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Wellington Water warns of smells at Moa Point ahead of works

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Wellington Water has warned south coast residents of potential smells today and Monday while recovery works are done at Moa Point waste treatment plant.

Crews have been refurbishing the plant after it was forced to shut down after a catastrophic failure in February, which spewed tens of millions of litres of untreated sewage into the sea, and closed some south coast beaches for a period.

Wellington Water previously apologised about unexpected smells after turning its ventilation system on for the first time.

Crews will refurbish three clarifiers, which are large tanks that separate solids from liquids.

The plant have deployed odour neutralisers and scouts to combat smells.

Wellington Water said there was a “low risk” of smells.

People with complaints should contact the Greater Wellington Region Council.  

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

Israel caught in a permanent state of war mindset – peace is taboo

INTERVIEW: C.J. Polychroniou and Idan Landau

Israel’s war on Iran is a direct result of a political culture that depends for survival upon a permanent state of war, says Israeli academic and left-wing activist Idan Landau in the interview that follows.

He observes that Israeli society on the whole has embraced a fascist mindset, “reflecting extreme paranoia and anxiety,” and thus intolerance for dissent.

Subsequently, peace is a taboo and there is total indifference to genocidal acts and human casualties. Moreover, there is very little hope for a different trajectory, argues Landau, “as long as the US and Europe continue to insulate Israel from the moral consequences of its actions.”

Landau is professor of linguistics and head of the department of linguistics at Tel Aviv University. He writes a political blog (in Hebrew) on Israeli affairs and has been imprisoned on several occasions for his refusal to serve in the Israel Defense Forces reserve.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Since the Hamas’ October 7 attack on southern Israel, the Netanyahu government embarked on a genocidal campaign against Palestinians in Gaza, expanded Jewish settlements in occupied West Bank and thus encouraged settlers to escalate West Bank terrorist attacks, exchanged fire with Hezbollah and the Houtis, then attacked Iran in what has been dubbed as the 12-Day War, and finally persuaded US President Donald Trump to go to war with Iran.

What is Israel’s endgame in terrorising the Middle East, and how has permanent war impacted Israeli society and the Israeli psyche?

IDAN LANDAU: I think the whole point of permanent war — I agree this is the most appropriate concept to use here — is that there is no endgame. Permanent war, with ever growing economic, emotional and political costs, is exactly what keeps the Israeli right-wing in power; it feeds on anxiety, paranoia and visions of imminent destruction (interestingly, our own and our enemies’ destruction, equally vivid).

Not being able to concentrate on and fully understand what’s going on is also crucial; the Israeli public is extremely underinformed about key issues, like the fraudulent nuclear talks in Geneva, the far-reaching proposals by the Lebanese government, etc. The media — always complicit, these days criminal — bombards us with caricatures of our surrounding countries.

That said, I think there is one constant, never-changing endgame lurking behind all the upheavals: The expansionist project in the West Bank. Not just Smotrich but a dedicated section within the Likkud, of right-wing religious settlers, are working tirelessly on this project, actually from the first week after October 7.

Plans for resettlement of Gaza combined with increased settlement in the West Bank (specifically, the northern Samaria, surrounding Jenin and Tulkarem) were immediately aired and pushed forward by the settlers’ lobby together with their MK partners.

The surge we now see in ethnic cleansing and forced displacement of Palestinian communities throughout the West Bank is inherent to the overall vision of this government, and it was stated as such even before October 7 — that only gave it a huge impetus.

The impact on Israeli society is perhaps the most depressing aspect of it all. Political discourse has been reduced to hollow slogans. Every single issue in foreign affairs in framed as either “existential threat” or “unavoidable use of military force.” There’s absolutely no room for talk about non-violent paths (“peace” is a taboo even on the left).

The Enemy is an undifferentiated mass of Hamas/Iran/Hezbollah/Houthis, in short, different guises of Amalek. Much of that, as I noted, is fueled by the deliberate absence of facts and evidence for rational conduct on the part of our enemies.

Israelis live in a peculiar state of mind: total disbelief in the possibility of normal life, clinging on to the very ideology that perpetuates this state of mind.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Israel has actual and perceived enemies. But is Benjamin Netanyahu alone the actual problem behind Israel’s permanent state of war? I mean, even most of Israeli opposition supported the genocide in Gaza and it’s doing the same thing now with the war against Iran.

IDAN LANDAU: Netanyahu is the most able consolidator of all the dark impulses of Israeli society, but of course he didn’t make up anything on his own. If you go back to Begin’s speeches in the 1970s-1980s, they also constantly invoked the Holocaust as the ultimate justification for whatever Israel does.

The Messianic drive to settle the greater Israel predates Netanyahu, as well as the overall brutal, racist degradation of Palestinians inside and outside Israel. You can go on and on — nothing is new here. At most, as you note, it is the subservience of the “opposition”; I don’t recall anything like it in the past.

If you look at the governments that went to wars in 1973 and 1982, they faced considerable opposition, within the Knesset and outside of it, on the very issue of whether the war was justified (in 1973, it was clearly preventable; in 1982, it was pure imperial vanity). None of that is left today.

Which is why the temptation of permanent war is so strong: You’re guaranteed to make the willful silence of the opposition also permanent.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: In Lebanon, the Israeli armed forces are using Gaza tactics, attacking hospitals and killing medical staff, while in Iran they have engaged in what has been rightly described as chemical warfare on account of strikes on fuel depots. Isn’t the country concerned at all about its blatant assault on international law and that it has turned into a pariah state in the eyes of the overwhelming majority of the people across the globe? What happened to Israel’s labor party which combined socialism with nation-building?

IDAN LANDAU: As to the Labour Party, I always say that one should not speak ill of the dead. A handful of members of Knesset (MKs) that are obsessed with displays of liberal values and with welfare legislation when genocide is in full force and Apartheid shifts from de facto to de jure.

The other “opposition” parties are either led by generals (Golan, Eizenkot) who offer zero alternatives to military dominance, or by right-wing neoliberals (Bennet, Lapid). The only representatives of left values in the Knesset are the Arab MKs.

As to International Humanitarian Law (IHL), my impression is that Israelis are unconcerned insofar as Uncle Sam is, and it sure looks like he is, thoroughly unconcerned. The Trump administration vindictively sanctioned the International Criminal Court (ICC) judges presiding over the Israeli case, and quite explicitly stated that IHL does not apply to the US and its allies.

There’s a lot of duplicity in Israeli discourse regarding the so-called “Principle of Complementarity”; the official response to the ICC described the “independent and robust judicial system” of Israel, which investigates any suspicions for wrongdoings. Most Israelis simply think that the rules don’t apply to us since they don’t apply to Hamas (they do apply to both parties; I already said that Israelis are shrouded in disinformation).

But even the liberals that appeal to our own “independent and robust judicial system” look ridiculous in face of the massive cover-up we witness from the beginning of the genocide; the dropping of charges against the five torturers/rapists in Sde-Teiman is but the latest instance.

Hundreds of heinous crimes did not even yield any charges.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Courageous voices against war and violence can be heard here and there across Israeli society and peace activists have organised scores of demonstrations in cities like Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Jerusalem to express their opposition to the war in Iran.

Are anti-war demonstrations really seen as a threat to national security by the Netanyahu government and even segments of the Israeli citizenry?

IDAN LANDAU: These things happen and they do lift our spirit. In honesty, I don’t think anyone views them as “a threat to national security,” that’s fascist talk. The public atmosphere is just incredibly intolerant, with or without the presence of the police, with or without any legal process.

Just try to voice your opposition to the war — any war, pick your favourite — out in the street, and you’re sure to be harassed and probably beaten by random pedestrians within 15-20 minutes. So I think it is a typical fascist all-embracing violent climate, reflecting extreme paranoia and anxiety.

The mere verbal expression of “sacrilegious” opinions is seen as a personal threat to our carefully maintained peace of mind; so tenuous and feeble, that it cannot even stand to face dissent.

Point it out to Israelis and urge them to make out what it means for their confidence in what their state is doing that they must violently banish any expression of doubt and criticism (this is now the position of many journalists as well!) — well, see if you get an answer.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: Israel censored reporting on the genocide in Gaza. Is the same thing happening now with the war in Iran?

IDAN LANDAU: Luckily, the IDF doesn’t control the entrance and exit to Iran. So we don’t have the brute force censorship, instead it’s the good old “filter and distort and leave out the context” censorship.

They would report civilian casualties only if forced (because it’s getting too much international media), and you wouldn’t be surprised to hear that the “human shield” trick is now applied reflexively, before any facts are even known.

In this sense, as all human right organisations pointed out, the Gaza genocide has set a shocking new standard of indifference to civilian casualties: All targets are criminalised by association to your favourite Amalek (currently the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps or IRGC), and we stopped bothering about substantiating this association with actual facts; declaring it so makes it so.

In this context, one can watch civilian suffering in Iran with a level of detachment and blame it all on the IRGC. We should remember, though, that the Iranian regime is no more scrupulous in its choice of targets in Israel — the war crimes are on both sides.

Yet I cannot say that Israeli media covers the wider civilian effects of the war on Iranian citizens in any serious way. Pretty much 95 percent of what we get are silly, heroic odes to our courageous pilots and genius cyber fighters.

C.J. POLYCHRONIOU: In your view, is there a pathway towards peace in Israel? Is permanent peace even possible for Israel?

IDAN LANDAU: Ultimately there can’t be any other solution; wars eventually end, consuming nations. I just don’t think it will be “Israel” as we now know it that will see the fruits of peace.

It will be a totally different entity, somehow letting Jews and Arabs live together as equals. That’s not possible within the current regime. Sadly, the shift to non-violence only occurs after the level of death and suffering is insurmountable to both sides.

No one knows when that will be. As long as the US and Europe continue to insulate Israel from the moral consequences of its policies, it won’t change trajectory.

C.J. Polychroniou is a political economist/political scientist who has taught and worked in numerous universities and research centres in Europe and the United States. His latest books are The Precipice: Neoliberalism, the Pandemic and the Urgent Need for Social Change (A collection of interviews with Noam Chomsky; Haymarket Books, 2021), and Economics and the Left: Interviews with Progressive Economists (Verso, 2021).

Idan Landau is an Israeli social justice activist and professor of linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at Tel Aviv University.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Nationwide outage impacting 2degrees mobile customers

Source: Radio New Zealand

It is not known how many customers are impacted. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A nationwide outage is affecting some 2degrees mobile customers, preventing them from making or receiving calls.

The company confirmed the outage, which is listed as ‘under repair’ in a network status update on its website at 3.12pm on Wednesday.

“We know some 2degrees customers are having difficulties making calls on their mobiles. We’re sorry for the hassle and rest assured our technicians are working hard to fix this for you.”

It is not known how many customers are impacted.

More to come.

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

‘One of the most dated GDP report cards in recent memory’

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ’s GDP rose about 0.3 percent in the three months to December, compared to the Reserve Bank’s February forecast of 0.5 percent. RNZ

  • Economic growth estimated at 0.3 percent in three months ended December, annual growth 1.5 percent
  • Primary sector, tourism industries the best; manufacturing flat, construction weak.
  • Figures are expected to confirm economy was turning corner
  • Historic numbers have been rendered almost irrelevant by Middle East conflict
  • The conflict at best will slow recovery, at worst derail it
  • RBNZ faces a dilemma – support growth or fight inflation

The economy is expected to have shown improving growth at the end of last year, in a set of historic numbers rendered almost irrelevant by the Middle East conflict.

Economists expect gross domestic product (GDP) – a broad measure of economic growth – rose around 0.3 percent in the three months ended December, compared to the Reserve Bank’s February forecast of 0.5 percent. The annual rate is forecast to have risen to 1.5 percent.

Kiwibank economist Sabrina Delgado said the numbers would be stale.

“To be honest, it’s probably going to be one of the most dated GDP report cards in recent memory.”

She said the growth numbers were always delayed, but the escalating conflict in the Middle East, and the impact of rising prices, supply chain disruptions and the like had changed the picture entirely.

For the record, the numbers are expected to show the primary sector and tourism related industries doing well, manufacturing broadly flat, and construction weak.

“It was another quarter of strong visitor arrivals with plenty of indicators pointing to a lift in transport, arts and recreation, and retail trade and accommodation,” Delgado said.

That was then, this is now

ASB senior economist Kim Mundy said the data would confirm the economic direction of travel, although growth was not as vigorous as the previous quarter’s 1.1 percent. The per capita growth measure was expected to be positive for the second quarter in a row, reflecting better household finances.

But the conflict has changed that.

“The economic consequences for New Zealand from the war depend on how long it lasts, but so far, the risks to economic growth are firmly skewed to the downside,” she said.

The risks were clearly being driven by the surge in oil prices, which have already driven pump prices and would flow through to the price of other goods and services, giving an inevitable lift to inflation.

Treasury has forecast a worst case scenario of inflation hitting 3.7 percent this year if the conflict persists, a forecast some see as too conservative.

The inflation spike and softening economic performance give the Reserve Bank (RBNZ) a dilemma – to tackle inflation, implying interest rises or to support the economy with “accommodative” interest rates.

Economists do not expect the RBNZ to have any kneekerk rate reaction to the price spikes at its 8 April statement, and ANZ senior economist Matthew Gault said a softish GDP number might have the central bank seeing more slack in the economy, and therefore more capacity to absorb price rises.

“However, we wouldn’t want to overplay this given the uncertain outlook, and also recalling that annual inflation at 3.1 percent isn’t coming from an entirely comfortable starting point.”

Delgado said it was not just the inflation spike, but the impact on sentiment and demand.

“It’s yet another wave of uncertainty for Kiwi households and businesses. And there is a real risk that it derails our recovery in the same way Trump’s liberation day tariffs did last year.”

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

Fertility clinic apologises for lost embryos, still not sure where they are

Source: Radio New Zealand

An embryo pictured as it divides from four to eight cells. Melanie Olds

An Auckland fertility clinic has apologised after frozen embryos went missing, and it still does not know what happened to them.

In a letter on Wednesday, Fertility Associates chief medical officer Dr Andrew Murray said a review was sparked after frozen embryos belonging to an Auckland patient went missing in 2025.

He said the family was told as soon as the issue was detected, and kept regularly updated.

“We understand the anxiety and concern a missing embryo would create. We know how much emotional energy goes into the IVF process, and have sincerely apologised to the family,” he wrote.

He said the clinic could say “with absolute confidence” that no embryo was transferred to another patient, and no more embryos were found to be missing.

“We use RI Witness, which is an electronic witnessing system that uses radio frequency identification tags and barcoding to track and monitor patient samples such as eggs, sperm, and embryos throughout the entire IVF process,” Murray explained. 

“It provides an automated, real-time layer of security and traceability, avoiding potential mix-ups by sounding an alarm at the workstation if samples are mismatched.”

Dr Andrew Murray. RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

An independent review had confirmed Fertility Associates’ processes were robust and secure, in line with international best practice, he said.

