda said.

“She was able to get to a point where we could talk about food and eating plans with her.

“Everything’s very closed off and secretive with an eating disorder. It’s just so isolating for the person that’s struggling with it and they cut everybody, including us, as their parents, out of their world.

“They just shut down from everyone, so to get to a point where Bridie learned how to talk about her feelings and let people back into her world again was just incredible.”

Bridie’s back at university now and doing well, but Amanda worries for others unable to access the help they need if they can’t afford it.

Concerns about equity of care

Recovered Living chair Gerard DeCourcy said there was a cost to provide care, but because of its small scale, the home-style facility, which opened almost three years ago, didn’t fit the public-funding model .

“The issue for Health NZ is we’re quite small, with nine beds, and the public money is spent to reach greater numbers.

“The trade-off, however, is that the contract involves quite small amounts of money, relatively, but it still makes a huge difference to the lives of the clients who come to Recovered Living.”

DeCourcy said due to the cost there was an issue with equity of access.

“A Health NZ contract would enable this recovery-based therapy to be accessible,” he said.

“We operate in a small country. There are a number of very worthwhile charities all chasing private support.

“It is difficult for a charity like Recovered Living to build up enough working capital to give it financial security, so we need a reliable pipeline of clients who come to access our service to ensure that we remain financially viable.”

He would like to see a greater partnership between Health NZ and community providers.

Health NZ didn’t say why it doesn’t fund Recovered Living, but it confirmed a senior official met with the organisation late last year.

“Health New Zealand aims to provide a range of accessible, high-quality services for those with eating disorders, from early intervention through to specialist care, prioritising patients with the greatest clinical risk,” said Phil Grady, Health NZ’s national director for mental health and addiction.

“Wait times vary for different services across the country, but help is always available for those in urgent need.”

He said there was a standard application process for contestable funding.

There were 23 inpatient beds nationwide.

It’s estimated about 100,000 New Zealanders have an eating disorder.

Labour mental health spokesperson Ingrid Leary. VNP / Phil Smith

Labour mental health spokesperson Ingrid Leary said she’d like to see the government fund organisations with proven track records, rather than just measuring numbers of patients.

She said that’s what Labour would do if it were in power, and she compared the cost of a facility such as Recovered Living with the $1600 it would cost to keep someone in hospital each night.

“Clearly, this is an organisation that has good results and good evidence. Why isn’t it being funded?”

Minister for mental health Matt Doocey. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Minister for mental health Matt Doocey said he met with Recovered Living late last year and then contacted Health NZ’s director of mental health to arrange a meeting “to address the funding issue raised”.

“It is important to note that funding decisions are made independently by Health New Zealand.”

Doocey said last year he announced the first, refreshed eating disorders strategy in 16 years, which was supported by a $4 million a year funding boost.

“This represents a 20 percent increase and brings total annual investment in eating disorders services to more than $23m.

“I expect Health NZ to ensure that this funding is directed to where it is most needed, so that people experiencing eating disorders can access the support they need.”

Where to get help:

If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.

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

25 years since Lord of the Rings debuted in cinemas, why are fans still flocking to Middle Earth?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rebecca Lower from Iowa is hoping to visit Hobbiton Tongariro National Park and Weta Workshop as well as the filming locations around Queenstown. RNZ / Katie Todd

Thousands of fans are still making the pilgrimage to Middle Earth nearly a quarter century after The Lord of the Rings first hit the silver screen.

Tourism New Zealand said nearly one-in-five visitors from the United States last year booked their trip because of the trilogy – with tour operators reporting a renewed surge in demand for Lord of the Rings experiences.

Rebecca Lower, from Iowa, said the movies were the key reason New Zealand was on her radar and the catalyst for being in Queenstown this month.

“This is my senior year of high school and we’re taking a trip one place anywhere in the world – and I decided I wanted to come to New Zealand to visit all of the filming locations with my mum, who’s also a big fan,” she said.

Their itinerary included a trip to Hobbiton, a hike in Tongariro National Park, a visit to Wētā Workshop and a tour of film locations around Central Otago, Lower said.

“It’s a lot of fun being able to pretend for a while that I’m in some fantasy world,” she said.

Southern Trails, which runs Trails of Middle Earth tours, offers a range of trips to filming locations with opportunities to see and handle replica props and dress up in fellowship-style cloaks.

Owner Shane Pinder said bookings had almost doubled since restarting the company in 2023 and it now offered helicopter tours.

“People are really craving for more Middle Earth,” he said.

“We’ve got a third vehicle; we’ve got another $15,000 worth of props; we’ve got now six guides – whereas we were just two for the first year … and we’re continuing to grow.”

Most visitors had grown up with the movies, he said.

