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ANZCO working to get shipment of beef destined for Middle East back to New Zealand

Source: Radio New Zealand

File image. 123RF

Meat company ANZCO is working to get shipments of beef caught up in the Middle East conflict back to New Zealand to sell on the domestic market.

General manager of sales and marketing Rick Walker said shipments of premium beef cuts that were on the way to Dubai have been parked by shipping companies in various ports.

“We only had a handful of containers on route to Dubai so our exposure is very small compared to some other meat companies but we are now in the process of figuring out what the best alternative is for those containers is – whether we bring them home or we find another market for them.

“It depends on the product and what its end use was going to be, but a lot of it will come back to New Zealand.”

Walker said some of the beef has specific Arabic labelling which would make it difficult to transfer it into other markets.

“So it’s probably easier to bring it back to New Zealand, we can find homes for it here in the domestic market. There’s good demand here, so that’s probably the easiest answer for us at the moment.”

Walker said the containers are chilled so the meat has a shelf life of about 120 days.

“It’s important to remember we are only a week into dealing with this – so we do have time but at the same time we are not going to wait, we want to make decisions pretty quickly.”

So with shipments of meat bound for the Middle East possibly returning to New Zealand – could consumers be in for cheaper cuts? Walker doesn’t think so.

“I think that’s a big step to take, it will depend again on what cuts are coming back, are they chilled? Are they frozen? Every company will then have to make its decision on frozen product. Do you bring it back into inventory and then make a decision what to do with it from there in terms of other export opportunities?

“So in theory, more supply in New Zealand provides the opportunity for lower prices, but it’s hard to see that really playing out at any level that’s going to be material in the short term, particularly when we’ve got very tight livestock numbers here in New Zealand at the moment and very high livestock prices.”

Walker said demand for red meat around the world is high – so going forward any product that would have gone to the Middle East can go to other markets like the US and Asia.

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Battle of Kororāreka remembrance ceremony to mark key moment in history of Aotearoa

Source: Radio New Zealand

People gather at dawn atop Maiki Hill, or Flagstaff Hill, for the 175th anniversary of the Battle of Kororāreka in 2020. Peter de Graaf

A ceremony on a Bay of Islands hilltop at dawn on Wednesday aims to preserve the memory of a war that changed New Zealand history – and make sure the stories are passed on to a new generation.

Early on 11 March, 1845, fighters loyal to Ngāpuhi chief Hone Heke chopped down the flagpole at Russell, then still better known as Kororāreka, for the fourth time.

The felling of the flagstaff was a signal for men led by Hone Heke and Ngāti Hine chief Te Ruki Kawiti to attack the Bay of Islands town.

In the ensuing battle most of the town’s European inhabitants were evacuated to Auckland, and about 20 Māori and 13 Britons were killed.

It was the start of the wider Northern War which raged until early 1846, culminating in the famous, but inconclusive, battle of Ruapekapeka Pā.

Kororāreka Marae chairwoman Deb Rewiri said remembering events such as the Battle of Kororāreka was as important as observing Anzac Day.

“Because if you think about it, the foundation of Aotearoa New Zealand was being played out here in the North at that time,” Rewiri said.

She expected a large crowd for Wednesday’s 181st anniversary because of the nationwide interest sparked by the Battle of Ruapekapeka Pā commemorations in January.

The ceremony would begin at 6.45am with a service at Maiki Hill, or Flagstaff Hill, then continue at Christ Church, New Zealand’s oldest surviving church.

Navy sailor Brandyn Sigley lays a wreath at the HMS Hazard memorial during the 175th anniversary commemorations of the Battle of Kororāreka in 2020. Peter de Graaf

There, members of the Royal New Zealand Navy would lay a wreath at the grave of sailors from the HMS Hazard who died in the battle.

Karakia would also be held at a nearby kōhatu (stone) marking the spot where the first blood was spilled.

Commemorations would wrap up at Haratu Marae, on the town’s waterfront, where children from Te Kura o Kororāreka (Russell School) would raise a new kara (flag) and be presented with a paraikete (blanket) embroidered with their impressions of the battle.

Rewiri said she was inspired to get local children involved after attending Treaty commemorations in Mangungu, in South Hokianga, last month.

The outbreak of war in the Middle East made tomorrow’s ceremony all the more relevant.

“We’re a little bit removed from that, but also I think it’s not so much about a war going on, but there’s certainly levels of deprivation within our own country, so holding fast to the past reminds us of how resilient and purposeful our tūpuna were. Their aim was to help us to grow so that we are all thriving, and this is what we hope to do.”

Kororāreka Marae chairwoman Deb Rewiri. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

She said the reasons Hone Heke and Kawiti went in to battle included what they saw as erosion of their tino rangatiratanga and the government’s failure to adhere to Te Tiriti, signed just five years earlier.

At the Ruapekapeka commemorations in January, Ngāti Hine leader Pita Tipene said economic factors also played a part, with the government’s decision to shift the capital from Ōkiato (near Russell) to Auckland leading to a sharp drop in trade.

Rewiri said during the battle, fighters gave fleeing civilians safe passage out to ships waiting to evacuate them to Auckland.

“They didn’t want to harm those people. Their disagreement was not with them but with the Crown, and that continues today. We’re in 2026 and we still have that battle, back at the Crown.”

Rewiri said there was little parking at Maiki Hill so those keen to take part in the dawn ceremony were encouraged to take one of the shuttles leaving from Haratu Marae and Kororāreka Museum starting at 6.15am.

For those coming across the water, the first car ferry from Ōpua was due to leave at 6am.

The current flagpole atop Te Maiki Hill was erected in 1858 by Maihi Parāone Kawiti, a son of Te Ruki Kawiti, as a symbol of national unity and reconciliation.

It survived a wild fire in 1913 and serious vandalism in 2022.

The new flag to be raised at Haratu Marae, called Kororāreka Whakaora, was designed by Lyall Hakaraia (Ngāti Kuta, Patukeha) of the British Museum.

Rewiri said about 200 people were expected to take part in the commemorations.

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I’ve studied MAGA rhetoric for a decade, and this is what I see in Hegseth’s boasts, action-movie one-liners and gloating over dominance

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Casey Ryan Kelly, Professor of Communication Studies, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

When Secretary of Defense James Mattis addressed the intensification of U.S. combat operations against the Islamic State group in 2017, he assured the American public of his commitment to “get the strategy right” while maintaining “the rules of engagement” to “protect the innocent.”

Mattis’ professional tone was a stark contrast to Secretary Pete Hegseth’s remarks following the first days of the joint U.S.-Israeli combat operations in Iran.

On March 2, 2026, after bragging about the awe-inspiring lethality of U.S. “B-2s, fighters, drones, missiles,” Hegseth casually brushed aside concerns about long-term geopolitical strategy, declaring “no stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars. We fight to win.”

Admonishing the press for anything less than total assent, he commanded, “to the media outlets and political left screaming ‘endless wars:’ Stop. This is not Iraq.”

Two days later, Hegseth gloated about “dominance” and “control,” while asserting that the preoccupation of the “fake news media” with casualties was motivated by liberal media bias and hatred of President Trump.

“Tragic things happen; the press only wants to make the president look bad,” he said. He dismissed concerns about the rules of engagement, declaring that “this was never meant to be a fair fight. We are punching them while they are down, as it should be.”

Pete Hegseth’s Pentagon press conference, at which he asserted the Iran war would have no ‘No stupid rules of engagement, no nation building quagmire, no democracy-building exercise.’

I’m a communication scholar who has studied MAGA rhetoric for a decade. I have observed how Hegseth and other officials in the second Trump administration refuse to abide by what recurring rhetorical situations – urgent public matters that compel speech to audiences capable of being influenced – typically demand of public officials.

The theme of this administration is that no one is going to tell it what to say or how to say it. It will be encumbered neither by norms nor the exigencies that compel speech in a democratic society.

The big man

When the U.S. goes to war, the public expects the president and the defense secretary to convince them of the appropriateness of the action. They do this by detailing the justification for military action, but also by addressing the public in a manner that conveys the seriousness and competence required for such a grave task as waging war.

But during the first week of the Iran war, Hegseth’s press briefings deviated from the measured tone expected from high-ranking military officials.

Hegseth flippantly employed villainous colloquialism – “they are toast and they know it,” “we play for keeps,” and “President Trump got the last laugh” – delivered with a combative tone that communicated masculine self-assurance.

Many observers were taken aback by his haughty tone, hypermasculine preoccupation with domination, giddiness about violence and casual attitude toward death.

During Trump’s first term, this penchant for rule-breaking was by and large isolated to the president, whose transgressions were part of his populist appeal.

Although Trump’s first cabinet members agreed on most political objectives, they attempted to rein in what they saw as the president’s more dangerous whims.

But with loyalty as the new bona fide qualification for administration officials, Trump’s second cabinet is populated with a large contingent of right and far-right media personalities like Hegseth, including Kash Patel, Sean Duffy and Mehmet Oz.

The anti-institutional ethos of far-right media explains why these officials refuse to conform to “elite” expectations and instead speak in a manner that is bombastic, outrageous and perverse.

Among them, there is little reverence for what they may perceive of as emasculating rules of tradition and politeness in a media marketplace where “owning,” “dominating,” and “triggering” your enemy is precious currency. Far-right media personalities are adept at commanding attention with showmanship and swagger.

Trump appears to have chosen Hegseth for precisely this reason: He performs the role of the big man to perfection.

“They are toast and they know it,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said of Iran on March 4, 2026.

‘Kill talk’

Hegseth’s language choices and petulant tone do not demonstrate an ignorance of what rhetorical situations demand of him; instead, they reflect a refusal to be emasculated by such cumbersome norms.

When making statements about the first week of the war, Hegseth grinned as he delivered action-movie one-liners, like “turns out the regime who chanted ‘Death to America’ and ‘Death to Israel’ was gifted death from America and death from Israel.”

Hegseth engaged in what is known as “kill talk,” a verbal strategy, typically directed at new military recruits, that denies the enemy’s humanity and disguises the terrible costs of violence. His repetition of words like “death,” “killing,” “destruction,” “control,” “warriors” and “dominance” framed violence in heroic terms that are detached from the realities of war.

In my view, Hegseth addressed the public as a squad leader addresses military recruits. Hegseth apparently delighted in dispensing death and elevating and glorifying war. He said virtually nothing of long-term strategy beyond “winning.”

In the MAGA media world, winning is really all that matters. If winning is the only goal, then war is, by profound inference, a game, a test of masculine fortitude.

This point was made clear when the White House posted a video that interspersed footage of airstrikes on Iran with “killstreak animation” from the popular video game Call of Duty: Modern Warfare. In the game, when a player kills multiple opponents without also dying, they are rewarded with the ability to conduct a missile strike to exterminate an opposing team. Again, this message gamifies violence and obscures the destructive toll of war.

Informed by the contemptuous hypermasculinity of far-right media culture, all this taboo behavior and glorified portrayals of death convey one fundamental message: When the public most needs explanation and justification for the actions of their government, the powerful owe the public neither explanation – nor comfort.

ref. I’ve studied MAGA rhetoric for a decade, and this is what I see in Hegseth’s boasts, action-movie one-liners and gloating over dominance – https://theconversation.com/ive-studied-maga-rhetoric-for-a-decade-and-this-is-what-i-see-in-hegseths-boasts-action-movie-one-liners-and-gloating-over-dominance-277731

Serious injuries following crash at Isla Bank, west of Invercargill

Source: Radio New Zealand

One person was injured. (File photo) St John

A person has been seriously injured in a two-vehicle crash at Isla Bank, west of Invercargill.

The road was closed at the intersection of Fairfax-Isla Bank and Isla Bank-Flints Bush Roads as a result of the crash shortly after 8.30am on Tuesday.

The serious crash unit was investigating, police said.

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Aid organisations fighting to stay in Gaza, unable to get much-needed supplies into city

Source: Radio New Zealand

Medecins Sans Frontieres is determined to stay in Gaza despite requirements from Israel to supply extensive details of staff and funding. Medecins Sans Frontieres

Aid organisations in Gaza, say they have been unable to get supplies or staff into the city since January.

A court temporarily blocked a decision by Israel to ban 37 aid organisations for failing to cooperate with new rules.

Those rules included registering names and contact details of staff with Israeli authorities as well as providing details of the group’s funding.

Médecins Sans Frontières, also known as, Doctors Without Borders’ (MSF) executive director for New Zealand and Australia, Tom Roth, told Nine to Noon, the organisation had been discussing with authorities why they needed that information and what it would be used for.

He said there were fears about staff being targeted using the information and so far there had been no assurances on how that information would be used.

Despite the court temporarily blocking the decision, supplies and staff had not been able to enter Gaza since January, Roth said.

He described the situation as “catastrophic”.

“Eighty percent of the infrastructure [in Gaza] has been destroyed, it’s a massive catastrophe… Palestinians are struggling just with basic shelter. They are living within 40 percent of Gaza’s land mass, living in tents trying to survive without access to food, water and medical assistance.”

Displaced Palestinians warm up by the fire. (File photo) NurPhoto via AFP

Roth said there had been limited food in Gaza since before the ceasefire, and even with it there had still been limited amounts of food coming in.

“There’s an obligation under international humanitarian law that Israel is required to allow unhindered humanitarian access for NGO’s.”

Roth said after the new rules came in last year, a petition was taken to the Supreme Court to overthrow the registration ban.

He said an injunction to stop it being implemented was now in place, but by the time it was put in place, MSF has already removed staff from Gaza.

“We’ve requested staff and supplies to come into Gaza since then and that has been refused.

“We’re still waiting for the Israeli government’s response to it.”

MSF had no international staff in Gaza and the West Bank at present, Roth said, but Palestinian staff remained, which made up about 80 percent of the staff.

“So we have and will continue to operate in Gaza for as long as possible.”

However, Roth said staff needed the means to do their job, including the supply of medical equipment which at the moment was unable to replenished, he said.

“People are living in tents desperately searching for food, for water, there’s thousands of people needing urgent medical attention.

“It would take five years to evacuate the children needing urgent medical evacuation. It’s heartbreaking we’re put in this situation.”

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Documents reveal why staff didn’t tell minister about Jevon McSkimming allegations

Source: Radio New Zealand

Disgraced former deputy police commissioner Jevon McSkimming was sentenced to nine months home detention in December after pleading guilty to charges relating to possessing objectionable publications. RNZ / Mark Papalii

A police staffer who was asked to not circulate emails containing allegations about disgraced former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming “assumed” then Police Commissioner Andrew Coster would brief the Police Minister.

However, the Minister says it wasn’t until almost nearly two years later that he was first informed of the allegations against McSkimming.

Why 36 emails containing allegations about McSkimming were diverted from Mark Mitchell’s office to Coster’s office without the Police Minister seeing them became one of the central questions to come following the scathing report by the Independent Police Conduct Authority in November.

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

Protocol was to forward emails to police commissioner’s office bypassing minister

A protocol had been put in place for police staff in Mitchell’s ministerial office to forward the emails directly to then-Commissioner Andrew Coster’s office, and not share them with Mitchell or his political staff, he said.