But all frozen embryos in Auckland would now be stored in a new, larger, dedicated area in a building in Greenlane, and the company would be “enhancing senior laboratory oversight and reinforcing training, quality assurance, and internal reporting mechanisms”.

“The relationship we have with our patients is built on trust, and we appreciate that trust has been shaken through this situation. While we can assure you that you have not been impacted by this issue, we understand that you may have questions.”

The letter did not address whether the missing embryos had been located, but in response to further questions by RNZ, Murray confirmed that despite the investigation, the clinic had been unable to locate the patient’s embryos or confirm how they went missing.

“We fully appreciate that the lack of a conclusion and clear answers is frustrating – we share that feeling and have done everything we can to get a definitive answer.”

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

Men can get out of the manosphere. Here’s what former incels say about why they left

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Joshua Thorburn, PhD Candidate, School of Social Sciences, Monash University

Louis Theroux’s recent documentary Inside the Manosphere, alongside Netflix’s 2025 hit drama Adolescence, has driven a spike in public discussion about the “manosphere”. The term refers to a loose ecosystem of anti-feminist online communities and influencers that promote male dominance and hostility toward women.

Much of the public conversation about the manosphere focuses on how boys and young men fall into these spaces. A new study by the Australian Institute of Criminology asks a different question: how do some men manage to leave?

Real-world dangers

Concern about this online culture has grown in recent years. Increasing attention has been paid to adolescent boys and young men going down toxic online rabbit holes, moving from the misogynistic worldview of manosphere influencers toward more extreme spaces.

This includes “incel” (involuntary celibate) forums. These frame women as enemies standing in the way of men’s perceived entitlement to sex. Violent revenge against women is sometimes openly encouraged.

These concerns are warranted. Earlier anxieties largely focused on incidents of lone-offender violence in North America perpetrated by men linked to the misogynistic incel movement. It’s a threat Australia’s security agency ASIO has also flagged.


Read more: How boys get sucked into the manosphere


More recently, researchers and educators have raised alarms about the broader cultural impact of manosphere ideas. This includes their influence on young men’s attitudes toward women and relationships, resulting in growing rates of hostile sexism in Australian schools.

Understandably, much of the attention focuses on radicalisation into these communities. However, far less attention has been paid to what happens when some men begin to disengage from them.

‘An unhealthy loop of depression’

The Australian Institute of Criminology study provides rare insight into this process. Drawing on surveys and interviews with former participants in incel communities, the research explores how men become disillusioned with these spaces and eventually step away.

The findings add to a growing body of evidence suggesting many men first encounter these communities during periods of insecurity or loneliness.

Participants frequently described anxieties about their physical appearance, social status, sexual experience or financial success. Incel and manosphere forums claim to offer explanations and solidarity for these frustrations.

As one former incel in the institute’s study recalled, he initially felt “some togetherness with others” in the forums.

Yet the same environment often becomes corrosive. Another respondent described how the community functioned as an “echo chamber […] fulfilling their own prophecy”, fuelling what he called “an unhealthy loop of depression”.

Over time, some participants begin to notice the gap between the ideology promoted in these spaces and their everyday experiences. Positive interactions with women, supportive friendships, or simply observing that relationships in the real world do not follow the rigid rules promoted online can begin to undermine the worldview.

One participant in the study described the moment it “clicked that all of it was really wrong” when his peers, “regardless of gender”, treated him with kindness and respect.

In another study of people leaving the manosphere, a former participant reflected that the movement’s claims about women collapsed when he realised he still had a happy relationship with his wife despite being “unfit and definitely not wealthy”.

Research consistently shows leaving these spaces is a challenging experience. Disengagement is usually gradual and uneven. It often involves the slow rebuilding of identity, relationships and belonging outside the forums that once defined participants’ worldview.

Finding the pathways out

The perspectives of people who have left the manosphere deserve greater attention in public discussions. For people currently within the manosphere (and for those vulnerable to falling into it) amplifying such stories can reveal how these communities ultimately harm many of the people who believe in them.

These stories matter because public discussion about the manosphere often focuses almost exclusively on its harms. Those harms are real and serious.

But we need to be hopeful the scale of the problem can be arrested and that the men who fall into these spaces are not permanently lost to them.

Schools, policymakers and families all need these first-hand perspectives. They offer more than just insight into why boys and young men fall down the rabbit hole: they provide a crucial road map for how we might help pull them out. This is essential to violence prevention work focused on how to promote “positive masculinity”.

Maintaining that cautiously hopeful perspective is important. Without it, we risk treating radicalisation as inevitable and disengagement as impossible.

The growing body of research on men leaving these communities suggests something different. While the harms of the manosphere are real, understanding the pathways out may offer some of the most important clues for how to respond.

ref. Men can get out of the manosphere. Here’s what former incels say about why they left – https://theconversation.com/men-can-get-out-of-the-manosphere-heres-what-former-incels-say-about-why-they-left-278312

As Israel invades again, Lebanon faces more turmoil and possible civil war. Here are 3 ways this could go

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mariam Farida, Lecturer in Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism Studies, Macquarie University

Just two days after the US and Israel killed Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in late February, Hezbollah opened a second front in the war by launching six rockets into Israel from Lebanon.

The rockets came as a surprise to many. Hezbollah, once one of Iran’s most powerful proxy fighting forces, had been severely weakened by Israel during 13 months of fighting from late 2023–24.

The militant group had also stopped firing rockets into Israel since signing a ceasefire agreement in November 2024.

According to the ceasefire, the Lebanese army was to take control of the territory south of the Litani River in southern Lebanon and prevent Hezbollah from rebuilding its infrastructure. Hezbollah was also expected to move its fighters north of the river, about 30 kilometres from the border with Israel.

The Lebanese government and the Lebanese army then launched an enthusiastic public campaign to show their commitment to the systematic disarmament of Hezbollah’s fighters and dismantling of its missile launches.

But this has proved to be a monumentally difficult task for both the government and army.

The Israeli army has continued to carry out airstrikes on Hezbollah military sites and targeted assassinations of Hezbollah fighters on a near-daily basis since the ceasefire.

Hezbollah has repeatedly refused to disarm and withdraw north of the Litani River if these strikes continue.

So, the ceasefire deal was already shaky. And when fighting resumed earlier this month, Israel decided it was time to “finish the job” in Lebanon.

This week, it launched another ground invasion to completely destroy Hezbollah’s remaining military infrastructure, “just as was done against Hamas in Rafah, Beit Hanoun and the terror tunnels in Gaza”, Israel’s defence minister, Israel Katz, said.

More than 1 million Lebanese people have already been displaced, leading to fears Israel will reoccupy southern Lebanon, as it did for 18 years from 1982 to 2000.


Read more: Israel has invaded Lebanon six times in the past 50 years – a timeline of events


Israeli soldiers with tanks gather at an undisclosed position along the Israel-Lebanon border in northern Israel on March 16. Atef Safadi/EPA

There are three possible scenarios for what could happen next.

1. A short-term or “limited” ground operation

Israel does not want a return to its 18-year occupation, when it was dragged into a guerrilla war with Hezbollah and other groups, and by some estimates lost hundreds of soldiers.

A limited ground operation lasting a few weeks would therefore be the most desirable scenario to minimise troop casualties on the ground.

But this carries risk, too. A limited operation would make it difficult for the Israeli army to successfully destroy Hezbollah’s infrastructure. Israel has attempted these types of limited operations in the past and so far failed to stop Hezbollah rockets. Hezbollah, too, is unlikely to want to de-escalate quickly.

As such, a limited ground operation seems unlikely.

Mourners carry the body of a Hezbollah fighter who was killed by Israeli airstrikes during his funeral procession in Khraibeh village, eastern Lebanon, on March 8. Bilal Hussein/AP

2. A war of attrition that lasts for months

This is a more possible scenario since the Hezbollah–Israel conflict is closely linked to the US–Israel war on Iran.

It has become obvious that Iran is engaged in a war of attrition with its adversaries. The regime doesn’t need to “win” the war; it just needs to hold on long enough for the US and Israel to feel enough global and domestic pressure to stop. Then, the regime can claim “victory”.

In this scenario, Hezbollah is fully capable of mirroring this strategy. If it can withstand Israeli airstrikes, it can retaliate with the type of guerilla warfare it has successfully used in the past to drag Israel into a longer conflict.

There are already signs Hezbollah fighters are adopting these strategies.

3. Another major war that will lead to reoccupation

This is the most likely scenario with highest chance of regional ripple effects.

If Israel launches a much larger ground operation, it would be aimed at fundamentally reshaping the balance of power with Hezbollah and putting more pressure on the Lebanese government before engaging in any negotiations or diplomatic settlements.

This is typical of negotiating processes: one side uses excessive violence to try to establish “new facts on the ground” and gain more leverage before entering into talks.

However, this could result in major losses for the Israeli army, similar to those suffered during its 1982 invasion and subsequent occupation.

Another possible outcome is a power vacuum in Lebanon and the outbreak of another civil war.

A Lebanese civil war would have serious implications for the region, much as the last one did from 1975 to 1990. Then, Lebanon was torn apart by multiple armed militias with different (and often competing) agendas. Hezbollah emerged from the chaos, giving Iran a powerful proxy group to threaten Israel for decades to come.

A Palestinian refugee camp near Tyre, Lebanon, during the civil war in 1982. Wikimedia Commons

There would most likely be a major surge of refugees across Lebanon’s borders, as well.

Lebanon is already a fragile and weak country, struggling to sustain some 250,000 Palestinian and 1.3 million Syrian refugees. Now, there are 1 million displaced Lebanese from the recent fighting.

This kind of disruption would no doubt spill over into Europe, with displaced people trying to seek refuge there, similar to the height of the Syrian civil war.

An Israeli reoccupation of southern Lebanon could also give Hezbollah a much-needed boost in legitimacy among the Lebanese people, if it is able to survive the war and targeted killings of its leaders.

Hezbollah will easily be able to frame its operations as a form of resistance or muqawama, much as it did in its early years. This could be viewed in several ways: resistance against occupation, resistance against oppressive regimes and resistance against the US and Israel.

Wherever this conflict goes, the Lebanese people – and beleaguered Lebanese state – will pay the highest price, trapped again in a geopolitical contest they didn’t start and feel powerless to stop.

ref. As Israel invades again, Lebanon faces more turmoil and possible civil war. Here are 3 ways this could go – https://theconversation.com/as-israel-invades-again-lebanon-faces-more-turmoil-and-possible-civil-war-here-are-3-ways-this-could-go-278408

Stories open to interpretation: the 2026 Biennale of Sydney embraces narratives with multiple meanings

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tracey Clement, Lecturer in Visual Art and McGlade Gallery Director, Australian Catholic University

Storytelling is at the heart of Rememory, the 25th Biennale of Sydney. And we humans like nothing better than being told a tale.

As literary critic Frank Kermode so persuasively argued, stuck as we are in the middle of our own stories, narratives with clear beginnings and endings help us make sense of an unpredictable world.

A key strength of art is its capacity to craft narratives with multiple meanings: ambivalent, ambiguous tales without end, open to interpretations.

By selecting Rememory as her theme – a phrase lifted from the brilliant author Toni Morrison – curator Hoor Al Qasimi highlights the fact that artistic narratives, like memories, are both personal and collective, enduring yet subject to change over time.


Read more: Sydney’s Biennale theme, ‘rememory’, urges us to confront trauma – now more relevant than ever


Displacement, and hope

Many of the narratives in Rememory are tales of migration, exile and the dispossession First Nations people experience without leaving home.

All the artists have something to say. Some artists choose to tell their tales with words spoken aloud or written down, but the stories that spoke loudest to me were utterly silent and text-less.

Marian Abboud describes herself as Lebanese, first generation Australian. Her installation at White Bay Power Station, Sister +++++ Familial Formations III, is a series of huge photographs suspended above an old battered sedan which is piled high with equally obsolete TVs.

A car, some TVs, large hanging photos.

Marian Abboud, Sister +++++ Familial Formations III, 2026, White Bay Power Station. Daniel Boud

Connected by tangled coils of electrical cords and roughly strapped together, this car/tech combo seems deliberately unstable. In several photos Abboud cradles a battered metal basin filled with dark liquid. Is it wine? Maybe it is blood or oil?

In other images she wears a black veil in front of a suburban garage. She appears to be just slightly hovering above the asphalt driveway, an apt metaphor for the diasporic experience.

As a migrant myself, I know firsthand this story of perpetual displacement – the sensation of not quite belonging in either the cultural homeland or the adopted country.

Fernando Poyón is a Maya Kaqchikel artist from Guatemala. His sculpture at Penrith Regional Gallery consists of five life-sized stalks of corn crafted from bright green pencils.

They appear to levitate over a bright circle of fake marigolds strewn across real dirt. It feels like we are witnessing a ritual suspended mid invocation, perhaps one celebrating the entwinement of nature and culture.

Gallery image: corn stalks made out of pencils.

Fernando Poyón (b. 1982 Guatemala), Bringing joy to the earth, 2025; pencils, concaste, bamboo. Installation view in Rememory: 25th Biennale of Sydney at Lewers: Penrith Regional Gallery, 2026. Commissioned by the Biennale of Sydney and Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain. Courtesy of the artist. Photography: Maja Baska.

Poyón’s title, Bringing joy to the earth, is filled with hope. Yet this artwork also seems to issue a warning. Pencils may symbolise a certain kind of knowledge transfer, but they are also the skeletal remains of dead trees. Poyón reminds us we destroy the natural world at our own peril.

We are part of nature, not separate or superior. As the climate-crisis continues to accelerate, this is a story that needs to be heard again and again until those with the power to make change finally listen.

The labour of artwork

Ema Shin, a migrant to Australia from Japan, presents a gigantic woven and bejewelled heart at the Chau Chak Wing Museum.

In this sculpture she makes the most of what I call the linguistics of labour-intensity: that ability of protracted hard work to add an extra layer of meaning to some artworks.

Gallery image: visitors around a giant heart.

Ema Shin Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family) 2026 wool, cotton, bamboo yarn, acrylic yarn, cotton pearls, glass beads, satin ribbon, aluminium. Commissioned by the Biennale of Sydney and BEEAH Group with generous support from National Center for Art Research, Japan and assistance from Tapestry Foundation Australia and Australian Tapestry Workshop (ATW). Woven by Ema Shin and ATW weaver Saffron Gordon. Courtesy of the artist and Gallerysmith, Melbourne Photograph: David James

Titled Hearts of Absent Women (Tree of Family), this richly ornamented organ can be read as a monument honouring matriarchal power. But this heart is not beating. And the textile techniques on display here aren’t the only traditional women’s work evoked by the labour-intensity of Shin’s magnificent creation.

It brings to mind the fact that not only do women still take on more than their fair share of domestic chores, but often they shoulder the bulk of emotional labour in families.

Shin’s huge heart is sumptuous and beguiling. But thinking about all this hard feminine work, the creamy accretions of bulbous fake pearls spilling from its oversized arteries start to resemble life-threatening cholesterol build-up, hinting at the toxic effects of systemic misogyny.

