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Tougher fines for power companies that play unfair a ‘credible deterrent’ – minister

Source: Radio New Zealand

Simon Watts. RNZ/Mark Papalii

Tougher fines are on the way for electricity providers and retailers that breach the rules, in a move to give the Electricity Authority more teeth to maintain a fair and competitive market.

Energy Minister Simon Watts said this year the authority will be able to hand out instant infringement fines of up to $2000 for minor breaches.

And from next year, heavier duty penalties will increase from $2 million to the highest of three options – a $10m fine, 10 percent of a company’s turnover or three times the gain made from the breach.

“This is about being a credible deterrent to not meeting the rules and not playing fairly in the market,” Watts said.

“It’s making sure that the penalties and infringements are significant enough to ensure that they are a credible threat.”

Watts said a stronger Electricity Authority will improve competition and should mean more affordable power.

There have been calls to split the generation and retail arms of the large power companies, with the aim of increasing competition and lowering prices.

Last year the Auckland Business Chamber released a survey showing 49 percent of people wanted power gentailers broken up, and 62 percent wanted the government to underwrite the cost of new electricity generation.

Watts said the new penalties will match what the Commerce Commission can do and allow better monitoring of the electricity market.

“Kiwis are feeling the pressure of high power bills. The government is moving quickly to fix this by strengthening the Electricity Authority, which oversees the electricity market and makes sure power companies play by the rules.”

The changes will require amendments to the Electricity Industry Act.

Watts said good progress had been made on National’s energy plan, announced in October:

  • commenced the first stage of the procurement process for an LNG facility to provide New Zealand with greater security of supply
  • assessed new energy projects under the Fast-Track Approvals process which will increase supply and unlock investment in new generation
  • started work on a new regulatory framework to prevent dry-year shortages that drive up prices.

“These steps are about making sure New Zealand has the affordable, abundant, reliable energy our economy needs,” Watts said.

“It’s critical to have strong leadership at the Electricity Authority to ensure it can support the market to deliver abundant and affordable energy.”

The government has also agreed to the appointment of new members to the Electricity Authority Board.

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

Locals want popular Kerikeri swimming spot reopened

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tommy Lodge backflips from the top of the falls at Charlie’s Rock, on Kerikeri’s Waipapa River. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Record temperatures in Kerikeri have highlighted a long-standing bugbear in the Northland town – declining access to once-popular swimming spots.

According to MetService, last Saturday’s maximum of 32.3C set a new January record for the town.

That was broken just 24 hours later by Sunday’s high of 32.7C.

Sweltering temperatures send Northlanders, like 17-year Te Moemoea Milne, flocking to streams and waterholes.

“It’s been ridiculously hot. Just boiling,” he said.

When RNZ caught up with him he was cooling off by doing bombs off Charlie’s Rock, a scenic waterfall on Kerikeri’s Waipapa River.

“If I have money, I just ask the boys to come and pick me up and go somewhere. Anywhere with a wharf or any jumping spots.”

Over recent decades, however, the fast-growing town has lost access to beaches due to the coastal property boom and the closure of privately owned roads once used by the public.

The most recent swimming spot to become off-limits is Fairy Pools, on the Kerikeri River, which used to be accessed from a public road in the town centre.

Fairy Pools Lane was closed by the Far North District Council in November 2024 for what was supposed to be a four-month period, due to a major housing development on the surrounding land.

Long-time Kerikeri resident Anne Trussler describes Fairy Pools as “a serene and beautiful place”. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Late last month, the closure, already three times longer than originally intended, was extended indefinitely.

At the time a council statement said the closure was for safety reasons, and the extension was because the developer’s work programme had expanded.

“Heavy machinery, tree felling, bush clearance, and earthworks in and around the accessway make public entry unsafe,” the council said. To ensure public safety during the ongoing works, a full closure of access to the reserve is required… The extended closure will remain until all major development works have been completed.”

Young swimmers told RNZ that Charlie’s Rock was far superior for its jumping-off places and cool water, but Fairy Pools was close to the town centre and easy to access.

Charlie’s Rock was reached via a 20-minute, bouldery path, which was challenging for less mobile residents.

Tommy Lodge, 17, said Charlie’s Rock was easily the town’s best freshwater swimming spot.

“But Fairy Pools is nice and accessible, real close and still good for a swim.”

He described the closure as “pretty stupid”.

“I reckon it should be open, especially for people that don’t have as much access to cars or transport.”

In recent days, when no tree felling is taking place, the access road to Fairy Pools has been open – though the council sign says it is still officially closed. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

RNZ contacted the Matakana-based developer, Turnstone, and the council for an estimate of when Fairy Pools Lane would officially reopen. Neither had responded before this story was due to be published.

Long-time Kerikeri resident Anne Trussler lamented the loss of what she described as “a serene and beautiful spot”.

She said Fairy Pools was her late father’s favourite place, where he used to take his dog for daily walks. Now she was unable to go there to remember him.

“More and more of these very, very special places, uniquely Kerikeri places, are slowly being denied to us. It’s wrong, and nobody’s really looking out for the people of Kerikeri. So I am deeply concerned.”

Fairy Pools Lane and reserve was until recently surrounded by the Bing property, named after a previous owner, and planted in gum and redwood trees about 90 years ago.

The roughly 20-hectare property, between Kerikeri’s town centre, the Heritage Bypass and Kerikeri River, was sold to a developer in 2021. Transfer of the land was delayed by a legal dispute until 2024.

Plans for the land included up to 350 homes, a “lifestyle village”, new roads, and commercial premises.

Most of the trees have now been cut down but felling is continuing this week alongside the river, prompting a two-day closure of part of the Rainbow Falls Track in the nearby Department of Conservation reserve.

Updated council signs at Fairy Pool Lane in Kerikeri now state the closure of the popular swimming spot is “until further notice”. Supplied

Firefighters were called to at least two fires in the property late last year.

In the most recent blaze, on 14 December, two helicopters and firefighters from five Far North brigades were needed to bring the flames under control.

FENZ said the fire started when high winds fanned a burn pile back into life.

Recent record-breaking temperatures prompted community group Our Kerikeri to compile a list of the town’s remaining swimming spots.

As well as Charlie’s Rock, the list included the pool at the bottom of Rainbow Falls, Waipapa Landing, and waterholes along Wairoa Stream, accessed via a bush track off Cobham Road.

The nearest beach was Wharau Bay, 14km away at the entrance to Kerikeri Inlet.

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

Locals want popular Kerikeri swimming spot Kerikeri reopened

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tommy Lodge backflips from the top of the falls at Charlie’s Rock, on Kerikeri’s Waipapa River. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Record temperatures in Kerikeri have highlighted a long-standing bugbear in the Northland town – declining access to once-popular swimming spots.

According to MetService, last Saturday’s maximum of 32.3C set a new January record for the town.

That was broken just 24 hours later by Sunday’s high of 32.7C.

Sweltering temperatures send Northlanders, like 17-year Te Moemoea Milne, flocking to streams and waterholes.

“It’s been ridiculously hot. Just boiling,” he said.

When RNZ caught up with him he was cooling off by doing bombs off Charlie’s Rock, a scenic waterfall on Kerikeri’s Waipapa River.

“If I have money, I just ask the boys to come and pick me up and go somewhere. Anywhere with a wharf or any jumping spots.”

Over recent decades, however, the fast-growing town has lost access to beaches due to the coastal property boom and the closure of privately owned roads once used by the public.

The most recent swimming spot to become off-limits is Fairy Pools, on the Kerikeri River, which used to be accessed from a public road in the town centre.

Fairy Pools Lane was closed by the Far North District Council in November 2024 for what was supposed to be a four-month period, due to a major housing development on the surrounding land.

Long-time Kerikeri resident Anne Trussler describes Fairy Pools as “a serene and beautiful place”. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Late last month, the closure, already three times longer than originally intended, was extended indefinitely.

At the time a council statement said the closure was for safety reasons, and the extension was because the developer’s work programme had expanded.

“Heavy machinery, tree felling, bush clearance, and earthworks in and around the accessway make public entry unsafe,” the council said. To ensure public safety during the ongoing works, a full closure of access to the reserve is required… The extended closure will remain until all major development works have been completed.”

Young swimmers told RNZ that Charlie’s Rock was far superior for its jumping-off places and cool water, but Fairy Pools was close to the town centre and easy to access.

Charlie’s Rock was reached via a 20-minute, bouldery path, which was challenging for less mobile residents.

Tommy Lodge, 17, said Charlie’s Rock was easily the town’s best freshwater swimming spot.

“But Fairy Pools is nice and accessible, real close and still good for a swim.”

He described the closure as “pretty stupid”.

“I reckon it should be open, especially for people that don’t have as much access to cars or transport.”

In recent days, when no tree felling is taking place, the access road to Fairy Pools has been open – though the council sign says it is still officially closed. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

RNZ contacted the Matakana-based developer, Turnstone, and the council for an estimate of when Fairy Pools Lane would officially reopen. Neither had responded before this story was due to be published.

Long-time Kerikeri resident Anne Trussler lamented the loss of what she described as “a serene and beautiful spot”.

She said Fairy Pools was her late father’s favourite place, where he used to take his dog for daily walks. Now she was unable to go there to remember him.

“More and more of these very, very special places, uniquely Kerikeri places, are slowly being denied to us. It’s wrong, and nobody’s really looking out for the people of Kerikeri. So I am deeply concerned.”

Fairy Pools Lane and reserve was until recently surrounded by the Bing property, named after a previous owner, and planted in gum and redwood trees about 90 years ago.

The roughly 20-hectare property, between Kerikeri’s town centre, the Heritage Bypass and Kerikeri River, was sold to a developer in 2021. Transfer of the land was delayed by a legal dispute until 2024.

Plans for the land included up to 350 homes, a “lifestyle village”, new roads, and commercial premises.

Most of the trees have now been cut down but felling is continuing this week alongside the river, prompting a two-day closure of part of the Rainbow Falls Track in the nearby Department of Conservation reserve.

Updated council signs at Fairy Pool Lane in Kerikeri now state the closure of the popular swimming spot is “until further notice”. Supplied

Firefighters were called to at least two fires in the property late last year.

In the most recent blaze, on 14 December, two helicopters and firefighters from five Far North brigades were needed to bring the flames under control.

FENZ said the fire started when high winds fanned a burn pile back into life.

Recent record-breaking temperatures prompted community group Our Kerikeri to compile a list of the town’s remaining swimming spots.

As well as Charlie’s Rock, the list included the pool at the bottom of Rainbow Falls, Waipapa Landing, and waterholes along Wairoa Stream, accessed via a bush track off Cobham Road.

The nearest beach was Wharau Bay, 14km away at the entrance to Kerikeri Inlet.

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

Person dead, three critically wounded in Horowhenua shooting

Source: Radio New Zealand

Waitārere Beach is a small settlement 13km south of Foxton. Google Maps

A person has been found dead and three people are in a critical condition after a shooting overnight in Horowhenua.

Police were called to a Waitārere Beach address near Levin at about 12.40am on Wednesday.

They found four people with gunshot wounds when they arrived.

Manawatū Area Commander Inspector Ross Grantham said a woman and two teenage boys have been taken to hospital in a critical condition. The woman was taken to Palmerston North Hospital by ambulance and the two teenagers were flown to Wellington Hospital.

“Another young person who was at the address is physically unharmed and they are being given wrap-around support,” Grantham said.

He said the gun was found at the scene and a forensic examination of the property will take place on Wednesday.

Access to State Highway 1 from Waitārere Beach Road was closed overnight; however, it has since reopened under traffic management.

Grantham said police were not looking for anyone else in relation to the shooting, and officers would be visible around the area while an investigation is underway.

“This is a shocking incident for Waitārere Beach and the district,” Grantham said.

“This was a confronting scene, and I want to acknowledge the emergency personnel who responded to the call for help.

“We are still in the very early stages of our enquiries, but we are focused on understanding how and why this tragic event occurred.”

He said police will release more information when it becomes available.

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

ASB Classic: Gael Monfils’ title defence over at first hurdle

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gael Monfils, champion of the ASB Classic in 2025. www.photosport.nz

French tennis player Gael Monfils’ fifth and last appearance at Auckland’s ASB Classic, hasn’t been one for the history books, but his contribution to the tournament down through the years, will live long in the memory.

The 39-year-old was beaten in the first round by Hungarian Fabian Marozsan last night, 7-5 3-6 4-6, in a battle which lasted just on two hours, meaning his title defence was over in the opening round.

The match had a similar feel to the first round matchup between the two in 2024, which Marozsan also won in three sets.

Monfils has finished his Auckland career with a 8-4 record, first coming to the tournament in 2007, when he was beaten in the first round by Spain’s Alberto Martin.

Six years later, he was back for his second visit, which was much more successful.

He won three matches before being beaten by another Spaniard David Ferrer in the semi-finals.