RNZ has obtained under the OIA a copy of a handwritten file note by Police’s manager of Ministerial Services Lee Hodgson dated 17 January, 2024.

In the note Hodgson wrote that someone had brought some emails to her attention that they had come across in the minister’s mailbox while clearing a backlog of correspondence.

“They related to anonymous allegations about Jevon.”

Hodgson wrote that the staffer gave her hard copies of the emails. Hodgson said she brought them to the attention of then Director of the Commissioner’s office Maria Rawiri who said the commissioner and other members of the executive had received “similar emails and they were being dealt with together”.

Hodgson was asked to give the hard copies to another staffer who was working with former Deputy Commissioner Tania Kura on them.

“Maria asked me not to circulate them any further as they were unsubstantiated anonymous allegations.”

Hodgson then called her colleague and told her they had been asked to send any further such emails to the commissioner’s office.

‘I felt assured that the allegations were going to be assessed’ – staffer

Assistant Commissioner Tusha Penny said that on 11 November, the file note was typed up with additional detail that Hodgson recalled from memory to create a digital record after Mitchell’s office sought clarification about how such emails had been managed.

Hodgson said Rawiri asked her not to circulate them further in the Minister’s office or within police as they were “unsubstantiated anonymous allegations”.

In the file note, Hodgson said she had also given her manager a “verbal heads up” after telling her colleague to send any further such complaints to her which she would then forward on to the Commissioner’s office.

“I felt assured that the allegations were going to be assessed (and considered by Fixated Threat Assessment Centre) under independent oversight by Deputy Commissioner Tania Kura. I assumed the Commissioner would be verbally briefing the Minister, as is usual with sensitive matters.”

On 12 November, a staffer from Mitchell’s office wrote to Police Commissioner Richard Chambers in relation to Mitchell’s emails.

“It is important that Police can provide this office with some assurances and change their processes accordingly.”

The staffer said Mitchell needed assurance that previous correspondence addressed to him and referred to Police for action had been “actioned appropriately” and that the procedure instated by Coster, and any similar, was limited to just the issue for which it was put in place.

“I understand there may be other practises around where emails on certain topics should be sent. Unless there is a good explanation for it, that should stop. All emails referred to Police by the Minister should go to the same place at Police for assessment and action as appropriate. Any approach taken currently that departs from this should be stopped.

“I also understand that previously feedback has been provided to this office on what has happened in relation to an email referred to Police (actions taken etc), however this practise has over time lapsed and stopped. That needs to be restarted.”

The staffer said employees had been put in “highly uncomfortable positions and that is not fair and should not be allowed to continue”.

“Correspondence referred from the Minister’s office needs to be treated transparently and in the same way, and deserves a genuine assessment and response from Police. I would appreciate having that assurance from you directly.”

Current Police Commissioner not aware Coster had asked for different correspondence protocol

In response, Chambers said he was not aware that Coster had asked for a different process to be put in place to deal with correspondence.

“This is obviously a departure from the well understood and accepted processes for dealing with correspondence relevant to a Minister’s portfolio and the persons and agencies to which they relate. This includes feedback mechanisms.”

Former police commissioner Andrew Coster. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Chambers said Ministerial Services had a “key role” in supporting Mitchell’s office and should be the “single channel for all correspondence relevant to the interface between Police and the Minister’s office”.

“This includes the role of agency private secretaries whose role it is to provide support to the Minister’s office. It is disappointing to learn that staff were under instruction to depart from these systems and processes and I apologise to any staff, either in the Minister’s office or Ministerial Services who were put into this unfortunate situation.”

Chambers had copied in the Chief Operating Officer and Executive Director who would discuss to ensure systems, processes and expectations were “well understood and in place”, and that the Minister and Minister’s office received the assurance they sought going forward and in respect of previous correspondence.

In an interview with TVNZ’s Q+A on Sunday after his resignation Coster said the first he heard of the allegation about emails being redirected after the IPCA report was released.

“I had absolutely no knowledge of that whatsoever. I can’t validate whether that was, in fact, a protocol that was in place, but what I can say is there’s no way in the world that agency employed staff in a minister’s office are able to prevent the minister or the minister’s staff from seeing email coming in on the minister’s email address.

“The role of the agency staff is to have emails given to them by the minister’s own staff to prepare responses for the minister through the agency… there’s just no way that police staff in Minister’s office could, could somehow intercept.”

Coster said he had seen a file note that was prepared by police in recent weeks, which said there was a conversation between the head of ministerial services – who is not in the minister’s office – and the director of Coster’s office about emails that came through in late 2023 and early 2024.

“It was ‘there are these emails. What do I do with them?’… the file note says the direction was send them through to Deputy Commissioner Tania Kura, who was overseeing the process.”

Coster did not know why the “retrospective note” was created.

“I imagine there will have been some concern across more than one Minister’s office about … where did all these emails go, and who saw them and and I assume that this paperwork was created in response to those conversations.”

Chief operating officer Andrea Conlan earlier said police could confirm a handwritten file note was made at the time of a discussion with the director of the office of the former commissioner on 17 January, 2024, regarding the processing of emails to the minister’s office.

Ministerial Services outlines how emails were handled

The manager of Ministerial Services was asked to speak with the minister’s office staff on 11 November, 2025, to outline how the emails sent to the office were handled.

“The handwritten file note was typed up by the manager after that conversation (and some detail added from memory). This was to make a digital record in parallel with the email the manager was asked to provide the minister’s office confirming the earlier conversation (and the process followed) in writing.

“Nobody asked for the file note to be prepared, but a confirmation email was requested by the minister’s office following the conversation on the morning of 11 November.

“Following the 17 January, 2024 conversation, at the request of the director of the office of the (former) commissioner, the manager of Ministerial Services provided hard copies of the emails to the (former) commissioner’s office.”

The manager also spoke to the staff member in the minister’s office to convey the director’s instruction.

“This was not included in the file note, but these actions corroborate what was documented in the manager’s original handwritten file note.”

Mitchell previously defended the police staff in his ministerial office, saying they were put in an “awful situation” by the protocol, which he was unaware of.

Following Coster’s interview, Mitchell said Coster’s claim that he was not aware about the system instituted to redirect emails was “unfathomable”.

“The protocol around the emails has been repeatedly verified by several police employees, who were given the instruction by Coster’s office.

“It came from his office and most senior direct reports, and as he already accepts, as commissioner, all things ultimately fell to his responsibility.”

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Politics live: Christopher Luxon faces colleagues as National’s caucus meets

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the latest news with RNZ’s live blog above.

MPs are back at Parliament today for caucus meetings and the House back in session, after a weekend of speculation about Christopher Luxon’s leadership and economic uncertainty over the Iran war.

Follow all the latest news with RNZ’s live blog at the top of this page.

RNZ / Mark Papalii

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‘It’s quite deceptive’: Complaint laid about the rise of property flippers

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Dom Thomas

One of the country’s most prominent buyers’ agencies has complained to the Real Estate Authority about a rise in “property flippers” making six-figures from unwitting vendors.

Earlier, Cotality told RNZ that the number of contemporaneous sales had lifted significantly last year after a sharp fall in 2023.

“There was a lift in these types of transactions last year, almost double 2024, and even more than what we saw through the Covid boom times,” head of research Nick Goodall said.

In a contemporaneous settlement, a property flipper often makes an offer with a long settlement period, and then finds another buyer to purchase the property the same day they have to settle, making money on the transaction.

iFindProperty co-founder Maree Tassell said there was noticeably more of the activity happening.

“It’s quite common that there are some deals out there where people are making over $100,000-plus on contemporaneous settlements, getting a property under contract. The poor old vendor, and even often the vendor’s agents will think ‘oh this is a real purchaser’. This is what’s really pissing me off.

“You’re getting these people come along, they get the property under contract, they act like they are the buyer. They tie a property up to say 20 days’ due diligence and then they’re immediately sending it out to their database and putting a big margin on it trying to onsell the property… they will pretend they’re bringing a builder through or pretend they’re bringing a valuer through and it will be a potential buyer. It’s quite deceptive to the vendors and quite deceptive sometimes to the agents.”

She said people saw it as a quick way to make money.

“And you get a whole lot of people creating mentoring services… they’re charging people money to come and learn how to make money in property.

“It’s all very sexy and it’s called no money down deals so they’re teaching people who know [not much] about property and don’t have the money to buy property just basically how to tie property contacts up and sell the contract. There’s no protection for the consumer, there’s no protection often for the vendor. They don’t know what’s happening.”

Property law expert Joanna Pidgeon said traders who were finding properties, buying them personally and then onselling were excluded from having to comply with the Real Estate Agents Act because they were self representing.

“Companies that sell property owned by the company directly to consumers are not required to hold a real estate licence issued by REA. However, a company that engages a contractor or sales agent who does not hold an active real estate licence to act as their representative on property sales may be engaged in unlicensed trading.

“People who buy directly from property traders who are not licensed do not have the same protections as when buying from a licensed real estate agent. This is particularly important as there is a conflict of interest when a trader is onselling directly. A purchaser should be seeking advice in relation to this, and should have their deposit held in a trust account pending the vendor becoming the registered owner of the property. We have seen some purchasers lose their deposits when traders have got into financial difficulty and the deposit has been released but the vendor unable to settle to enable the onsale.”

Tassell said she had meetings with both the Real Estate Institute and Real Estate Authority about the issue, which were positive.

The Real Estate Authority said it received a range of inquiries about property related activity and whether activity is within its regulatory scope. “We are not able to comment on any recent enquiries while our enquiries are ongoing, particularly out of fairness to the parties and to preserve the integrity of the process.”

Tassell said her business would make it clear if it were onselling, “We have a clause saying we’re licensed buyers’ agents. We’re not buying the property. We’re looking for someone to buy it. It’s total transparency with the vendor, it’s total transparency with the vendor’s agent. And then with our clients, the purchasers, it’s total transparency what they pay us. We’re not putting $150,000 between contracts and just laughing all the way to the bank.”

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Fatal Auckland fire not suspicious

Source: Radio New Zealand

The scene of the fatal fire. RNZ / FELIX WALTON

A fatal blaze in Auckland last week is not suspicious, police say.

Emergency services were called to a garage on fire on Tamaki Avenue in Ōtāhuhu last Wednesday night.

A person was found dead inside.

“Our thoughts are with the deceased’s family and friends at this sad time,” police said.

“The death will be referred to the coroner.”

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Robin Beets was killed in a dementia unit attack but his family don’t want the other patient charged

Source: Radio New Zealand

Robin Walter Beets, 84, died in November 2023. Supplied

The death of an elderly man at a dementia unit following an altercation with another patient was a “tragic outcome that was preceded by a sudden eruption of anger without a known cause or warning”, a coroner says.

Police decided not to charge the patient with manslaughter. The family of the man did not want the patient charged and said the “best outcome is to ensure this doesn’t happen again to other families”.

Coroner Ruth Thomas’ report into the death of Robin Walter Beets in November 2023 was released to RNZ.

The report said the 84-year-old was living in the Stokeswood Care Home dementia unit in Lower Hutt.

Nurses and caregivers said Beets was a “gentleman” and a “lovely guy”.

In August 2023 Beets was assessed as needing Dementia Level 3 secure residential care and placed in the dementia unit operated by BUPA Care Service.

The unit co-ordinator said Beets required full assistance with daily living, orientation and direction.

“She said he liked to keep himself busy, he had previously worked as an engineer and would try to fix things like the stereo at the dementia unit even when it was working fine. He would sometimes move furniture around, which would frustrate other residents who became triggered by the noise of the moving,” the coroner said.

Coroner Thomas’ report discusses another patient who was staying at the facility. Staff recorded the patient could become “triggered by loud noises at times”.

“The staff had a care plan in place to manage [the patient’s] behaviour with de-escalation techniques and medication as needed. The staff found this was effective as he was easy to calm down and re-direct.”

A medical note for the patient said his “unsettled and aggressive behaviour” on some afternoons was due to sundowning.

“Sundowning is a deterioration in cognitive function and occurs in the late afternoon or evening. [The patient’s] medication regime was adjusted, and this was helpful in reducing his agitation. Staff were aware of this behaviour and would redirect and distract [the patient].”

On the evening of 9 November, 2023, Beets was seated at a table with two other residents near a bookshelf. The other patient was sitting at a different table with other residents.

A nurse said she was walking along a corridor when she heard the emergency alarm went off, so she ran back to the dementia lounge.

She saw Beets lying on his back near the bookshelf and the other patient was “on his knees with Mr Beets”.

The patient was shouting at Beets and was pointing at him with his hand “like the gesture you use to tell a person off”.

A caregiver said she was looking at some medication alongside a colleague and could hear some residents talking as well as the sound of chairs moving behind her and the patient shouting.

“In her peripheral vision she saw [the patient] near Mr Beets’ table. They were both standing, facing each other and [the patient] was holding Mr Beets’ collar. Mr Beets stepped backwards away from [the patient] and fell onto the floor.”

She described seeing the patient kneeling next to Beets with his arm raised and his fist clenched.

“Mr Beets was screaming in pain and [the patient] was yelling.”

The caregiver ran over and told the patient to stop and helped him to stand up. Another staffer got the patient away from the area.

The caregiver then noticed the dining chair Beets had been sitting on was on the floor, and thought he may have tripped over it.

The other caregiver who was also looking at the medication reported seeing both men standing face to face by the bookshelf.

The patient was holding Beets’ shirt collar. She described the patient as holding his right arm up with a closed fist.

“She then saw Mr Beets take two to three steps backwards, trip over a dining chair that was behind him, and fall to the ground.” She also saw the patient fall to the ground.

Beets was eventually transferred to Hutt Hospital where he underwent hip surgery the following day. There were no complications from the surgery, however his health declined in the days afterwards and he developed aspiration pneumonia. Beets died on 20 November.

A falls investigation report, carried out by BUPA, recommended new registered nurses receive further education to increase their knowledge of the fall prevention management in the dementia unit. The shared learning lessons part of the review said the unit had a staff meeting about early detection and intervention of residents in an altercation and ensuring clear documentation of an event and management.

Police sought an expert opinion from a consultant psychiatrist as part of its investigation. The psychiatrist said the patient would be “entirely unable to understand the charge, nature, purpose or consequences of court proceedings, unable to instruct defence counsel, unable to enter a plea and unable to participate in a hearing”.

It was his opinion that the patient would be unfit to stand trial. Police decided not to charge the man with manslaughter. As part of the investigation, police spoke with Beets’ family who said they did not want anyone charged adding “the best outcome is to ensure this doesn’t happen again to other families, in Stokeswood, or any care facility.”

Coroner Thomas said Beets’ family had questioned the circumstances surrounding his fall to understand whether anything could have been done to prevent it.

A Coroners Court Clinical Advisor reviewed the evidence and said the incident was “very unfortunate but unpredictable and not preventable”.

“Although incidents like this can be assumed at some level to probably have some sort of trigger in the person’s mind, it is often impossible, even in retrospect, to identify what it was. I am of the view, based on the provided information, that the staff provided very good care for [the patient], and did everything in their power to prevent the assault.”

Coroner Thomas said her assessment of the evidence in the inquiry revealed a “tragic outcome that was preceded by a sudden eruption of anger without a known cause or warning”.