For me, Ngurrara Canvas II at the Art Gallery of New South Wales is the real heart of Rememory. The Ngurrara artists were 43 men and women whose Country includes the Great Sandy Desert, and this vividly coloured 80-square-metre canvas seems to vibrate with deep knowledge.

Gallery of a series of works by Aboriginal artists.

Installation view of the 25th Biennale of Sydney, Rememory, at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, 14 March – 14 June 2026. Artwork © the artists, photo © Art Gallery of New South Wales, Felicity Jenkins

The work is designed to tell a story of continuous connection to Country spanning millennia. They presented this painting as evidence in a 1997 Native Title tribunal and the tale it tells is one of resistance, persistence and ingenuity. It also contains an incontrovertible truth: this always was, and always will be, Aboriginal land.

The 25th Biennale of Sydney is full of stories. What I truly love about art is that the tales I’m told are unique. They are a collective narrative hybrid, a mash-up triggered by the artists’ visual poetry and all the associations reverberating around inside my mind.

Each visitor to Rememory will create their own stories.

The 25th Biennale of Sydney: Rememory is on until June 14.

ref. Stories open to interpretation: the 2026 Biennale of Sydney embraces narratives with multiple meanings – https://theconversation.com/stories-open-to-interpretation-the-2026-biennale-of-sydney-embraces-narratives-with-multiple-meanings-275561

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for March 18, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on March 18, 2026.

What’s ‘dirty fuel’ doing to our lungs? The same as it did for most of 2025
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brian Oliver, Professor, School of Life Sciences, University of Technology Sydney Australians may have seen headlines warning “dirty fuel” is back, temporarily, to ease fuel supplies. The phrase sounds alarming, but it has a specific and fairly narrow meaning. In this context, “dirty fuel” refers to petrol

Western media failing to tell truth about war on Iran, says academic
Pacific Media Watch Western legacy media is failing to tell the truth on the US-Israeli war on Iran, says a leading US academic and analyst. “Mass murder has been normalised,” said Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs in an interview with the Chinese channel CGTN Live. He argues that mainstream media in the US and Europe

Sophie Devine’s record cricket contract can’t disguise a stubborn pay gap in NZ women’s sport
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hoani Smith, Lecturer in Sport Management and Sport Science, Lincoln University, New Zealand When former White Ferns captain Sophie Devine secured the equal-highest deal in the United Kingdom’s pro-cricket league last week, it was greeted as another sign of how quickly investment in the women’s game is

Australia was once a world leader in innovation. A new report shows the system is now ‘broken’
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Roy Green, Emeritus Professor of Innovation, University of Technology Sydney Australia’s research and innovation system is “broken” and needs “bold reform”, according to a major new independent report released on Tuesday. Titled “Ambitious Australia”, it’s the culmination of a strategic examination of research and development in Australia,

Can’t stop endlessly scrolling? Tips to help you take back control
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sharon Horwood, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Deakin University It’s called the infinite scroll – a design feature on social media, shopping, video and many other apps that continuously loads content as you reach the bottom of the page. Handy? Yes. Clever? Also yes. Devious? Very much so.

MCPNG and UN hold media freedom talks in wake of attacks on women journalists
Pacific Media Watch The United Nations in Papua New Guinea has met the leadership of the Media Council of PNG to advance collaboration in support of a strong, independent and responsible media sector, reports UNPNG. The meeting addressed recent incidents of threats and violence against journalists — especially attacks against women journalists and the growing

A world-first quantum battery charges faster when it gets bigger – but it’s tiny and only lasts nanoseconds
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By James Quach, Science Leader, Quantum Batteries Team, CSIRO You’re late for an important appointment. Just as you are leaving your house, you realise your phone is flat. Imagine you could charge it almost instantly by exploiting the strange rules of quantum physics. That’s the promise of quantum

Is Spotify’s AI ‘killing’ Australian music? What we found from analysing more than 2 million tracks
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mohsin Malik, Associate Professor, Project Management, Swinburne University of Technology Last year, former Spotify chief economist Will Page compiled a report for the Australia Institute that concluded music streaming algorithms were “killing” Australian music. The report found that, between 2021 and 2024, there was a 30% drop

With AI finishing your sentences, what will happen to your unique voice on the page?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gayle Rogers, Professor of English, University of Pittsburgh It’s a familiar feeling: You start a text message, and your phone’s auto-complete function suggests several choices for the next word, ranging from banal to hilarious. “I love…” you, or coffee? Or you’re finishing an email, and merely typing

Iran war shows how AI speeds up military ‘kill chains’
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Craig Jones, Senior Lecturer in Political Geography, Department of Geography, Newcastle University The US-Israel war on Iran has been described as “the first AI war”. But recent deployments of artificial intelligence are, in fact, the latest in a long history of technological developments that prize a need

Victoria’s school reports are set to change. What does this mean for teachers and families?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ilana Finefter-Rosenbluh, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education, Monash University On Tuesday, the Victorian government announced it is revamping its student reporting for public schools. As part of a broader push to cut down on teachers’ paperwork, it will simplify the reports that go home to families. This

Iran oil crisis: why NZ’s car dependence is now a strategic liability
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Timothy Welch, Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau The war in Iran and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz have sent oil prices past US$100 a barrel – and Kiwis flocking to fill up. Petrol just hit NZ$3 a litre

War on Iran: Propaganda in overdrive as Trump’s war spirals out of control
Pacific Media Watch As the US and Israel battle to control the narrative of their war against Iran, their messaging gets harder to defend, reports Al Jazeera’s Listening Post. With the war entering its third week, the upper hand that the United States and Israel hold militarily is being countered asymmetrically by Iran which has

Capital gains tax discount ‘skewed’ housing towards investors: Senate inquiry
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra A Senate inquiry has provided Treasurer Jim Chalmers with ammunition for his plan to pare back the capital gains tax discount in the May 12 budget. The majority report of the inquiry into the operation of the capital gains tax

Saige England: Journalists must stand up and report with the moral courage of abolitionists
COMMENTARY: By Saige England Every week, health prevailing, I march with our Palestinian friends and their supporters in Aotearoa New Zealand. And my country is one which — under Britain — was colonised. Colonisation perpetrates injustices against indigenous people. This legacy is still felt by Indigenous people today. All around the world we must dismantle

RBA narrowly votes to lift interest rates. The Middle East war may determine if there’s more to come
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Head, Canberra School of Government, University of Canberra The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has lifted official interest rates for the second time this year as it struggles to bring inflation under control, saying inflation is “likely to remain above target for some time”. But

Can brevetoxins from algal blooms make me sick? A toxicologist explains
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ian Musgrave, Senior Lecturer in Pharmacology, Adelaide University For about a year, an algal bloom in South Australian waters has had devastating effects on marine life. At my local beach, walks were a sad parade of dead sea life. But what of the health effects of these

Attacks on hospitals are surging in war zones. What do the laws of war say about protecting them?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Shannon Bosch, Associate Professor (Law), Edith Cowan University Afghanistan says at least 400 people have been killed in a Pakistani airstrike on a drug rehabilitation hospital in Kabul on Monday night, with potentially hundreds more wounded. Pakistan has denied deliberately targeting the health-care facility. In a statement

Remote communities are more vulnerable to fuel price shocks – could microgrids help?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Saman Gorji, Associate Professor, Renewable Energy and Electrical Engineering, Deakin University When diesel prices jump, most Australians notice it at the bowser. But in parts of remote Australia, diesel is what keeps the lights on. That makes it indispensable. That’s why the federal government’s decisions to temporarily

As the war drags on, what does victory look like for the US, Israel and Iran?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Amin Saikal, Emeritus Professor of Middle Eastern Studies, Australian National University; The University of Western Australia; Victoria University As the Middle East war enters its third week, there is no sign from either Iran or the United States and Israel that they will stop the fighting any

World Cup dream over for Tall Ferns after winless tournament

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emilia Shearer #2 of New Zealand at the 2026 FIBA World Cup Qualifying Tournament in San Juan. (Photo by Edgardo Medina / NurPhoto via AFP)

The Tall Ferns have finished their World Cup Qualifying Tournament winless after a 77-61 loss to hosts Puerto Rico.

The Tall Ferns had to beat Puerto Rico by 24 points or more to qualify for the 2026 Basketball Women’s World Cup in Berlin later this year, which was always going to be a massive ask against the world’s 13th-ranked side.

New Zealand, which was ranked 21st, had only met their opponents once before when Puerto Rico beat them by two goals at an Olympic qualifying tournament in 2024.

The Tall Ferns also took a young side to the tournament and are without a number of players who are on college basketball duty in the United States. Three players made their debuts in San Juan.

Before going into today’s game, New Zealand suffered losses to the USA, Italy, Senegal, and Spain.

The Tall Ferns put up a strong showing in the first quarter, which they won 21-12. The hosts then took the initiative in the second period to nudge ahead of New Zealand 40-38 at half-time.

New Zealand stayed within touching distance of Puerto Rico in the third quarter before being restricted to just seven points in the final spell.

Experienced Tall Fern Sharne Pupuke Robati put in a big shift, scoring 13 points and 10 rebounds, to go along with four assists.

With their second win of the tournament, Puerto Rico joined the USA, Italy and Spain in securing a place at the World Cup in Germany in September.

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

New Zealand man accused of woman and baby’s murders in Australia

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Talissa Siganto, ABC

Blake Seers, 37, has been charged with two counts of murder (domestic violence) over the deaths of a woman and child. ABC/Lucas Hill

A man accused of killing his partner and baby daughter in Logan, south of Brisbane, was suffering a “schizoaffective disorder”, a court has heard.

The bodies of 37-year-old Kate Paterson and 11-month-old April were found dead inside a Belivah home last week.

At the time, police said they had initially attended the residence after a man who lived there, Blake Seers, had been hit by a car nearby at Bannockburn.

Seers, 38, was taken to hospital and yesterday was charged with two counts of domestic violence murder.

RNZ understands Seers is from New Zealand.

On Wednesday, defence lawyer Nicholas Andrews appeared in court on Seers’s behalf.

“Mr Seers is currently in custody under police watch in hospital,” he said.

Andrews asked for the matter to be moved to Beenleigh and said his client would need to seek a mental health assessment once transferred to a remand centre.

“I should also just place on record Mr Seers has a diagnosed schizoaffective disorder,” he said.

Defence lawyer Nicholas Andrews says Blake Seers has “mental health considerations”. ABC/Talissa Siganto

The matter was adjourned until next week.

Outside court, Andrews said it was a “sensitive matter”.

“Our thoughts are with those who’ve been affected by this tragedy,” he said.

“At times like this, I just need to remind myself that there is a job to do.”

“It’s currently progressing through the courts and there’s some mental health considerations here.”

-ABC with additional reporting by RNZ

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

Moa Point failure report to be released on Friday

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

A report into the Moa Point disaster will be revealed to the public at the end of this week.

The wastewater treatment plant failed last month, sending millions of litres of raw sewage into the sea each day.

A spokesperson for the mayor’s office said a final version of the report from Wellington Water will be released on Friday, rather than a draft version intended for mid-this week.

The technical engineers’ report looks at hydraulic issues in the plant, and a draft version has been with the council since last week.

The final report will be released immediately once received, the spokesperson said.

Wellington Water previously said it has notified its insurers after doing the report, but any questions about that need to be referred to the council.

A spokesperson for Wellington Water said the agency needed to “undergo a process” to have the cause of the failure confirmed, and there was now another investigation underway too.

“We have made good progress and have commissioned a technical report into the underlying cause of the incident.

“This report is currently being finalised. Additionally, we have also commissioned a wider investigation into all factors of the incident and that work is underway.”

Wellington Mayor Andrew Little has said there are potentially multiple causes for the failure, all of which need to be investigated.

An independent Crown review into the failure is also underway, with the team led by Raveen Jaduram, the chairperson of the water services authority, Taumata Arowai. The Crown Review will release its final report in August 2026.

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What’s ‘dirty fuel’ doing to our lungs? The same as it did for most of 2025

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brian Oliver, Professor, School of Life Sciences, University of Technology Sydney

Australians may have seen headlines warning “dirty fuel” is back, temporarily, to ease fuel supplies. The phrase sounds alarming, but it has a specific and fairly narrow meaning.

In this context, “dirty fuel” refers to petrol with higher sulfur content than Australia’s newest fuel standards allow.

So how worried should we be about our health if we use petrol containing more sulfur over the coming weeks? What about people with asthma?

Why the backflip?

Sulfur is a naturally occurring component of crude oil. When fuel is burned in engines, sulfur contributes to air pollution, particularly the gas sulfur dioxide (SO₂) and fine particles (known as PM2.5). When inhaled, both can affect our health.

Australia only fully adopted ultra-low sulfur petrol standards in late 2025, bringing sulfur levels down to 10 parts per million (ppm) across all petrol grades.

Until then, Australians had been using petrol with sulfur levels of 50ppm or more for decades.

But last week, the federal government announced a temporary 60-day exemption allowing petrol with higher sulfur levels (up to around 50ppm) back into the domestic market.

The decision was made in response to severe global supply disruptions, driven by conflict in the Middle East and the partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which a sizeable proportion of the world’s oil normally flows.

According to the government, the exemption allows around 100 million extra litres of petrol per month to be diverted from export markets into Australian service stations, particularly in regional areas.

The government has emphasised the change is temporary and that fuel quality will return to the lower level of permitted sulfur once supply pressures ease.

Sulfur is also found in diesel, but the recently announced changes only relate to petrol standards.


Read more: Oil, petrol, gasoline: a chemical engineer explains how crude turns into fuel


Why does sulfur in fuel matter for health?

We can’t inhale sulfur itself directly from fuel. But burning petrol containing sulfur increases emissions of SO₂, which we can breathe in.

Sulfur exhaust emissions of SO₂ are also chemically transformed into sulfate particles that make up an important fraction of fine particulate pollution (known as PM2.5).

Sulfur in fuel also interferes with vehicle emission-control systems. It makes catalytic converters less effective. This indirectly increases other harmful pollutants, including fine particulate matter (PM2.5), which is linked to:

Because of this, reducing sulfur in fuel is widely regarded as one of the most cost-effective air quality interventions, delivering population-wide health benefits over time.

What about a temporary increase like this one?

This is where context matters. The fuel now being allowed back into the system is no dirtier than what Australians were using for most of 2025.

In fact, for many drivers, it will be chemically similar to petrol they used last year without noticing.

Because Australia only switched to ultra-low sulfur petrol in late 2025, there has been little time for large population-level health gains to accumulate. Air quality improvements from cleaner fuels tend to emerge gradually, rather than within weeks or months.

That means a short-term reversal is unlikely to cause sudden, dramatic new health effects for the general population. There is no evidence a two-month increase will trigger a wave of new disease.

And while increased SO₂ levels in the atmosphere are not good for human health, Australian roadside monitoring studies (including monitoring SO₂) consistently report very low concentrations.