His crowning glory though, was last year, when he won the title, beating Belgium’s Zizou Bergs 6-3 6-4.

“I have, of course, great memories, being playing here in my early age,” he said on Sky Sport after last night’s defeat.

“It’s been a big honour for me to play here in a special country, a great culture. I was very lucky and fortunate last year to win this title. For me, Auckland is in a special place in my heart, so thank you very much.

“You have a lovely country. It won’t be my last time here, that’s for sure. I want my daughter to discover your country. So I’ll be coming, not for tennis, but to visit,” Monfils said.

Monfils’ wife, Ukrainian veteran Elina Svitolina won the ASB Classic women’s tournament on Sunday.

Marozsan, in the meantime, will be back on court tonight in the second round, when he faces Norweigan and second seed Casper Ruud for a spot in the quarter finals.

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

Person killed, three critically wounded in Horowhenua shooting

Source: Radio New Zealand

Waitārere Beach is a small settlement 13km south of Foxton. Google Maps

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A person has been found dead and three people are in a critical condition after a shooting overnight in Horowhenua.

Police were called to a Waitārere Beach address at about 12.40am on Wednesday.

They found four people with gunshot wounds when they arrived.

Manawatū Area Commander Inspector Ross Grantham said a woman and two teenage boys have been taken to hospital in a critical condition. The woman was taken to Palmerston North Hospital by ambulance and the two teenagers were flown to Wellington Hospital.

“Another young person who was at the address is physically unharmed and they are being given wrap-around support,” Grantham said.

He said the gun was found at the scene and a forensic examination of the property will take place on Wednesday.

Grantham said police were not looking for anyone else in relation to the shooting, and officers would be visible around the area while an investigation is underway.

“This is a shocking incident for Waitārere Beach and the district,” Grantham said.

“This was a confronting scene, and I want to acknowledge the emergency personnel who responded to the call for help.

“We are still in the very early stages of our enquiries, but we are focused on understanding how and why this tragic event occurred.”

He said police will release more information when it becomes available.

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

Fears popular heritage area will become forgotten if access bridge not restored

Source: Radio New Zealand

Skippers Bridge. Google Maps

A former museum director fears a popular heritage area in Queenstown will be forgotten about if a crucial access bridge is not restored.

This week, Queenstown Lakes District Council indefinitely closed the country’s highest suspension bridge, Skippers Bridge, due to safety risks.

The bridge is the only access route from Queenstown to Skippers Canyon, where several tourism operators offer four-wheel-drive tours.

The council said inspections revealed issues with the bridge’s suspension cables, and it could not safely assess what load the bridge was currently able to support or its integrity.

Now, the future of the bridge was in the hands of councillors, who would be deciding whether to invest in remediating the bridge during their annual planning process.

David Clarke, a former director of the Lakes District Museum for 34 years, was worried that fixing the bridge would not be a priority.

“It’s the old catchcry that money should only be spent on essential items, and sometimes heritage falls into the area of not being essential, and so you get a decline in heritage buildings and structures.

“That’s a great shame because the proof is in the pudding. Thousands go up there every year to see the gold mining heritage and to cross that bridge.”

He hoped that if driving over the bridge in a vehicle was no longer possible, people might be able to walk or cycle over the bridge.

“I’m hoping they’ll quickly find some money and do the remedial work to open it at least to pedestrians.

“It’s still a bit of a haul to walk from the bridge to the old Skippers Point Township ruins, but at least that would be something and allow people to get through to the backcountry, where there’s some other amazing heritage relics like the old Bullendale powerhouse and the remains of the Bullendale township up the left branch of Skippers Creek.

“There’s also a lot to see at Skippers Point: the cemetery, the old school house, some of the ruins, and it’s just spectacular.”

Clarke said Skippers Bridge, which first opened in 1901, was also a “major feat of engineering”.

“When you consider how remote it is, to get the materials in there, let alone sling the giant cables across the gorge, without helicopters, it’s amazing.”

Clarke hoped council could find money – or use some of the tourist tax to fix it.

“There are other heritage items around the district that are under threat as well. Yes, we need roads, and infrastructure, and sewerage, and water, and all of those things, but once these heritage features are gone, they’re gone forever.

“It’s nice to be able to protect these remnants of the past.”

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

How to talk to your teen if their NCEA results aren’t what they wanted

Source: Radio New Zealand

The nerve-racking wait is over, for better or worse. Thousands of teenagers will be signing on the New Zealand Qualification Authority’s website to check their NCEA exam results today.

As a mother of four, including a 16-year-old receiving her results today, Parenting Place coach Sheridan Eketone is keen for parents and teens to know it’s not an end-of-the-world matter.

“I think a lot of my generation, we hold a lot of weight on these results because that’s how it was in our day, everything hinged on the exam results, and I think the world is shifting.

Parenting coach Sheridan Eketone says parents can support teens to focus on their strengths, and follow that up with lessons on what could have been differently in hindsight.

supplied

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

NZ’s health data hack needs a proper diagnosis – and a transparent treatment plan

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dylan A Mordaunt, Research Fellow, Faculty of Education, Health, and Psychological Sciences, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington; Flinders University; The University of Melbourne

Getty Images

Two cyber hacks have highlighted the vulnerability of New Zealand’s digital health systems – and the vast volumes of patient data we rely on them to protect.

Following the hacking of Manage My Health – compromising the records of about 127,000 patients – and an earlier breach at Canopy Health, a concerned public is asking how this happened and who is to blame.

The most urgent question, however, is whether it can happen again.

What we know so far

Manage My Health (MMH) – a patient portal used by many general practices to share test results, prescriptions and messages – published its first public notice about a cyber security incident on New Year’s Day.

According to the company, it became aware of unauthorised access on December 30, after being alerted by a partner. It says it immediately engaged independent cyber security specialists and that the compromise was limited to its “Health Documents / My Health Documents” module.

The Office of the Privacy Commissioner confirmed it was notified on January 1 and later published guidance for those affected. The National Cyber Security Centre also issued an incident notice.

MMH has since obtained urgent High Court injunctions that restrain the use or publication of data taken. In its decision, the court described activity patterns consistent with automation, including unusually high-frequency behaviour and repeated access attempts.

While this sheds some light on how the hacker operated, it does not establish which specific technical control failed – or where responsibility ultimately lies.

We have now also learned that a second provider, Canopy Health, experienced unauthorised access to parts of its administrative systems six months ago, with some patients only being notified this week.

Why framing matters

When health data is stolen at scale, it might be tempting to frame it as “cyberterrorism”. That term, however, has a specific and contested meaning.

Security scholar Dorothy Denning’s widely-cited definition limits cyberterrorism to attacks intended to coerce or intimidate in pursuit of political goals, and which cause severe harm – not financially motivated intrusions or large-scale data theft alone. By that standard, the MMH incident does not clearly qualify.

Why does the label matter? Because the way breaches are framed shapes the response.

Casting an incident as “cyberterror” can privilege speed over evidence, and dramatic reassurance over careful diagnosis. It can also encourage what critics describe as “security theatre”: visible but poorly targeted measures that look decisive without necessarily reducing risk.

Research on cyber-threat politics shows that threat narratives influence which problems receive funding, which solutions are prioritised and which questions are ultimately sidelined.

So far, the government’s response has centred on commissioning a review. In announcing it, Health Minister Simeon Brown framed MMH as a privately operated portal used by some general practices, and asked the Ministry of Health to review the response by MMH and Health New Zealand.

That approach makes sense from a stewardship perspective. But it also creates an immediate transparency problem.

If government agencies are part of the system response, a ministry-led review can look like “marking our own homework” unless the terms of reference and independence are explicit.

At minimum, the review needs a transparent method, a clear boundary between facts and assumptions and a public explanation of what evidence will be examined.

An obvious starting point is clarifying who holds the data and who is accountable. MMH’s privacy statement and terms of use outline how information is made available through the portal and the responsibilities of users.

But public sources do not fully set out the underlying hosting arrangements, the role of subcontractors, or how responsibility is allocated between different parties. Without a clear “data custody chain”, accountability becomes diffuse.

What real fixes look like

Offering advice to users – such as that around unique passwords, multi-factor authentication and phishing – may be important, but it is only the baseline.

Preventing a repeat of the MMH breach really depends on controls that operate at system level and can be independently audited.

First, portal operators should maintain a credible vulnerability-disclosure programme that publicly sets out how security issues can be reported, responded to and tracked.

Second, independent testing must be anchored to explicit standards, not general assurances that a system has been externally checked.

Third, governance needs teeth. Procurement contracts should require proof that basic controls are in place, along with clear timelines for responding to incidents and preserving evidence.

A national framework can help here – and New Zealand’s health agencies already publish their own security frameworks.

Finally, communication should be treated as part of security. Clear, consistent notifications reduce confusion and with it the opportunity for scammers to impersonate security.

In the fallout of this debacle, what matters most now is seeing evidence of improvements across the system.

That means being able to see what was fixed and how it was verified, what will be tested next and by whom, and what will change across the wider health sector, not just within a single portal.

For people affected, the immediate priority is to follow official guidance and remain cautious about phishing or impersonation attempts. The government’s advice on Own Your Online is a sensible starting point.

The Conversation

I previously worked for Orion Health until 2017, and have worked in digital health roles in Australia and New Zealand, however these were provider (e.g. hospital and government) rather than vendor/commercial roles.

ref. NZ’s health data hack needs a proper diagnosis – and a transparent treatment plan – https://theconversation.com/nzs-health-data-hack-needs-a-proper-diagnosis-and-a-transparent-treatment-plan-273343

Cost of building a new house set to rise

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

It could become more expensive to build a house this year.

Cotality, formerly known as Corelogic, has released its latest Cordell Construction Cost Index, which shows residential building costs increased by 0.9 percent in the three months to December.

The index is made up of 50 percent materials, 40 percent wage costs and 10 percent other expenses such as professional fees and consenting.

The annual pace of increase rose to 2.3 percent, but is still below its long-term average of 4.1 percent since 2012.

Cotality chief property economist Kelvin Davidson said the pace of growth was constrained.

“We are certainly not seeing the extreme inflation experienced in the post-Covid phase, when the [index] annual growth rate peaked at more than 10 percent in late 2022.

“During that period, there were supply chain issues for key materials such as plasterboard and rising wages also drove up costs significantly.

“However, although they’re not rising to any huge degree at present, costs haven’t seen significant falls either. Following the previous growth phase, the overall level of cost to build a new dwelling remains elevated even though the growth rate has cooled,” he said.

He said confidence was returning to the construction sector.

The number of dwelling consents has started to rise again, and reached 35,500 on a 12-month basis in October.

Davidson said that was a turnaround after a period of stagnation.

“After peaking at more than 51,000 in the 12 months to May 2022, the number of new dwellings consented dropped to a low point between 33,500 and 34,000. We are now seeing a recovery that aligns with anecdotal evidence that builders are becoming busier again.”

Activity would probably pick up with interest rates down, and rules such as loan-to-value ratios and debt-to-income rules making new builds more appealing.

“I don’t think we’ll necessarily see a big rise [in costs] because wages, the labour market is still relatively softer than it was a couple of years ago.

“You wouldn’t think there’d be large wage increases for the builders, but there might be a wee bit more pressure coming through there. And then materials as well, a wee bit more pressure, but again, not that returning post-Covid.”

He said activity could generally trend higher this year and cost pressures could return to normal.

Supplied/ Unsplash – Josh Olalde

Brighter outlook for construction firms

Things were looking up for construction firms, he said.

“There’s always going to be individual experiences and distributional effects in here, but what I hear on the ground and from people I talk to in the construction industry, there is a bit more confidence coming through.

“It takes a while, and it’s been a pretty big downturn for sure, and some developers have done it pretty tough, maybe buying land at the absolute peak value and then seeing interest rates go up and demand for that product come down, prices they could eventually sell it for come down… a big squeeze on margins when you’ve paid top dollar for land, the cost to build has gone up, the eventual selling price has come down. It’s been pretty tricky.

“Some people have obviously done it pretty tough, but I guess the other thing I think you also have to acknowledge is that, yes, it’s been a big downturn, but it was coming off an incredibly high base. So, actually, in the long run context, we’re still building a decent number of properties compared to what we’ve done at the previous troughs.

“So, you know, it’s not all doom and gloom, but at the same time acknowledging that it has been tricky for a lot of builders.”

A period of slower construction cost growth was good for homeowners potentially committing to a build, he said.

“If you sign up for something off the plans and it’s not going to be ready for 12 or 18 months, at least you can kind of have a bit more confidence that it’s not going to run away in the meantime. I think that a bit more stability is probably what people have been hoping for.

“And that is kind of what we’ve seen in the past sort of year or two… I think a lot of people would probably say it’s still expensive to build a house. But the growth rate hasn’t been as fast. So, you know, things have stabilised, have plateaued. And I guess, you know, with interest rates coming down, it just does get a bit more affordable.”