“The staff had been actively managing [the patient’s] behaviour in the unit, but tragically on this occasion with no warning of a change in [the patient’s] behaviour, and both staff momentarily facing away from where the incident started, there was not enough time for staff to pre-emptively intervene and redirect [the patient] before he had grabbed Mr Beets by his collar. This incident took the staff by surprise, was unpredictable and I do not find the staff could have done more to prevent this altercation and therefore the tragic consequences that followed.”

In a statement to RNZ, Beets’ family said he was a “much-loved” husband, father, Grandad and Poppa who was “very practical, mechanically capable and a friend to many in Petone”.

“He was a very caring man, had a great laugh and was always willing to help others.”

Beets was diagnosed with dementia formally in early 2021, and as he deteriorated the family made the decision to go into full-time care in August 2023.

“Dementia is a terrible disease for both the individual and their family. As is expressed in the report, we have never wanted the other party who also suffered from this disease to be charged or punished for this incident.

“What was important for us as a family was to see if there were lessons to be learnt which may prevent another family suffering a loss in the same way. We appreciate the thorough work done by both the Police and the Coroner, especially that the specific questions we asked were addressed within her report. We also note the internal review that the Care Facility undertook which resulted in additional training and support being put in place.”

A BUPA spokesperson said acknowledged the coroner’s findings and the conclusion that this incident was “unpredictable and surprising”.

“Our thoughts remain with Mr Beets’ family, and we recognise the distress this event caused them. Moments like this are profoundly sad for everyone involved, and we continue to extend our sincere sympathy to the family.”

Aged Care Association chief executive Tracey Martin said in a statement to RNZ the case highlighted a “broader and growing reality”.

“Aged residential care is supporting residents with increasingly complex behavioural and clinical needs, particularly within dementia care settings.

“Dementia units are caring for people with significant behavioural and psychological symptoms, often in environments that were not originally designed for the intensity of today’s care requirements. As the acuity of residents rises, so too does the need for workforce support, training, clinical backup, and appropriate funding settings.”

She said while the coroner had not made recommendations, the case reinforced the importance of “continued investment in dementia capability, staff training, and system settings that recognise the complexity of modern aged care”.

Detective Inspector John van den Heuvel said as New Zealand’s median age continued to rise, the number of people living with dementia was also expected to grow.

“While fatal incidents within dementia units remain rare, resident‑on‑resident assaults do occur from time to time that require Police investigation. This can be a difficult and sad situation to deal with for everyone involved.”

People living with dementia often experienced significant cognitive impairment, meaning they may not fully comprehend their actions or form the intent required to be held criminally responsible, he said.

“As a result, the evidential test for prosecution is frequently not met, and pursuing criminal charges is unlikely to be in the public interest. Police assess these matters carefully and in close consultation with medical specialists, care providers, and legal advisors. In cases involving a death the coroner is also consulted.”

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

How to talk to your children about conflict and war

Source: Radio New Zealand

It can be hard to avoid news about the conflict and war around the world, especially with images and updates regularly topping the news and circulating online.

Brad Morgan is the director of Emerging Minds, an Australian organisation which develops mental health policy, interventions and programmes, and leads the National Workforce Centre for Child Mental Health.

“You see it on public transport. We see it in shops. You see it at home. Obviously, for some children, it’s also in their pockets or at school,” Morgan tells Nine to Noon.

Our children are increasingly exposed to updates about wars and conflicts from all around the world with the 24/7 accessibility to the news.

Unsplash / Getty Images

Air NZ suspends earning guidance amid global jet fuel markets volatilty

Source: Radio New Zealand

Generic plane. Air New Zealand at Wellington airport. RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

Air New Zealand has suspended its earning guidance amid what it calls unprecedented volatility in global jet fuel markets.

The airline expects a meaningful impact on its second half earnings.

After implementing initial fare changes, it says it may need to take further price action and adjust its network if the conflict leads to continued high jet fuel costs.

Air New Zealand shares had fallen nearly 8 percent on Monday.

Oil prices are up about 8 percent to US$99.90 a barrel, after climbing to a high of US$119.50 a barrel overnight, its biggest-ever absolute price jump in a single day.

Reuters reports that some jet fuel prices have doubled since the start of the conflict putting pressure on carriers already having to reroute to avoid the Middle East conflict and cater to thousands of stranded passengers trying to leave the region.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

AUKUS is binding Australia to a dangerous, unpredictable leader. We need a Plan B now

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hugh White, Emeritus Professor of Strategic Studies at the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University

In a dangerous and uncertain world, what should US allies do? Draw closer to America, or pull away?

When the United States under President Donald Trump is itself among the biggest drivers of danger and uncertainty, the answer seems obvious.

Canada’s prime minster, Mark Carney, spelled it out with brutal clarity in his attention-grabbing speech at Davos in January and again speaking to the Australian parliament last week.

Middle powers like Canada and Australia must stop depending on Washington and start working more closely together to navigate a world in which the idea of a US-led rules-based order is a fiction.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says he agrees with Carney. But there is a problem.

At a time when diplomatic realities, strategic imperatives and political expedience all suggest we should gently but firmly distance ourselves from Trump’s America, AUKUS ties us tighter than ever.

The need to step back from our US entanglements is clearer than ever as Washington plunges headlong into major war with Iran without any coherent strategic purpose. The way AUKUS deepens those entanglements is neatly symbolised by the presence of three Australian AUKUS trainees on the US fast-attack submarine that sunk an Iranian warship last week.


The world order has “ruptured”, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has warned – so it’s time for countries like Australia and New Zealand to forge a new, less US-reliant future. In this new series, we’ve asked top experts to explain what that future could look like – and the challenges that lie ahead.


‘Full steam ahead’?

The Albanese government has embraced AUKUS as the central pillar of its defence policy and a fundamental reframing of our entire strategic posture. But the future of AUKUS hangs on the whim of the most mercurial and mendacious figure in world politics.

Canberra breathed a huge sigh of relief when Trump declared AUKUS as “full steam ahead” in his meeting with Albanese in October. He seemed to brush aside the doubts and questions that have dogged AUKUS ever since Labor announced it would require the US to sell Australia at least three Virginia-class submarines.

The Virginia-class fast attack submarine USS Colorado in 2018. Dana Jensen/AP

But those doubts remain. They were apparently spelled out in the Pentagon’s review of AUKUS completed just before Albanese’s visit.

Neither Washington nor Canberra has been willing to say what it concluded, beyond admitting it raised concerns about how to “do AUKUS better”. But it’s pretty clear what the concerns are.

Here are three pressing questions that remain unresolved:

Is the US prepared to give us subs?

First, there is the problem that America has no Virginia-class subs to spare.
Ever since the plan was announced, US Navy and Defence officials, as well as members of Congress, have warned the US could not spare subs for Australia unless its shipyards can double the rate of production. Confidence in AUKUS has always depended on blind faith this will happen.

But it is not happening. The US Government Accountability Office last year reported to Congress that between 2019 and 2023, the US shipyards were forecast to build 11 Virginia-class submarines. They delivered just four.

In December, a senior Pentagon official described the situation as “borderline frightening” and a major challenge to AUKUS.

Is Australia prepared to spend more on defence?

Second, there is the problem of defence spending. There is a lot of concern in Australian defence circles that the reported pricetag of up to A$365 billion over the next 30 years will distort the defence budget by pulling funds away from other vital defence capability investments. These worries are shared in Washington.

The idea that Australia is seriously expecting to build and operate a fleet of nuclear-powered subs while also maintaining and upgrading a wide range of other expensive capabilities on a defence budget that is planned to grow to only 2.3% of GDP by the mid-2030s is seen by US policymakers as delusional. Which it is.

This worries US defence planners. They don’t want AUKUS to starve the rest of the Australian Defence Force (ADF), because they expect Australia, as a close ally, to be able to offer a wide range of forces to US-led coalitions, not just submarines.

And they understand that even if the AUKUS plan goes like clockwork, Australia will not have a viable independent nuclear sub force until the mid-2040s at the very earliest. So, AUKUS will not work for America unless Australia starts spending a lot more on defence right now.

Would Australia go to war with China?

The leads to the most serious concern of all, given the events of the last week in the Middle East: the question of how confident Washington can be that Canberra would wholeheartedly support the US in a war with China.

That includes whether Australia would allow our bases to be used by US forces to attack China, and whether we would send out forces to fight alongside America’s. These are absolutely critical issues for US policymakers.

Unless they can be very confident about Australia’s commitment, it simply makes no strategic sense for them to base their forces here or sell us submarines that could otherwise strengthen their own submarine force.

And they are not satisfied by whatever nods and winks they may getting from the Albanese government.

This was made very clear just last month by Ely Ratner, the Pentagon’s highly-respected policy lead on the Indo-Pacific under the Biden Administration. Speaking in Canberra he said, there was a “need for very serious and deep alliance conversations about our expectations around roles and missions” if a war with China were to break out.

He plainly implied these conversations had not happened yet. And the Albanese government continues to insist that no such understandings or undertakings will be entered into.

Australia needs to think about an alternative

The deeper reality is that even if these problems can be addressed, AUKUS will do nothing help the US regain its maritime supremacy in the western Pacific, which it has lost as China’s capabilities have grown.

Fundamentally, that is because the US lacks the resolve to do what would be necessary to remain the region’s primary power.

In fact, AUKUS is a perfect symbol of this: historians will see it as an attempt by America to get Australia to pay to bolster US military power against China.

But Australia is not yet prepared to do the alternative, which is to start seriously taking responsibility for our own security in a region no longer dominated and made safe for us by our powerful friends.

We will not take that step until we stop pretending to ourselves and to Washington that AUKUS somehow makes that unnecessary.

ref. AUKUS is binding Australia to a dangerous, unpredictable leader. We need a Plan B now – https://theconversation.com/aukus-is-binding-australia-to-a-dangerous-unpredictable-leader-we-need-a-plan-b-now-276364

5 top tips for the perfect compost – according to science

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gregory Moore, Senior Research Associate, School of Agriculture, Food and Ecosystem Sciences, The University of Melbourne

As a young boy, I had to contend with my grandfather’s compost heap. It was a veritable Vesuvius of foul-smelling, putrescible plant waste, a metre high and hidden behind a privet hedge.

We had placed all the weedy waste in it a year before. As we started the annual spring gardening day, the first area we had to clear was the now weed-covered and unsightly compost heap.

By the time we had cleared the weeds sprouting from it, half the day and most of our energy was gone.

We were doing everything wrong. But it’s not too late for you. You can learn from our mistakes.

Making compost is a cornerstone of sustainable gardening, yet few of us understand the great science behind it.

It all comes down to understanding the requirements of the bacteria and fungi that do most of the decomposing and the processes of cellular respiration. Here’s how to work with them, not against them.

Your compost’s little helpers

For the most part, plant material is broken down by bacteria and fungi, aided by worms, other soil organisms and microbiota.

However, there are different types of bacteria and fungi, and the rates they break down organic matter vary enormously.

Some will completely break down plant material into clean, high-grade compost in just six to eight weeks.

Others, as my grandfather and I saw, could not complete the job in a year or more.

That’s in large part due to the big differences between anaerobic and aerobic respiration.

What’s the difference?

Respiration doesn’t just mean breathing. Biologically, is the metabolic process by which cells break down the energy stored in organic molecules (such as sugar and fats) to release energy.

There are two types of respiration:

  • aerobic respiration, which occurs when oxygen is available, and
  • anaerobic respiration, which occurs when there is little or no oxygen available.

In our cells and those of larger plants and animals, both forms of respiration can take place.

But in some micro-organisms, only anaerobic respiration is possible.

Anaerobic respiration is an ancient metabolism that evolved early in the development of life on Earth, well before larger multi-cellular organisms existed.

The processes involved in anaerobic respiration are relatively inefficient. Its chemical reactions result in the incomplete breakdown of the food and plant waste; very little energy and heat are produced along the way.

For composting, that’s a problem.

It means the plant material breaks down very slowly. Worse, the temperature is so low that weedy contaminants can survive and germinate.

This explains why my grandfather’s compost heap failed to decompose after a year, grew so many weeds and was a slimy, smelly mess. The conditions inside the heap were anaerobic from the start.

We ended up being very good at spreading weeds around his garden.

Aerobic is better

Aerobic respiration, which evolved when oxygen was more readily available on Earth, consists of many linked chemical reactions that cause plant material to completely break down.

It produces almost 20 times more energy than anaerobic respiration and generates much more heat.

This high level efficiency produces a more rapid metabolism, which quickly breaks down plant material and the heat generated kills most of the weedy contaminants in the plant litter.

This results in lovely, clean compost.

So the key to good composting is to ensure conditions are right for aerobic respiration and for crucial aerobic bacteria and fungi.

It’s vital to provide oxygen.

My top tips are:

  1. if you have a compost heap, ensure it is wide, long and low (which ensures a high surface area to volume ratio), and introduce air by dragging a hoe or rake through it
  2. if you use a compost tumbler or container, then rotate or stir it often
  3. keep the compost moist (but not wet) over the dry summer months
  4. keep your compost warm over colder months by ensuring it gets some winter sunlight
  5. add some “browns”, such as dry leaves, or shredded cardboard or paper; the carbon-rich browns, added to the high-nitrogen green waste, gives a better carbon to nitrogen ratio and results in better compost.

If your compost is happy, the heat will be high enough to kill most pest eggs and parasites, and may even kill worms.

Don’t add worms to aerobic compost unless you have a worm-friendly composting system; you may end up committing wormicide. Let worms enter the compost naturally.

Rarely, heat from aerobic compost can damage thin-barked trees. So if you’re spreading it around the garden, keep it 20-50mm from the trunks of your trees.

Compost systems and heaps need not be unsightly if you follow the rules for clean and rapid composting.

Aerobic composting is rapid and is neither smelly nor slimy.

The bacteria and fungi that generate your compost efficiently need air, moisture and warmth to be their best selves.

If you resolve to provide the right conditions, you are not only recycling efficiently but getting a product every good gardener wants and needs.

ref. 5 top tips for the perfect compost – according to science – https://theconversation.com/5-top-tips-for-the-perfect-compost-according-to-science-271403

As global trade rules falter, how can Australia protect itself from economic coercion?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Peter Draper, Professor, and Executive Director: Institute for International Trade, and Director of the Jean Monnet Centre of Trade and Environment, Adelaide University

The United States was once a champion of fair trade rules. Now, it has transformed into a rampaging Viking seeking extortionate tributes.

This shift means America now uses its power to pressure even its closest allies, threatening to withdraw military protection while hitting them with punishing trade tariffs.

Australia depends on America for its security, yet we’re increasingly vulnerable to American economic pressure.

US President Donald Trump’s now illegal “Liberation Day” tariffs showed that trade is a frontline instrument of US geo-economic power rather than a technocratic domain for trade negotiators.

Trump has since announced the reimposition of 10% tariffs across the board. He then hiked the rate in a social media post to 15%.


The world order has “ruptured”, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has warned – so it’s time for countries like Australia and New Zealand to forge a new, less US-reliant future. In this six-part series, we’ve asked top experts to explain what that future could look like – and the challenges that lie ahead.