“This is their dream to get over here and see all the locations where the films took place.”

A few kilometres away, Silky Otter cinemas offers 13-hour Lord of the Rings movie marathons every week, comprising all three of the extended editions of the films with introductions by Peter Jackson.

Peter Janssen from Belgium said he was inspired to visit New Zealand because of Lord of the Rings. RNZ / Katie Todd

Cinema manager Clem Walker said the sessions – running from 10am to 11pm every Tuesday – typically drew 10 to 20 viewers with most staying right until the end.

“It carries us through quiet seasons and during the winter season it’s going to be even bigger again,” he said.

Many viewers were locals on working holidays or fans closing the circle after visiting filming sites – a final stop on their Middle Earth mission, he said.

“It’s almost 4D, being able to walk out and immediately look out the windows at Middle Earth itself,” he said.

“To say you’ve seen it in a cinema is a novelty, but to say you’ve seen it surrounded by most of the major filming locations – it’s just that extra step.

“I think the whole tourism industry of New Zealand is on a growth curve that sort of parallels Lord of the Rings fandom as well. It just runs quite closely. We’re not planning on stopping at all.”

North American travel company GoWay had also recorded a rise in people seeking out Lord of the Rings adventures.

Shane Pinder from Southern Trails which runs Trails of Middle Earth Lord of the Rings Tours. RNZ / Katie Todd

After the company updated its itineraries last year, interest in New Zealand trips featuring movie stop-offs almost doubled, South Pacific vice president Anthony Saba said.

“Our search data tells us we’re getting a lot more people hitting these packages … once we rejigged them to be a little bit more Middle Earth, Lord of the Rings-focused in some of the labelling,” he said.

People typically were not going soley for movie-related experiences, but it was a key reason for their interest, Saba said.

“I think what happened was it made people research New Zealand more and they learned more about it, Māori culture, the scenery, Milford Sound,” he said.

It will be 25 years since the premier of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, and 12 years since the final Hobbit movie – The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies in December.

Tourism New Zealand said last year’s International Visitor Survey showed 14 percent of arrivals to the country were motivated by The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit films.

Among visitors from the USA, that figure rose to 18 percent, it said.

“Once here, 26 percent of visitors went to or participated in a film location, tour or experience, this was 37 percent for visitors from the US,” a spokesperson said.

Saba said long-time fans now had the time and money to travel.

“A lot of people who were really interested in the Lord of the Rings movies 25 years ago, they may have been in their 20s. And that drove a lot of interest to New Zealand. But a lot of those people, North Americans, don’t travel until they get into their 50s and do this kind of a trip. So I think what we’re seeing now is that generation…now fulfilling the dream of going to New Zealand,” he said.

Shane Pinder believed a sense of nostalgia was contributing.

“It’s this cycle that you see in pop culture, whether it’s music and fashion, movies – people hark back to their younger days. Twenty-five years just seems to be that kind of number where people always look back. I see a lot of people listening to early 2000s music and dressing the way that I dressed when I was in high school. And I guess Lord of the Rings was a huge part of the early 2000s pop culture – these were the biggest films of the early 2000s, 17 Academy Awards,” he said.

“That’s not to say that there wasn’t fandom in between, but it definitely seems like there’s a resurgence of it.”

Peter Janssen, a fan from Belgium, said it was all about the power of the ring.

“It’s so unique the way they were filmed, the location here, it’s just amazing. I think it just has a lot of influence on people’s lives,” he said.

“For me New Zealand was always high on the list – but mainly because of Lord of the Rings,” he said.

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

Proposed deportation changes could disproportionately affect Pacific Island nationals

Source: Radio New Zealand

Immigration Minister Erica Stanford. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Government documents show changes aimed at strengthening deportation levers could disproportionately affect Pacific Island nationals, but the Immigration Minister says that won’t happen.

Erica Stanford said it was “not about racial profiling, it never has been”, but the Greens are concerned the “MAGA-loving immigration Bill” could scapegoat migrant communities.

The Immigration (Enhanced Risk Management) Amendment Bill was up for its first reading at Parliament on Thursday, and will give immigration officers the power to ask suspected overstayers for identification in homes and workplaces.

The government said it was closing a compliance gap in the deportation system, while critics argued it was a step towards the immigration conditions that had allowed the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raids seen in the United States.

Proactively released documents by the Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment show a paper outlining further decisions on the Bill.

It noted the population groups most likely to be “potentially liable for deportation” had historically been Pacific Island nationals.

“As a result, the proposal to expand the powers of immigration officers to request identity information from those they have ‘good cause to suspect’ may be liable for deportation, could disproportionately affect these same population groups.”