There was a premium for a new build compared to existing houses, he said, but that could reflect the fact that maintenance cost should be lower and the property could be built to higher specifications.

“It stands to reason that new builds will cost a little bit more than existing properties, but then there are those benefits too.”

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

Jellybeans and water safety: Operation Neptune keeping Waikato boaties safe

Source: Radio New Zealand

Deputy regional harbourmaster Shane Miles. RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

An estimated 160,000 recreational boaties launch into the waters in and around Waikato each year.

With numbers particularly high over summer time, the Waikato region bolsters its harbourmaster team through Operation Neptune, enabling daily patrols on the lakes, rivers, and coasts of the region.

To staff Operation Neptune, the regular harbourmaster team of nine swelled to up to 27, with volunteers like Nicki Wilson joining the team for a few weeks.

In her regular job, Wilson is a hydrogeologist for the regional council.

This was her second summer working on Operation Neptune.

“The maritime team asked for additional volunteers over the summer period and I thought, oh this sounds like fun,” she said.

Together, deputy regional harbourmaster Shane Miles and Wilson cruise around, survey boaties for Maritime New Zealand, stop people who are breaking the rules, and hand out jellybeans and water safety information.

Giving a tow to a boat with engine problems at Horohoro. RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

During lunchtime while the sun sparkled off the waters of Waikato River, RNZ jumped onboard.

Starting at Lake Karāpiro, the boat cruised up river and it didn’t take long for Miles to spot a jet ski towing a sea biscuit with both riders on the ski not wearing life jackets.

Miles hailed them, told them what was wrong and asked if they knew that in Waikato jet ski riders must wear life jackets.

“I did, I was just silly,” said the jet ski driver who lived locally.

Miles said there were a few common issues they were looking out for during Operation Neptune.

“Definitely we are looking for people to be wearing life jackets, we are looking for them operating at a safe speed when they are close to shore or by a person in the water, and we are looking that they have got an observer or a third person on board watching when they are towing,” he said.

Regional Council volunteer Nicki Wilson joined the harbourmaster team for a few weeks to help staff Operation Neptune. RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

The local jet skiers were likely to receive a $200 fine for breaching the life jacket rule, but they did have an observer and the kids on the sea biscuit were all wearing life jackets.

“Are the kids on the back allowed jellybeans since they are wearing life jackets?” asked Miles.

Continuing down the river near Horahora domain, they pull up alongside another jet ski to check in with the driver.

“How old are you guys?” asked Wilson of the two young people on the ski.

There is no national safe practice standard for water skiing and boating in New Zealand. Instead, the rules are set region by region by local council bylaws.

In Waikato, 15 is the legal age to drive a jet ski and these young people got a packet of jellybeans each for knowing and following the rules.

While idling, a boat approached and told the harbourmaster a vessel was in trouble around the bend.

Miles and Wilson cruised over to check it out.

Harbourmaster boat on Lake Karāpiro. RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

“Everyone happy?” asked Miles as they approach a couple with three young children aboard the drifting boat.

The skipper explained that after a couple of happy hours on the water, the boat engine suddenly stopped responding.

A tow rope was attached and the harbourmaster vessel took the boat back to shore.

The family were all wearing life jackets and three packets of jellybeans were thrown over to the children, putting smiles back on their faces.

With the family safely returned to shore the harbourmaster turned around and headed back up the river to Karāpiro domain to drop RNZ off.

They pass the earlier jet ski near Keeley’s Landing – the mates were still out enjoying the water, and Miles noted everyone was now wearing life jackets.

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

Coroner calls for urgent psychological support for prisoners following death of former inmate

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

A coroner is calling for urgent psychological support for prisoners before and after their release, following the death of a man who served almost 30 years of a life sentence for murder.

Lee Rawiri Kohiti was sentenced in 1996 for the murder of his cousin. He was released on parole in May 2025.

Two months later, Kohiti was found dead at the Hamilton parole address he had been living at.

He was 19 when he entered prison.

According to the coroner, on his release at 49 years old, he wasn’t visited by friends or family and he expressed a desire to return to the prison environment.

“His closest support had been his mother; however, her health had deteriorated, and she had recently passed away,” Coroner Bruce Hesketh said.

Kohiti’s death has been ruled a suicide.

It’s a story that’s all to familiar to University of Auckland professor Tracey McIntosh.

“We’ve a parole board that largely looks at risk, with particular focus, as we can understand, on risk to community, but perhaps far less is done in actually determining the risk for individuals, particularly around their wellbeing,” she said.

McIntosh wanted more support on the inside to prepare prisoners for re-integrating into society.

“We’re letting people down … it’s very difficult for me to understand why these people wouldn’t be the highest priority, given that they’ve been in prison for such a long time because of the reasons of what they were convicted with.

“We do need to look at community, Corrections, probation, is there emphasis, particularly in that first six months, on the right things,” she said.

It was a significant and urgent issue, McIntosh said.

“When we think about how we do reintegration, I don’t know if there’s any country that really does integration extremely well, but we certainly, we’ve got so much more work to be done at the reintegration level,” she said.

“If you’re really going to talk about community safety, then it has to be a much broader view, and there has to be a much more nuanced understanding of safety.”

Work with other agencies needed

Coroner Hesketh’s ruling on Kohiti’s death recommended the Department of Corrections work with other agencies to address systemic issues in providing services to prisoners on release.

He also suggested Corrections collaborate with relevant partners to collate and review data on suspected suicide deaths after release, within a relevant time period.

“I add a further recommendation that long-term prisoners should have their cases marked as ‘urgent’ to receive psychological services support in preparation for their release in the critical weeks and months both before and after their release,” he said.

Corrections chief mental health and addictions officer Dr Emma Gardner said there were teams that regularly assess inmates’ risk of suicide.

“If a person becomes unwell after they have left prison, they will be having, if they are on probation, regular connections with their probation officer. That probation officer would be doing wellbeing checks on an individual and if they became concerned about their mental health then they would be able to refer them to services in the community…,” she said.

Gardner said a lot of work had been done for those in prison, such as expanding the mental health services across the prison network.

“We are now starting to turn our attention to ‘what does support in the community look like, how do we ensure that the relevant agencies that are already available out in the community are connecting with our people’, but it’s early days on that work and we’ve got a lot more to do,” she said.

Gardner said the Corrections executive have commissioned a piece of work looking at community support.

She said there was always room for improvement, but that Corrections had done a lot of work over the last four to improve internal services for inmates.

Gardner believed the systemic issues mentioned by the coroner were being addressed.

“We really do take every death in custody very, very seriously, and obviously every death for people on community sentences is an absolute tragedy, and we are really, really focused on doing everything we can to improve the support we offer those people and their whānau.”

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

The new TV shows we’re excited to watch in 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

There’s a lot to look forward to on the box this year. Critical darlings like Bridgerton, The Pitt, EuphoriaandThe Boys are all returning for new seasons, while old fan favourites like Malcolm in the Middle and Scrubs are being dusted off, spruced up and preparing for the spotlight once again after decades off-screen.

But today, we’re not talking about any of those. No. Instead, we’ve compiled a bunch of the all-new TV shows coming out this year that we think should be on your radar.

‘Sheer panic’: Dual-citizenship Brits have to get UK passport to return

Source: Radio New Zealand

Vince, who moved with Diane from England in 1966, thought: “There’s no way they would penalise me just because I am British.” Supplied

  • Dual New Zealand nationals will need to get a British passport
  • Thousands of travellers are affected
  • Changes come in next month – Brits can no longer use an electronic travel authorisation (ETA)

Dual British-New Zealand citizens are angry and bemused after discovering they have to pay hundreds of dollars to return to their country of birth.

Travel agents are warning that many passengers are unaware of the change, which will come into effect for expat British and Irish dual citizens from next month.

While other visitors can pay $37 for an electronic travel authorisation (ETA), New Zealand passport holders born in Britain will have to travel on a UK passport – and some say it is not straightforward to get one.

Vince and Diane, who live on Auckland’s North Shore, moved from England in 1966.

They were shocked to find they could no longer visit British family and friends without first applying for a UK passport; the last time they used one was 50 years ago. From the end of February, they cannot use their New Zealand passport, as UK citizens will no longer be eligible for ETAs.

Vince, who asked that his surname not be published, did not believe it when he first heard the news.

“I said, no, that’s a load of absolute rubbish. There’s no way they would do that. There’s no way they would penalise me just because I am British. So then I did some research and it is definite that on the 25th of February if you’re a dual citizen and you’re born in Britain, then you have to have a British passport.

“If you as a Kiwi [born in NZ] wanted to go to Britain, no problem at all – just use your Kiwi passport.”

It put British citizens in a worse position in their own country than visa-waiver travellers – such as New Zealand-born citizens using ETAs, he said.

His shock at the cost was matched by his outrage at the bureaucracy involved – including finding a UK passport holder to confirm his identity, form-filling, the possibility of an in-person interview at the embassy in Wellington, and having to post his New Zealand passport.

“If you don’t want to send the passport, which I didn’t, you have to send a photocopy of every page. And they make the point that even if the pages are blank, you’ve got to send a photocopy. So I sent 42 pages, 41 of which were blank. Isn’t that fantastic? So, yeah, this is bureaucracy gone mad.”

Vince considered whether he could get around the rule by hoping authorities assumed he was New Zealand-born – but then realised his NZ passport reveals he was born in the English city of Coventry.

The wait for a new British passport would be worrying for people with travel already booked or who had an emergency, he said.

A new passport seemed a better option than an alternative the UK government is offering – a ‘certificate of entitlement’ costing £589/NZ$1373 compared to £94.50/$220 for an adult passport – but it is still much more than an ETA (£16/$37 for two years), and a lot more work.

“Up until now, it’s cost me around about $600, copious amounts of form filling in, and now we’re still waiting to see what else they want. It has to go by special delivery – there is only one way the post office will accept old passports and that costs $121. Absolutely ridiculous. And we’re in our 80s, we’ll probably only ever go [to England] one more time.”

‘Absolute chaos’

Another Briton – who asked only to be identified as Jane for privacy reasons – said her dual-citizen husband had lived in New Zealand for about 18 years. He was able to travel back with an ETA last time he went, and found out through social media he needs a passport the next time he returns.

They are worried that others who are making urgent trips to see old or dying relatives will find out too late about the rule change, costs and potential timeframes. Hundreds of thousands of people would be affected among Commonwealth countries and elsewhere, said Jane.

“This is what’s happening to so many expats, not just in New Zealand, but all over the world. They’re basically being forced into this because essentially, they’re not going to be able to go back to the country of their birth. And I just think it’s really, really wrong the way it’s been done.

“When you’ve got parents that are older, you have to go back. So we’re fortunate that his [her husband’s] mum is well enough that she can actually come out here, but if God forbid anything happens to her, she’s 80, he needs to be able to get back.”

Their children are NZ citizens by birth so only need a ETA. “So my son has just literally gone on his New Zealand passport,” she said.

“But my husband’s had to go to Warehouse Stationery and get all 40 pages of his New Zealand passport printed out in colour. And then he’s having to post that back along with his expired British passport. And now New Zealand Post are basically charging 120 bucks because they’re insisting it’s got to go registered [post]. So there’s just all this money being made.

“And are you telling me there’s going to be people in the British passport office that are going to sit there leafing through each individual page? I think they’ve really underestimated the volume of work that this is going to actually generate and the mounds of paper.”

She suspected it was a revenue-making exercise, though others feared it was more of a data-grab.

“I was talking to a friend of mine yesterday who’s a travel agent, and she’s in the same situation, she’s got elderly relatives. And she said it’s going to be absolute chaos at the airports in February when this happens, because the people that are aware of it, it’s only the tip of the iceberg.

“I think there’s so many people that are going to get caught out and not being able to board those flights. It’s going to be a nightmare. She said, ‘I don’t ask every customer what passport they’ve got’. There’s people that don’t even use travel agents. So many people nowadays just book the flights themselves.”

No passport, no fly

She recalled the ‘sheer panic’ of realising she needed a US transit visa to get back to New Zealand some years ago.

“It was most stressful few hours of my life,” she said. “And this is what people are going to [go through] when they get to the airport at the end of next month and they’re not going to be allowed to board the plane. And it’ll be the first they’ve heard of it.

“I haven’t got an issue with ETAs because even New Zealand has an ETA now and the US do the whole transit visa. It’s just the fact is they’re forcing people to get these British passports and the rigmarole you have to go through to actually do it.”

For those without a British passport or the option of an ETA, the final option on the table is renouncing UK citizenship, but that is a step too far for many people – and still is not free (£482/$1124 NZD).

“People don’t want to renounce their UK citizenship, but equally they don’t want to be forced into having to jump through all these hoops to travel into a country where you can legally travel into,” said Jane.

Meanwhile, Vince said he had been tempted to arrive with his NZ passport and British birth certificate and seeing whether UK officials would turn him away at the border. He decided against it, as the main obstacle seemed to be getting past through check-in at the airport.