However, there are some important caveats:

  • sulfur emissions worsen air quality and disproportionately affect people with existing heart and lung diseases (especally asthma)

  • traffic-related pollution causes harm even at the relatively low levels found in Australia

  • we do not know precisely how much additional SO₂ or particulate pollution this temporary change will generate in Australian cities, because it depends on traffic patterns, weather and how petrol is blended at the refinery

  • we suspect any added health burden will be small, short lived, and concentrated near busy roads and enclosed spaces – but not zero.

In other words, this change is not ideal. But it is also not equivalent to introducing a brand new pollution source. It is closer to a brief return to very recent historical conditions.

What can people do to minimise their risk?

The advice for this period is largely the same as existing guidance on minimising harms from vehicle pollution. Practical steps include:

  • avoid idling vehicles in enclosed or poorly ventilated spaces such as garages and underground car parks. Exhaust pollutants, including SO₂, can build up quickly

  • reduce unnecessary car use where practical, particularly in congested urban areas

  • keep your distance from heavy traffic, especially for people with asthma, COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), heart disease, pregnant people, and young children

  • ensure good ventilation if driving in slow-moving traffic; close your windows and set the car aircon to recirculate

  • follow asthma or heart management plans, and seek medical advice if symptoms worsen.

For most Australians, no special protective equipment or behavioural changes are required beyond this type of air quality advice.

The bigger picture

Australia’s move to ultra-low sulfur petrol in late 2025 was a major public health win, long overdue and strongly supported by medical and environmental experts.

The current exemption reflects a genuine fuel security crisis – but it also highlights how fragile progress can be.

The key test will be whether this measure remains strictly temporary, and whether Australia continues to prioritise clean fuels as part of long-term health and climate policy once supply stabilises.

Cleaner fuel means cleaner air – and cleaner air saves lives. Even short detours from that path should be taken cautiously, transparently and for as little time as possible.

ref. What’s ‘dirty fuel’ doing to our lungs? The same as it did for most of 2025 – https://theconversation.com/whats-dirty-fuel-doing-to-our-lungs-the-same-as-it-did-for-most-of-2025-278534

Western media failing to tell truth about war on Iran, says academic

Pacific Media Watch

Western legacy media is failing to tell the truth on the US-Israeli war on Iran, says a leading US academic and analyst.

“Mass murder has been normalised,” said Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs in an interview with the Chinese channel CGTN Live.

He argues that mainstream media in the US and Europe is not reporting the truth about what is really happening in the Middle East.

Professor Sachs describes how he attended a UN Security Council meeting on the day that the US-Israeli bombing started.

“And what did all the Western countries do? They attacked Iran for being bombed.

“You know this is propaganda. This is so-called narrative control.

“So yes, mass murder has been normalised.”


Jeffrey Sachs: Western media is failing to tell the truth            Video: CGYN America

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

New Zealand writer gets shoutout by Meghan Markle

Source: Radio New Zealand

A book of poems about motherhood has been dog-eared and shared by Meghan Markle on her social media.

They Bloom Because of You was published two weeks ago by Christchurch-based mother of three, Jessica Urlichs.

“I was just completely stunned, I didn’t believe that it would be real,” Urlichs told RNZ.

“I was just incredibly grateful that she would share something like that on her platform. I think it was a really big moment of women supporting women as well.”

On Tuesday, the Duchess of Sussex posted a video to her Instagram stories to 4.5 million followers showing her sitting in a garden appearing to flip through the book, saying “so good”.

A number of pages had been turned down, including poems titled The Mental Load, Hands We Hold Close, More Than a Body, Unraveled, Texts Between Friends and A Mother’s Love.

Urlichs learned of the post when a number of followers shared it with her. At first she thought it was a fan account.

When Urlichs posted her “shock” at the “huge moment” Markle replied with the message: “My mom friend, Christina, shared it with me. My current bedside book”.

Overseas interest in the book has spiked since Markle, who lives in California with husband Prince Harry and their two children, posted about it.

Urlichs’ first book of poetry, Beautiful Chaos, became a Sunday Times bestseller. Her work, inspired by her own postpartum experience, has been previously mentioned by Blake Lively and endorsed by Hilary Duff and Jennifer Love Hewitt.

Urlichs said her latest book focused on “the seasons of growth and blooming alongside our children”.

“There are a lot of poems in there for babies and older kids, but a lot of it speaks to the seasons after and finding ourselves as well.

“I’m not really sure what she took from them but I know that a lot of them would speak to a mother – that two things can be true – that we can feel elated and overjoyed in motherhood, but still find some seasons really difficult.

“I guess she would appreciate the vulnerability in those poems.”

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

Murderer, sex offenders among current asylum claimants

Source: Radio New Zealand

Immigration Minister Erica Stanford. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Immigration Minister Erica Stanford says she was shocked to find out a murderer and sex offenders convicted in New Zealand are among current asylum claimants.

Removing appeal rights against deportation for migrants and cracking down on asylum claims are among controversial proposals announced by the government, three months after the last immigration legislation came into force.

“If you’re said to be a refugee, it allows you a number of benefits that you will be aware of on the taxpayer’s dime that you will get as a refugee,” said Stanford. “It was very clear that we are a huge soft touch in this country compared to everybody else. And I’m just trying to bring us in line.”

Proposed changes would allow decision-makers to rule out refugee status – which brings with it access to residence visas – for those with criminal records, but still approve protection claims if people were at risk if they returned home.

“INZ has on hand 14 refugee claims from people who’ve been convicted of serious offences since arriving in New Zealand, including one person convicted of murder, five for serious drug offences, three for sexual offences, four for family violence, one for arson, and one for burglary with a weapon. And we still have to consider their refugee status.

The government is introducing the Immigration (Enhanced Risk Management) Amendment Bill to Parliament on Wednesday. It would also stop asylum seekers who withdraw their claims from later applying for other visas.

lenor/123RF

Deportation appeals

Another major change would be to deportation rules for migrants.

Immigration lawyers say children will be separated from parents, and partners of New Zealanders if migrants with visitor visa lose the right to appeal their deportations on humanitarian grounds.

Pooja Sundar said visitor visas are not only for tourists, but also partners, parents and children, such as Parent Boost and partner visitor visas.

“We do a lot of appeals. Ask anyone representing cases in representing people before the tribunal and they will absolutely tell you how high a threshold that really is and how the circumstances have to be truly exceptional.

“We are not a soft touch, we just used to give a crap about about our international conventions. Clearly we don’t anymore.”

Other changes

Previously announced changes in the bill include extending the period during which a residence visa holder may become liable for deportation following criminal offending from 10 years to 20 years.

“New Zealand has one of the most lenient criminal deportation liability regimes,” said Stanford. “Australia, the UK, Canada, Ireland all make residents liable for deportation indefinitely, including for relatively minor convictions.

“As proposed in the bill, deportation liability would continue to be scaled according to the seriousness of the offending and the length of a time the person has held residence. But longer-term residents who commit very serious offences will no longer be able to avoid deportation liability. “

Migrant exploitation jail terms would increase from a maximum of seven years to 10 years under the new legislation.

Asylum claimants may not be granted refugee status if they breach ‘good faith’ rules which include not creating grounds for a refugee claim by their social media activity in New Zealand.

“So I’m aware of cases where people take action deliberately to engage in proactive political activity when they’re arriving in New Zealand, such as seeking social media or media attention in a cynical attempt to create or increase their grounds for recognition as a refugee,” Stanford told the Immigration Law Symposium in Auckland.

“These bad faith proposals will ensure that both Immigration New Zealand and the IPT (Immigration and Protection Tribunal) will have the ability to deal with these cases made in bad faith as swiftly as possible and that the benefits associated with refugee status are reserved for those who genuinely deserve them.”

Stanford said with more than 4000 asylum claims on hand, they needed to take another look at the rules.

“While there are genuine claims, there are many claims, the vast majority of claims, that are not meritorious.

“And in some instances, people lodge an asylum claim in the final days of another visa, not because they face persecution in their home country, but simply because they want to remain in New Zealand on that visa that everybody wants, the open work visa.”

She said not turning up for a a biometrics appointment without good reason was a technique asylum claimants used to spin out the time their claim takes, while continuing on asylum seeker work visas.

But immigration lawyer Stewart Dalley said until recently, claimants’ biometrics were taken at the time of their interview.

“They’ve now changed the policy to make people come to do the biometrics a couple of days after they’ve filed their claim form. So they’ve actually created a problem that didn’t actually exist. And they’re creating this deliberately, in my mind, to actually try and see if they can decline people’s claims. Because they’ve set it out to say, you’re legally required to come and do your biometrics a couple of days after you’ve lodged your claim.

“If the person doesn’t go because they don’t read English, they haven’t got an interpreter there, they don’t know how to get to the place – claim declined, you’re out of here. They’re deliberately setting people up to fail.”

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Fuel stock down, but not unusually so – Nicola Willis

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nicola Willis. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Energy Minister Shane Jones says there is no need for fuel restrictions at this stage, as the government provides the latest update on stocks.

And the latest data shows New Zealand continues to hold “healthy levels of petrol, diesel and jet fuel” according to Finance Minister Nicola Willis.

“As at midnight on Sunday 15 March, combined petrol, diesel and jet fuel stocks equated to about 49 days of cover nationwide, including fuel held onshore in storage terminals and fuel already on ships bound for New Zealand,” Willis said.

That was slightly down from last week, but Willis explained the change reflected normal patterns of consumption.

“They are not a sign of supply disruption.”

Willis said fuel supply is inherently dynamic, with stock levels fluctuating week to week as it was consumed and new shipments arrived.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment will now also report on the pipeline of fuel shipments on their way to New Zealand.

More than a week’s worth of fuel was scheduled to arrive in the coming days.

Jones said the government was working with industry to strengthen the frequency, quality and timeliness of fuel stock and shipping data.

“This is critical to ensuring we can identify emerging risks early and plan appropriately.”

Shane Jones. RNZ / Mark Papalii

His expectation was that fuel companies were responsive and continuing to work constructively with the government as the situation evolved.

“All indications are, so far, that New Zealand is well-placed to deal with the fallout from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

“I want to be clear that at this stage, there is no need for fuel restrictions. Introducing rationing or restriction measures before there is clear evidence of a genuine shortage won’t create more fuel in the system.”

Jones said if the situation changed, the government would communicate that information quickly, along with plans in place to deal with any issues.

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Sophie Devine’s record cricket contract can’t disguise a stubborn pay gap in NZ women’s sport

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hoani Smith, Lecturer in Sport Management and Sport Science, Lincoln University, New Zealand

When former White Ferns captain Sophie Devine secured the equal-highest deal in the United Kingdom’s pro-cricket league last week, it was greeted as another sign of how quickly investment in the women’s game is growing.

Moments like this make it easy to believe women’s professional sport has finally arrived. But Devine’s £210,000 (NZ$470,000) contract to play for the Welsh Fire also highlights something else.

She’s still an exception.

For most elite women athletes – including many representing New Zealand internationally – professional sport still doesn’t pay enough to make a living.

Take netball. Players in New Zealand’s ANZ Premiership earn relatively modest retainers compared with other professional competitions.

After a 20% pay cut earlier this year, contracts reportedly sit somewhere between NZ$20,000 and $45,000 per season. Many players need secondary employment to sustain their careers.

By contrast, Australia’s Suncorp Super Netball competition operates under a team salary cap of about A$742,212, with average salaries approaching A$89,000 drawing top Kiwi players away from home.

Rugby and league pay gaps

Rugby shows a similar pattern. Despite the success of the New Zealand women’s team at the 2022 Rugby World Cup – the final at Eden Park drew more than 42,000 fans, the largest ever crowd for a women’s rugby match – the pay gap with the men’s game remains large.

Black Ferns players now receive retainers of roughly NZ$50,000–$70,000, and players in Super Rugby Aupiki (the professional club competition) earn about $25,000 for the season.

Male players in the Super Rugby Pacific competition commonly earn NZ$150,000–$250,000 per season, while All Blacks can earn $400,000 to more than $1 million annually.

The story is similar with rugby league. Salaries in Australia’s NRL Women’s Premiership are steadily increasing, with minimum salaries rising from A$30,000 in 2023 to $50,600 by 2027.

Meanwhile, the men’s NRL operates under a salary cap exceeding A$12 million per club, with some top players earning $1.3–$1.4 million per season.

Money isn’t the only factor shaping women’s sporting careers, of course. Historically, pregnancy often meant the end of a professional sporting career, with contractual protections rare.

This is changing, however. Some governing bodies have introduced parental leave protections for contracted athletes, including Cricket Australia which allows players to access paid parental leave for up to 12 months while retaining their contracts.

The English Rugby Football Union’s maternity policy provides up to 26 weeks of full pay, supporting players through pregnancy and a return to elite competition.

While important steps forward, this kind of support still varies widely between sports and leagues. Many athletes remain on short-term contracts that make long-term planning difficult.

High profile, lower pay: the Black Ferns in action against France at the Women’s Rugby World Cup in London in 2025. Mike Hewitt/Getty Images

Investing for success

Whenever pay equity in sport is discussed, one argument you’ll always hear is that men’s sport pays for women’s sport.

And there is some truth to that. Many sporting organisations bundle men’s and women’s competitions together in broadcast deals and sponsorship packages, meaning revenue from men’s competitions supports the wider system.

But the real issue isn’t equal pay – it’s the way these sporting systems are designed.

Men’s professional programmes have developed over decades into layered structures – school competitions, domestic leagues, professional clubs, international tournaments and commercial franchises. Each level generates revenue.

Under the partnership agreement between New Zealand Rugby and the Players Association, for example, 36.56% of player-generated revenue is distributed to professional players. Salaries therefore reflect the commercial value of the competitions themselves.

That model works well in mature competitions. But it also highlights the challenge for women’s sports, most of which don’t yet have that same depth.

If women athletes continue to be paid strictly according to the current market value of their competitions, the gap between men’s and women’s earnings could take decades to close.

This is why some sporting organisations are not waiting for women’s competitions to generate large audiences first.

The UK’s Hundred pro-cricket league features men’s and women’s double-headers and shared match days. The US Women’s National Basketball Association has benefited from sustained investment by its parent organisation. And Spain’s Liga F women’s football competition secured a five-season, €35 million centralised broadcast deal.

The logic is simple: investment builds visibility, which grows audiences, which attract sponsors, which generate revenue.

Over time, that creates the layered professional system needed to sustain careers. Sophie Devine’s contract shows what women’s sport can look like when investment finally meets performance.

The real challenge now is building systems that allow entire competitions – not just individual stars – to thrive. If organisations invest early to build deeper competitions and stronger commercial ecosystems, the next generation of athletes might not have to leave the country – or their sport – just to make a living.

ref. Sophie Devine’s record cricket contract can’t disguise a stubborn pay gap in NZ women’s sport – https://theconversation.com/sophie-devines-record-cricket-contract-cant-disguise-a-stubborn-pay-gap-in-nz-womens-sport-278301

Australia was once a world leader in innovation. A new report shows the system is now ‘broken’

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Roy Green, Emeritus Professor of Innovation, University of Technology Sydney

Australia’s research and innovation system is “broken” and needs “bold reform”, according to a major new independent report released on Tuesday.