Not the act of a friend

The uncomfortable reality is that the United States has moved from rule setter to rule breaker.

That gives the US enormous scope to “friend coerce” its allies, threatening withdrawal of security guarantees while beating them with tariff and other trade tools.

Trump’s unilateral tariffs, layered over existing “national security” tariffs and a baseline levy on all imports, have left Australian exporters facing higher barriers.

In this environment, deeper economic integration with China brings its own geopolitical risk.

We could move to enhance our free-trade agreement with China by broadening services commitments, easing investment screening, or adding new digital and green economy rules. But this would entrench trade relations with China just as Washington is trying to “de-risk” them.

That could inflame perceptions in US security circles that Australia is hedging too far economically, even if the intent is purely commercial.

Canada faces the storm, too

Canada is experiencing US pressure first-hand. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, in Australia last week, has emerged as a leading voice against what he calls economic “coercion” by dominant powers. He said countries

cannot live within the lie of mutual benefit through integration, when integration becomes their source of subordination.

Canada faces a particularly difficult situation. Three-quarters of Canadian exports go to the United States, making up about one-fifth of Canada’s entire economy.

Carney’s visit aimed to strengthen trade and defence ties between middle powers that share similar challenges.

Both Australia and Canada are seeking ways to reduce dependence on unpredictable American trade policies – while maintaining crucial security relationships.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speak to the media during a joint press conference at the Australian Parliament House

Mutual interests: Canadian PM Mark Carney with Anthony Albanese at a press conference last week. Lukas Coch/AAP

The US has other options for tariffs

More country-specific tariffs are likely, using Section 301 of the US Trade Act of 1974. This can be applied where the US “finds” that a foreign country’s trade practices are unjustifiable, unreasonable or discriminatory to US commerce.

Countries that wobble in implementing the ad hoc trade deals agreed after tariffs were imposed will be investigated. China is already subject to four waves of tariffs, cumulatively covering two-thirds of its exports to the US.

Under a separate law, the US imposed a variety of sectoral tariffs on products, such as steel, aluminium and auto parts. More will likely follow.

Australia may be subjected to these new sectoral tariffs. They could have far greater impacts than last year’s 10% “reciprocal” tariff.

For Australia, deeply integrated with US security but increasingly exposed to US economic coercion, that poses a hard question. What can we build into our existing trade relationships to avoid becoming collateral damage in the next escalation?

Trade deals have quietly done their job

The answer is not to abandon free-trade agreements (FTAs) in favour of a vague new class of “economic security agreements”.

Rather, Australia should modernise our FTAs, investment partnerships, and financial arrangements so they provide genuine resilience when the next shock hits, whether it comes from Washington or Beijing.

Our largest goods and services partners are almost always FTA partners – we have a range of agreements with China, Japan, South Korea and other Asian nations.

These agreements have served to grow and diversify Australia’s trade over two decades.

Walking away from FTAs in the name of “economic security” would be like cancelling your home insurance because the neighbourhood has become more dangerous.

Don’t reinvent the wheel in the name of economic security

There is now a fashion for narrow “economic security” deals on critical minerals and supply-chain resilience that sit alongside FTAs.

Australia is already part of this world through bilateral critical minerals partnerships and joint-funding commitments with the US, EU, Japan, UK, South Korea, India, France and Germany.

These arrangements do not replace FTAs; they overlay and complement them.

Moreover, the essential economic security tools are already available inside modern FTAs and related instruments. These include:

  • chapters on supply chain resilience, export restrictions and transparency
  • provisions on investment screening and security exceptions
  • cooperation on critical minerals, clean energy and advanced technologies.

Collectively, these signal to markets that partners will privilege each other when crises hit. That contributes to building economic resilience in key supply chains.

Critical minerals could be Australia’s leverage

In critical minerals, Australia holds genuine structural leverage with the US and other partners. So, too, does Canada.

Australia supplies a significant share of US imports of uranium, niobium, tantalum and vanadium ores, and titanium — all vital for nuclear energy, aerospace, defence, and advanced batteries.

We are also the world’s leading producer of lithium and a major player in rare earths, with companies such as Lynas now producing key heavy rare earths outside China for the first time.

Australia and Canada signed a series of new agreements on critical minerals during Carney’s visit.

Recent US-Australia arrangements propose substantial joint financing for critical minerals projects. The EU’s critical minerals partnership with Australia explicitly aims to reduce European dependence on China by backing Australian projects.

This gives us crucial leverage in key bilateral trade and investment partnerships, should we wish to use it.

Build collective resilience with like-minded partners

Australia’s best defence isn’t to retreat from openness, but to strengthen and diversify the rules-based system that supports it.

By working with like-minded middle powers such as Canada, the EU, Japan, and others, Australia can build resilience against economic coercion from any direction – whether from supposed friends or declared rivals.

As Carney’s visit demonstrates, middle powers face similar challenges and can achieve more by standing together than by standing alone.

ref. As global trade rules falter, how can Australia protect itself from economic coercion? – https://theconversation.com/as-global-trade-rules-falter-how-can-australia-protect-itself-from-economic-coercion-276523

The Oscars aren’t a meritocracy – there’s a complex formula for winning

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By William Simon, Casual Lecturer (Education and English Departments), University of Tasmania

Every January, Hollywood is overtaken by a massive Oscar prediction game, with studios, critics and commentators all playing a role in shaping the debate.

But choosing a winner is more complicated than acknowledging a film’s artistic merit. The Oscars are decided on by a large peer group of some 10,000 Academy members, who confidentially vote for their colleagues in their specialised field. All eligible members, however, can vote on Best Picture.

In an era where nearly every major film is carefully packaged and marketed for profit, predicting an Oscar winner seems like a complex science.

The most crucial way a film positions itself as a contender relates to its status as a “prestige” picture. This is earned through highbrow themes, strategic release timing, critical acclaim, and plenty of lobbying.

What gives a film prestige?

Prestige pictures typically examine subjects that hit a nerve with Academy voters, such as injustice, intense relationships, and the triumph of the human spirit.

This thematic preoccupation is amply demonstrated through previous Best Picture winners including The King’s Speech (2010), 12 Years A Slave (2013), Philadelphia (1993) and Schindler’s List (1993). The only recent winner that seemed to deliberately reject such tropes was No Country for Old Men (2007).

This year’s top contenders also have these recognisable tropes. Hamnet, for instance, focuses on the misfortunes of William Shakespeare’s tragic family life.

Production still: teary-eyed woman with hands clasped together looks directly at the camera

Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet received eight Oscar nominations and won the 2026 Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Drama. Focus Features

Meanwhile, Sinners (which has earned a record 16 nominations) is a thrilling genre-bender, combining supernatural horror with historical injustices endured by African Americans. Its originality places it in pole position for Best Original Screenplay.

Two men stand side by side, one smiling (left) and the other holding a cigar (right).

Starring Michael B. Jordan as Stack (left) and his twin brother Smoke (right), Sinners became the most-awarded movie by a Black director at the BAFTAs. Warner Bros. Pictures

Timing, marketing and previous acclaim

The timing of a film’s release remains a key component of its prestige status. Most Oscar-nominated films are released between September and December. This keeps them fresh in voters’ minds during the nomination and voting periods.

Critical recognition also matters enormously. Voters are often fond of following the crowd and, as a result, will favour films that have already triumphed at significant events such as the Cannes Film Festival.

This year’s Best Actor race also illustrates how previous near misses, and commercial success, can build momentum for an actor.

Timothée Chalamet was previously nominated for A Complete Unknown (2024) and Call Me by Your Name (2017), and has been widely praised for his work in the blockbuster Dune franchise. This makes him a top contender for this year’s Best Actor award, even though his character in Marty Supreme is an unlikable parasitic hustler.

Similarly, front-runner Paul Thomas Anderson seems poised to claim the Best Director prize, after 11 previous nominations in various categories. His film, One Battle After Another, also connects with the zeitgeist. The current headlines about ICE raids, immigration detention centres and police crackdowns make it ahead of its time.

Timothée Chalamet is the youngest actor since Marlon Brando in 1954 to receive three Best Actor Oscar nominations. Jordan Strauss/AP

Oscar-winning potential is also determined by what industry insiders call “positive buzz”. Creating this buzz is a strategic and expensive undertaking, funded by major studios, that propels certain films into awards contention.

Greta Gerwig’s Barbie (2023) was a good example. Warner Bros is reported to have matched the film’s production budget with an equally substantial marketing budget and secured more than 100 brand partnerships (including Airbnb and Burger King). “Pinkification” dominated social media and positioned the film as having significant cultural relevance.

20th Century Studios appear to be adopting a similar strategy for the upcoming The Devil Wears Prada 2.

Networks and lobbying

Professional networks allow certain films to benefit from what American sociologist Robert K. Merton called “cumulative advantage”. Applied here, this principle explains how established talent attracts more prestigious collaborators, producing films that Academy voters are more likely to take seriously, and therefore vote for. As a result, Oscar success becomes increasingly concentrated in the same elite circles.

The Academy’s newly introduced Achievement in Casting category is a good example of how collaborative advantage plays out in films with A-listers.

Consider Leonardo Di Caprio’s commanding presence in One Battle After Another, or the ongoing partnership between director Yorgos Lanthimos and actress Emma Stone. Stone’s cold and calculating character in Bugonia is a departure from her more empathetic roles, while Di Caprio’s fallible anti-hero father is equally far removed from previous “leading man” characters.

When famous actors play against type, they generate conversations that amplify a film’s visibility – creating awards-season talking points.

Production still: mid-shot of a bald woman seated on a chair facing the right, smiling off-camera.

Yorgos Lanthimos’s Bugonia has earned four Oscar nominations, with Emma Stone already a two-time winner. Universal Pictures International Australasia

Lobbying also has a role to play. Direct lobbying involves public relations ploys to embed a movie into the audience’s consciousness and, crucially, into the minds of Academy voters. This might look like issuing industry notices, setting up magazine features, screeners, previews, free ticket offers, and special events (such as question and answer sessions).

But there’s also a form of indirect lobbying, that is arguably more effective in planting favourable stories about a film, or denigrating opponents.

Shakespeare in Love’s Best Picture win over Saving Private Ryan in 1999 remains the best example of how an aggressive campaign can override merit. In this case the campaign was backed by Harvey Weinstein – then head of Miramax (and not yet a convicted sexual abuser) – who, among other things, resorted to badmouthing Saving Private Ryan to journalists.

Oscar prediction remains a science that combines art, commerce, marketing and – to some extent – merit. It’s a dazzling lottery that rewards not the “best” in Hollywood, but the more “probable”.

ref. The Oscars aren’t a meritocracy – there’s a complex formula for winning – https://theconversation.com/the-oscars-arent-a-meritocracy-theres-a-complex-formula-for-winning-274980

Kiwis in Tehran warned of toxic hazards following US-Israel strikes

Source: Radio New Zealand

A plume of smoke rises after a strike on the Iranian capital of Tehran on March 5, 2026. AFP / Atta Kenare

New Zealanders in Iran’s capital are being warned of toxic hazards.

SafeTravel is advising there is oil, smoke and soot across Tehran which is making conditions significantly more dangerous.

It said rain droplets will pull toxic chemicals from the smoke down to ground level.

“Staying indoors is your best protection – remain indoors at all times unless your safety is at immediate risk. Keep windows and doors closed, and seal any gaps with damp cloth or tape,” it said on social media.

“If it rains, treat it as a chemical hazard – do not go outdoors during rainfall and for two hours afterward. If rain contacts your skin, rinse immediately with cold running water. Do not rub, and do not use soap.”

SafeTravel said people should wait two hours after rain stops to go outside – and children should be kept off outdoor surfaces for 24 hours post rainfall.

“Avoid walking through or touching oily surfaces. If you must cross oil: cover feet entirely, remove footwear before re-entering home. If contact occurs, rinse with cold water only.

“Do not collect rainwater, or drink tap or well water if it smells or looks oily. Use sealed bottled water – boiling water will not make it safe.

“If you wear contact lenses, and are exposed to smoke, oil, or rain, remove them immediately. Keep them out until conditions clear.”

SafeTravel said the conditions can cause breathing issues, but hospitals are overwhelmed and people should only go for life-threatening symptoms.

“Masks work, and are recommended – N95/FFP2 masks give best protection from particles. Activated carbon masks help with both particles and vapours.”

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

‘Grey washing’: SuperGold Card discounts skip entire regions

Source: Radio New Zealand

The SuperGold card was designed to help offset the high cost of living, which statistically hit NZ’s seniors harder than other groups. RNZ / Kim Baker-Wilson

SuperGold Card holders are finding it difficult to cash-in on weekly supermarket discounts with a mish-mash of locations, leaving some regions missing out entirely with patchy coverage in others.

Age Concern chief executive Kevin Lamb called it an example of “grey washing”.

For example, the SuperGold Card was accepted at grocery stores in most central business districts, but not in Gisborne, Marlborough Nelson, Tasman, West Coast districts nor the densely populated Auckland CBD, with a fast-growing resident senior population of more than 2000 people.

“It is portraying themselves as supporting older people, but doing what I would call the bare minimum in order to achieve that,” Lamb said.

“If you’re going to say that SuperGold Card gets a discount in our stores, why wouldn’t you do that for every store? Not just cherry pick a handful of stores around the country and have such a lack of consistency about where those stores are located.”

Monopoly concerns

Monopoly Watch analyst Tex Edwards said confusing or difficult to get information on the availability of SuperGold Card discounts at leading supermarkets was another example of unchecked monopolistic behaviour.

“What’s being exhibited here with the leverage of the senior gold cards, is a concept called geographic monopolisation in several regions of the country, where you don’t have any brand choice, you just have to go to the Woolworths, or you just have to go to the Foodstuffs banner of either New World or Pak’nSave and Four Square.”

Edwards singled out Wellington, where lobbyists worked on behalf of supermarket chains to maintain the duopoly.

He said it was not surprising that Wellington region had the best coverage of supermarkets offering the SuperGold Card discount in the country, with New World offering it at 100 percent of its stores, and 63 percent at Woolworths.

“The monopolies have these people called the lobbyists, and they run round Wellington and busy telling government officials that they’re doing everything right, and they’re being sensible citizens of New Zealand, and they’re doing all this good stuff, except competing on price and competing on any real initiative,” Edwards said.

Phone calls to New World stores resulted in conflicting information. Google Maps

Conflicting information

Co-op Foodstuffs, which supplied New World, said there was no comprehensive list of store locations offering the SuperGold Card discount as individual stores were privately owned and operated.

“The discount isn’t offered in our South Island stores. In the North Island, it’s up to individual store owners to decide whether to offer it, so there isn’t a single, comprehensive list of participating stores,” Foodstuffs said in a statement to RNZ.

But internet searches of New World stores offering SuperGold Card incorrectly indicated the card was widely accepted in South Island locations – which was not the case.

Likewise, telephone calls to New World stores also resulted in conflicting information, together with incomplete information online about the terms and conditions at stores honouring the card, such as minimum purchases.

New World’s online location finder did link to a standardised template for each store, but none of them contained information about SuperGold, though other services were mentioned.