“I’m wondering if somebody in the UK passport office will suddenly realise, ‘hey, we’ve made a huge mistake here’ – because this will affect thousands of people in so many countries,” said Vince. “I mean, Canada, NZ, Australia – it’s going to be bigger than Elvis.”

Reasons for the change

The High Commission in Wellington has been approached for comment.

A House of Commons Library’s research paper published last week said there was no specific legal requirement for British citizens to travel on a British passport, but ‘in practice, pre-departure checks for UK-bound travellers made it difficult to travel to the UK without one’. It provided the following advice and background on why the issue had arisen.

How do British citizens show they have the right to enter the UK?

All British citizens have the right of abode in the UK (meaning, the entitlement to live or work in the UK without any immigration restrictions). This makes them exempt from immigration control. They don’t need an immigration officer’s permission to enter the UK, but they must be able to demonstrate that they have the right of abode.

They are expected to do this by showing a current British passport or a certificate of entitlement of the right of abode: paragraph 12 of the immigration rules and section 3(9) of the Immigration Act 1971.

A certificate of entitlement is an official document which confirms the holder has the right of abode in the UK. The certificate is attached to the person’s foreign passport; a new one is required each time the passport is renewed. It isn’t possible to have more than one certificate at a time, or to have a certificate and a current British passport.

It is significantly more expensive to apply for a certificate of entitlement (£589) than a British passport (£94.50 for adults or £61.50 for under 16s when applying online).

Travelling to the UK without a UK passport or certificate of entitlement

British dual nationals whose other nationality is for a ‘non-visa national country’ (meaning, one which isn’t subject to a UK visit visa requirement) used to be able to travel to the UK using their foreign passport without a certificate of entitlement.

People travelling on a non-British passport demonstrate their permission to travel by using:

  • their digital UK immigration permission (eVisa), if they are resident in the UK;
  • their entry clearance vignette sticker or eVisa, if they are from a visa national country; or
  • their electronic travel authorisation (ETA), if they are visiting the UK and are from a non-visa national country (for example, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, USA or an EU country).

A British dual national travelling on a foreign passport would not have any of those. They would be ineligible for an ETA, eVisa or immigration permission due to their British citizenship.

The Home Office has been advising British dual nationals to travel on a British passport or with a certificate of entitlement for many months. But in practice it has not been strictly enforcing the ETA requirement for non-visa nationals, to allow people time to adjust. Those transitional arrangements will end in early 2026.

From 25 February 2026, the Home Office will be fully applying the ETA requirement. The Home Office is advising British dual citizens to make sure they have a valid British passport or certificate of entitlement if they will be travelling on or after that date. If they don’t, they may not be able to board their transport to the UK.

What can people do if they have an urgent need to travel?

British dual citizens travelling on or before 24 February 2026 should be allowed to board transport to the UK if they have a valid passport for a non-visa national country, due to the transitional arrangements.

British dual citizens whose other nationality is subject to a UK visit visa requirement need to travel with a British passport or certificate of entitlement.

British nationals abroad might be able to apply for an emergency travel document if they have an urgent need to travel and can’t renew or replace their British passport in time. It might be more difficult to get an emergency travel document if the person hasn’t had a UK passport for many years.

Why can’t people prove their right of abode in other ways?

Some people question why they can not use other documents to prove their right of abode and exemption from the permission to travel requirement, such as an expired British passport or a certificate of naturalisation or registration as a British citizen.

Those documents are not listed in the Home Office’s document checking guidance for transport providers. Carriers are unlikely to deviate from the guidance because they can be penalised for bringing inadequately documented passengers to the UK.

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

Demand for staff in Queenstown higher than ever – but people can’t afford to live there

Source: Radio New Zealand

Scotland’s Orla Marshall lives in a van – the only way she had been able to return to Queenstown to work after finding it too costly last winter. RNZ / Katie Todd

Gold Rush: Who’s cashing in on Queenstown? An RNZ series examining the money flowing into Queenstown – and who’s missing out.

Workers are arriving in Queenstown and leaving within weeks because the cost of living is too high, recruiters and unions say.

Despite record-high visitor spending and hundreds of job listings, data shows a growing gap between average pay rates and day-to-day living costs in the district.

Café worker Orla Marshall, from Scotland, was living in a van – the only way she had been able to return to Queenstown after finding it too costly last winter, she said.

She initially rented a room in a flat with her partner in Fernhill at a below-average $220 per week – but it came with “very expensive” heating, she said.

“A lot of our paycheque was going towards that. And we did not necessarily find Queenstown to have higher wages, just higher prices,” she said.

According to Hospitality NZ, hospitality roles in Queenstown paid $28.51 per hour on average – just 2.4 percent higher than elsewhere in the country.

Data from Infometrics showed across the board, the average Queenstown worker earned $69,788 – 12 percent below the New Zealand average.

Meanwhile, both rents and house prices in Queenstown Lakes District were the most expensive in New Zealand.

Rents had risen faster than earnings, to their least affordable rate since 2000, Infometrics data showed – taking an average 27.2 percent of each renter’s income.

Queenstown. RNZ / Kymberlee Gomes

The average weekly rent in Queenstown was $707, compared to the New Zealand average of $573.

Groceries, fuel and other expenses all seemed to carry a Queenstown premium, Marshall said.

“I just cannot comprehend how [employers] expect people to be able to get by on the wages that they offer,” she said.

“If there are customers coming in, tours coming in, they are charging more, they are making more – but they are paying you the same as they would anywhere else, which is quite ridiculous.”

Unite Union regional organiser Simon Edmunds. RNZ / Katie Todd

‘You can do the equation – it does not work’: union

Unite Union regional organiser Simon Edmunds said in the hospitality industry, he knew of people enduring poor rentals or working second jobs to get by.

“There are certainly some businesses that pay minimum wage in Queenstown – $23.50. Paying $300-400 for a room. You can do the equation – that does not work,” he said.

The average hospitality wage of $28.50 or the national living wage of $29 per hour was far from enough, he said.

“It is not just rent – food prices here are crazy expensive. Petrol is expensive … parking is incredibly expensive, and there are no provisions made for workers to get discounts.”

In 2023, workers had been resorting to living in their cars, tents, hostels and couch surfing to get by amid a shortage of rentals, he said.

Now, many were simply choosing other places to live, he said.

“A lot of people end up leaving. There is an awful lot of workers that come here with hopes. That try it out. That find they are just not saving money or even going backwards, and they will leave for somewhere else in New Zealand if they can, or overseas again.”

Remarkable People’s Shauna O’Sullivan. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Demand for workers ‘crazy’: recruiter

Shauna O’Sullivan, area sales manager for recruitment company Remarkable People, said demand for staff was higher than ever, with hundreds of jobs available.

“It is just crazy busy down here. It is insane. I have been with the company for four years now, and this is the busiest it has ever been,” she said.

“The demand for skilled workers is very high and it is very, very difficult to find those that are staying and can commit to the work that needs to be done.”

She said high turnover was a huge factor in the job market – and she too was seeing people leave roles almost immediately.

“People do seem to be coming through and then leaving quite promptly… we place people into long-term roles and then maybe a week or two later they come back and say, look, I cannot afford to live here,” she said.

Many were looking across the ditch for higher wages.

“We are losing a lot of people to Australia,” she said.

Workers in, workers out

Edmunds said he was not holding out hope for employers to pay their workers more.

Queenstown appeared to be turning into a “high churn” economy, where employers – particularly in the tourism sector – paid poorly but recruited often, he said.

“There are good employers who have long-term staff, but they are a bit far and few between … for a lot of employers, they just accept that that is what you do in Queenstown and have adapted accordingly,” he said.

Edmunds said Queenstown had always been expensive place to live – but it should not just be a playground for the ultra-rich, he said.

“Queenstown can be a place that can have ultra-high-end tourism, beautiful, $20 million mansions and even billionaire bunkers… but what is to stop it from being a place where the people – who actually run it, who actually do the work and keep the shops open, who did right through Covid, who actually are committed long term to the place – actually get some of those rewards as well?”

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

NCEA exam results can be accessed from today

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

More than 150,000 students in New Zealand, Niue and the Cook Islands can access their NCEA exam results today.

They can log into the Qualifications Authority’s website to see how they went.

The authority said students would be able to access their marked NCEA exam papers from 20 January.

It said scholarship exam results and papers would be available from 10 February.

The authority said students who found they had too few credits for an NCEA certificate should talk to their school or to Te Kura the Correspondence School.

It said students could request a review or reconsideration if they believed their answer booklet had not been marked correctly or results were not recorded accurately.

NZQA said students who had misplaced their National Student Number and password should use Awhina, NZQA’s online chatbot, or contact its contact centre on 0800 697 296.

The 2025 results will be closely watched due to some principals’ fears that high-stakes literacy and numeracy requirements will dent pass rates.

Results from last year’s literacy and numeracy tests indicated students’ from poor communities were less likely to pass.

The government is moving to replace NCEA with a new qualification that would be phased in from 2028-2030.

If the government stuck to its timetable, this year’s Year 10 cohort would be the last group to use NCEA and this year’s Year 9’s the first to use the new qualification.

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From flammable neighborhoods to moral hazards, fire insurance maps capture early US cities and the landscape of discrimination

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jack Swab, Assistant Professor Department of Geography & Sustainability, University of Tennessee

1909 Sanborn map of Suffolk County in Boston, Mass. Library of Congress

Imagine a map that allows you to see what your neighborhood looked like a century ago in immense detail. What you’re thinking of is probably very much like the fire insurance maps produced from the 1860s to the 1970s for insurance companies to identify potential fire risks.

Often referred to as Sanborn maps, after the Sanborn Map Co. that produced them, fire insurance maps were created for every city in the United States with a population greater than 1,000 people. Over a century, more than 50,000 editions of these maps were produced, comprising over 700,000 map sheets – many of which have been scanned and are publicly accessible through the Library of Congress.

1917 Sanborn map of The Hill at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
Library of Congress

Genealogists, historic preservationists, historians and urban planners commonly use these maps to understand past urban landscapes. But as a critical cartographer interested in how maps shape how people understand the world, I see these maps differently.

Fire insurance maps supply more than just detailed insights into how neighborhoods looked decades ago. Needing to turn a profit, insurers sought to minimize the amount of risk they underwrote or charged higher premiums to account for risk. These maps provide important clues into how insurance companies understood how risk was distributed across cities, revealing costly biases.

Mapping fire risk

Before zoning and land-use planning, American cities frequently mixed industrial, commercial and residential buildings in the same block. Insurance agents used the immense detail of fire insurance maps to determine whether a property was too risky to underwrite, often weighing the demographics of the neighborhoods with the flammability of the buildings in the neighborhood.

Key to interpreting the Sanborn maps.
Library of Congress

For example, an Atlanta neighborhood called Lightning was a Black, working-class district composed of a mixture of rail yards, noxious industries and residences in 1911. The neighborhood was also an immense fire hazard. Atlanta’s primary trash incinerator stood less than 150 feet from two massive natural gas storage tanks, while two gas processing plants manufactured specialized fuels just feet from homes.

Underwriters would use information from fire insurance maps to understand the local landscape. In these maps, colors correspond to the building’s construction material: pink indicates brick, while yellow indicates wood. Lightning was primarily made from wood, placing the entire neighborhood at risk if a fire broke out.

Fire insurance maps and discrimination

At the same time, fire insurance maps also highlight the social landscape of the neighborhood.

Many buildings in the Lightning fire insurance map are labeled “F.B.,” which stands for “female boarding,” a euphemism for brothels. While brothels were not a fire risk themselves, this code indicated the alleged moral hazard of a neighborhood, or the likelihood that property owners would allow riskier activities to occur on their property that could cost insurers more.

1911 Sanborn map of the Lightning neighborhood of Atlanta, Ga. It’s now Mercedes-Benz Stadium, home to the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League and the Atlanta United FC of Major League Soccer.
Library of Congress

From this one map, an underwriter could quickly see that Lightning was an extremely risky place to insure. Along with disinvestment from fire insurers, marginalized communities like Lightning also experienced other forms of systemic discrimination. Scholars have documented racial discrimination in car, life and health insurance underwriting.

Indeed, in the 1970s, much of Lightning was purchased under the threat of eminent domain – the legal process through which the government takes ownership of private land for public use – to construct the Georgia Dome, now the site of Mercedes-Benz Stadium.

Although fire insurance maps are no longer used in the insurance industry, they provide researchers one way of seeing how discrimination in fire insurance and urban planning manifested in the United States during the 20th century.