Titled “Ambitious Australia”, it’s the culmination of a strategic examination of research and development in Australia, commissioned by the federal government in December 2024. It was led by Tesla chairwoman Robyn Denholm.

Ambitious Australia joins a long line of reports stretching back to the Hawke-Keating era in the 1980s and ‘90s, when public spending on science, research and innovation gained a substantial boost.

By the end of the 1990s, the fastest-growing component of Australia’s export mix was high-value, complex, finished products. Correspondingly, Australia’s rate of productivity growth was running well above the OECD average.

We are now in a very different world. As this new report shows, Australia has fallen behind its peers on many fronts.

Diagnosing the problem

If the report did nothing other than highlight how fragile Australia’s hard-won prosperity is, it would still have performed a valuable service. And on this point, it does not hold back.

The report notes Australia’s manufacturing as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) is the lowest among developed economies in the OECD.

Australia also has among the lowest share of spending on research and development in the OECD at 1.69% in 2023–24. This is from a peak of 2.24% of GDP in 2008-09.

And between 2010 and 2020, Australia’s productivity growth was the weakest it had been in six decades.

Of course, correlation is not causation. But in most countries, manufacturing is where businesses make the biggest commitment to research and development. It is hardly surprising that as manufacturing has declined, so, too, has spending on innovation.

Australia’s economy has grown heavily dependent on natural resources. Alan Porritt/AAP

Rethinking our reliance on resources

The economic concept of “comparative advantage” suggests a country should specialise in producing the things it can with a lower opportunity cost than its trading partners.

The problem is that in pursuit of comparative advantage, successive federal governments have allowed Australia’s resources exports – such as iron ore and coal – to crowd out high-value manufacturing.

The task of this review was twofold.

First, it had to think through the reconstruction of our entire research and innovation system. This includes neglected “blue sky” research, which doesn’t have immediate practical use, but which has led to world-changing inventions.

For instance, work on black hole mathematics played a key part in the invention of WiFi at CSIRO.

Second, it had to ensure the system was “fit for purpose” as part of broader industrial policy to build new areas of competitive advantage in global markets and value chains.

The report’s recommendations

After a lengthy consultation process, the report proposes a comprehensive “plan for action”, with 20 recommendations, including:

  • better support for foundational research
  • consolidation of fragmented research and innovation programs
  • changes in the incentive structure for business research and development
  • improved startup and early-stage financing
  • embedding research and development in public procurement.

Echoing previous reviews, Ambitious Australia also called on the federal government to establish a new national innovation council. This body would set priorities and coordinate efforts to meet goals across six national innovation “pillars” in:

  • health and medical
  • agriculture and food
  • defence
  • environment and energy
  • resources
  • technology.

Overall, the idea is to promote more efficient teamwork across these pillars between government, business, investors and researchers on “high-risk, high-impact” challenges.

What could work better

The problem with this approach is that while the motivation is sound, the bureaucratic complexity of the new structure may prove a drawback. This is especially the case when it comes to getting industry involved.

As a number of submissions, including one from the Business Council of Australia, suggested, Australia should be following the lead of countries like Germany, the UK and US, which have built a network of collaborative research and innovation hubs in specific locations.

For instance, the UK Catapult centres bring together some of the UK’s top businesses, scientists, technical specialists and engineers to work side by side. In doing so, they bridge the gap between research and industry.

This is not a new idea. About 30 years ago, then-Prime Minister Paul Keating’s “Innovate Australia” policy statement favoured a similar model, with the CSIRO and universities as an engine for industrial transformation.

However, as with so many policy statements and reports, it became a casualty of a change of government. The Rudd-Gillard government’s Venturous Australia report suffered a similar fate.

Gaps to be filled

The recommendations in the report are mostly compelling. But there are still some significant gaps.

For example, the report offered no view on whether the current research and development tax incentive represented better value for taxpayer money than direct targeted funding.

Nor did it address the crucial role of management in improving productivity by engaging with workforces and building their capacity to adopt and adapt to new technology, such as embodied artificial intelligence in manufacturing.

And then there’s Australia’s regions. These can play a vital part in the research and innovation system because they address the related challenges of energy transition and economic diversification.

A separate report on the government’s Energy Industry Jobs Plan goes some way to filling this gap.

What’s next

Ambitious Australia outlines many recommendations whose time has surely come – especially given the federal government’s vision for a “Future Made in Australia”.

The challenge now is to work through the report in the lead-up to the 2027 federal budget and beyond. We must also ensure strategic intent is matched by transformative actions.

ref. Australia was once a world leader in innovation. A new report shows the system is now ‘broken’ – https://theconversation.com/australia-was-once-a-world-leader-in-innovation-a-new-report-shows-the-system-is-now-broken-274012

Grocery Commissioner puts supermarkets on notice

Source: Radio New Zealand

Shoppers are bracing for more food price rises. 123RF

Shoppers are bracing for more food price rises, but the Grocery Commissioner has put supermarkets on notice about their margins.

Foodstuffs NZ managing director Chris Quin told Morning Report that there was likely to be pressure on food prices as conflict in the Middle East pushed up oil prices. Food prices were already up 4.5 percent year-on-year in February, before the impact began to be felt.

Quin said while it was hard to say at this point exactly how large the impact would be, it would become more of a problem the longer the conflict continued.

He said Foodstuffs was hearing from suppliers that they were under pressure too.

Grocery Commissioner Pierre van Heerden told Midday Report that he had told supermarkets that the Commerce Commission’s expectation was that if prices increased, they dropped as soon as they could as well, and that supermarkets were not seeking additional margin.

“Discussions with suppliers about the pressure they are facing should be done in good faith, as per the grocery supply code.”

He said supermarkets had indicated that as of yet, the additional cost was not being passed on.

“It’s dependent on how long this war continues, how long they can do that.”

Van Heerden said grocery margins had come down a bit in recent years and then stabilised.

“I would expect to see them stable or come down,” he said.

Grocery Commissioner Pierre van Heerden.

There was increasing competition in Auckland, he said, but other parts of the country were still only served by the duopoly.

The Commerce Commission is currently running an anonymous survey of supermarket suppliers to check for any concerns in the sector. He said small and medium suppliers were often scared to raise issues.

One shopper, Delwyn, said she was now spending about $500 a week on food for her family of five. She had to shift to chicken and pork mince instead of beef, which has risen [. https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/business/589814/mince-records-biggest-annual-increase-since-data-began more than 20 percent] in a year in price

She said supermarket shopping could be a depressing and disheartening experience.

Earlier, Gemma Rasmussen, Consumer NZ’s head of advocacy, told RNZ that she was concerned about the potential for supermarkets to push up prices amid the conflict.

She said when Cyclone Gabrielle hit the Hawkes Bay, she spoke to a producer who provided an example of a produce item that was affected by the floods.

“This resulted in the store price going from $3.50 a kg to $9 to $14.

“They said, if it’s sold for $3.50 retail, the supermarket is buying it for around $1.99 wholesale. It ended up reaching $4.50 wholesale, but despite this, it ended up being sold in the supermarkets for as high as $14.

“One supplier spoke of an instance when the margin a major supermarket made on a frozen product was close to 60 percent. He’s currently selling frozen produce with an alternative retailer who is ‘a dream to work with’ and takes only a 25 percent margin.”

She said the country could do well to look at what Australia was doing to moderate supermarket prices.

“From 1 July 2026, it will introduce a specific excessive pricing regime for very large supermarkets that will ban prices considered excessive in relation to supply cost plus a reasonable margin. If one of the big players breaches these rules, it will face penalties of up to A$10 million, three times the benefit gained, or 10 percent of turnover.

“In effect, this is a direct attempt to curb price gouging and hold major supermarkets accountable where mark-ups are excessive and unjustified.

“New Zealand could benefit from a similar regime. Long-term structural reform has so far done little to meaningfully reduce supermarket pricing pressure, and with cost-of-living concerns continuing, households remain exposed to pricing that may be difficult to justify.”

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

Watch: Polyfest opens with dawn ceremony

Source: Radio New Zealand

The world’s largest secondary school Pasifika cultural festival officially kicked off at the Manukau Sports Bowl in Auckland on Wednesday with an intimate flag raising ceremony.

The sun crept over the horizon, met with traditional waiata as the flags of the Pacific were hoisted into the air, marking the start of day one of ASB Polyfest – where the cultural diversity of Aotearoa’s students is being celebrated.

The Manukau Sports Bowl has been transformed into a cultural hub with five stages featuring the Cook Islands, Niue, Samoa and Tonga, as well as a stage dedicated to Diversity.

Festivals director Seiuli Terri Leo-Mauu was full of excitement as Polyfest began this morning with a dedication.

“It’s a very special time for our Pasifika and Diversity stages to be able to bless their flags and sing a hymn, as well as just come together as well,” she told RNZ Pacific.

ASB Polyfest festivals director Seiuli Terri Leo-Mauu RNZ Pacific / Coco Lance

“It’s a good vibe with the sunshine over us right now at the dawn service with our flags and, yes, we are excited. We can’t wait to see the kids come in.”

More than 80,000 people are expected to attend to support the 263 groups from 73 schools who are registered to perform this year.

The Samoan stage will have a kava ceremony, while Tonga kicks off their speech competition.

While Polyfest mainly showcases Pacific students, Leo-Mauu said they embrace all cultures.

The diversity stage is the place to be today as students from all backgrounds were given the opportunity to share their heritage.

“We have to embrace the fact that our children are blended and come from different cultures,” he said.

“We’ve got also a lot of smaller Pacific groups that are on that stage as well. And then we’ve also got some new ones coming in this year, so there’s Germany and Latino that are coming through to celebrate on the diversity stage.”

Breona Nassau and Joseph Tulua from Tangaroa College at ASB Polyfest. RNZ Pacific / Coco Lance

Breona Nassau and Joseph Tulua from Tangaroa College said the diversity stage helps them learn more about their peers heritage.

“We’ve got some of the other cultures from our school performing on the diversity stage, so I’m really excited to support them.”

“Getting a taste of all of the cultures in one, seeing cultures I’ve never seen before.”

Faith Fomai, a student from Southern Cross Campus, is attending her first Polyfest.

“One thing that I’ll probably look forward looking at is the diversity and all our countries come together to perform and to represent each other’s culture,” she said.

“I think it’s just like, at least learning your roots, staying cool, also just be connected and be one.”

Southern Cross Campus students at ASB Polyfest. RNZ Pacific / Coco Lance

Meanwhile, Halatau Teputepu from Otahuhu College said this is his last year joining Polyfest, and he wants to make it count.

“You know, showcasing our culture, embracing our culture, our ancestors, and just dancing for our last year, we’re not gonna do Poly again and hopefully we bring back the trophies.”

Otahuhu College students at ASB Polyfest on Wednesday. 18 March 2026. RNZ Pacific / Coco Lance

The Pacific and Diversity stages run until Saturday.

Manukau’s Due Drop Event Centre will host the Māori stage with performances scheduled from 30 March – 2 April.

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

Can’t stop endlessly scrolling? Tips to help you take back control

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sharon Horwood, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, Deakin University

It’s called the infinite scroll – a design feature on social media, shopping, video and many other apps that continuously loads content as you reach the bottom of the page. Handy? Yes. Clever? Also yes. Devious? Very much so. The infinite scroll is likely the main reason you find it so hard to stop scrolling once you begin.

To understand why this design feature is so devious, we need to understand the psychology and behaviours it taps into.

First, the infinite scroll takes away a natural stopping point – where you might decide that’s enough social media for today. For example, Instagram feeds once stopped after all chronologically new posts from followed accounts had been viewed, and even told us we were “all caught up” for the day. Now, algorithmic feeds combined with the infinite scroll mean there’s no way to ever be caught up with it all.

The second reason you find it so hard to stop scrolling is the promise of something good that might be just about to pop up in your feed. The algorithm “knows” what you like. So, hand-in-hand with the infinite scroll, it keeps feeding you all those tasty tid-bits.

Putting it bluntly, these features help create an addiction of sorts. The promise of a little hit of dopamine when we see content we love. And addictions are hard to beat – but not impossible.

Here are some quick wins and longer-term solutions if you want to break free from the grip of the scroll.

The quick wins

Create a break

Your device might be the problem, but it can also be part of the solution. Start by using your phone’s screen time features – such as Android’s Digital Wellbeing or Apple’s Screen Time.

You can also install a more sophisticated third-party app that forces you to break the patterns of mindless scrolling behaviour.

Apps such as One Sec, ScreenZen, Opal and Freedom can short-circuit the automatic habits associated with scrolling in various ways. These include putting mandatory pauses before social media apps open, or applying colour filters (like grayscale) to make apps less appealing.

They can even hard-block apps for specific periods of time if you really need a tough love approach.

Remove social media apps

This one’s usually met with an audible gasp when I suggest it, but you might find you adapt to not having social media at your fingertips faster than you’d imagine. You’re not deleting your accounts – just making it harder to open them and scroll.

Schedule some scrolling time

If you can’t imagine life without scrolling, schedule time each day for just that activity. It could be in your lunch break or when you get home from work: give yourself the freedom to scroll for the amount of time you set (say, 15 minutes) and don’t feel guilty about it. Just remember you still have to close the apps and get on with your life as soon as the time is up.

The hard work

The above might limit your scrolling in the short term, but long-term benefits (and emotional freedom) will likely take a bit more work.

The “easy” tips often work for a little while, when you’re motivated to change and feeling optimistic. But time and the pressures of life can start to erode your convictions.

So, to gain true freedom from scrolling, think about social media and whether it’s a relationship that serves you well. If you feel like it’s controlling you far more than you are controlling it, here are some things to consider. Be warned, they might not be easy.

What’s the deeper reason?

Think deeply about why you’re scrolling so much in the first place. Is it a lack of willpower? Are you avoiding something or someone? Are you suppressing feelings that you would prefer not to acknowledge?

All of these things can be reasons why we seek distraction. You might be avoiding a big thing (the state of a relationship) or a small thing (cooking dinner), but either way, scrolling is the symptom, not the disease. So, consider if scrolling might be part of a bigger problem you need to deal with instead.

Who’s benefiting whom?

Consider how much you really “need” social media. Do you actively use it in a way that benefits you (for example, as a business platform) or did you sign up out of curiosity years ago and have never really questioned why you’re still using it?

If it’s the latter, apply a critical lens to the platforms you use and how they serve you. On average, Australians use six to seven different social media platforms regularly. Think about what you might gain from spending less time scrolling, but also think about whether your life would be worse without some of them.

If you can’t think of a really compelling reason as to why it would be worse, it might be time to say goodbye to a few.

These “hard” options will take time and effort, and require you to reflect on your habits. But, like with most things, the reward for effort is likely to be greater, and last longer.

ref. Can’t stop endlessly scrolling? Tips to help you take back control – https://theconversation.com/cant-stop-endlessly-scrolling-tips-to-help-you-take-back-control-278418

MCPNG and UN hold media freedom talks in wake of attacks on women journalists

Pacific Media Watch

The United Nations in Papua New Guinea has met the leadership of the Media Council of PNG to advance collaboration in support of a strong, independent and responsible media sector, reports UNPNG.