Woolworths said it offered the discount in about a third of its stores broadly located nationwide, but that was also somewhat misleading as the discount was not evenly distributed throughout the country, with some regions seeing near 100 percent coverage, while others offered nothing at all.

A list of participating Woolworths stores on the SuperGold app was also out of date with four stores no longer operating.

Commerce Commission response

Grocery Commissioner Pierre van Heerden said supermarkets were not obligated to offer a SuperGold discount at any of its stores, though they needed to deliver on their promises to do so.

“However, we would reiterate that any discounts offered need to be clear and accurate and should not mislead consumers.

“Supermarkets need to follow through where discounts are offered.

Grocery Commissioner Pierre van Heerden

“Any exceptions to discounts, including eligible locations, need to be clearly communicated to avoid misleading consumers,” he said.

“We would encourage people to report a concern to the Commission if they think one of the laws we enforce has been breached.

“We are unable comment further without undertaking a more thorough assessment of the matter and, if warranted, through undertaking an investigation,” he said.

Just 23 percent of Woolworths stores in the Auckland region offered the discount Supplied / Woolworths

Woolworths response

Woolworths’ website indicates a third of its total 185 grocery stores offered the 5 percent discount on any given Tuesday, but just 23 percent of its Auckland region’s stores offered the discount, and not at any of the five stores located within a 20-minute walk of the Auckland CBD.

“Whilst we may not offer the discount in all Auckland CBD stores, we do offer it broadly across the country,” Woolworths director of retail Jason Stockill said.

However, a list of Woolworths stores that accepted the SuperGold card were not broadly located according to data available on supermarket websites, and many of its North Island stores were located near competing New World supermarkets that also offered SuperGold discounts.

“We are aware that some select competitor stores run a SuperGold discount programme. We are not aware of this being directly matched store to store by us or our competitors,” Stockill said.

Still, the following table indicates the regions where Woolworths and New World’s SuperGold Card discounts are matched store-to-store:

  • Gisborne District: Woolworths 0 percent offers 0/1 stores – New World 0/0 stores 0 percent offers
  • West Coast: Woolworths 0 percent 0/1 – New World 0/3 0 percent offers in the South Island
  • Nelson: Woolworths 0 percent 0/6 – New World 0/2 0 percent offers in the South Island
  • Tasman: Woolworths 0 percent 0/1 stores – New World 0/1 stores 0 percent offers in the South Island
  • Taranaki: Woolworths 20 percent 1/5 stores – New World 60 percent 3/5 stores matched 0
  • Auckland: Woolworths 23 percent 14/ 62 stores – New World 61 percent 19/31 matched 11
  • Waikato: Woolworths 26 percent 5/19 stores – New World 44 percent 7/16 matched 3
  • Southland: Woolworths 33 percent 1/3 stores – New World 0/3 0 percent offers in the South Island
  • Hawke’s Bay: Woolworths 50 percent or 2 of 4 stores – New World 80 percent 4/5 matched 2
  • Otago: Woolworths 56 percent or 5 of 9 stores – New World 0/11 0 percent offers in the South Island
  • Manawatu-Wanganui: Woolworths 60 percent 6 of 10 stores – New World 36 percent 4/11 matched 3
  • Wellington: Woolworths 63 percent or 12 of 19 stores – New World 100 percent 21/21 matched 8
  • Marlborough: Woolworths 67 percent 2/3 stores – New World 0/2 0 percent offers in the South Island
  • Northland: Woolworths 71 percent 5/7 stores – New World 80 percent 4/5 matched 3
  • Bay of Plenty: Woolworths 83 percent 10/12 stores – New World 67 percent at 6/9 – matched 5
  • Canterbury: Woolworths 95 percent -19/20 stores – New World 0/20 0 percent offers in the South Island

Privately-owned Pak’nSave supermarkets do not offer a SuperGold Card discount, though some Four Square supermarkets do. Woolworths-owned Fresh Choice honoured the card at selected locations.

SuperGold Card discounts difficult to access

The SuperGold card was designed to help offset the high cost of living, which statistically hit New Zealand’s seniors harder than other groups.

Lamb said many of the SuperGold advertised on the app or website were beyond the reach of all but the most wealthy retirees.

“I think as well, it’s often the the interfaces are designed for those people who are extremely efficient at using online technology, and that doesn’t apply to a portion of the older population,” he said.

“There are still somewhere in the region of 20 to 25 percent of the older population who don’t have any access to any online resource.

“So creating an app or creating a website is meaningless for those people, and those people do tend to be the ones who are the most vulnerable.”

In any case, using the SuperGold Card App to figuring out which supermarkets did or did not offer the discount was impossible, with no sense as to the rationale behind the selection of stores.

Auckland CBD and other centres miss out

Stockill said Woolworths considered a number of factors when deciding which stores would be included the programme, including demand.

“We are always looking at options to provide additional value to our customers. We know the SuperGold discount program is very valued in the stores we offer it in and we would love to extend this to all stores,” Stockill said.

“However, the truth is that this programme is costly and whilst we would love to roll this out more broadly, we do need to carefully balance this expense with our ongoing investment into lower prices, services and shopping experiences for all our customers.”

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

How ‘looksmaxxing’ self-improvement apps are marketing misogyny to young men

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Marten Risius, Adjunct Senior Fellow, School of Psychology, The University of Queensland

A theory about male “sexual market value” that began in online manosphere forums is now appearing in the TikTok feeds of Australian teenagers — repackaged as AI-powered “looksmaxxing” apps.

The idea is closely tied to the incel (“involuntary celibate”) subculture. These are loose online communities of mostly young men who believe they are unable to form romantic or sexual relationships with women.

Within these spaces, users often rank men according to physical attractiveness and argue that dating success is largely determined by genetics. This worldview is sometimes called “the blackpill”.

Our research suggests that, by scoring faces and suggesting ways people can “optimise” their appearance, looksmaxxing tools are quietly mainstreaming a toxic view of masculinity and monetising insecurities.

Looksmaxxing is mainstreaming misogynistic incel ideology

Looksmaxxing describes an extreme physical optimisation of a person’s appearance, usually within a numerical rating system known as the PSL-scale.

Our TikTok network analysis reveals a dominant subculture around this concept, with so called “blackpill edits” at its heart. These usually show a conventionally less attractive person who is “mogged” (physically dominated based on looks) by a contrast with a person deemed attractive in the looksmaxxing community.

Such edits generate massive reach. One looksmaxxing influencer garnered more than 100 million views in 2025 alone.

Besides blackpill edits, the community also shares tutorial videos purportedly helping to improve one’s appearance. These include such dubious tips as recommending “mewing” (adjusting tongue posture) for a stronger jawline.

The looksmaxxing app economy

An ad for a typical looksmaxxing app in the Google Play Store. Google Play

Within this ecosystem, we identified more than a dozen smartphone apps that promise to help users on their looksmaxxing journey. Essentially, all these apps offer the same service.

A user uploads a recent selfie, which an artificial intelligence (AI) model scans for arcane metrics such as “gonial angle”, “maxilla ratio” and “mentolabial angle”.

The user is then provided with an attractiveness score, and an associated rank on the PSL scale. Then, users receive a supposedly personalised assessment of their “potential”. The apps also offer generic fitness and dietary advice, but also recommendations of more niche practices such as mewing.

Monetising insecurity

Most apps hide their core features behind weekly subscriptions, usually priced around A$6. To attract paying customers, these apps are advertised in video descriptions (“Make your own reality @UmaxApp”), as well as in blackpill edits, for example by flashing rating screenshots between video clips.

Quantification, gamification and reframing

These apps are an active vector for mainstreaming an appealing version of formerly niche incel beliefs. While the focus on self-improvement seems to contradict the extreme fatalism present in dedicated incel forums, the apps act as a gateway, making harmful assumptions accessible through three key mechanisms.

First is quantification.

Incels believe every person has a “sexual market value”, usually expressed on a scale from one to ten. Looksmaxxing apps use the PSL-scale (running from one to eight), but the concept is identical: a user’s face is assigned numerical scores based on obscure calculations, reducing human worth to an AI assessment.

Second is gamification.

Scores are tied to specific ranks that often reflect key incel language, such as “low-tier normie” or “chadlite”. Much like a video game, the apps promise users the ability to “ascend” to a higher rank.

Unlike passively reading incel ideology in a web forum, these apps allow users to directly engage with the ideology by having their own faces assessed.

The third mechanism is reframing.

A key part of the success of these apps is that they provide a “recipe for ascension” instead of the traditional stream of blackpill fatalism. This makes these apps attractive to young men struggling with confidence. It’s worth noting, however, that alongside ordinary celebrities looksmaxxing ads sometimes include AI-generated versions of rich, famous sex abusers such as Jeffrey Epstein and Sean Coombs (better known as Diddy).

However, besides the reframing, the underlying assumptions are still rooted within incel ideology: a person’s ascension potential is limited and dictated by biology.

To illustrate, we observed young boys posting their selfies in the comment section of app advertisments, asking for others to rate them. In exchange, they were sometimes asked to “ropemax” – an incel term for committing suicide – if deemed incapable of ascension.

A user asking if he is ‘htn’ (a ‘high-tier normie’) is advised to ‘ropemax’. TikTok

Looksmaxxing apps as a potential funnel to violence

Beyond the reframing, the foundation of looksmaxxing in underlying violent incel ideology can become quite explicit.

In a recent TikTok interaction we documented, a looksmaxxing influencer with hundreds of thousands of followers responded via video format to a user comment. The user’s profile picture was a photo of Elliot Rodger, the perpetrator of the 2014 Isla Vista killings, and a celebrated “saint” within the incel community. A subsequent comment pointing out this dark connection received more than 20,000 likes.

A influential looksmaxxing creator engaging directly with a user with a profile picture of Elliott Rodger, an incel mass murderer. TikTok

The particular danger at hand is that looksmaxxing apps, through the mainstreaming mechanisms described above, actively target vulnerable individuals struggling with self-confidence, drawing them into a harmful and potentially violent ideology.

Looksmaxxing apps might seem like an easy cash grab fuelled by young boys going through puberty. But as long as they remain openly accessible in app stores, using viral TikTok edits to reach a massive audience, they can function as a potential radicalisation pipeline into extremist incel worldviews.

ref. How ‘looksmaxxing’ self-improvement apps are marketing misogyny to young men – https://theconversation.com/how-looksmaxxing-self-improvement-apps-are-marketing-misogyny-to-young-men-276174

Your child has pathological demand avoidance? Here’s what it means – and 9 tips for what to do

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nicole Rinehart, Nicole Rinehart, Professor, Clinical Psychology, Director of the Neurodevelopment Program, School of Psychological Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University

For some children, everyday demands such “brush your teeth” or “time to get off of your computer game”, can trigger intense anxiety and extreme resistance. When this type of response affects everyday life it may fit into the pattern of behaviour known as pathological demand avoidance, or PDA.

Children with this pattern of behaviour have intense emotional reactions to parents’ and teachers’ requests that infringe on the their sense of control. This can prompt angry or punitive responses from parents or teachers, culminating in a cycle of distress and frustration for adult and child.

PDA isn’t a diagnosis or in the DSM-5, which defines mental disorders. And there is debate among experts about its key features. Like most conditions describing a cluster of psychiatric symptoms, demand avoidance exists on a continuum, with different degrees of anxiety-driven distress and control-seeking symptoms.

PDA mainly affects a subgroup of autistic children, but adults and people without autism can also have PDA.

What causes these behaviours?

Most neurodevelopmental conditions, including autism, disrupt specific brain circuits, especially in the loop between the basal ganglia, the thalamus and the cortex.

These behaviours stem from differences in the brain. blueringmedia/Getty Images

These circuits help people override impulsive responses, consider alternatives, choose suitable courses of action and initiate appropriate responses. This is known as executive functioning.

Stressful events and excessive demands can disrupt these circuits. Rather than respond flexibly, individuals with demand avoidance may get overwhelmed and become rigid, reactive and avoidant.

When non-autistic children feel inundated, they may approach their parent or display other obvious signals to indicate they feel overwhelmed. The parent or teacher can then respond to support them through it.

When autistic children feel inundated, to instil a sense of security they may avert their gaze, absorb themselves in their usual routines, display behaviours they had previously outgrown, or refuse to shift in response to stress.

Parents and teachers can misconstrue these behaviours as defiance, rather than overload, and may not respond appropriately.

Families often don’t receive the support they need

In a 2025 study, researchers interviewed 21 parents of autistic children who had features of pathological demand avoidance.

Rather than receiving consistent, integrated support from health services, parents experienced three recurring challenges:

  1. health services didn’t know how to support the spectrum of demand avoidance behaviours

  2. health practitioners often blamed the parents, who felt judged and inadequate

  3. health practitioners tended to focus only on autistic symptoms rather than the clinically impairing anxiety and control-seeking behaviours.

These responses from health services tended to make symptoms worse.

9 ways to help your child – and yourself

While there is limited research trialling interventions for PDA, there are strategies parents of all children can implement to reduce the degree to which children feel overwhelmed with demands.

These strategies revolve around parents and teachers adopting a mindset of curiosity, humility and a willingness to learn.

This can prevent the child becoming overloaded, boost their executive functioning and enable them to respond more flexibly. It can also leave you feeling less stressed by any setbacks.

Here are nine ways you can put this into practice:

1. Embrace not knowing

Demand avoidance can be confronting and confusing. Don’t feel you need to apply the right strategy. Every child is unique and changes over time, so no one strategy will always be effective. Experiment with various approaches, blend compassion with clear expectations, and revisit ideas later if needed.

2. Stay curious, not judgemental

Recognise when you the child is acting defiantly. Then remember such behaviour often emanates from stress and overload. Remain curious – pause to consider the concerns that may be upsetting the child. Share ideas with the child and, where possible, collaborate on a plan that feels manageable and supports their autonomy.

3. Listen deeply

Recognise that defiance is often a plea for help to manage overwhelming emotions. So, when the child is defiant, acknowledge the situation and ask for their thoughts. If you listen closely to their words, you may learn how you can resolve their distress. Admittedly, children are often unsure why they’ve become upset, so they may need your help to clarify the cause and find a way forward.

4. Hold your ego lightly

Insisting on compliance often escalates distress. Relinquishing the need to be right or in control helps the child feel more at ease and willing to engage. Offering choices about how or when to complete tasks, while maintaining safety and guidance, gives children agency.

5. Accept complexity

Children with demand avoidance often have needs that don’t fit into simple categories. Accepting complexity helps adults remain flexible and open-minded.

6. Prioritise relationships

A strong and trusting relationship is the foundation for effective behaviour support. Building connection and repairing ruptures helps children feel you are supportive. This naturally reduces avoidance.

7. Notice strengths and create opportunities to shine

Children with demand avoidance often have strong abilities that can be nurtured and applied under the right conditions. Highlighting strengths and building opportunities for leadership and helping other people can build confidence and motivation.

8. Regulate yourself first

Managing your own emotions helps you respond more calmly. When a child seems defiant, observe your breath for a few seconds (partly to override the initial temptation to display anger). Once your intense emotions dissipate, your curiosity will return. A calm response also models the emotional regulation you want your child to learn.