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

ref. From flammable neighborhoods to moral hazards, fire insurance maps capture early US cities and the landscape of discrimination – https://theconversation.com/from-flammable-neighborhoods-to-moral-hazards-fire-insurance-maps-capture-early-us-cities-and-the-landscape-of-discrimination-271271

Mountain biker spends 24 hours circling Christchurch McDonald’s

Source: Radio New Zealand

Twenty-one-year-old Matthew Fairbrother rode around a Christchurch McDonald’s for 24 hours. Matthew Fairbrother

A Christchurch mountain biker spent 24 hours cycling continuous laps around a McDonald’s drive-through to test his endurance.

Twenty-one-year-old Matthew Fairbrother clocked up 500 kilometres on the ride on Christmas Day, which he described as a “deliberately absurd” endurance challenge.

“I came up with this idea about a year ago and started looking into it and worked out the only day that I could do it was the 25th of December because that’s the only day McDonald’s shuts down,” he said.

“It’s been on my mind the last 12 or so months and it’s just been burning a hole, so I had to go extinguish that fire and get it done.

“There was never a distance goal it was just a time goal. I basically told myself I’d bike for 24 hours or up until I got kicked out. I started at 5am and then I stopped at 5am and over the whole 24 hours I only spent just under two hours not moving.”

Fairbrother said he felt exhausted but satisfied at the end.

He said the ride was intentionally simple and repetitive, and rather than aiming for speed or spectacle, the challenge focused on mental discipline.

“I don’t usually do stupid things like this. At my core I’m a mountain biker, mainly long distance so a lot of the things and events I do are super physically tough, but also mentally tough, so I spend a lot of time by myself in the mountains and most of the time it’s mind over matter,” he said.

“So I guess this was a big test of what my mind and my mental capacity actually has. Physically I knew I could bike for 24 hours non-stop but to do it in the way I did, mentally I’ve never done anything so tough.”

Fairbrother said he got into biking through his family.

“I started mountain biking when I was 12 but the more adventure side of it kicked in at age 16, then at age 17 I went overseas to compete internationally and ever since then I’ve been doing six months overseas competing each year.”

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Indonesia accused of being ‘unfit’ for UN rights council presidency

Asia Pacific Report

A West Papuan advocacy group has condemned Indonesia over taking up the presidency of the United Nations Human Rights Council, saying it was “totally unfit” and the choice  “makes a mockery” of the office.

Indonesia was the sole candidate for the Asia-Pacific bloc at the council (HRC), which also includes China, Japan and South Korea. It was the group’s turn to propose a leader.

Ambassador Sidharto Reza Suryodipuro succeeds Switzerland and will now lead proceedings at the UN forum for a year after his nomination last week.

However, a statement by a senior official of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP), interim president Benny Wenda, has challenged the nomination, asking: “How can Indonesia lead on human rights, when they are hiding from the world their 66-year occupation of West Papua, with 500,000 men, women, and children dead?”

“How can Indonesia lead on human rights, when their President is a war criminal who is complicit in genocide in East Timor and West Papua?

President Prabowo Subianto “personally tortured East Timorese men, and presided over indiscriminate massacres of Indigenous people from Kraras to Mapenduma”, claimed Wenda whose allegations have been documented in various human rights reports.

‘No apology’
“He has never apologised or been held accountable for his crimes,” said Wenda.

He said Indonesia had not won the presidency due to its human rights record.

“The position rotates around the world, and Indonesia was the only candidate from the Asia Pacific region to put themselves forward,” Wenda said.

“Nonetheless, this appointment makes a mockery of the UN and its claim to uphold international law and human rights.”

Wenda said 105,000 West Papuans were currently displaced due to Indonesian military operations.

“Indonesia holding the presidency of the HRC in 2026 is akin to apartheid South Africa leading it in 1980.”

Instead of leading the HRC, “Indonesia should be a global pariah,” said Wenda.

Refused to admit UN
“For seven years, they have refused to admit the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights [to the Papuan provinces], ignoring the repeated demand of over 110 countries, including all members of the EU commission, the United States, the Netherlands, and the UK.

“In that time, with West Papua closed to the world, they have launched countless military operations in Papua, killing thousands and displacing hundreds of thousands of Indigenous people.”

Indonesia’s Minister for Human Rights is a West Papuan, Natalius Pigai.

Wenda said Pigai had stated that Indonesia would use the HRC position to “counter breaches of international law in Venezuela and elsewhere”.

“What about your own people, Mr Pigai? What about Indonesia’s own back yard?” asked Wenda.

Until the world intervened to stop such “egregious hypocrisy” and recognised the “ongoing occupation, apartheid, and genocide”, there would “be no peace or justice in the Pacific.”

Principal defender
The UN Human Rights Council is the world’s principal defender of vulnerable people worldwide. This is the first time that an Indonesian diplomat has been elected president of the forum.

After his confirmation last Thursday, Ambassador Suryodipuro said Indonesia had been a strong supporter of the council since it began its work 20 years ago, and of the Geneva forum’s predecessor, the Human Rights Commission.

“Our decision to step forward is rooted in our 1945 constitution and that aligns with the purposes and principles of the UN Charter which mandates Indonesia to contribute to world peace based on independence, peace and social justice,” he told delegates.

At the same meeting, delegates also agreed to the appointment of Ecuadorian candidate Ambassador Marcelo Vázquez Bermúdez as vice-president of the council for 2026.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

One dead after Christchurch apartment fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

One person has died after a house fire in Christchurch.

Emergency services were called to an apartment on Korimako Lane just after 4pm on Tuesday after reports of a fire alarm sounding and the smell of smoke.

Police said one person was transported to hospital in critical condition, where they died.

Four crews responded and the blaze was contained at 4:35pm.

Enquiries into the circumstances of the blaze are ongoing.

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‘Several’ people injured in serious Rotorua crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

A major road in Rotorua has been closed after a serious two-vehicle crash.

Police said several people were injured after two vehicles collided on Tauranga Direct Road between Hamurana Road and Te Waerenga Road at about 5.30pm on Tuesday.

The road is closed while emergency services respond.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area and expect delays.

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Tennis: NZ pair into ASB Classic quarter finals

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s Finn Reynolds and James Watt during their doubles match at the ASB Classic. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

New Zealand doubles pairing Finn Reynolds and James Watt have belied their wildcard status to progress to the quarter-finals of the ASB Classic tennis tournament in Auckland.

The local duo beat Belgium’s Sander Gille and Sem Verbeek of the Netherlands in a super tiebreak 6-4 6-7(2) 13-11 on Tuesday on centre court.

Down four points in the tiebreak, the New Zealanders stormed back into the match and secured their first win of the tournament.

The Kiwis said they never doubted they could get a result.

“You always think it’s not over until it’s over you’ve got to play every single point as hard as you can,” Watt said.

Reynolds backed that up.

“You’re definitely aware that you’re not in the greatest position but you always believe you can win. Talk to any player here they’ve all had crazy comebacks or losses going the other way around so you’re never out of it, especially in doubles.”

They had drawn on the crowd’s energy to get them into the next round.

“We’re on a big high right now, the crowd and the atmosphere really got us pumped up at the end there,” Watt said of the post-match emotions.

“We were trying to get some energy going in the first tiebreak and it just felt like we were a little bit flat and even in the super [tiebreak] it was sort of like that too and we just eventually got things going and then we just needed one or two shots to get ourselves really pumped up and the crowd pumped up because it was getting a little quiet.”

Reynolds and Watt will play the winner of match between the third seeds from France, Sadio Doumbia and Fabien Reboul, and Austria’s Alexander Erler and Robert Galloway of the United States who play on Wednesday afternoon.

Tuesday’s match was Watt’s second time on court at his home tournament after he lost in his singles match against American Jenson Brooksby on Monday.

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Teen caught huffing nangs while driving

Source: Radio New Zealand

Cartridge of nitrous oxide, also called laughing gas or nangs, can cause serious health problems. These were found in a street in France in 2020. AFP/ GARO

Police are concerned about what they say is an increase in drivers huffing nitrous oxide, or ‘nangs’, from small silver canisters.

Last Wednesday, a Rotorua teenager was banned from driving after allegedly inhaling nitrous oxide from a balloon while on Te Ngae Road at 3pm.

The 18-year-old driver has also been charged with dangerous driving.

Bay of Plenty road policing manager, Inspector Phil Gillbanks, said the behaviour was extremely concerning and putting road users at risk.

“The effects might be temporary, but there is no margin for error when you’re driving tonnes of metal around.

“If you black out while you’re driving, then you’re likely to kill or maim yourself, your passengers, or some other innocent person – why would you want to take that risk?

“Nitrous oxide, or any drugs or alcohol, have no place in your system if you’re driving.”

Police said they were investigating a number of serious and fatal crashes on behalf of the coroner, where nitrous oxide is a potential contributor, including in the Bay of Plenty.

Gillbanks said anyone who saw someone inhaling from balloons or similar items while driving should call 111 immediately.

“You could save a life,” he said.

Police also asked anyone with information concerning the illegal sale of nitrous oxide, or it being sold for other reasons than its intended purpose, to notify Police via the 105 service.

They said those concerned about their own drinking or drug taking could reach out to the Alcohol Drug Helpline on 0800 787 797, or text 8681.

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Australia vs NZ: Who’s doing retirement income better?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Who gets the best deal in retirement? Australians or New Zealanders? RNZ / REECE BAKER

Do New Zealanders or Australians get a better deal in retirement?

Commentators say it depends who you’re asking.

A number of people who contact RNZ with questions about their financial lives want to know about NZ Super if they’ve been in Australia or [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/business/579686/we-re-in-australia-can-we-come-back-and-get-nz-super-ask-susan their entitlements to a pension in Australia if they’ve been living here.

But how do the two systems compare?

Superannuation savings

Australians probably get a better deal out of their superannuation savings than New Zealanders do from KiwiSaver.

From July last year, the contribution rate has been set at 12 percent – and this is contributed by the employer. Contributions are generally taxed at 15 percent but tax is charged on withdrawals when they are made from income before tax was paid on it such as contributions from an employer or salary sacrifice.

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In New Zealand, our current default rate of 6 percent is split between the employer and employee. It comes from taxed income and returns made by the fund are taxed. Withdrawals are not taxed.

Tim Jenkins, superannuation consulting leader at Mercer, said the contributions were a key difference. “In Australia, no one needs to pay a contribution… if you’re an employee, it’s 12 percent regardless of whether you pay or not.”

The compulsory nature of the scheme meant that anyone who was employed was developing savings for retirement, whereas in New Zealand people could opt out of the scheme, or stop contributing.

He said it was notable that New Zealand had next to no tax concession for savings.

“In Australia there are substantial tax concessions particularly for the higher end of town and that makes a big difference on incentives and what people choose to do.”

Jenkins said another difference was that Australian superannuation schemes had life insurance built in, whereas in New Zealand people have to arrange and pay for this cover separately

People can also access their superannuation in Australia when they are 60 if they have left work. In New Zealand, access is tied to the age of eligibility for NZ Super.

“That’s quite important because you have a number of people who cannot continue working to 65 because of the physical jobs, or whatever is going on, or they’re unemployed,” Jenkins said. “This helps with that transition to retirement phase.”

New Zealand’s pension costs about 5.1 percent of GDP, roughly twice what Australia’s costs. It is projected to rise to 8 percent by 2065, compared to a projected drop to 2 percent for Australia by 2060.

Pension

But it’s on the pension that New Zealand comes into its own.

In Australia, you need to be 67 to qualify. To receive the full pension amount, you can only earn up to $218 a fortnight as a single person, or $380 as a couple.

The cut-off point for a single person to receive anything is $2575.40 a fortnight, and for a couple it is $3934.

A single homeowner also cannot have assets more than $321,500 to receive a full pension.

In New Zealand, NZ Super is available to anyone over 65 who meets the residency requirement, with no income or means testing.

To generate the amount that a single person gets in NZ Super, you’d need to have about $600,000 saved, at a drawdown rate of 4 percent a year. At the moment, the average balance of Australians nearing retirement is about A$400,000.

Jenkins said Australian super was replacing the pension for middle Australia, whereas all residents and citizens in New Zealand could access it.

Simplicity chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub said, from an individual perspective, New Zealand had a really good system. “Everybody just gets free cash… Who would say no to free cash? The problem, of course, is that the overall pension system doesn’t make sense.

“It’s literally free money. Essentially working New Zealanders are subsidising the superannuation system. It’s working as we designed it to and it’s doing exactly what we thought it would. The question is, is it fair?”

The cost of the current system was projected to keep rising in an unsustainable way, he said.

“If you look at the Treasury long-term briefing, there’s a really nice chart of New Zealand versus Australia, comparing the total superannuation cost including the subsidies for their savings scheme.

“Ours goes up forever, and theirs gradually trends down over the next several decades. That’s the difference. We have it good for now but it’s not going to last.

“They have it good for those who need it but not so much for those who don’t. They have a system that encourages people to save out of their income … it’s really around collective versus individual. I think the lens really matters but also generational, so for people who are getting it now this current system in New Zealand is fantastic and it’s absolutely terrible for the young people of New Zealand.”