Stanford rejected the suggestion the Bill would lead to disproportionate impacts on Pacific communities, saying it was a “really small technical change” in very “limited circumstances”.

“This is not about racial profiling. It never has been,” she said.

Stanford explained that currently immigration officials who come across people “hiding” or “jumping out windows” or “escaping” aren’t able to ask them for identification documents.

“This is not about randomly stopping people on the street or targeting them because of their ethnicity. This is a particular behaviour in a particular situation, and it was a request from immigration officials for that change.”

She said she wasn’t scared of history repeating itself.

Greens immigration spokesperson Ricardo Menéndez March. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The Greens immigration spokesperson Ricardo Menéndez March said he was extremely concerned the “MAGA-loving immigration bill” would scapegoat migrant communities.

“The government is taking a Trump-like approach to immigration by targeting undocumented migrants, including our Pacific communities, who have already faced the intergenerational damage of the Dawn Raids.”

He said the government had been advised that Pacific people will be disproportionately affected by the bill and it needed to be scrapped.

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

Activist journalist Terry Bell – a life defined by unwavering commitment to justice and democracy

Radio 786

Anti-apartheid campaigner Terry Bell has died at the age of 84. A lifelong activist, journalist, and educator, Bell’s life was defined by his unwavering commitment to justice and democracy.

His early journalism career spanned several South African newspapers, where he also helped found the non-racial South African Journalists’ Union.

Bell was deeply involved in underground activism, editing the clandestine publication Combat. Detained under the 90-day law in 1964, he fled into exile in Zambia the following year. There, he worked as chief reporter for the Times of Zambia before being granted asylum in the UK.

In London, he studied international affairs, edited Anti-Apartheid News, and worked at the Daily Worker.

Bell’s activism took him across continents, from Zambia to New Zealand, where he helped launch the Anti-Apartheid Movement in 1972.

In 1979, he and his wife, Barbara, established the primary division of Somafco in Tanzania, drafting the ANC’s first primary school curriculum. Disillusioned by abuses within the ANC, the Bells resigned in 1982 and later supported striking miners in Britain.

Returning to South Africa in 1991, Bell settled in Cape Town, choosing not to rejoin the ANC. Instead, he advocated for democratic socialism, urging citizens to “Vote ANC, but build a socialist alternative”.

From 1992, he edited Africa Analysis and contributed incisive labour columns to Business Report, Fin24, and City Press.

He was also a regular contributor to Radio 786’s programming, and was a staunch voice advocating for the rights of Palestinians.

His writing combined sharp analysis with a deep empathy for workers and marginalised communities. Bell remained a freelance journalist and commentator until his final years, never ceasing to challenge injustice.

Terry Bell’s life reminds us that resistance, even in exile, can shape nations and inspire generations.

Republished from Radio 786 in Cape Town, South Africa.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Woman, two young children rescued from car trapped in rising flood water

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Kiripaka, Northland. Supplied

A woman and two young children have been rescued from a car trapped by rising floodwaters in Northland.

Fire and Emergency said the rescue unfolded on Pigs Head Road, Whananaki, when the woman’s car became trapped between two impassable bodies of water.

Hikurangi fire chief Trevor Gallagher said the brigade initially thought the car had gone off the road and was submerged in floodwaters.

A specialist swift water rescue team – which had been stationed in Whangārei ahead of the storm – was dispatched to Pigs Head Road, and a rescue helicopter was put on standby.

However, when the Hikurangi Volunteer Fire Brigade arrived they found the driver had made her way through one flooded section of road, only to come to another where the water was even deeper.

With the water still rising, she was unable to go back the way she had come.

Gallagher said she got her car onto an area of higher ground and called for help just before noon on Thursday.

The water was also too deep for emergency service vehicles, so some of the firefighters, kitted out in lifejackets and safety gear, waded through the water to the car.

The primary-school-aged children were cold and frightened, but otherwise unharmed.

The brigade then called in an ex-army Unimog to drive through the flood and collect the trio, but while they were waiting a large contractor’s truck turned up.

The driver was able to collect the woman and children and drive them to the other side of the flood, where an ambulance crew was waiting to check them.

The water rescue team was stood down.

State Highway 1 is closed at the slip-prone Mangamuka Gorge in the Far North as a safety precaution. Supplied/NZTA

Gallagher said since then floodwaters had continued rising, with the nearby settlements of Ngunguru and Whananaki entirely cut off, and State Highway 1 closed by flooding at Whakapara.

A Pigs Head Road resident told RNZ he saw emergency vehicles on either side of a section of flooded road about 40 metres long.

He said so much rain had fallen overnight – about 200mm since midnight – that waterfalls were pouring off the embankments alongside the road.

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