9. Build a support team

A team of supportive adults, such as family members, teachers and support workers, helps share the load and ensures the child can always seek support when needed. Prioritising understanding, offering choices and building trust helps children feel more confident and understood.


Read more: A new diagnosis of ‘profound autism’ is on the cards. Here’s what could change


ref. Your child has pathological demand avoidance? Here’s what it means – and 9 tips for what to do – https://theconversation.com/your-child-has-pathological-demand-avoidance-heres-what-it-means-and-9-tips-for-what-to-do-265677

‘It is a ticking time bomb’: Drive to evict PNG settlement communities runs into problems

Source: Radio New Zealand

Shattered homes: community leaders at Paga Hill settlement discuss their response to police attempts to evict them. RNZ / Johnny Blades

A Papua New Guinean anthropologist has warned that a campaign by authorities to remove communities from informal settlements in Port Moresby will not solve growing social problems in PNG’s capital.

The government is determined to end the role of settlements as what Prime Minister James Marape decsribes as “breeding grounds for terror” as part of its law and order reforms, but recent evictions have run into problems.

Almost half of Port Moresby’s estimated population of around 500,000 live in settlements, often without legal title or access to basic services. Some of the settlements have become notorious as crime hotspots.

However, in late January, police moved into the settlement at 2-Mile, sparking clashes with residents that resulted in two deaths and numerous injuries.

Police then moved to evict another settlement at 4-Mile, but this met with a legal challenge which led to the National Court placing a stay order on the eviction.

While the campaign is essentially paused, Marape has said that his government would soon announce a permanent plan to replace unplanned settlements with properly titled residential allotments.

He also apologised to residents affected by the evictions, in recognition that many law-abiding and hard working families have made settlements their home over the years.

Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat

Urban drift

Previous attempts at evicting settlement communities did not exactly lay a template for the success of what authorities are trying to do in 2026.

In numerous cases, homes were destroyed or razed to the ground, people were left homeless and then simply moved to other areas of vacant land or ended up living with wantoks in other parts of Morebsy.

A PNG anthropologist who has done extensive work on settlements, Fiona Hukula, noted that settlements are long-established communities, stretching back decades.

“Essentially, people came to work in the towns and the cities, like in Port Moresby, and so where there was low cost housing, or where people weren’t able to afford housing, they started living in settlements, and some of the settlements on the outskirts, there’s stories that they made some kind of connection and deals with the local landowners.”

Dr Hukula said over the decades, migration to the towns and cities had grown significantly, but the available housing had not kept pace.

Water services at a settlement.

“People are just now coming into the city, really, to access better services, health and education. Some Papua New Guineans are coming to the city to escape various forms of conflict and violence.

“And this is now where we’ve seen just an influx of people coming into the city, and obviously there’s nowhere to live, and they live in settlements, and many of Moresby settlements are populated by families who have been there for several generations.”

‘Difficult thing I have to do’

Many of Moresby’s settlements are now populated by families who have been there for several generations. Removing people from these communities is a complex challenge.

“An eviction is not going to solve the problem, because people will just go and find somewhere else to stay (in Moresby), especially if they’re generational families who have lived in these settlements, who don’t necessarily have the ties back to their rural villages and their connections to their people in their village,” Dr Hukula said.

Adding to the complexities of the eviction drive are social connections forged in the National Capital District (NCD) over the years.

The head of the NCD Police Command Metropolitan Superintendent Warrick Simitab admitted that for him personally, leading the eviction exercises such as at 2-Mile had not been easy.

“It’s been difficult, because I grew up here. I grew up in NCD. For example in 2-Mile. Most of my classmates that I went to school together with, they live there. So for me personally, it’s a difficult thing that I have to do,” he told RNZ Pacific.

Papua New Guinea police RNZ / Johnny Blades

Simitab would not be drawn on when the evictions would start up again, saying things were paused while political leaders decide next steps.

Criminal hotspot

The local MP for Moresby South Justin Tkatchenko said the 2-Mile settlement had become a notorious criminal hotspot, and that the people of the city have had enough of it.

“Hold ups nearly every night and every day, women have been raped, attacked, citizens have been held up, cars stolen, injured, abused for nearly 20 years,” he said.

Things came to a head when police were shot at and those living in 2-Mile refused an ultimatum given by police to hand over the criminals, he explained.

Tkatchenko said the government was steadily working on resettling settlers with proper, legal allocations of land to live on.

“We have already allocated land and sub-divided that land for over 400 families in the 2-Mile Hill area and other areas. Some have already been resettled and moved, and others will follow suit,” the MP said.

Rainbow settlement in Port moresby, Papua New Guinea, where West Papuan refugees have squatted for years. RNZI / Johnny Blades

Dr Hukula acknowledged that crime linked to some settlements was an issue that the general population keenly wanted addressed.

But she said persisting with displacing communities from other settlements would not address the underlying cause of the problem.

“It is a ticking time bomb. It’s going to be like this, where there’s evictions and then people move. And the thing is that the cycle of violence continues, and that’s what we’re trying to address here, the crime.”

The anthropologist stressed that “not everybody in settlements are criminals”, saying the people who lived in settlements were often working people, “people who are doing the menial jobs in the offices, the office cleaners, the people who are drivers, all of these kinds of people also live in settlements, and so when they’re being kicked out, there are people who can’t go to work, children who can’t go to school”.

Dr Hukula has researched and written about how settlement communities have developed informal systems of settling disputes or addressing law and order problems such as through local komiti groups or village courts.

These provided a way in which the communities could maintain order and general respect between their people. But “because the settlements have just exploded now it’s not like necessarily everybody comes from the same area or the same province” she said, making it harder to maintain a social balance.

Looters run amok in shops amid a state of unrest in Port Moresby on 10 January, 2024. AFP / Andrew Kutan

In Dr Hukula’s view, “the village courts and the community leaders still play an extremely important role in being that bridge” between the authorities and the settlement community, and should be supported to play that role.

She said one of the other main things the government could do to help the situation was “to make sure that there’s affordable housing for all levels, all kinds of Papua New Guineans”.

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

Government may offer asylum to Iranian female football players, Seymour says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Iranian players saluting for the national anthem after being reprimanded for not singing in an earlier match. AFP

The New Zealand government may offer asylum to Iranian female football players in Australia who are likely to face persecution if they return to their home country.

The ABC reported that five players are currently being protected by police in Queensland after evading their team handlers at their Gold Coast accommodation.

The players, Fatemeh Pasandideh, Zahra Ghanbari, Zahra Sarbali, Atefeh Ramazanzadeh and Mona Hamoudi, refused to sing the national anthem before their opening match with South Korea at the Women’s Asian Cup earlier this month, the ABC said.

It said fears that the players would be targeted by the Iranian regime when they returned home have grown after Iranian state TV labelled them as “traitors,” the ABC said.

US President Donald Trump has urged Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to grant the whole team asylum.

In a post on his social media platform, Trump said: “Australia is making a terrible humanitarian mistake by allowing the Iran National Woman’s Soccer team to be forced back to Iran, where they will most likely be killed. Don’t do it, Mr. Prime Minister, give ASYLUM. The U.S. will take them if you won’t.”

Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour. RNZ / Mark Papalii

On First Up, Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour was asked if Australia should grant the players asylum – or if New Zealand should offer it.

Seymour said the Australian government had to make that decision based on law and it didn’t help “for their cousins across the ditch to start lobbying advice at them”.

But Seymour said it was a humanitarian question.

“Any sort-of lay person would sit there and say ‘do they have a well-founded fear of persecution of they return to their home country?’ I think the common sense answer is that they do.

“Would a country like Australia, or New Zealand for that matter, want to help people in that situation? I think the answer is we would, so let’s let the Australian government work through that question according to law as they have to.

“But I think any person looking at it would come to a pretty obvious answer in their heart and mind.”

Seymour said New Zealand has done something similar for refugees/aslyum seekers in the past.

“Perhaps the New Zealand government will do something like that today.”

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

How much fuel does NZ have – and what happens if we run out?

Source: Radio New Zealand

there were 49 days’ worth of petrol, 54 of diesel and 50 of jet fuel in New Zealand at the start of this month. File photo. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

New Zealand could make its fuel supplies last about three to four weeks if supply was completely cut off.

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) data shows that, on 1 March, there were 49 days’ worth of petrol, 54 of diesel and 50 of jet fuel in New Zealand.

But that total includes “stock on water” that has shipped but not yet arrived here. That is more than half the diesel stock, and 22 of 49 days’ supply of petrol.

War between the US, Israel and Iran has created significant disruptions to the price and supply of fuel and oil around the world, particularly due to the closure of the crucial supply route through the Strait of Hormuz.

Murat Ungor, economist at the University of Otago, said if fuel were completely cut off tomorrow, New Zealand could sustain itself for roughly a month, or just under, with the stocks on shore, assuming there was rationing and prioritisation for essential services.

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He said stock on water could still take some time to access and transport.

“New Zealand’s fuel supply position is structurally exposed in ways that deserve serious attention. Since the closure of the Marsden Point oil refinery on 31 March 2022, New Zealand has been entirely dependent on imported refined fuels,” he said.

“International transport was significantly disrupted in 2020 due to border closures implemented in response to the coronavirus pandemic. Fuel use for both international aviation and international shipping has been recovering in the years since. Any sustained conflict involving Iran introduces an immediate risk to global oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, through which approximately 20 percent of the world’s petroleum liquids transit daily.”

Kelly Eckhold, chief economist at Westpac, said there were two boats due to arrive at Marsden Point, near Whangarei, in 10 days. “What I’m not totally sure is if there are others that are also en route but it certainly looks like that’s the situation… there’s about 45 to 48 days’ of products available assuming the stock that’s on the water makes it here.”

He said at the time the new stock arrived, the country could be at around 17 or 18 days’ worth.

He said if supply was completely cut off, there would probably be a prioritisation process. “With ordinary car use there can be changes in the way that people use fuel. You can work from home… the thing with diesel is that it is used in the supply chain.

“The agricultural sector is a heavy user, the transport sector is a heavy user. They’re required to be able to do that otherwise you can’t even get goods to the supermarket. I would expect that if it really got that bad they would have some sort of prioritisation scheme in place to be able to keep things going.”

He said whether that was likely would depend on how the situation unfolded. “If things don’t resolve in a month or six weeks, it would strike me as a decent probability.”

ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner told RNZ the disruption of oil around the world was becoming “pretty real”.

She said the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait had joined Iran in reducing output because they were not able to ship through the usual routes.

MBIE said the country’s fuel stocks were still “healthy” and fuel companies were not reporting issues with supply chains.

“New Zealand has a well defined, multi agency system for managing fuel supply disruptions,” a spokesperson said.

“In the event of disruption, the Fuel Sector Coordinating Entity-led by MBIE-works with NEMA, fuel companies and regional civil defence groups under the National Fuel Plan to maintain supply, prioritise essential services, and manage distribution.

“Should the situation escalate, the International Energy Agency (IEA) may intervene through collective actions like coordinating release of strategic oil reserves by their member states. This happened when Russia invaded Ukraine. The New Zealand Government has agreements with governments from the USA, United Kingdom and Japan to enable ticket contracts or stocks to be held in those countries count toward our emergency oil reserves.

“These measures, accompanied by the government’s long term Fuel Security Plan, provide a clear framework to respond effectively to both domestic and global fuel supply shocks.”

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

The real price of Buy Now Pay Later

Source: Radio New Zealand

Buy Now Pay Later schemes including Afterpay are popular with consumers, with one million Kiwis using them. Screenshot

Financial watchdogs want the rules about Buy Now Pay Later schemes strengthened, saying the last tweak didn’t work.

It’s been described as both a lifeline, and a trap.

Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) has been in New Zealand for about eight years. It’s still a relatively new product, but one million Kiwis use one of the four companies providing it.

However a new report from Consumer NZ and FinCap, with research done by Victoria University, has raised concerns about the damage BNPLs are doing to some borrowers.

The report says a regulatory tweak in the rules in 2024 did nothing to help prevent harm, and financial mentors report people are trying to break into their KiwiSaver schemes to pay their debt.

The report recommends tightening the rules further to get better protection for consumers.

Today on The Detail, we talk to Michael Saadat, the International Head of Policy at Block, Afterpay’s Australian parent company, who says it’s not necessary for the New Zealand government to bring in any additional regulation.

“We think the evidence and the data should really drive any consideration of whether new regulation is required, and the data clearly shows that additional regulation, when it exists for other credit products, hasn’t delivered better consumer outcomes.”

He says such extra regulation brings additional costs which ultimately have to be passed on to consumers, “but also, we don’t want a situation where for example it’s harder for Kiwis to get access to a product like Afterpay, and that means that they have to go and find alternatives which are much more expensive, much less safe … and we just don’t think that’s a great outcome.

“We think the current regulatory settings have struck the right balance.”

Saadat says the New Zealand regulations are a clear example of how you can balance consumer protections with the need to promote innovation and foster safer consumer products.

He says our credit data collection agency, Centrix, which Afterpay must provide reports to, says New Zealanders who use BNPL products are in a healthy position.

“Traditional credit products like personal loans, credit cards and mortgages actually remain the primary drivers of hardship for New Zealanders.”

Centrix data says that 97 percent of the New Zealand BNPL transactions over Black Friday and Cyber Monday were paid off before or on the dates payments were due.

“Which again tells you that consumers are using the product in the way it was meant to be used. They’re using it wisely, it’s helping them budget for their purchases, and they’re not getting into trouble.

“It really is becoming a really mainstream product that consumers are using to help manage their spending,” Saadat says.

Asked why the bad press and the call for more regulation, he says that “financial mentors are experiencing consumers at the coal face who are in financial difficulty”.

“They would see consumers who’ve gotten themselves into trouble with all sorts of different products that they might have taken up. That is something that informs their approach to these issues, but fundamentally when we’re thinking about what policy settings should be in place, we do need to look across all consumers and understand what the overall consumer experience is.”

The Consumer NZ/FinCap report has three recommendations for Buy Now Pay Later lending.

It wants affordability assessment requirements introduced; a rule that lenders can’t charge unreasonable late fees; and it wants other lending like phone handset deals and in-store payment schemes that have late fees included in credit law protections.

Report author Victoria Stace, a senior lecturer at Victoria University of Wellington whose research is in areas of consumer credit and financial protection, says because BNPL didn’t have an interest component, it was outside of credit rules until 2024, when it was brought within the CCCFA rules – although in a limited way.

“If it’s used well, and you pay off your instalments without defaulting, it can work out better [than credit cards] because it’s an interest-free arrangement,” she says.

However, financial mentors are saying that of the clients they’re seeing with money troubles, more people have BNPL debt as a proportion of their overall debt than before the 2024 regulatory fixes.

Stace also suspects that BNPL credit is being used to pay off other debt.

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

Suzie Bates, Sophie Devine return for White Ferns series against South Africa

Source: Radio New Zealand

Suzie Bates (R) and Sophie Devine (L) of New Zealand celebrate their win over Pakistan at the 2024 T20 World Cup in UAE. PHOTOSPORT

Former captain Sophie Devine along with veteran batter Suzie Bates return to the White Ferns squad for this month’s T20 series against South Africa.