Pie Funds chief executive Ana-Marie Lockyer agreed there were clear differences.

“I would say Australia is more generous at the front end through compulsory employer contributions and tax breaks. New Zealand is more generous at the back end by guaranteeing a universal pension. They’re fundamentally different philosophies rather than one clearly being more generous overall, and different cohorts will benefit from one over the other.”

Australia’s pension is generally tax-free and more generous than New Zealand’s, which is also taxed as income.

Other differences

Jenkins said another difference was that Australia had given more thought to helping people spend their superannuation savings.

“We’re starting to get decumulation options and a focus on how to spend in retirement using your super as opposed to New Zealand, which is really a savings system at this stage… every system has its strengths and its weaknesses and it’s the combination of the KiwiSaver or super guarantee alongside the age pension that makes the difference. You’ve got to look at both together. And then think about not just accumulation but how does decumulation work?”

What if you live in one country and want to retire in another?

New Zealand has a reciprocal social security agreement with Australia and you can use residence in either country to meet the residency test for the pension in the other.

Ministry of Social Development general manager international, disability and generational policy Harry Fenton said if someone relied on time spent in Australia to meet the residency requirements, they would not be able to qualify for NZ Super until they reach the age of entitlement for Australian Age Pension, which is age 67.

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Adelaide Writers Week: Cancelled – no decorum without a quorum

By Kim Wingerei and Michael West in Sydney

Adelaide Writers’ Week, a core part of South Australia’s premier cultural event, the Adelaide Festival, has finally been cancelled in its 40th year.

There are own goals. And then there is the board of the Adelaide Festival (ably assisted by referee, Premier Peter Malinauskas). After yesterday’s resignation of chair Tracey Whiting and three further members, the board no longer had a quorum to make any decisions.

The chaos follows last week’s “uninvitation” of Palestinian-Australian sociologist, lawyer and author Dr Randa Abdel-Fattah. Almost 100 authors and presenters (of the 124 in the programme, according to InDailySA) cancelled their attendance in protest.

It was finally cancelled today. The damage is colossal.

Being one of the most popular and respected writers’ events in Australia, the list of withdrawals includes best-selling local writers Trent Dalton, Helen Garner and Hannah Kent, journalists Sarah Ferguson, Peter Greste and Laura Tingle, as well as international speakers former New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern, Yanis Varoufakis and Zadie Smith.

Literary luminaries such as Greg Sheridan are among the 30-odd who had yet to cancel. At least publicly. Some planned panel discussions were left with just one participant, and some stage interviews with just a questioner, somewhat stymying the discourse.

But it’s not just writers who are staying away; the main Festival is also seeing significant fallout, with day two of “Tryp”, the music programme, already cancelled because lead acts have said they are no longer coming. Then there are those already signed up and paid for — for events now cancelled, or planned to do so.

Sponsors rattled too
Last year, 362,000 people attended the two events, and according to the SA government’s impact report, they spent over $62 million. The economic impact will be felt not just by the organisers and the state government, but by hotels, restaurants, retailers and cellar doors from Clare Valley to the Padthaway.

At least one sponsor, Mischief Brew, pulled out, with others likely to monitor the situation closely. A low-attendance festival hitting headlines for all the wrong reasons is not an attractive marketing proposition.

Premier Malinauskas in all sorts
The otherwise well-liked SA Premier has perhaps helped the Zionist cause with his vocal support for the decision, but is unlikely to have found much sympathy beyond rusted-on readers of The Advertiser. But perhaps that’s what he was looking for?

The SA state election is in March, too.

Palestinian-Australian sociologist, lawyer, and author Dr Randa Abdel-Fattah . . . . keynote speaking engagement being “cancelled” by Adelaide Writers’ Week stirred a national furore. Image: The Jewish Independent

Both he and Treasurer Tom Koutsantonis have been caught lying by stating that the Festival removed New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman from the 2024 programme at the behest of Dr Abdel-Fattah and 10 others who had written to the board and requested his exclusion because of an article he had written demeaning Palestinians and Arabs.

Notwithstanding the hypocrisy of that request, correspondence from the Festival showed they did not cave in; Friedman withdrew on his own accord.

In an attempt to diminish his earlier comments, Malinauskas has since stated that he had not “directed’ the board to act, but merely voiced “his opinion” in supporting the axing of Dr Abdel-Fattah.

It does, of course, also highlight the double standards of a board that rejected the request for a Jewish participant to be cancelled, for all the right reasons, yet were happy to comply when the target of the complaint was a Palestinian.

What will the board do?
Michael West Media understands that the board members who resigned were all supportive of Louise Adler’s programming decisions and understood the need to review the decision to cancel Dr Abdel-Fattah.

However, with Writers Week still over seven weeks away, it apparently could not be saved. Most of the authors who resigned said they would come if Abdel-Fattah was reinstated.

But as it stands, the board cannot decide anything. The Adelaide Festival is constituted by an Act of Parliament, and board members are appointed by the State Governor at the recommendation of the City of Adelaide and the State Government.

According to the act, the board has to have a maximum of eight members, at least two must be women and two must be men.

After the above was posted, chair Tracey Whiting resigned and also the director Louise Adler, who said in an article in The Guardian explaining her resignation that she “cannot be party to silencing writers”.

The board now has three members, two women and one man, plus a non-voting government observer. No quorum.

In addition, Dr Abdel-Fattah and several of those who have cancelled have engaged lawyers, and (unconfirmed) reports suggest so has Adler.

On Monday afternoon, Adelaide Festival Corporation’s executive director Julian Hobba issued a brief statement saying the situation was “complex and unprecedented”.

We bet it is. Stay tuned.

Kim Wingerei is a businessman turned writer and commentator. He is passionate about free speech, human rights, democracy and the politics of change. Originally from Norway, Kim has lived in Australia for 30 years. Author of ‘Why Democracy is Broken – A Blueprint for Change’.

Michael West established Michael West Media in 2016 to focus on journalism of high public interest, particularly the rising power of corporations over democracy. West was formerly a journalist and editor with Fairfax newspapers, a columnist for News Corp and even, once, a stockbroker. This article is republished with permission.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

One seriously injured after Christchurch apartment fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

One person is in a serious condition after an apartment fire in Christchurch on Tuesday afternoon.

Fire and Emergency were called to the blaze in the suburb of Sydenham at 4:05pm after reports of a fire alarm sounding off and the smell of smoke.

Four crews responded and the blaze was contained at 4:35pm.

Fire and Emergency said one occupant was found at the house.

Police told RNZ it appeared one person was in a serious condition.

A fire investigator was still at the scene.

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Flight bound for Vancouver loops back to Auckland Airport

Source: Radio New Zealand

The flight looped back to Auckland soon after it left. Supplied / FlightRadar24

A flight bound for Vancouver returned to Auckland International Airport shortly after takeoff.

The AC40 flight was due to depart Auckland at 2pm on Tuesday, but it didn’t leave until 2.51pm.

According to Flight Aware, it landed back where it started at 4.02pm.

Were you on the flight? Email iwitness@rnz.co.nz

According to FlightRadar24, the average flight time is 12-and-a-half hours.

Air Canada has been contacted for comment.

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Heavy traffic on Auckland’s south-western motorway after truck fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland’s south-western motorway has reopened after a truck load of rubbish caught fire before it was spilled onto the road.

The blaze and debris initially closed two lanes and filled the area with smoke.

Both lanes near Lambie Drive have reopened and the debris cleared.

The truck driver dumped his load which was on fire. Supplied / Checkpoint Watch Auckland

The Lambie Drive off-ramp, which was earlier closed, is also now open again.

The NZ Transport Agency earlier said traffic was heavy and motorists should expect delays.

Police urged drivers to avoid the area.

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This is the playbook the Iranian regime uses to crack down on protests – but will it work this time?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Amin Naeni, PhD Candidate in International Relations, Deakin University

In late December, Tehran’s bazaar merchants began protesting against Iran’s theocratic rulers over the sharp collapse of the currency.

These protests quickly spread nationwide, although the level of participation remained limited, initially. The situation changed when Reza Pahlavi, the exiled son of Iran’s former shah, issued a public call for demonstrations last Thursday and Friday.

This altered the dynamics of the protest movement. The authorities appeared not to take Pahlavi’s call seriously, suggesting they did not believe the US-based Pahlavi had significant influence among the population. State media openly mocked the call.

Yet, Pahlavi’s message spread rapidly online. His video on Instagram has received more than 90 million views and nearly 500,000 comments as of January 13. These are unprecedented figures for any Persian content on social media.

Huge crowds then took to the streets, reportedly spreading to all of Iran’s 31 provinces, with many chanting for Pahlavi’s return to the country.

This marked the first time since the 1979 Iranian revolution that a political figure issued a protest call explicitly framed around regime change and people responded at scale.

In 2009, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, who lost a contested presidential election to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, mobilised large protests that became known as the Green Movement, but these largely called for reforms rather than regime change.

Other protest movements in Iran, including those in 2017–18, 2019–20 and 2022, were social media-driven and largely leaderless. This time, the protests have combined online tools with clear leadership, making the potential reach and overall impact of the movement even greater.

Internet shutdown

As the protests intensified, the authorities realised they had underestimated Pahlavi’s impact. In response, the regime imposed a complete internet shutdown of the country on January 8. Telephone lines and SMS services were also cut.

Since then, more than 85 million Iranians have been living in an information vacuum, with the only news coming from state-run sources. The regime has made only a handful of its outlets available online, including Tasnim and Fars, both of which are affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

Although Iranians have often found ways around online restrictions using VPNs in the past, this isn’t possible when the entire internet is shut down.

The authorities used a complete digital blackout combined with violent suppression to crack down on the 2019 protests when 1,500 people are believed to have been killed.

This time, the only difference is the limited availability of Starlink satellite internet. Very few Iranians have access to Starlink, but it has allowed a small number of videos to reach the outside world.

Hundreds have reportedly been killed in the state crackdown so far – perhaps even thousands – with more than 10,000 people arrested.

The government is now intensifying efforts to disrupt Starlink signals, as well.

Meanwhile, protesters have tried to turn the tables on the authorities by disabling the ubiquitous surveillance cameras that have long been a key part of the regime’s strategy to crack down on dissent.

Iran’s digital authoritarianism

Alongside China and Russia, Iran has one of the most sophisticated systems of digital authoritarianism in the world. The regime has developed three core strategies:

1) Internet shutdown. The regime frequently imposes internet restrictions, or disables it completely, to hamper protesters’ ability to coordinate. This tactic also limits international awareness of the protest movement and pressure on the regime to stop killing civilians, making repression easier.

2) Facial recognition cameras. The regime also relies on this technology, largely imported from China, to identify and arrest protesters.

3) Control the narrative. The third strategy is spreading propaganda and disinformation aimed at shaping public perception and justifying state suppression. This messaging is also crafted to discourage people from taking part in protests.

In recent days, the regime has unleashed all of these three strategies, accompanied by gunfire. The last time all three strategies were used together was in 2019, when reformist President Hassan Rouhani was in office. (In 2022, the internet was cut off on a regional basis.)

How the regime is portraying the protests

So, as the Iranian population is plunged into a blackout, the state media and officials have begun constructing their preferred narrative of the events.

Linking protesters to the United States and Israel is one of the oldest propaganda techniques used by the regime, and it is once again being promoted heavily.

Iran’s current president, Masoud Pezeshkian, another reformist, has said “the enemy has brought trained terrorists into the country” and those involved in the unrest are not ordinary Iranians. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of Iran’s parliament, has also alleged “the enemy has entered a phase of terrorist warfare”.

In addition, Tasnim News Agency has claimed that “terrorist actions” have resulted in a significant number of “martyrs” – referring to both protesters and security forces who have been killed – blaming “agents” of the US and Israel for the killings. Reports of arrests of alleged “Mossad agents” are also being broadcast repeatedly.

The construction of such narratives is an obvious attempt to delegitimise the protesters and present the regime’s harsh response as an unavoidable measure taken in the name of public security. In this framing, the authorities can claim they are neutralising an enemy plan rather than targeting ordinary Iranians. The messaging is also aimed at deterring undecided groups from joining the movement.

Narratives centred on terrorism and the alleged role of the US and Israel are also used to prevent the erosion of support within the regime’s traditional base. While the regime’s hardcore supporters are strident believers in the ideology of the Islamic revolution, the leaders may fear their support could waver under the current economic conditions and sustained popular unrest.

Emphasising the role of “enemies” serves to reinforce the narrative of longstanding foreign hostilities, rather than a domestic uprising.

While the securitisation of protesters and the digital blackout have intensified, protesters continue to risk their lives in pursuit of freedom. They hope their voices will be heard around the world, despite the digital darkness.