The meeting addressed recent incidents of threats and violence against journalists — especially attacks against women journalists and the growing risks they face while reporting.

Participants identified key priorities to strengthen media freedom and safety. These included:

  • Improving journalist safety measures;
  • reinforcing newsroom integrity and professional standards; and
  • promoting responsible and accurate reporting in the lead up to the national elections.

The UNPNG statement said dialogue reaffirmed the shared commitment of the United Nations and the Media Council to “support a safe and independent media sector and to ensure that everyone in PNG can access reliable information that supports free and informed participation in public life”.

Present at the meeting were Media Council PNG president Neville Choi, secretary Belinda Kora and treasurer Genesis Ketan, UN Resident Coordinator Richard Howard, Human Rights Advisor Marc Cebreros, UNDP Country Representative (OIC) Aadil Mansoor, Chief Technical Adviser on Transparency and Anti-Corruption Alma Sedlar, Peace and Development Advisor Tony Cameron, and UNDP Assistant Resident Representative for Governance, Gender and Peace Zoe Pelter.

MCPNG president Choi thanked UN Resident Coordinator Howard and UNDP for the continued support of media freedom in PNG.

Earlier this month, the MCPNG condemned an alleged assault on a senior female reporter by warders at Bomana Prison and called on the police to conduct a full independent investigation into the incident on February 27.

MCPNG’s secretary Belinda Kora . . . growing concerns about assaults and threats against journalists, especially women reporters. Image: UNPNG/PMW

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Organised crime group linked to alleged hitman from US accused of bribing prison guards, bail address managers

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland courier driver Tuipulotu Vi was killed in August 2024.

Police allege an organised crime group they’ve linked to the killing of a New Zealand man corrupted prison officers and bail officials.

It’s understood the man that was killed, Auckland courier driver Tuipulotu Vi, was not involved in the drug world.

RNZ earlier revealed that Tanginoa Tangi, one of three people charged with murdering Vi in August 2024, flew back to the USA where he has since been charged with attempting to murder someone else. If convicted there he faces a maximum sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole.

The homicide investigation, dubbed Operation Block, is linked to Operation Mexted, a joint investigation by the National Organised Crime Group (NOCG) and Customs, which targeted a transnational organised criminal cell.

Nine people are before the courts in relation to Operation Mexted.

Last week, Judge Yelena Yelavich lifted a suppression order on parts of a court document that details police allegations against the group. The rest of the document remains suppressed pending an appeal to the High Court.

Police claim the group, which included both New Zealand and US citizens, was responsible for the importation and dealing of methamphetamine and the trafficking of firearms.

The financial gains from the group’s activities were allegedly laundered through various construction and other companies in an attempt to conceal their source.

Vi’s death followed a series of shootings in the South Auckland area, which police claim were arranged by the syndicate, but which failed to reach the intended target.

The court document setting out police allegations against the group, details the roles police believe each defendant played in the operation.

One of the defendants, a 35-year-old Auckland man, is accused of being one of the senior members with direct reporting back to a more senior member in the US.

Police say that once he was arrested in September 2024, another person who was his “lieutenant” assisted him from outside while he was remanded in custody. This person’s role included laundering the syndicate’s financial proceeds as well as administration of the syndicate’s activities.

Police allege this included corrupting prison officers and bail address managers “to facilitate the movement of the syndicate’s property”.

After the 35-year-old man’s arrest, police claim the person also took control of a cryptocurrency account through which about $4.9 million had been transferred since the start of 2025.

Police accuse the syndicate of using various methods to traffic illegal consignments of drugs and firearms into the country, including using corrupt agents at international airports in the US and in New Zealand as well as New Zealand Post.

They claim the group rented Airbnbs at multiple addresses throughout Auckland to assist them in their activities.

In June 2025, the American syndicate members were arrested. Following this, police say the other members started attempting to move their property and assist the members in prison.

The remaining members also moved addresses.

In July 2025, three members were captured on CCTV checking into the Park Hyatt Hotel in downtown Auckland. Police allege that between 2023 and 2025 one of the “lieutenants” spent $164,000 on room bookings at the hotel, including rooms that cost as much as $1400 a night.

In that same month, police claim the “lieutenant” contacted a Corrections officer at Mt Eden prison who had been “corrupted” by the group and asked to move an associate of the syndicate to another part of the prison.

They are also suspected of arranging the officer to provide cigarettes to another person in prison.

Police allege that after the arrest of the American defendants, one of the members of the group started communicating with higher members of the syndicate, both in New Zealand and overseas.

In a 10-day period in August 2025, the man is accused of importing 7 consignments into New Zealand from the US containing almost 18kgs of methamphetamine. Forensic analysis to confirm the precise amount of methamphetamine is ongoing.

The court document also claims that while on EM bail the 35-year-old engaged in various mobile chat communications with a senior offshore member of the syndicate about ongoing efforts regarding their drug importations.

In September 2025, the man received a photograph from another defendant, who was at another EM bail address, while he was at the gym as well as photographs of him outside his bail address wearing his bail bracelet.

Later that month the 35-year-old was arrested again while walking along Tamaki Dr in Auckland with a mobile phone, in breach of his bail conditions.

After his arrest, one of the staff at the bail support service, was caught on camera clearing his room before police arrived, including removing “high value items” including a Rolex. Police claim the “lieutenant” called the staffer on Instagram while he was clearing the room.

That afternoon, the “lieutenant” called the manager of the bail support about the 35-year-old’s arrest. They were overheard saying “what are we gonna do damn it” to which the manager replied: “they can just bugger off”.

The “lieutenant” was arrested two days later at the Park Hyatt Hotel.

That same day police issued a press release announcing the five-month operation.

Acting Customs Investigations Manager Simon Peterson said at the time Customs used its “investigative and specialist expertise” to track the syndicate.

“Customs identified the suspects smuggling cannabis plants and resin into the country, tracking their smuggling activities throughout and gathering evidence.

“The offenders now face charges for the importation of 18 kilograms of methamphetamine, as well as importation charges for cannabis.”

The US national

RNZ has obtained court documents in relation to the charges Tangi faces in the USA.

He’s accused of attempted murder, shooting at an occupied motor vehicle, fleeing a pursuing police officer’s vehicle while driving recklessly, and possession of a firearm.

He has pleaded not guilty and is set to go on trial next month.

A spokesperson for the local District Attorney’s office told RNZ the office was “generally aware” that Tangi had another pending matter in New Zealand and that they were aware an extradition warrant existed.

Tangi was facing a possible life sentence with the possibility of parole, the spokesperson confirmed.

“Regarding the New Zealand matter, the DA’s office does not litigate extradition proceedings. However, we expect that once Mr Tangi’s case here in California concludes, the extradition process to New Zealand would move forward at that time.”

RNZ sent several questions to Tangi’s lawyer, who declined to comment.

“We cannot comment at this time and do not foresee being able to offer anything in the near future.”

In a statement to RNZ on Friday afternoon, police confirmed a third person had been charged with murder in relation to Vi’s death.

“The man is currently in custody in the United States for offences committed in that country and is now subject to an extradition process,” Counties Manukau CIB detective inspector Shaun Vickers said.

“We are working with the relevant authorities in relation to this.

“This is the third person charged over to Mr Vi’s death and our investigation remains ongoing.”

As the matter is before the courts, police are limited in providing further information, Vickers said.

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

Government, SPCA putting $1.2 million towards desexing dogs

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. An animal control officer with a roaming dog. RNZ / Felix Walton

Hundreds of thousands of dollars is being directed by the government to try to curb rife uncontrolled dog breeding in Auckland and Northland.

The funding comes after a spate of serious dog incidents, including the death of 62-year-old Mihiata Te Rore in a remote Northland settlement in February. The SPCA says three of the last four fatal dog attacks had been in Northland.

Almost $500,000 of money from the Lottery Minister’s Discretionary Fund is going toward desexing.

The SPCA, which is continuing calls for a law overhaul, is putting up a further $700,000.

There was an urgent need for preventative action to protect people, animals and communities, the SPCA said.

Together, the money is enough to desex about 3000 dogs from what’s thought to be up to 51,000 across both regions that are not desexed.

It’s enough to stop around 7500 puppies in a year or about 45,000 across the lifetimes of desexed females.

Unregistered or roaming dogs that have not been desexed were specifically in the SPCA’s sights.

The programme is for early intervention, stopping litters, reducing roaming and lowering the chances of people suffering serious bites.

The funding is ringfenced, and the programme will run from this coming 1 April to 31 March 2027.

Mihiata Te Rore was killed by a pack of dogs at a property at Kaihu, near Dargaville. Supplied

Before Mihiata Te Rore was killed by a pack of dogs at a property at Kaihu, near Dargaville, the government appeared uncertain on the idea of law changes.

Local Government Minister Simon Watts had said there was no time for changes before the election and would not commit to changes if the government stayed in power.

After the death, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said he was open to changing the law.

The three dogs that attacked Te Rore were later put down.

The SPCA said there needed to be more than money, and that the current laws lacked teeth.

With the announcement on Wednesday, the SPCA called for an “urgent and comprehensive overhaul” of dog control laws as well as standardised national guidelines for every council.

It also wants a national database for dog bite incidents, strong and enforceable breeding rules, and updated Code of Welfare and ongoing funding for desexing.

In Auckland, one of the regions targeted, animal control staff have been busier than ever.

Last year Auckland Council got almost 17,000 reports of roaming dogs and more than 1300 reports of dog attacks on people.

Each year the council impounded about 10,000 dogs – releasing most of them – and it too has been calling for an overhaul of the decades-old Dog Control Act.

“We want people to be out and about, enjoying our parks, going for walks and having the fear of being attacked by a dog is not something that we want,” it said last month.

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Shadows cast on Auckland’s Sunfield development

Source: Radio New Zealand

Artist’s impression of the planned Sunfield development in Auckland. Winton / supplied

One of Auckland’s largest new housing developments – the Sunfield community near Ardmore Airport in South Auckland, given the go-ahead under fast-track rules – has raised the ire of local politicians.

Developers Winton envisage nearly 4000 homes, a town centre, retail and healthcare buildings, three retirement villages and approximately 26 hectares of parks and reserves and ecological areas. Regional development minister Shane Jones says it will deliver up to $3.2 billion to the economy and support more than 24,000 jobs over the 10- to 15-year building period.

But concerns have been raised that it sits on a flood plain, is located near an airport, and does not have the extensive transport, water and sewerage infrastructure needed to support it.

The fast-track panel that gave the go-ahead did attach a number of conditions, including the need for stormwater and drainage management plans. But Kelvin Hieatt, the chair of the Papakura Community Board, and Auckland councillor Richard Hills, chair of the Policy and Planning Committee, say those have not been met.

“We’re sort of downstream of everything, and you consider what’s got to go into that suburb and if there is a major storm, major flooding coming through, eventually their systems get overwhelmed and it’s going to be coming downstream,” Hieatt told RNZ’s Nine to Noon on Wednesday.

“Our Papakura stream is the receiving environment and it’s going to come out through our communities. So that’s the last thing we want to see.”

Hieatt said the land Sunfield was being built on was peat, “so what doesn’t drain away has to run off. And particularly when you’ve got these large storms moving through, once the ground is soaked, it has to go somewhere. You couldn’t build in enough residue, residual infrastructure up there to accommodate it. It’s got to go somewhere once you overload it.”

Auckland councillor Richard Hills. Alexia Russell

He said the presently rural area presently had no treated water, stormwater, power, communications infrastructure or plans for transport.

“There’s nothing. Everything’s got to come out from Papakura to that area. There was some planning in the past… but that land is noted after, particularly after the Anniversary Day storms and then Cyclone Gabrielle as being flood-prone and at-risk. There’s a lot of work gone into the future development strategy to keep those areas rural…

“One of the things with this development is there’s supposedly no cars on site.”

Sunfield’s plan involves electric shuttle buses once the population hits a certain level. But not before then. Hills called it bad city planning.

“They don’t even start the electric bus until 445 households are already in there, and they’re going to give them temporary parking for the first part of their lives there and then have the electric bus come in and I guess the cars just magically disappear… It is not normal city planning, and people expect us in all those neighbouring neighbourhoods to this site to deal with it, and we may not be able to.”

Hieatt said future residents might not appreciate being so close to an expanding airport either.

“We [don’t] want another Western Springs, where we have infrastructure that’s been in for decades, decades and decades before people move in, all of a sudden they think, ‘Oh, well, it’s my peace and quiet.’ Hang on a sec, you’ve moved in at the end of a runway, you know?”

Hills said there was little the council could do to slow down the development until it met its standards.

Sunfield community concept sketch. Winton/Supplied

“Fast-track supersedes all. I mean, we only get a couple of days to respond. Most of the work can’t be done. If you look through the Watercare responses, they say they didn’t [have time to check] some of the evidence they needed.

“So it doesn’t mean that there won’t be still resource consenting processes for housing in that development… but even through this process, there’s been no work on the overland flow paths, which is a normal process. There’s sort of no real suggestion about how stormwater is dealt with in a flood situation.

“It does deal – or supposedly deal – with lighter storms or heavy rain. But we know from 2023 and from this year across New Zealand how drastically things can change and where you build is just as important as how the infrastructure is around it.”

He said unless the developer planned to look after the development “forever”, eventually problems would end up back with the council.

“We have no plans for wastewater and water supply in that site anytime soon. And so it’s just pulling out-of-sequence infrastructure spending from current urban areas to these areas, which I’m assuming we’re going to be forced to do under the fast-track.”

He said the council was not trying to stifle development, but there was only so much it could do, particularly if rates were getting capped.

Winton was invited to join Nine to Noon to talk about its plans, but no one was available.

In a statement, it said the engineering solution for the Sunfield community had been designed by a ‘tier 1’ engineering firm, and the work had been peer reviewed by a further two equally well qualified independent engineering firms.

It said the stormwater solution for Sunfield was based on stage one of the Awakeri Wetlands, which serviced part of the Sunfield site, which was designed and constructed by Auckland Council and was currently operational.

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Interest rates rise, so what’s the best strategy now?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Economists were split on whether the conflict in the Middle East would mean lower or higher interest rates. Stuff/Kathryn George

Banks are moving interest rates higher, but the right term to pick depends a lot on how you think the economy will fare through the rest of this year.

BNZ on Wednesday increased its 18-month rate by five basis points, to 4.69 percent. Its two-year rate lifted by 20 to 4.89 percent, its three-year rate by 30 to 5.29 percent, its four-year rate by 30 to 5.49 percent and the five-year rate to 5.69 percent.

A day earlier, Westpac said it was increasing its rates, too. The one-year rate lifted by 10 basis points to 4.59 percent, and the two-year and three-year rates by 30 basis points to 5.19 percent and 5.29 percent, respectively.