Devine, Bates, Georgia Plimmer and Flora Devonshire were all unavailable for the current series against Zimbabwe which finishes on Wednesday.

Bates has recovered from a quad injury, Devonshire a broken finger and Plimmer a shoulder injury.

The five match series, which includes double headers with the Black Caps and Proteas, starts in Mount Maunganui on Sunday.

Devine is set to make her return to the side for the first time since the World Cup in India in October, as the White Ferns continue their preparation to defend their title at the T20 World Cup in England later this year.

New Zealand is ranked fourth in T20 cricket with South Africa fifth.

Head Coach Ben Sawyer said the injection of Bates and Devine’s experience could only do good things for the team.

“Their quality on the field really does speak for itself but what they bring to the group culturally is really important for us as a team. I’m looking forward to having them mix in with some of the newer members of the squad.”

New Zealand’s Georgia Plimmer bats DJ Mills / PHOTOSPORT

Sawyer expressed his excitement at having Plimmer available again.

“Her role at the top of the order is a key one and it’ll be great to have her back as we continue to build toward that World Cup later in the year.”

The squad features 15 players, with Auckland Hearts’ Bree Illing and Otago Sparks’ Polly Inglis making way for Devonshire and Canterbury Magicians’ Lea Tahuhu after the first two T20Is.

White Ferns T20 Squad v South Africa

Melie Kerr (C) – Wellington Blaze

Suzie Bates – Otago Sparks

Sophie Devine – Wellington Blaze

Flora Devonshire** – Central Hinds

Izzy Gaze – Auckland Hearts

Maddy Green – Auckland Hearts

Brooke Halliday – Auckland Hearts

Bree Illing* – Auckland Hearts

Polly Inglis* – Otago Sparks

Jess Kerr – Wellington Blaze

Rosemary Mair – Central Hinds

Nensi Patel – Northern Brave

Georgia Plimmer – Wellington Blaze

Izzy Sharp – Canterbury Magicians

Lea Tahuhu** – Canterbury Magicians

*first two T20s only

**last three T20s only

Schedule

Sunday 15 March, 1st T20I’s, Bay Oval

Tuesday 17 March, 2nd T20I’s, Seddon Park

Friday 20 March, 3rd T20I’s,Eden Park

Sunday 22 March, 4th T20I’s, Hnry Stadium (Wgtn)

Wednesday 25 March, 5th T20I’s, Hagley Oval

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

NZTA picks cheaper but less effective option to fix SH2 through Waioweka Gorge

Source: Radio New Zealand

A slip on State Highway 2 through the Waioweka Gorge in January. Supplied/NZTA

The Transport Agency (NZTA) has picked a cheaper but less effective option to fix the highway through Waioweka Gorge north of Gisborne that leaves a greater likelihood of closures than a costlier “full” fix.

A newly released business case shows the recommended option would cut closures by 53 percent while a full fix would cut them by 70 percent.

But it would still deliver 83 percent fewer days closed, a 7.5 percent cut in deaths and serious injuries, and halve the cost of freight detours.

State Highway 2 through the 48km-long gorge was still being repaired and only partially open weeks after 40 slips shut it during January’s storms.

It was regularly out of action, costing the economy at least $8 million a day.

In the May 2024 business case – the latest there was – the NZTA board actually “endorsed” the full fix of 83 sites because that would make funding it a bit more certain.

But it instead recommended fixing 58 out of the 83 sites of rockfalls, slips and erosion on what it called a “lifeline route” – those 58 most likely to cut the road.

The other 25 less risky sites to fix would be “separately funded” and not start till 2029.

It suggested this was the quickest path.

“There is urgency to address as many sites as possible quickly and it is recommended that TREC [the project] deliver funding tranches 1 and 2 now,” the report said, “with funding of lower consequence … sites delivered through future operations and maintenance programmes or future capital works programmes.”

The difference in cost was put at $36-43m in 2023 dollars. A much cheaper third option was discarded.

State Highway 2 through the 48km-long gorge is only partially open weeks after 40 slips shut it during January’s storms. Supplied/NZTA

The agency told RNZ it was now reviewing all the sites to see if the report or the costs needed updating.

However, it also said last month that the 2024 business case was “complete and does not need any further work. So it can be utilitised without delay, subject to funding availability”.

The gorge was the country’s only stretch of highway to be rated in the worst at-risk category by a 2020 assessment.

The draft business case was begun in 2022 but storms delivering more damage kept on catching up on it.

“This 2022 business case was substantially complete, including engagement activities and inclusion of iwi in the business case process, but it was not yet submitted for approval at the time Cyclone Gabrielle hit.”

Some locals, saying Tairāwhiti had been suffering too long and too often, had called for the government to look at alternative routes north to Ōpōtiki but it said the clean-up had to come first.

The highway was closed for over three weeks after January’s storms and was on stop-go signals at times during the day and still shut at night as roadworks carry on.

The report said the board endorsed a full fix to ensure that if extra funding came available in future, it could be released for it.

The full fix was to “ensure a resilient level of service for this lifeline route”.

The estimated total costs were put at between $130m and $153m for the recommended option; and between $166m and $196m for the full fix.

The business case cautioned about leaving any risky sites ultimately unfixed.

“If lower risk sites remain unfunded there is potential these sites will deteriorate further and reduce the long-term resilience outcomes of the … investment.

“Without proactive interventions the demand for emergency funding and repairs on SH2 through Waioweka Gorge will continue.”

Of the 25 “maybe” fixes, 13 were of level three risks and 12 of level one and two. Four and five are the worst.

“Confirming full tranche 1 funding and obtaining additional tranche 2&3 funding will remain a high priority for the TREC team.”

The Transport Rebuild East Coast Alliance, or TREC, was set up to rebuild roads after Gabrielle in February 2023.

The business case had envisaged starting in 2024 on 32 projects in tranche one, then tranche two through to 2029, but was overtaken by events.

The full fix had a higher cost-benefit ratio of 1.3 versus 1.2 for what was recommended ($1.20 value back to the wider economy for each dollar spent).

Eight key risks were led off by three “high” ones: That costs would rise, the quake hazard from the Koranga Fault and how sensitive the area was to local iwi and hapu.

“Please note that future investment in the corridor is subject to funding approval,” NZTA told RNZ.

TIMELINE

  • 2020 – Waioweka Gorge is officially rated NZ’s riskiest highway
  • 2021 – Waka Kotahi preparing a business case for gorge highway
  • 2022 – Business case mostly complete
  • 2022-24 – Eight extreme weather events
  • 2023 – In February, Cyclone Gabrielle damages road
  • Later that year Transport Rebuild East Coast (TREC) is set up to rebuild
  • 2024 – Business case completed in May
  • 2025 – June and September rain closes road
  • Five repair projects begin after September
  • 2026 – 40 slips shut the highway in January
  • By March 2026 it is stop-go past roadworks during the day, closed at night
  • Business case is done but unfunded

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

Ministry of Social Development apologises for broken data system

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

Months’ worth of social housing and benefit data haven’t been published because of a broken system, and there’s no fix in sight.

The Ministry of Social Development (MSD) usually provides monthly updates, including information like the number of people in emergency and social housing, and how big the waitlist is, tracking changes over time.

Those have not been published since November, and the quarterly update due in December was also missing.

MSD has reported “high level” benefit data – the number of people on various benefits – as at December, but its usual monthly benefit reporting was affected too.

“The delay is related to our Information Analysis Platform, which is the tool we use to collate benefit and some housing data,” MSD insights general manager Fleur McLaren said.

She could not say when the information would be published.

“The system is ageing and requires manual fixes,” she said.

“Because of the age of the system, undertaking a fix has taken longer than we had first anticipated.”

McLaren apologised for the delay.

The problem did not affect the ministry’s internal data collection or reporting capability – that is, the data does exist – but it could not be publicised because that required additional checks, the ministry said.

MSD is in the midst of a 10-year, $2 billion overhaul of its 30-year-old IT systems that are so clunky they hold up benefits.

In 2024, it was reported that nearly one in four beneficiaries could be receiving the wrong level of support due in part to staff having to navigate multiple frontline IT systems.

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

Our Changing World: Iwi-led conservation in the Kaimai Mamuku ranges

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mohi Korohina at Killarney Lakes. RNZ

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It was during the Covid-19 pandemic and Mohi Korohina was working in Australia when he got the call. It was his grandfather – ‘no good staying in Aussie’, he said, ‘Come home. There’s a job here and you can help our people.’

Returning to reconnect with whenua and whānau, Mohi became team leader for Ngāti Hinerangi’s new conservation project – Wairere Mahi.

Wairere Mahi

The Wairere Falls carpark at the base of the Kaimai Mamuku ranges is just a short drive out of Matamata. The walk to the waterfall viewing platform is normally a busy one. The falls, which can be seen from the road, are a spectacular sight even at a distance. But the track has been closed since July 2025 due to safety concerns.

Wairere Falls is a special place to Ngāti Hinerangi and neighbouring iwi. A pathway beside the waterfall was once a vital connection between Waikato and Tauranga iwi, who traded harakeke (flax) for kaimoana (seafood). Part of the Wairere Scenic Reserve was returned to Ngāti Hinerangi in their 2021 Treaty of Waitangi settlement, and it’s here that Wairere Mahi began their pest trapping work.

First though, was the R & D, says Mohi. He was previously a farmer and some members of the team had hunting backgrounds but the skills of trapping and using locator technology to stay safe in the bush were new, he says.

A 40 hectares area at the base of the falls was the testing ground. Once those trap lines were established, the team set their sights on a larger area at the top of the ranges.

The original plan was to move up and trap across the top of the falls but the mountain and hut locations dictated a change of plan, says Mohi. “We came up with a new plan that we would go over to Te Tuhi and put in a thousand hectares over there.”

The Wairere Falls scenic reserve RNZ / Claire Concannon

Alongside this trapping work, Mohi is running a project to restore two small nearby lakes in an area also returned to the iwi. The goal is to remove the weeds and replant natives, with a focus on those plants important for rongoā Māori, says Mohi. “My personal idea for this area is that it becomes a hub for healing, that we can bring our kaumatua, that we can bring our aunties and our uncles out here.”

But ambitious goals need long-term resourcing. The Killarney Lakes project is currently being supported in-part by Matariki Forests who own the forestry surrounding the lakes, Wai Connections funding administered through GoEco, and support from umbrella organisation Manaaki Kaimai Mamuku Trust. Some of this is only short term.

Funding for Wairere Mahi originally came from the iwi capability fund, a pot of Jobs for Nature money, set aside for hapū and iwi to build capability in the conservation space. At the height of the trapping project it employed nine workers. Now it’s just Mohi.

The future of nature funding?

It’s not an unusual tale for a Jobs for Nature-funded project. This pandemic-era $1.2 billion fund ran from July 2020 to the end of June 2025.

While many projects finished once the money dried up, some have managed to source funding from elsewhere to continue and Manaaki Kaimai Mamuku Trust chief executive Louise Saunders hopes that will be their future too.

The co-governed charitable trust was set up in 2019, built on the back of 10 years of community concern about the state of the Kaimai Mamuku ranges. When Jobs for Nature came on the scene, the trust was allocated $19.4 million from the iwi capability portion to work with iwi and hapū throughout the area to develop business cases for their own individual projects, and subsequently support them.

At the height of the funding there were 12 projects. Now there are eight. They are spread across the Kaimai Mamuku ranges, across different ecosystems, and with each iwi or hapū having their own goals – pest animal control, weed removal, native planting and monitoring certain taonga species. The trust’s support is specific to whatever the project needs, whether that is help with budgeting, report writing, health and safety systems or different technical aspects.

“You name it, we’ve done it,” says Louise, “because each project entity is independent… it’s its own individual entity. And by building their capability, we’re building their resilience for the long term as an organisation.”

The trust has enough money to keep the lights on until the last quarter of this year, and is applying to local council and philanthropic funds for the next few years. But looking to the future, Louise sees an opportunity in enabling businesses to contribute to nature funding.

“Whether [it’s] because they want to support a local project or because they have a brand image or reputational reason…or because they need to be reporting on the nature risk or nature impact… or because there are trade restrictions… There’s all sorts of reasons why businesses are considering what their position on nature is right now.”

In June 2025, the government announced it was investigating the expansion of a voluntary nature credit market by supporting nine pilot projects across New Zealand and Manaaki Kaimai Mamuku Trust is involved in one of them. Boffa Miskell is working with the trust to see if they can adapt an international framework for use in New Zealand landscapes.

With an umbrella organisation supporting eight projects, and each project team with their own goals and methods, working across varied land types and tenures, there’s a lot going on. But Louise sees the complexity of their system as an advantage for the pilot. “If it’s going to fail, it’s going to fail here. But if we succeed, then it makes the market accessible to anybody wanting to participate.”

Listen to the episode to learn more. And sign up to the Our Changing World monthly newsletter for episode backstories, science analysis and more.

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

Advocacy group calls for National Fuel Security Plan to be activated in face of global shortages

Source: Radio New Zealand

An advocacy group wants more action from the government in the face of global fuel shortages. RNZ

A broad coalition dedicated to assessing and responding to risks arising from climate change and economic insecurity wants more action from the government in the face of what could be “massive economic disruption” caused by global fuel shortages.

New Zealand has been too slow to understand the nature of the crisis, Wise Response Society chair Nathan Surendran said, as the group called for more transparency from the government and the activation of the National Fuel Security Plan.

New Zealanders queued for petrol over the weekend as crude oil prices topped US$115 a barrel, the highest level since 2022.

Waitomo Group chief executive Simon Parham said demand at the company’s petrol stations went up 15 to 20 percent over the past week.

He said there was 20 days’ stock in the country and cargo was arriving by ship every other day.

Air Chathams chief executive Duane Emeny said the rising cost of oil was costing the small airline around $140,000 extra a month in fuel.

Emeny told Checkpoint the airline may have to cut flights should the price of jet fuel remain so high, and he wanted the government to look at ways to soften the blow on airlines.

Freight companies warned escalating costs would be passed on to “every product that arrives on shelves” as some operators halted operations and others added war and fuel surcharges.

Cars in a queue for petrol at Tasman Fuels in Epsom, on Sunday 8 March 2026. RNZ / Luka Forman

Surendran said it was clear the conflict would go on far longer than United States President Donald Trump indicated, but even if it ended swiftly, structural damage to refineries and oil facilities across six countries meant delays would last months, not weeks.

“New Zealand imports every drop of refined fuel we use, and the countries we buy it from are running out of the crude oil they need to make it. Eighty-one percent of our refined fuel comes from South Korea and Singapore – both countries have companies declaring force majeure, which means they legally cannot deliver what we’re contracted to buy, so the pipeline of fuel coming into New Zealand is breaking down.”

Beyond the two to three weeks of fuel in tanks in the country and the floating reserve of ships en route, supply was uncertain as refineries New Zealand bought from cut production and countries restricted exports to protect their own supply, he said.

This meant the preferential buy options on international oil markets New Zealand relied on may not be able to be redeemed.