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

ref. This is the playbook the Iranian regime uses to crack down on protests – but will it work this time? – https://theconversation.com/this-is-the-playbook-the-iranian-regime-uses-to-crack-down-on-protests-but-will-it-work-this-time-273215

Miracle journey: From village rugby to Super Rugby captain

Source: Radio New Zealand

Miracle Fai’ilagi will take the reigns from Moana’s inspirational 2024 leader, Ardie Savea, who is on playing sabbatical in Japan. Alan Lee / www.photosport.nz

Miracle Fai’ilagi is no stranger to the unexpected, his very arrival into the world marked by extraordinary circumstances.

Such was the nature of his birth that his parents bestowed the name Miracle on their son, a name he has continued to live up to, carving out a remarkable journey from village rugby to Moana Pasifika captain.

“It was kind of a miracle in my family. My mum was giving birth at the same time my dad was having surgery. When I was born, my dad finished his surgery. So it was kind of a miracle that they both lived.”

Fai’ilagi will take the reigns from Moana’s inspirational 2024 leader, Ardie Savea, who is on playing sabbatical in Japan.

Coach Tana Umaga said it’s a hole that’s impossible to fill.

“No one person can do what Ardie did for us last year or his legacy, and we can’t expect one person to step up. And so for us, it is a collective effort. We need everybody to step into that hole that he’s left.”

However, Umaga said Fai’ilagi has the full backing of the squad to lead them.

“I’ve just seen him grow in the respect that he’s gathered from those around him. He’s softly spoken, but he’s very knowledgeable around what he talks about. When we announced it to the team, it got the loudest chair that I’ve heard for a long time.”

Hailing from the villages of Vailele and Uafato in Samoa, Umaga said Fai’ilagi encapsulates the purpose of Moana Pasifika.

“It’s something for others to aspire to that come from the same background as Mira, because to get to where he’s got to, there’s not many of those stories around, especially through the pathway that he’s taken to come to Moana. it just shows that if you go through your work and you put in the effort, things can happen for you.”

Coach Tana Umaga said Fai’ilagi has the full backing of the squad to lead them. Alan Lee / www.photosport.nz

It was a breakout season for Fai’ilagi, scoring eight tries, including a hat-trick in Moana Pasifika’s win over the Hurricanes.

Despite the captain’s armband, Fai’ilagi is not feeling the pressure of the role.

“Just being the best player on the field, just leading through my actions and just doing my job, nothing changes.”

He said he was honoured to be asked to lead.

“It’s a massive step up for me. It’s a really special moment for me and also my family.”

Fai’ilagi has been in regular contact with his predecessor, whose advice gave him the confidence he could do the job.

“I saw that opportunity to learn many things from him (Savea) and I’ve spoken to him a couple of weeks ago about some leadership stuff. It’s a goal of mine this season to step into that leadership group and stepping to this captaincy is massive.”

After their strongest season to date, Umaga said Moana’s challenge is to back it up in 2026.

“We knew what we did last year was great, but you can’t rest on your laurels or on what happened last year. You’ve got to learn and learn how to grow.”

Moana kick off their Super Rugby season against the Fijian Drua in Lautoka on 14 February.

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Pedestrian killed after crash involving two vehicles in Rangitikei

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police responded to the fatal crash on Tuesday morning. (File photo) RNZ / REECE BAKER

A person has died following a crash in Rangitikei.

The crash on Taihape-Napier Rd, involving two vehicles and a pedestrian, was reported to police just after 11.20am.

The pedestrian died at the scene, police said.

The drivers of the two vehicles involved sustained moderate to serious injuries, a spokesperson said.

Taihape-Napier Rd remained closed near Comet Rd while a scene examination took place.

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Three early January polls have Labor down, but disagree on One Nation’s vote

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne

Three early January national polls have Labor sliding to between 52–53% two party preferred against the Coalition, down from around 55% to Labor before Anika Wells’ expenses scandal and Bondi. These polls are the worst for Labor since they unexpectedly won the May 2025 federal election in a landslide.

The three polls disagree on One Nation and the Coalition’s vote. In Morgan, the Coalition is actually ahead of Labor on primary votes by 30.5–30, with One Nation at 15%. In Fox & Hedgehog, Labor has 29% of the primary vote, the Coalition 25% and One Nation 21%. And in DemosAU, Labor has 29% with the Coalition and One Nation tied at 23% each.

Labor’s slide in the polls began with the expenses scandal and appears to have been worsened by fallout from Bondi. But just because Labor has lost support doesn’t mean they will keep losing it.

DemosAU has One Nation surging to tie with Coalition

A national DemosAU poll, conducted January 5–6 from a sample of 1,027, gave Labor 29% of the primary vote (down four since the October to November DemosAU MRP poll), the Coalition 23% (down one), One Nation 23% (up six), the Greens 12% (down one) and all Others 13% (steady).

Based on 2025 election preference flows, Labor led the Coalition by 52–48, a four-point gain for the Coalition. The pollster estimated a 50–50 tie between Labor and One Nation based on one seat (Hunter), where Coalition preferences were distributed at the election in a contest between Labor and One Nation.

Anthony Albanese’s ratings were 41% negative, 30% neutral, 29% positive (net -12), while Sussan Ley was at 28% negative, 55% neutral, 17% positive (net -11). Albanese led Ley by 42–29 as preferred PM.

Fox & Hedgehog poll

A national poll by new pollster Fox & Hedgehog for the News Corp papers, conducted January 5–6 from a sample of 1,608, gave Labor a 53–47 lead over the Coalition by respondent preferences and a 56–44 lead over One Nation.

Primary votes were 29% Labor, 25% Coalition, 21% One Nation, 14% Greens and 11% for all Others. By 2025 election flows, Labor would lead the Coalition by about 53–47.

Albanese had a net approval of -15, with 48% disapproving and 33% approving, while Ley was at -13 net approval. Albanese led Ley by 39–31 as preferred PM.

Federal Labor’s net approval was -10, the federal Liberals were at -10, One Nation at -1, Pauline Hanson at -3 and Greens leader Larissa Waters at -9, with 45% who had never heard of her.

By 54–19, respondents supported a royal commission into the Bondi terror attack. By 54–22, they thought there should be a pause to all migration to Australia other than tourism. By 47–26, they thought Australia should remain committed to net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Morgan poll

A national Morgan poll, conducted January 5–11 from a sample of 1,676, gave Labor a 52–48 lead by respondent preferences, a 2.5-point gain for the Coalition since the December 8–14 Morgan poll.

Primary votes were 30.5% Coalition (up three), 30% Labor (down 0.5), 15% One Nation (down two), 13.5% Greens (up 0.5) and 11% for all Others (down one). By 2025 election flows, Labor led by 52–48, a one-point gain for the Coalition from my estimate for the December 8–14 poll.

The previous Morgan poll was taken after the expenses scandal but before Bondi, suggesting that Bondi caused a further erosion for Labor.

Queensland Redbridge poll has big LNP lead

A Queensland state Redbridge and Accent Research poll for The Financial Review, conducted November 24 to December 8 from a sample of 818, gave the Liberal National Party (LNP) a 56–44 lead, from primary votes of 40% LNP, 27% Labor, 16% One Nation, 12% Greens and 5% for all Others.

By 54–30, respondents thought the Crisafulli LNP government has the right focus and priorities. By 54–28, they did not think Steven Miles and Labor have done enough to deserve to win the next election.

Resolve’s Queensland polls have been weaker for the LNP than other polls. An October DemosAU poll gave the LNP a 54–46 lead. The LNP gained a seat at a recent byelection from the Katter party.

UK Labour falls to third in polls

I wrote for The Poll Bludger on December 27 that United Kingdom Labour has fallen to third in the polls, behind the far-right Reform and the Conservatives. This article also covered polls in major western European countries and in some countries with elections this year.

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

ref. Three early January polls have Labor down, but disagree on One Nation’s vote – https://theconversation.com/three-early-january-polls-have-labor-down-but-disagree-on-one-nations-vote-272639

View from The Hill: Kevin Rudd, a controversial energy ball as ambassador to US, quits early

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

Kevin Rudd’s premature departure in March from his post of Australia’s ambassador to the United States is a surprise, but perhaps not as unexpected as it might initially appear.

Rudd’s term had another year to run. Any extension would have been limited. His old job as president of Asia Society had opened up, giving him the opportunity to re-devote his main attention to China. He will head the society’s Center for China Analysis.

Rudd said in his statement he’d always believed “the future of US-China relations […] to be the core question for the future stability of our region and the world”. Last year he published a book titled How Xi’s Marxist Nationalism is Shaping China and the World.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Tuesday described Rudd as “regarded as perhaps the world’s most eminent and sought after expert on China and China-US relations”.

There is no reason to disbelieve Albanese when he says Rudd’s decision to leave early was his own. Rudd and the Albanese government had ridden out the worst of the bumps his past mouthings-off had caused in relations with the Trump administration.

Though they continued to have the capacity to embarrass. Who can forget Donald Trump’s reaction when his attention was drawn to Rudd during Albanese’s October meeting with the president? “You said bad?” Trump asked Rudd. “I don’t like you either, and I probably never will.”

Rudd in his pre-ambassadorial days had famously denounced Trump, including calling him the “most destructive president in history”. There were plenty of quotes on the record. Being Rudd, his language had often been extravagant and offensive, and the observations didn’t go unnoticed by some around the president.

But the negatives for Australia of Rudd’s controversial past utterances were at least neutralised, and arguably outshone by the positives he brought to the role of Australia’s representative in Washington, notably his expertise and his energy.

If the mandarin-speaking Rudd could not be surpassed for knowledge about China, certainly no one could match his hyperactivity and persistence. His energy is prodigious; his determination to cover every base, to make his case relentlessly, could on occasion drive his peers and betters in Canberra to distraction.

No doubt it had the the same effect in Washington, but it did get results. Rudd knew everybody, and many senior administration figures were willing to go to the Australian residence to meet visiting ministers and officials.

Rudd arrived in Washington when Joe Biden was still in office, so the Albanese government had an fraternal administration that shared many policy views. But then Labor had to feel its way with Trump, who was much emboldened in this second term and had many difficult people around him.

At the same time, the challenges were big in terms of Australia’s interests: the US review of AUKUS, dealing with Trump’s tariffs, negotiation of a critical minerals agreement. Securing the first bilateral between Albanese and Trump proved ridiculously complicated and fraught. Rudd was at the centre of the government’s handling of these issues, and also highly active in furthering investment relationships. On another front, he helped secure Julian Assange’s repatriation. .

Rudd’s departure might remove what was at times was an irritant for the relationship with the Trump administration but the qualifications and qualities he has brought to the role set a high benchmark for his successor, yet to be announced.

Rudd says he will remain in America working between New York and Washington. Of course we won’t have heard the last of his voice. He says, “As a ‘think and do’ tank, Asia Society’s formidable Center for China Analysis will be an important platform”. Hopefully, however, he has learned something of the hazards of social media platforms.

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

ref. View from The Hill: Kevin Rudd, a controversial energy ball as ambassador to US, quits early – https://theconversation.com/view-from-the-hill-kevin-rudd-a-controversial-energy-ball-as-ambassador-to-us-quits-early-272431

Waka Ama pays tribute to one of its pillars at 2026 Nationals

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ngāti Korokī Kahukura kaumātua and staunch supporter of Waka Ama, Karaitiana Tamatea. Supplied/Waka Ama Aotearoa NZ

Waka Ama paddlers and officials have paid tribute to Ngāti Korokī Kahukura kaumātua and staunch supporter of waka ama, Karaitiana Tamatea.

Tamatea, of Ngāti Korokī Kahukura and Te Aitanga a Mahaki, died on Saturday – the day before the biggest Waka Ama Sprint Nationals in history began.

Racing at Lake Karāpiro was paused on Monday morning and kaihoe raised their paddles in acknowledgement of Tamatea’s passing as his whānau departed to Maungatautari Marae.

Waka Ama Aotearoa New Zealand chief executive Lara Collins told RNZ they worked closely with Tamatea and Ngāti Korokī Kahukura to host the nationals.

“Karaitiana, his wife Te Rairi, all of their whānau, hapū, they have been involved in helping us host the event since the event came back to Karapiro in 1999. So since then, they’ve had a really big involvement behind the scenes, you know, the level of manaakitanga that they’ve shown all of the VIPs and guests over the years is just, it’s incredible.”

Kaihoe form a guard of honour in tribute to Ngāti Korokī Kahukura kaumātua and staunch supporter of Waka Ama, Karaitiana Tamatea. Supplied/Waka Ama Aotearoa NZ

Tamatea was the driver from Ngāti Korokī Kahukura in waka ama, a kaupapa that was dear to his heart, she said.

“Losing him the day before the event started on Saturday, we really wanted, you know, to [pay tribute] to him as much as we can to make this the best waka ama nationals there’s ever been just for him, because I know how much he loved this kaupapa.

“So the fact that the whānau was able to call in yesterday on their way to Maungatautari Marae, we paused racing and had a really amazing send-off for him here at the venue and the opportunity for all of our waka ama whānau to just give him and his whānau love and aroha while they’re here and then send them on their way to the marae. And it was a really special moment and I think one that people will remember for a long time.”