It comes on the back of rising wholesale interest rates, which drive what it costs banks to borrow the money they lend.

The two-year rate has lifted from about 2.6 percent at the end of February to more than 2.8 percent.

Squirrel chief executive David Cunningham said although economists were split on whether the conflict in the Middle East would mean lower interest rates because of the impact on the economy, or higher interest rates because of the impact on prices, the markets were pricing in hikes.

“Ultimately, what the market prices is what flows through to the mortgage rates. We’ve really seen the pass-through of much higher swap rates, and so the banks naturally protect their margins and lift mortgage rates.”

He said other banks were likely to follow.

“The lowest point on the curve now is the six-month rate… if you take the six-month rate, it’s much lower right now, but you’re betting on interest rates not increasing, you’re almost betting against the market and taking the risk that they won’t be as high as the market’s pricing.”

Six month rates are available from about 4.49 percent, although some of the main banks are also offering one-year rates at that level, too.

Cunningham said if people thought markets had got ahead of themselves, it could be worth taking a shorter fix. “I’d probably go with six months on the basis that it feels to me like the market’s gone all gloom, and if anything, we’re going to unquestionably have a weaker economy because of the Middle East conflict.

“When it finishes, the oil price comes back down to the same level.

“Eventually, the world has a habit of sorting itself out, then the inflationary threats sort of disappear.”

He said people would need to consider their own circumstances and how they could cope with an increase, if interest rates did move higher.

But Infometrics chief forecaster Gareth Kiernan said there was “so much risk to the upside on lots of bad stuff at the moment”.

“Even though the two-year is a bit higher… in a world of uncertainty, paying a bit more in the short term to lock in at 5 percent-ish for two years is probably not a bad thing in my view.”

He said anyone who fixed for six months could be underestimating the chance of interest rates rising later this year.

“Financial markets would tend to back me up on that in terms of what swap rates and longer-term rates have done over the last few weeks.”

He said he expected a lift in the official cash rate in September.

“I guess the difficulty for the Reserve Bank is they’re trying to weigh up the negative effects on growth from higher fuel prices versus the effects of higher fuel prices on inflation more generally.

“We still have the view that businesses are more in a mindset to pass that kind of thing on than they were a decade ago… the Reserve Bank probably has to push back against that more than might otherwise be the case.”

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David Seymour announces new iwi-led charter school for Wellington region

Source: Radio New Zealand

Associate Education Minister David Seymour RNZ / Mark Papalii

An iwi-led charter school will open in Porirua later this year.

Associate Education Minister David Seymour announced the Ngati Toa-run secondary school for children in Y7-13, Kura Toa, would open in the third school term.

Seymour said Ngāti Toa’s education organisation, Puna Mātauranga, would work with the school along with Te Pikau o te Rangi, an iwi-designed service that supported learners.

He said the school and others opening this year would take the total number of privately owned, publicly funded charter schools to 21.

Seymour said Kura Toa would provide pastoral care founded on an iwi framework and would track students’ physical, mental, cultural, and social wellbeing.

He said it would ensure none of its students were falling through gaps in the education system.

Seymour said 28.5 percent of Māori students in Porirua left school without achieving NCEA Level 1, compared to 17.8 percent across all students in Wellington and 32.9 percent achieved NCEA Level 3 or higher, compared to 43.8 percent of all students in the region.

He said Māori youth were referred to attendance services at a rate of 23 per 1000, nearly twice the Wellington rate of 12.8 per 1000.

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Fire and Emergency postpones decision on cutting 140 jobs

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland firefighters protest for better pay and work conditions on November 2025. RNZ/Lucy Xia

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) has once again postponed its final decisions about restructuring.

Originally, FENZ said it would decide before Christmas on a proposal made last November to cut 140 positions and make changes to 700 roles in total.

It pushed that back to January, then again to Wednesday.

It has now been postponed again.

“The release of Fire and Emergency New Zealand’s organisational structure consultation decisions has been postponed until we have received the second determination from the Employment Relations Authority,” it said.

This second Employment Relations Authority (ERA) ruling was in response to two unions challenging FENZ’s consultation process.

FENZ said the ERA’s first ruling aligned with its position that it was not required to consult with the unions before issuing its change proposal last November, and that it can consult with them at the same time about the reason for changes and actual proposed changes.

The two sides were scheduled to go back to facilitated bargaining for two days in late March.

The Professional Firefighters Union earlier dropped a proposed ban on some administrative duties, such as doing fire reports.

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Consumers ‘nervous’ about economic outlook amid war in Middle East

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Quin Tauetau

Consumer confidence slipped in the March quarter as global uncertainty made households more nervous about the economic outlook.

The Westpac McDermott Miller Consumer Confidence Index fell 1.8 points to 94.7. A level below 100 indicates pessimists outweigh optimists.

Westpac senior economist Satish Ranchhod said the survey was conducted in the first two weeks of March, when the Middle East war took hold.

“Against that increasingly uncertain global backdrop, households have grown a little more nervous about the economic outlook,” he said.

“However, at the time we spoke to households, many will not have seen the full impact of the conflict or experienced the rise in fuel prices.”

Ranchhod said the longer the war went on, the economy would see more disruptions and lead to more pressure on households.

“Many households actually told us that their financial position had improved over the past year, and that lifted spending appetites in recent months,” he said.

“However, cost-of-living pressures are picking up again, led by sharp increases in fuel prices.”

Confidence was highest in Gisborne/Hawke’s Bay, followed by Auckland, with both regions sneaking into optimism territory above 100.

Taranaki/Manawatū-Whanganui was the most pessimistic region.

“Women remain much more pessimistic than men and their confidence has dropped this quarter by 4.7 points, down to an index score of 85.9. In contrast, men have experienced a small rise in confidence of 1.5 points to 104.1,” said Imogen Rendall, market research director at McDermott Miller.

“Looking ahead to next year, both men and women have similar expectations for their personal finances, with around a quarter expecting to be worse off.”

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Four teens charged charged burglary and high-speed chase in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police at the scene. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

Four teenagers have been charged over an Auckland home invasion that resulted in a high-speed chase across the city, ending on Karangahape Road with a forced stop.

The accused – aged between 15 and 17 – are due to appear in the Manukau Youth Court on Wednesday.

They face charges of aggravated burglary and the driver has been charged with assaulting a person with a blunt instrument and failing to stop.

It started with an alleged armed home invasion in the sleepy eastern suburb of Howick and ended with police forcing a stolen ute to stop on Auckland’s Karangahape Road.

Manukau area commander Shanan Gray said four people, one armed with a machete, carried out the home invasion in Howick before stealing a white Ford ute and heading south, shortly after 3pm on Tuesday.

The superintendent said the ute reached high speeds and drove dangerously, sometimes on the wrong side of the road, as the four people made their way through Manukau and Ōtara.

Police inspect a Ford ute at the scene. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

The police helicopter watched from above and Gray said at times, the ute crashed into cars and rammed patrol cars as they headed into the city.

Members of the police armed offenders squad (AOS) joined in the chase and a sponge round was fired.

Gray said a police dog was also used in the arrest.

The drama unfolded in the afternoon as commuters began making their way home from work.

A shopkeeper who only wanted to be known as Dave said the ute was heading into oncoming traffic when it was stopped.

“It was like full speed, boom. And the cop’s car … it just hit from the side. At that moment one guy jumped from the car with his hands up.”

A crashed car at the scene. Kim Baker Wilson/RNZ

A bridal shop worker, Jessie, was talking with a client when she heard two collisions outside on the street and what sounded like an explosion and a gun shot.

“I saw this white ute that had seemingly been the one that had crashed earlier, a bunch of men all kind of piled out of the car and all kind of got down on their stomachs…

“It had clearly been a police chase that had been going on for a while, because there were lots of police cars and police on them right away, and police dogs as well,” she said.

The worker said she was pretty shaken and locked the doors to their shop.

“We’re definitely kind of accustomed to some craziness happening outside on K’Road, so we’re definitely quick to lock our doors on occasions to keep our team and customers safe.

“But yeah, definitely nothing like this has ever happened before.”

Two other vehicles were involved in the crash.

Kim Baker Wilson/RNZ

She said one of the vehicles that the white ute crashed into looked like it had a young couple in, but she said they looked unhurt.

“It is extremely lucky that the reckless behaviour of these individuals did not result an anyone suffering serious injuries.”

Gray said two of the accused needed hospital treatment following the events.

“The victim of the aggravated burglary in Howick was shaken by the violent event that took place and has been provided support.”

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Moana Pasifika’s Augustine Pulu gets three week ban for dangerous tackle

Source: Radio New Zealand

Moana Pasifika halfback Augustine Pulu tackles Blues opposite Sam Nock. Alan Lee / www.photosport.nz

Moana Pasifika halfback Augustine Pulu has been suspended for three weeks for a dangerous tackle during his side’s 43-7 defeat to the Blues last weekend.

It’s a blow for Moana who have three tough games on the horizon. They host the Crusaders on Friday before matches against the Highlanders and Chiefs.

The high shot on Blues opposite Sam Nock occurred in the 17th minute of the Super Rugby match at Eden Park with former All Black Pulu receiving a yellow card which was later upgraded to red.

After the game Moana Pasifika coach Tana Umaga lamented Pulu’s sending off and said it made it harder for his side.

“That did harm us. It obviously harmed Sam Nock, which isn’t ideal. He’s a good, young man,” Umaga said.

“To play half an hour with 14 players… but the funny thing is, when we did have 14 men, we seemed to have a lot more urgency and showed what we can do.

“When we were 15, it wasn’t the same.”

The judiciary determined that the mid-range entry point of six weeks/matches was appropriate for the incident in which Pulu made direct contact with a swinging arm to an opponent’s head, with no mitigation.

Due to Pulu’s guilty plea and other factors such as his prior disciplinary record and remorse, the judiciary applied the full 50 per cent reduction in sanction, reducing the ban to three weeks.

The ban will be reduced to two weeks if Pulu takes part in World Rugby’s Coaching Intervention Programme.

If he doesn’t attend the coaching programme he will miss Moana Pasifika’s upcoming matches against the Crusaders (21 March), Highlanders (27 March) and Chiefs (11 April).

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‘Trail went cold’: The hunt for masterpieces stolen in the Gardner Museum heist

Source: Radio New Zealand

Thieves stole 13 artworks by masters such as Rembrandt, Vermeer, Manet, and Degas from Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990. Screeenshot / FBI

Thirty-six years on, mystery still lingers at Boston’s Gardner Museum.

In the early morning hours of 18 March 1990, two men dressed as police officers talked their way into the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Within minutes, they had overpowered the security guards, duct taping and handcuffing them, and set about stripping the walls of treasures that may never be seen again.

The thieves moved between galleries, unbuttered by security who were still duct taped at the entrance. They triggered motion sensors and proceeded to cut canvases from their frames. By the time they left, 81 minutes after they arrived, they carried with them 13 works now valued at more than US$1 billion, names such as Rembrandt, Vermeer, Manet, and Degas.

Other masterpieces went ignored. Works Titian and Michelangelo remained hung untouched, leaving investigators to wonder whether this was a targeted theft or simply a hurried snatch and grab. Whatever the motive, the result was the same: thirteen irreplaceable works gone, their empty frames hanging to this day in the museum’s Dutch Room.

Few know the case better than retired FBI agent Geoffrey Kelly, who spent 22 years interviewing hoaxers, chasing whispers and tracking rumours of Vermeer and Rembrandt masterpieces reportedly seen in darkened warehouses or in private vaults. His book, Thirteen Perfect Fugitives, is a true crime detective story.

An empty frame at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum on 27 December, 2017 in Boston, Massachusetts. AFP / Ryan McBride

The former Special Agent told First Up the reason the case fascinated the public was the audacious nature of the robbery.

“About 1.24 in the morning, on a Sunday morning right after St Patrick’s Day had ended, which is a big deal in Boston, these two subjects dressed as Boston police officers bluffed their way into the museum by claiming they were responding to a disturbance, and the guard – against protocol, let them in.”

For the FBI, the heist has become both legend and burden. Declared the largest property crime in United States history, the case has led agents through Boston’s criminal underground, across international smuggling channels, and down countless dead ends.

Kelly said that didn’t mean there weren’t suspects. Two men from Boston were identified.

“They were part of a bigger crew. It was an organised crime crew out of a section of Boston called Dorchester, and I’m confident they committed this robbery because they wanted to steal Rembrandts and hold on to them as a bargaining chip.

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. AFP / Philippe Renault / hemis.fr

“In Massachusetts there had been a few instances in the previous two decades where subjects had stolen Rembrandts from museums in a effort to leverage their return in exchange for getting leniency on pending criminal sentences.”

Unfortunately for the suspects, and for investigators, both men died within a year of the robbery.

“One was violently murdered, and the other died under some very suspicious circumstances which, as you can imagine, can have a chilling effect on efforts to recover the artwork and might prevent somebody with information coming forward after seeing what happened to the subjects.”

Kelly said there were theories about where the art works went. “We were able to track some of the pieces up into Maine, down to Connecticut and down to Philadelphia but from there the trail went cold and that’s kind of where we were looking when it was time for my retirement two years ago.

“I think it’s quite possible the pieces have been split up and right now they’re waiting somewhere, waiting to be apprehended and our job is to find them.”

A US$10m reward remains on the table for information leading to full recovery.

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‘Morning Report: Chris Hipkins Hipkins says he considered his future in politics after ex-wife’s claims

Source: Radio New Zealand

Labour leader Chris Hipkins says he did consider his future in politics after his ex-wife levelled claims at him on social media, but he remains “absolutely committed” to staying on.

Hipkins appeared on a suite of morning media on Wednesday – including Morning Report – where he again flatly denied all the claims, but said he would not be litigating them in public for the sake of his children.

The claims are not criminal and relate to a lack of support for his ex-wife Jade Paul during and after their relationship.

Speaking on Morning Report, Hipkins acknowledged he had considered stepping down, noting the impact on his family.

“It would be untrue to say that those thoughts hadn’t crossed my mind in the last 48 hours, but everybody in their lives at some point goes through rough patches, and you just have to keep getting out of bed every day.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins. RNZ / Mark Papalii

“I love my job and and I’m absolutely committed to continuing to do it.”

Hipkins said the public debate was “very unfair” on his children, partner and parents – “you do pause and think about that” – but he had received a lot of support over the past day or two.

“Our marriage broke up. That was a traumatic thing. You know, clearly, there are always going to be lots of regrets in a situation like that.

“Many, many people have contacted me in the last 24 hours to indicate that they’ve been through a relationship break-up that has been difficult. I think people will understand that litigating those things through the public is in no one’s best interest.”

Hipkins confirmed he had sought legal advice about the further publication of his ex-wife’s allegations by others, as well as the addition of other “completely unsubstantiated things”.

“The online world is a bit of a sewer pit, and it seems that no one has any hesitation in adding to that,” he said.

“Social media certainly has emboldened a lot of people, and, you know, we have a virtual vigilante approach on social media that anybody in a public profile role now has to contend with. I don’t think that’s been healthy for democracy.”