In a post on Facebook, Waka Ama Aotearoa NZ said: “We are reminded by his famous saying ‘he pakanga ki tai, he rongopai ki uta’, although waka ama is competitive on the water, we are all whānau when we return to land and to look after one another, while enjoying the sport we all love.”

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Football: ‘Healthy’ A-League club Auckland FC worried for opposition

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland FC coach Steve Corica. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The off-field blows keep coming for the A-League this week, with the future of another club hanging in the balance, and concern about the overall health of the competition is ever present for a leading coach.

On Monday the Australian Professional Leagues (APL) – which runs the A-League – took over the management of the struggling Central Coast Mariners on an interim basis while the process to sell the club is completed.

The fate of the Mariners follows Western United’s absence from the A-League this season while the club sorted out financial issues and worked to get their A-League licence back for a potential return.

Auckland FC coach Steve Corica said in their second season the league leaders were in a “healthy place” on and off the field, but he was aware that was not the case across the competition.

Corica has been involved as a player and coach in the A-League since the start in 2005.

“Of course there is always concerns,” Corica said on Tuesday about the health of the competition.

“Western we’re still not sure what is going to happen, I know they paid their debt off, so whether they come back in next year we’d like to see that, but with Central Coast as well it’s not great.

“It’s for the A-League to sort out, obviously they need to find another owner for Central Coast to move the club forward.

“We want the A-League to continue doing well.”

Reports out of Australia suggested there was local and international interest – including from English Championship club Queens Park Rangers – in taking over the ownership of the club, which is based in Gosford.

The Mariners’ men’s and women’s teams have had some success in recent years and Corica noted how well a team was doing on the field did not always impact what was happening with the business side of the club.

“They’ve had a really good run of late, they won the treble one year, they won the Grand Final, the Premiership, the last couple of years probably haven’t been like that but you just want to see them doing well off the pitch as well.”

A statement from the APL on Monday said that at this mid-point in the men’s and women’s seasons it would “ensure the ongoing obligations of the [Mariners] are met and operations continue.”

Auckland play the Mariners at Mt Smart Stadium next week.

The off-field success of the A-League would also be important for New Zealand Football which stated last month an intention to play a part in getting more New Zealand A-League teams into the competition with the first to join as soon as 2030.

NZF wanted a total of three men’s and three women’s A-League teams based in New Zealand by 2035.

Auckland also hung their future expansion into the women’s A-League on how well the competition was doing financially, with a plan to join in 2027.

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Two men charged with murder of Charles Pongi in Auckland’s Pt England more than two years on

Source: Radio New Zealand

Charles Pongi died in hospital after being shot in Taurima Reserve, Pt England. (File photo) Google Maps

Two new murder charges have been laid in relation to the 2023 shooting death of Charles Pongi in Auckland’s Pt England.

Pongi, 32, died after he was shot in Taurima Reserve on 5 August 2023.

In 2025, four men were convicted and sentenced for his murder.

But, Detective Inspector Glenn Baldwin, of Auckland City CIB, said Operation Pastel, which investigated Pongi’s death, had now led to two further arrests in Auckland.

Baldwin said two more men were identified as part of the investigation and had now been jointly charged with murder.

A 28-year-old man appeared on Tuesday in the Auckland District Court and had been remanded in custody to reappear in the High Court at Auckland on February 4.

A 25-year-old man was due to appear in the Auckland District Court on Tuesday afternoon.

That man also faced a charge of presenting a firearm, Baldwin said.

“We’re pleased to have laid further charges in this investigation.”

“I’m unable to comment further at this time with the court process ongoing for these two men, as well as a 21-year-old man who will be subject of a re-trial later this year.”

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Wellington’s commuter trains back after two week shutdown for major repairs

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington’s commuter trains are back after a two week closure for major track repairs.

Buses replaced trains for most of the capital’s services between Boxing Day and January 12.

During the closure, KiwiRail work included replacing the rails on Lower Hutt’s Ava Bridge and upgrading the Otaihanga level crossing in Kāpiti.

Earthworks were also started in Naenae and Trentham for the arrival of two new substations which were set to arrive later this year.

KiwiRail Wellington metro general manager, Andy Lyon said the renewals improved the long term resilience and reliability of the network.

“It’s a big part of getting the Wellington Metro ready for increasing services and the new trains destined for Wairarapa and Manawatū from 2029.”

Metlink acknowledged issues commuters faced with buses that replaced trains last week.

Commuters said the number of buses sent to replace trains was inadequate with some not turning up at all while others left earlier than scheduled.

The transport operator’s acting general manager Paul Tawharu said bus replacement services were a “constant area for improvement”.

“This summer we trialled new real-time tracking for bus replacements, and quickly learned where issues with coordinating timings and connections were happening.

“As soon as we detect issues we quickly work with our rail operator Transdev to understand what went wrong and what needs to be done to fix it – we thank our passengers for their patience and understanding.”

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Man bitten by police dog and arrested after allegedly shooting at police

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Police say it’s fortunate no was injured when a man shot at officers in Dargaville on Sunday evening.

Inspector Dean Robinson, acting Northland district commander, said police received a report of man with a firearm on Bassett Street just after 8pm.

Enquiries led police to a house on the same street where they located “a person of interest”.

Robinson said the man fired an air rifle towards the officers.

“Thankfully, no one was injured. A police dog was deployed and the alleged offender received a dog bite before being taken into custody.”

He was taken to hospital for treatment and discharged a short time later.

Robinson said a 48-year-old man appeared in Whangārei District Court on Monday charged with two counts of a dangerous act with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and two charges of resisting police.

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ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for January 13, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on January 13, 2026.

Why do educated people fall for conspiracy theories? It could be narcissism
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tylor Cosgrove, Lecturer in Psychology, Adelaide University If there are two things the internet loves talking about, it’s conspiracy theories, and who may or may not be a narcissist. Misinformation and conspiratorial thinking are long-running concerns, while narcissism has become TikTok’s favourite armchair diagnosis. Research shows the

Did NZ’s sweeping health reforms deliver on their promise? 3 years on, the verdict is mixed
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Arshad Ali, Researcher, University of Otago Dean Purcell/Getty Images When the former Labour-led government unveiled the Pae Ora (Healthy Futures) reforms in 2022, it billed them as the biggest shakeup of New Zealand’s health system in a generation. The sweeping overhaul promised to end chronic fragmentation and

The Pout-Pout Fish visually exemplifies contemporary animation – but something is lost in translation
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ari Chand, Senior Lecturer in Illustration and Animation, Adelaide University ; University of Newcastle Like a Photon Creative Adapting the much beloved and best-selling picture book series The Pout-Pout Fish is no easy feat. Staying core to the source material, the new Australian animated movie follows surly

A centuries-old debate on how reptiles keep evolving skin bones is finally settled
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Roy Ebel, PhD Candidate in Evolutionary Biology, Museums Victoria Research Institute Rosenberg’s goanna (WAM R95408) with skin bones visible in purple. Roy Ebel Our bones did not begin deep inside the body. They started in the skin, not long after the first complex animals took shape. Ever

Iran protests 2026: our surveys show Iranians agree more on regime change than what might come next
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ammar Maleki, Assistant Professor, Public Law and Governance, Tilburg University Protesters defied a savage regime crackdown to take to the streets to demand change. X Iranians have shown a willingness to pay a devastating price for political change, as protest has consistently been met by the Islamic

It takes many ghosts to make a story: how Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet takes from – and mistakes – Shakespeare
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kate Flaherty, Senior Lecturer (English and Drama), Australian National University Jessie Buckey as Agnes and Paul Mescal as Shakespeare in the film adaptation of Maggie O’Farrell’s Hamnet. Universal Pictures Australia In her eighth novel Hamnet, Maggie O’Farrell imagines the short life and tragic death of Shakespeare’s only

Yes, those big touchscreens in cars are dangerous and buttons are coming back
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Milad Haghani, Associate Professor and Principal Fellow in Urban Risk and Resilience, The University of Melbourne Vladimir Srajber/Pexels In recent years, the way drivers interact with cars has fundamentally changed. Physical buttons have gradually disappeared from dashboards as more functions have been transferred to touchscreens. Touchscreens in

How do airlines set bag and weight limits? An ex-pilot explains new changes on the way
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Natasha Heap, Program Director for the Bachelor of Aviation, University of Southern Queensland mtreasure/Getty Images You arrive at the airport in plenty of time to check in. You reach the departure gate early. You board, walking down to your seat – and that’s when you discover the

What causes ‘extreme morning sickness’? What we know, don’t know and suspect about hyperemesis gravidarum
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Karin Hammarberg, Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Global and Women’s Health, School of Public Health & Preventive Medicine, Monash University globalmoments/Getty Most women experience some nausea and vomiting in early pregnancy. Although this is called morning sickness, it can happen at any time of day. Up to 80%

What is the global water cycle and how is it amplifying climate disasters?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Albert Van Dijk, Professor, Water and Landscape Dynamics, Fenner School of Environment & Society, Australian National University Floods, droughts and heatwaves continue to dominate headlines around the world and in Australia. In the past few days, hundreds of bushfires have ignited in south-east Australia during an extreme

Could Heated Rivalry bring a whole new fanbase to ice hockey – and can the sport embrace them?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kasey Symons, Lecturer of Communication, Sports Media, Deakin University HBO Heated Rivalry has taken the world by a storm. The series tells the story of rivals-to-lovers hockey players Japanese-Canadian Shane Hollander (Hudson Williams) and Russian Ilya Rozanov (Connor Storrie), and their yearslong relationship navigating falling in love

Papua in the Pacific mirror: A path to recognition and reconciliation
Indonesia needs a fundamental shift in perspective: seeing Papuans not as a problem to be managed, but as equal partners and full subjects of their own destiny within the Republic, writes Laurens Ikinia. COMMENTARY: By Laurens Ikinia in Jakarta The island of Papua is a land of profound paradox. Beneath its ancient, cathedral-like forests and

CNMI leaders warn economic slide could affect US strategic presence in Pacific
By Mark Rabago, RNZ Pacific Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas correspondent Leaders in the Northern Marianas have warned that a deepening economic crisis in the US territory could begin to undermine civilian systems that support America’s long-term strategic presence in the Indo-Pacific. In joint letters sent to US President Donald Trump and Admiral Samuel Paparo,

Can the China-Australia relationship stay on track in 2026? This is how experts in China see it
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Guangyi Pan, Lecturer in International Political Studies at the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, UNSW Canberra, UNSW Sydney When Labor was returned to power in 2022, the China-Australia relationship began to stabilise after what had been a rocky few years. So, where do things stand now,

Venezuela’s leader may be gone, but his regime remains – with a new chief in Washington
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong US President Donald Trump has insisted the United States will now be “running” Venezuela after US forces bombed the capital on January 3 and whisked Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his

‘It only takes one spark’ – fire restrictions at the top of South Island come into force

Source: Radio New Zealand

The top of the south is experiencing high fire danger due to the hot and dry weather. File photo. RNZ / Tracy Neal

Bans and restrictions on outdoor fires are coming into force across the top of the South Island as the risk of wildfire intensifies.

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) has confirmed that its Marlborough South zone will move into a prohibited fire season from 8am Wednesday.

This zone covers land south of the Wairau River, including the flat land from the eastern side of SH1 between Tuamarina and Raringi, except the Royal New Zealand Airforce land at Woodbourne.

The region north of the Wairau would also move into a restricted season, meaning permits were required for all open fires.

Permits that had been issued for open fires in parts of Marlborough that are moving into a prohibited fire season would be voided once the shift happens.

FENZ district manager Grant Haywood said the top of the south was experiencing high fire danger due to the hot and dry weather.

“Fires will start and spread very easily and will be more challenging for our fire-fighters to contain and put out in these conditions,” he said.

“If anyone sees signs of smoke, please call 111 immediately.”

Fire restrictions were also being introduced further west with the Coastal, Waimea and Nelson North zones moving into a restricted season on Wednesday morning.

This covered Nelson, Richmond, Brightwater, Mapua, Motueka and stretched across to the Mt Arthur range in the west.

Most of the remaining areas of the Tasman district were already under a restricted fire season, leaving most of the top of the South Island under fire bans or restrictions.

Farmers, orchardists, contractors and forestry managers were being urged to check the sites of any old fires to ensure they were fully extinguished.

Holidaymakers and local residents had a part to play in helping prevent fires, Haywood said.

“[Monday’s] fire in the dunes at Tahunanui Beach showed just how quickly a fire can take hold, and how much damage it can cause,” he said.

“Ninety-seven percent of wildfires in New Zealand are caused by humans, and it only takes one spark.”

FENZ said activities like welding and grinding should not be carried out near dry vegetation.

Parking a car in long grass could also cause a fire if the hot exhaust came into contact with the grass.

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