Paul’s initial post was published on her private Facebook page on Sunday evening, but screenshots were quickly circulated online.

Paul later removed the post, but told RNZ she stood by the comments.

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Popstar Robbie Williams announces New Zealand tour

Source: Radio New Zealand

Global popstar Robbie Williams will play Christchurch’s new stadium later this year.

Williams will be one of the first international acts at the One New Zealand Stadium when he brings his BRITPOP World Tour to the city on 28 November – the singer’s first concert in Christchurch in 25 years.

He will also play Auckland’s Eden Park on 24 November.

“Australia and New Zealand have always had a very special place in my heart. Ever since my first solo tours, you have welcomed me with open arms and made me feel at home,” Williams said in a statement.

Released in January, BRITPOP was a nod to the 90s Britpop era and featured collaborations with Coldplay’s Chris Martin, Gaz Coombes (Supergrass), Black Sabbath legend Tony Iommi, Mexican pop duo Jesse & Joy and Gary Barlow.

The government said Williams was bringing his BRITPOP World Tour to Aotearoa with the support of its $70 million Major Events and Tourism Package.

“It’s fantastic to welcome a showstopper act like Robbie, giving fans the chance to see him entertaining us,” said Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston.

“We know concerts like his bring a significant economic injection into our cities and create a real buzz. It’s been calculated that for every dollar spent on live performance, $3.20 is returned in benefits to the wider community and that’s why we’re investing in them.”

The brand new 30,000 multi-use arena One New Zealand Stadium is due to open in April, and the following month, a dance and light extravaganza will take over.

Six60 and Synthony will perform in Christchurch on 16 May, the first live music set at the city’s brand new stadium.

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‘Batteries on wheels’: EV expert says power grid well-equipped for rise in use

Source: Radio New Zealand

If more Kiwis make the switch to an EV, could the electricity network handle the extra demand? ABC News / Brendan Esposito

With interest in electric vehicles increasing due to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, questions have been raised over the reliability of New Zealand’s power grid, should there be an influx of EVs plugging in.

Petrol prices have risen past $3 per litre, and EV dealers told RNZ’s Morning Report they’ve seen a spike in sales since the Middle East conflict started to hit fuel prices.

But, if more Kiwis do make the switch, could the electricity network handle the extra demand from charging at peak times?

Drive Electric, an organisation established to advocate for cleaner transport options in New Zealand says even under the most extreme predictions of EV uptake, there’s no risk of the country running out of power.

Kirsten Corson, the chair of Drive Electric told Morning Report if all cars in New Zealand went electric, there would only be an increase of 20 percent in demand for electricity.

Corson says most people charge their cars overnight during off-peak hours, so are paying around $3 per 100 kilometres.

On top of the savings that can be made, Corson says smart charging set ups can often earn money with cars essentially becoming “batteries on wheels,” by allowing EVs to feed electricity back into the grid.

“Potentially, a car could put $2000 worth of value back into the electricity system. If you’re looking at something like a truck it was around $10,000 and a milk tanker was around $25,000 of value it could put back into the grid.”

Despite that, New Zealand has dropped behind other counties in the EV field.

“Embarassingly so, we’ve gone from a leader to a lagger. Over the last ten years we’ve seen around one in 10 new car sales are electric, compared to globally where one in four car sales are electric.

“The Australians are even ahead of us with one in five new car sales being electric, so we’re really behind the eight-ball. And, in China, one in two car sales are electric,” Corson said.

Corson says the government’s decision to drop incentives for EV purchases is concerning .

“We obviously want to see energy independence in this country, which we currently don’t have.” she said.

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Investment property report sparks questions

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Property investors say new research shows that they contribute significant amounts to the country’s economy – but not everyone is convinced.

Work by Infometrics, commissioned by the New Zealand Property Investors Federation, showed that private residential property investors contributed $24.8 billion to gross domestic product, or 5.9 percent of GDP, and sustained 126,000 full-time equivalent jobs.

Federation advocacy manager Matt Ball said it directly countered the narrative that property investors were unproductive.

“Providing rental housing doesn’t just produce economic activity, it’s an enabler of economic activity throughout the economy,” he said.

“A well-functioning rental market allows workers, students, and families to live where they need to be. Without private investors providing most rental properties, the economy simply wouldn’t operate effectively.”

Infometrics chief executive Brad Olsen said investors were often thought of as one singular group but there was a clear difference between speculators and property investors more generally.

“What we’ve found is that not only is there a substantial level of economic contribution and workforce that are indirectly supported by property investment in New Zealand, but the work that’s coming through, it does provide economic value in terms of places for people to live.

“The new builds that come through, the maintenance and repair spend, that’s a lot of continual year-on-year activity that emerges in the economy.

“That’s not what I think people think of when they think of property investors.”

Infometrics chief executive Brad Olsen. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

He said investors spent $4.1 billion in the year on maintenance and improvements.

But Council of Trade Unions policy director Craig Renney said if rental housing was owned by people who lived in it, that would generate maintenance work, too.

“Let’s assume someone buys a unit of housing and they have it as a private rental and then they replace the kitchen, great, that creates GDP. But that’s making an assumption that if it was in private ownership as an owner occupied property it wouldn’t do the same thing, which is clearly not a valid thing to hold true.

“A private owner might well maintain it to a higher standard than a landlord.”

Ball said it would not be the case that the properties were all otherwise owner-occupied.

“The rental sector exists and always will, it’s just a question of how big it is.”

Olsen said in some cases there would be an element of displacement.

“But you’re still getting a fairly large amount of work that comes out sort of just constantly year on year.”

He said the research did not take into account what investment activity did to property values.

He said first-home buyers tended not to buy the cheapest properties and investors were sometimes in a different part of the market.

“The sort of flow on effects through to other parts of the economy are important and we see that probably most in terms of the sort of employment effects… we calculated that 109 different industries do see some sort of effect.

“It’s concentrated particularly around construction and given that as a large employer that’s important. But it does go through to other areas and one of the reasons that we approached the analysis the way we did was to try and provide that broader scope of what’s the sort of flow-on effects.

“It’s not just the immediate impact of property investment at day one, it’s where does that go? You know, if you’ve got those 126,000 workers that are supported by property investment, 5 percent out of the workforce, where do they spend their money?

“And then you’ve got the nearly $11 billion or so that was coming through on new builds.”

But Shamubeel Eaqub, chief economist at Simplicity, said there were wider questions to ask, and any industry could be portrayed as being large when set out in the same way.

“The issue to consider is the necessity – provision of housing – versus the margin – where additional capital goes in the economy.

“I don’t think the critique has ever been that no property ownership is good. It’s whether we have disproportionate allocation of capital – we do – that distorts the market and creates efficiency and equity issues.”

Ball said the report had been commissioned to address claims that providing rental accommodation was “unproductive speculation”, or people just buying and selling houses for profit.

“The report shows it’s not.”

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

England netball coach Jess Thirlby steps down to focus on family

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jess Thirlby former head coach of England. © Photosport Ltd 2021 www.photosport.nz

England netball coach Jess Thirlby has stepped down just four months out from the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.

She steps down with immediate effect in a decision she said was “best for me and my family”.

Thirlby had been in the job for almost seven years after replacing Tracey Neville in 2019.

Thirlby said she was stepping down in order to focus on her family.

“It is with a heavy heart that I share my decision to step down from my role as head coach at England Netball, effective immediately,” Thirlby said in a statement.

“This is not a decision I had ever thought I would have to make but I need to turn my attention onto supporting my incredible family.

“On reflection, I was mistaken to not prioritise and process the loss of my father at the time of his death, instead, and without regret, travelling with the team for the World Cup and the subsequent series in New Zealand.

“Everything I have done since has been to prioritise the England Roses and with this in mind, I feel that stepping down as head coach now is best for me and my family.”

Thirlby’s assistant Anna Stembridge will lead the side into the Commonwealth Games with former captain Olivia Murphy becoming assistant coach.

England won the Commonwealth Games gold medal in 2018 but missed out on the medals in 2022.

The Silver Ferns beat England 2-1 in their series in Britain late last year.

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

A world-first quantum battery charges faster when it gets bigger – but it’s tiny and only lasts nanoseconds

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By James Quach, Science Leader, Quantum Batteries Team, CSIRO

You’re late for an important appointment. Just as you are leaving your house, you realise your phone is flat.

Imagine you could charge it almost instantly by exploiting the strange rules of quantum physics. That’s the promise of quantum batteries.

My colleagues and I at CSIRO have developed the world’s first quantum battery prototypes – and the direction the technology has taken is surprising.

Collective quantum effects

You may have heard of the peculiar quantum effects of superposition and entanglement, which allow mostly very tiny objects to behave very strangely. They could also allow quantum computers to solve problems conventional computers cannot.

One strange feature of the quantum world is what are called “collective effects”. They are what give quantum batteries their unique properties.

Under the right circumstances, the storage units of quantum batteries don’t act individually, but behave collectively. In a counterintuitive twist, this means the units charge faster together than if they were charging alone.

Let’s say your quantum battery has N storage units, and each unit takes one second to charge. Collective effects mean that if all units are charged at once, each unit will take only 1∕√N seconds to charge.

This means that the bigger your quantum battery, the less time it takes to charge. If it doubles in size, charging will take just a little more than half as long.

It is as if each unit somehow knows there are other units around, and their presence makes the unit charge faster. Strange, right?

This is radically different from how conventional batteries work, where bigger batteries typically take longer to charge. That’s why it might take an hour to charge your mobile phone, but your electric car needs all night.

Building a quantum battery

The idea of a quantum battery was just a theoretical curiosity for a long time. But back in 2018, I set out to demonstrate that they could actually be built.

In 2022, working with colleagues in the United Kingdom and Italy, we built a quantum battery prototype using an organic microcavity – a kind of tiny, complicated multi-layer sandwich of several different materials that traps light in a particular way.

And we were able to show for the first time the exotic behaviour where larger quantum batteries really do take less time to charge.

In fact, we were able to demonstrate that the charging time decreases as 1∕√N, where N was the number of molecules in our battery. The more molecules we included, the faster the battery charged — exactly as theory had predicted.

One thing this first prototype didn’t have was a way to extract the energy out of it. To do this, in our latest study, published in the journal Light: Science & Applications, we added extra layers into our device that converted the energy into an electrical current. This marks a major step towards a practical quantum battery.

Inside the CSIRO lab building quantum battery prototypes.

Progress still to be made

So, why aren’t we seeing quantum batteries in stores? Well, the capacity of quantum batteries is still tiny (a few billion electron-volts), and the time they hold their charge is fleetingly short (a few nanoseconds). This means quantum batteries are too small to power conventional devices such as your mobile phone, at least for now.

But quantum batteries might be perfect for powering quantum devices such as quantum computers. In fact, quantum batteries could be the exact solution quantum computers need to work at bigger scales and become practical.

While we don’t have practical quantum batteries yet, we are currently working on ways to scale up our prototype’s size and extend how long it can hold its charge. We hope to create a hybrid design that combines the exceptional charging speed of the quantum battery with the long storage time of the classical battery.

The progress we’ve made is a testament to the century of theoretical work done by quantum scientists before us.

Our first prototype’s battery charge lasted nanoseconds. The Wright brothers’ first plane flight lasted little longer. Progress takes time – but quantum batteries are certainly on our horizon.

ref. A world-first quantum battery charges faster when it gets bigger – but it’s tiny and only lasts nanoseconds – https://theconversation.com/a-world-first-quantum-battery-charges-faster-when-it-gets-bigger-but-its-tiny-and-only-lasts-nanoseconds-276755

Is Spotify’s AI ‘killing’ Australian music? What we found from analysing more than 2 million tracks

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mohsin Malik, Associate Professor, Project Management, Swinburne University of Technology

Last year, former Spotify chief economist Will Page compiled a report for the Australia Institute that concluded music streaming algorithms were “killing” Australian music.

The report found that, between 2021 and 2024, there was a 30% drop in Australian artists in the top 10,000 artists streamed in Australia on platforms such as Spotify, YouTube and Amazon.

“The algorithms of streaming services might recognise language, but they ignore geography, which means local music is not typically recommended to Australian audiences,” Page said.

These claims of reduced visibility resonate with Australian musicians, who are concerned their music may be less favoured than the work of more popular global artists.

We fact-checked these claims in new research commissioned by the Victorian Music Development Office, with a focus on Spotify.

While we didn’t find evidence of Australian music being “killed” by AI, we did find algorithms perpetuating conditions that make it difficult for less-established artists to break onto the scene.

How AI shapes streaming

The objective of streaming platforms is to maximise user engagement. Spotify does this by allowing users to discover new music in various ways, including through manual search and exploration, editorial (human-made) playlists, and AI-recommended playlists.

Algorithms have been criticised for amplifying the influence of superstars – and the corporate interests that support them – while also potentially narrowing listeners’ musical preferences.

Spotify’s AI does have a significant influence on the listening habits of its subscribers. But is this a problem?

For many users, AI-recommended playlists are simply convenient. Instead of intentionally searching for new music, they are happy to be recommended tracks they might like.

At the same time, there are concerns algorithmic bias may benefit certain artists over others.

Our findings

Our research, conducted in February 2025, involved analysing 2.27 million music tracks using Chartmetric’s real-time analytics platform.

Our dataset included 12,333 artists and 5,000 editorial and AI-mediated Spotify playlists from seven English-speaking countries: the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Ireland and Jamaica.

Our findings indicate that AI‑generated Australian playlists heavily rely on global listening patterns. They are also less likely than editorial playlists to surface diverse or regionally specific music. This matches the AI recommendations pattern for the UK market.

AI recommendations accentuate US dominance by reproducing US tastes as global “norms”. Our study showed the composition of AI playlists in all countries is very similar to those of the US.

This suggests the US – a much larger market than Australia and the other countries – generates a music footprint that dictates the global trends.

The AI playlists in our sample drew from only a quarter as many unique tracks as the editorial playlists. This further shows how AI playlists, in general, are more concentrated and less likely to recommend local music.

AI’s tendency to recommend “familiar” music also favoured artists from dominant markets such as the US. In our sample, 77% of the US tracks were produced by “established artists”, representing three Chartmetric categories (legendary, superstar and mainstream).

In contrast, only 22% of Australian tracks were being produced by established artists. The artists behind the other 78% of Australian tracks are less likely to be recommended by AI algorithms.

Filter bubbles

Over time, AI playlists – which are more likely to push established US artists – are fed back to users in a loop. This gives more exposure to already popular artists, and further disadvantages less established ones – leading to a “rich get richer” dynamic.

These conditions make it difficult for up and coming acts to break through Spotify’s recommender systems.

One solution might be for Spotify to tailor its AI algorithm to actively boost less-established artists. But for now, the inner workings of the algorithm remain somewhat hidden.

ref. Is Spotify’s AI ‘killing’ Australian music? What we found from analysing more than 2 million tracks – https://theconversation.com/is-spotifys-ai-killing-australian-music-what-we-found-from-analysing-more-than-2-million-tracks-276984