“New Zealand is at the end of some very long supply chains and is more vulnerable than most to supply shocks of this kind.”

Other countries across the region, including Thailand, Myanmar and India, had already taken concrete action, including rationing and implementing oil contingency plans, while in Australia some distributors were rationing deliveries to retailers.

In the absence of a formal rationing framework, price rationing kicked in.

“The worst form of rationing is the one that happens by default – price spikes, panic buying, emptying out petrol stations and the people who can least afford it go without.”

New Zealand faced massive economic upheaval if it did not proactively manage the crisis, given the country’s export and import sectors relied on the timely supply of fuel, as did the productive sector including freight, agriculture, construction and fisheries.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis is chairing a new economic security ministerial oversight group to focus on fuel and supply chains. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The last time the government bought in measures to restrict fuel use was in the 1970s in response to disruption caused by the Arab-Israeli war and the Iranian revolution.

This time, the one-fifth of global fuel supply that would travel through the Strait of Hormuz had been affected, and that proportion could grow.

“The 1970s fuel crises were a few percentage point drops in fuel supply and that nearly tanked economies globally. This is several times larger in terms of the impact, and there’s no obvious endpoint to the conflict.”

The situation or one similar was predictable given resource depletion and the limits to growth, and should be considered as part of a future where fuel supply was more expensive, less secure, and less reliable.

The country faced some difficult conversations, but Surendran said New Zealand’s number 8 wire mentality would help in coming to grips with the challenge.

“We can adapt, we will adapt. The sooner we get moving on that adaptation, the better.”

On Monday, the Prime Minister announced the establishment of a new economic security ministerial oversight group – chaired by the Finance Minister – to focus on fuel and supply chains.

Christopher Luxon said New Zealand was well-placed to ride the wave of the latest shock.

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

Human trials about to take place on universal flu vaccine

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. CDC

If you get a regular flu vaccine, you may be well aware that it protects against the most prevalent strains. But because influenza viruses evolve rapidly, the flu vaccine is updated annually to provide protection against new strains.

A universal flu vaccine looks to change that, providing protection against all strains of the flu – past, present, and future.

It’s a step closer to becoming a reality, with the first human trials about to take place for Centivax’s universal vaccine Centiflu 01 in Australia.

US-based immunoengineer and founder of Centivax, Dr Jacob Glanville, who is leading the trials, told RNZ’s First Up Centiflu 01 was designed to solve the problem that flu vaccines have.

“This is a single vaccine that you don’t need to change, and it focuses the immune response on parts of flu viruses that never change. So, we are expecting the efficacy, the proportion of people who take the vaccine and then don’t get sick, to be much higher than current flu shots,” he said.

Dr Glanville said the vaccine’s animal trials showed the immune response was better than the commercial vaccines, which he said are 10-60 percent effective.

“Your immune system has basically a limited budget of antibodies and T-cells that it chooses to respond randomly, normally against a virus,” he said.

“We are just adjusting that budget to make it entirely focused on the best parts of the virus to focus on.”

Dr Glanville said that while a normal flu shot doesn’t work against future viruses, hence the need for annual shots, his company’s vaccine continued to provide protection from viruses 15 years later.

“You don’t know where flu is going to mutate, except you know it’s not going to mutate on these spots that haven’t changed in thousands of years,” he said.

“… That’s sort of the big transition here. It’s making flu shots into like a normal vaccine. One that you take, and then it provides anticipatory future protection for years to come.”

Phase one of trials in Australia is the first step in a broader programme that will enrol roughly 300 healthy volunteers in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.

Phase two of the trials would commence next year, and phase three in 2028, Dr Glanville said.

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Shoes on or off inside? What are the rules?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Across Aotearoa, our indoor shoe etiquette is shaped by culture, faith, upbringing and our own ideas about cleanliness.

Guna Magesan, president of the Hindu Council, says that even if a host tells his whānau shoes are fine inside, they’ll usually remove them anyway. For him, it’s about respect, cultural values, discipline and cleanliness.

It’s a habit of daily life which he says most Hindus, especially those from rural or traditional backgrounds, have become accustomed to, he told RNZ in an email. Even while living abroad, it’s become a tradition passed down through generations, he says.

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

Corey Peters sixth in Super-G at Winter Games

Source: Radio New Zealand

Corey Peters at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympics. © Photosport 2026 Jeff Crowe / Photosport

New Zealand paralympian Corey Peters has finished sixth in the men’s Super-G sitting at the Paralympic Winter Games in Italy.

Competing in soft snow conditions, Peters produced a solid run to record 1:15.42, but ultimately the Beijing 2022 silver medallist finished short of a podium repeat.

The 42-year-old finished fifth in the downhill earlier in the programme.

Jeroen Kampschreur of the Netherlands bounced back from the disappointment of registering a DNF in the downhill to take gold in a time of 1:13.08.

Defending champion Jesper Pedersen of Norway, who claimed gold in the downhill two days earlier, took silver in 1:13.80, with Andrew Kurka of the USA clinching bronze a further 0.15 seconds adrift.

“It was a good run with minimal mistakes, but I just didn’t attack it like the podium guys did and I got a little wide on some turns where I could have tightened the line a bit more,” Peters said afterwards.

“The conditions again were really soft and I could feel through some of the turns that the ski was wanting to break away in that sugary, slushy snow.”

Peters, who is competing at his fourth Paralympic Winter Games, turns his attention to the Men’s Giant Slalom Sitting – his final event at Milano Cortina 2026 – which takes place on Friday 13 March.

“The downhill and Super-G are my favourite events but coming off a podium finish at my last World Cup in Veysonnaz, Switzerland before the Games, a medal is not off the cards. It’s just a matter of going out there, enjoying the moment and skiing as hard as I can.”

Peters claimed men’s giant slalom silver on his Paralympic Winter Games debut in Sochi 2014. He added downhill bronze at PyeongChang 2018 before winning downhill gold and super-G silver at Beijing 2022.

Adam Hall opens his games with the men’s giant slalom standing on Friday.

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The price of instant gratification

Source: Radio New Zealand

Buy Now Pay Later schemes including Afterpay are popular with consumers, with one million Kiwis using them. Screenshot

Financial watchdogs want the rules about Buy Now Pay Later schemes strengthened, saying the last tweak didn’t work.

It’s been described as both a lifeline, and a trap.

Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) has been in New Zealand for about eight years. It’s still a relatively new product, but one million Kiwis use one of the four companies providing it.

However a new report from Consumer NZ and FinCap, with research done by Victoria University, has raised concerns about the damage BNPLs are doing to some borrowers.

The report says a regulatory tweak in the rules in 2024 did nothing to help prevent harm, and financial mentors report people are trying to break into their KiwiSaver schemes to pay their debt.

The report recommends tightening the rules further to get better protection for consumers.

Today on The Detail, we talk to Michael Saadat, the International Head of Policy at Block, Afterpay’s Australian parent company, who says it’s not necessary for the New Zealand government to bring in any additional regulation.

“We think the evidence and the data should really drive any consideration of whether new regulation is required, and the data clearly shows that additional regulation, when it exists for other credit products, hasn’t delivered better consumer outcomes.”

He says such extra regulation brings additional costs which ultimately have to be passed on to consumers, “but also, we don’t want a situation where for example it’s harder for Kiwis to get access to a product like Afterpay, and that means that they have to go and find alternatives which are much more expensive, much less safe … and we just don’t think that’s a great outcome.

“We think the current regulatory settings have struck the right balance.”

Saadat says the New Zealand regulations are a clear example of how you can balance consumer protections with the need to promote innovation and foster safer consumer products.

He says our credit data collection agency, Centrix, which Afterpay must provide reports to, says New Zealanders who use BNPL products are in a healthy position.

“Traditional credit products like personal loans, credit cards and mortgages actually remain the primary drivers of hardship for New Zealanders.”

Centrix data says that 97 percent of the New Zealand BNPL transactions over Black Friday and Cyber Monday were paid off before or on the dates payments were due.

“Which again tells you that consumers are using the product in the way it was meant to be used. They’re using it wisely, it’s helping them budget for their purchases, and they’re not getting into trouble.

“It really is becoming a really mainstream product that consumers are using to help manage their spending,” Saadat says.

Asked why the bad press and the call for more regulation, he says that “financial mentors are experiencing consumers at the coal face who are in financial difficulty”.

“They would see consumers who’ve gotten themselves into trouble with all sorts of different products that they might have taken up. That is something that informs their approach to these issues, but fundamentally when we’re thinking about what policy settings should be in place, we do need to look across all consumers and understand what the overall consumer experience is.”

The Consumer NZ/FinCap report has three recommendations for Buy Now Pay Later lending.

It wants affordability assessment requirements introduced; a rule that lenders can’t charge unreasonable late fees; and it wants other lending like phone handset deals and in-store payment schemes that have late fees included in credit law protections.

Report author Victoria Stace, a senior lecturer at Victoria University of Wellington whose research is in areas of consumer credit and financial protection, says because BNPL didn’t have an interest component, it was outside of credit rules until 2024, when it was brought within the CCCFA rules – although in a limited way.

“If it’s used well, and you pay off your instalments without defaulting, it can work out better [than credit cards] because it’s an interest-free arrangement,” she says.

However, financial mentors are saying that of the clients they’re seeing with money troubles, more people have BNPL debt as a proportion of their overall debt than before the 2024 regulatory fixes.

Stace also suspects that BNPL credit is being used to pay off other debt.

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War on the wallet: Iran conflict a ‘worst of worlds’ scenario

Source: Radio New Zealand

Motorists drive past a plume of smoke rising from a reported Iranian strike in the industrial district of Doha, 1 March 2026. MAHMUD HAMS / AFP

A worst of worlds scenario for consumers is how one economist is describing the dual effects of the Middle East conflict on both inflation and economic growth.

The war and the resulting supply worries are pushing up global oil prices, with Brent Crude climbing above US$100 a barrel on Monday, to reach its highest level since 2022.

The ensuing price jumps at the petrol pump will not only affect people’s wallets directly, they are expected to flow right through the wider economy.

“Petrol prices are a key input to so many businesses, and so as their costs rise, that’s likely to push up costs on the other side as well,” BNZ head of research Stephen Toplis said.

“And that’s not even taking into consideration the increased cost of doing business, like insurance costs rising, and the fact that you may not be able to use freight routes that you previously used.”

The deflation flipside

Toplis said with the fuel price increases acting like a tax on people’s income, the less money they have to spend elsewhere, which tends to mute economic growth, creating a deflationary effect.

“The Reserve Bank’s got this awful challenge of trying to be very aware of the immediate inflationary challenges versus the deflationary challenges further on down the track,” he said.

“But given we’ve already got rising inflation expectations, given that prices will pick up, given that annual inflation might remain at 3 percent or more for a little while, then there’s certainly going to be, I think, in the immediate future, more pressure on the central bank to bring forward its rate hikes without getting too carried away about things.”

Based on current data, September is BNZ’s pick for a hike in the Official Cash Rate (OCR).

The conflict’s effects are frustrating for New Zealand, said Toplis, because it has been a long climb out of a dark economic hole for the country.

“The recovery was fragile and any shock of any description is highly unwelcome at the moment and certainly one of this size couldn’t have come at a worse possible time,” Topliss said.

Markets match the Mid East turmoil

After a muted greeting to the start of the conflict in which markets took a “wait and see” approach, the ongoing conflict saw Australasian markets crash on Monday.

The New Zealand share market had its worst session since April 2025, meanwhile Australian and Asian markets also plummeted.

The benchmark NZX50 dropped 3.1 percent or 421 points, with across the board falls in shares as investors worry about the potential economic fallout from higher oil prices.

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Local government minister Simon Watts can’t guarantee rates cap won’t increase social housing rents

Source: Radio New Zealand

Local government minister Simon Watts. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The local government minister cannot guarantee a rates cap will not cause higher costs for tens of thousands of social housing tenants.

Simon Watts said the final rates cap policy was still being designed, but did not anticipate it would cause higher costs for those living in roughly 10,000 council-owned rental homes.

Advice from the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development (MHUD) to the Department of Internal Affairs said if rate rises were restricted and replaced with more user charges then the impact would likely be a rent increase for those living in council homes, which was predominantly pensioners.

It would also lead to increased levels of housing need, MHUD said.

Green MP Tamatha Paul said this “crucial advice” was omitted from the Cabinet paper Watts presented to his colleagues.

The advice also stated councils would likely shift to market rents for properties it owned, and rely on higher accommodation supplement payments for tenant assistance.

Yet, the impact of an increased Accommodation Supplement had not been costed by the government.

This would especially impact older New Zealanders, the advice read, advice that was not included in the Cabinet paper on the policy.

Watts told RNZ he was confident the concerns raised by officials, particularly around rents, were not going to be a concern.

“The rates capping final policy model has not been finalised yet.

“On that basis, the concerns that have been raised, in my view, are not predicated on what the final design of the policy will be.”

He said the government did not “anticipate” the rates cap would have an impact on council services like council-owned rental homes.

Asked if he could guarantee the cost increase would not occur, he would not. Instead he reiterated the government was not far from finalising the policy following a round of consultation.

He said it would be the appropriate time to comment once that was announced, and the advice could be compared to the final policy.

Paul said the minister did not have any evidence to back up his assurances, and was concerned 10,000 households in New Zealand would be hit with a “crisis in their weekly bills”.

“Unless he was going to put some specific carve out in the rates cap that councils could continue to collect rates for council housing subsidies, then I don’t understand how he’s supposed to stop that from happening.”

Green MP Tamatha Paul. VNP / Phil Smith

She was worried the minister did not consider council housing as part of local government’s core functions, and instead was a “nice to have”.

Paul said many people did not understand councils were some of the “biggest landlords” for pensioners and elderly people on fixed incomes who would not be able to “weather a dramatic rent increase”.

Watts told RNZ it was not the government’s intent to adversely impact any specific group, and wanted to make sure he was putting in place a policy that was going to provide benefit across the board.

“Where there are concerns that that may have an implication on one group over another, then we want to work through that and take that on board.”

The advice from MHUD was not included in Watts’ Cabinet paper on rates capping, because ministers got a lot of advice from officials “across the board, across a variety of areas”, he said.

‘Devastating for Dunedin’ – housing advocate

Leader for the Otago Housing Alliance, Aaron Hawkins, said the outcome of the minister’s policy decisions could be “devastating in Dunedin”.

“If councils had to charge market rents, it would simply be unaffordable,” said Hawkins, who was also running in the Dunedin City Council by-election.

Leader for the Otago Housing Alliance, Aaron Hawkins. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

There were more than 900 units owned by council in Dunedin, the vast majority of them homing older people living alone on fixed incomes.

Currently a single bedroom unit for a council tenant was $150 a week, whereas the current median rent for a one bedroom apartment in St Kilda was $375 a week, he said.

The maximum accommodation supplement in Dunedin is $80, “so there’s no way they’ll be able to afford the balance”.

“We’ll have hundreds of older residents looking for somewhere else to go, and there isn’t anywhere else obvious for them to go.”

He also was not suprised the advice was not in the Cabinet paper. He said rates capping was nothing more than a slogan, and no way to run a city let alone a country.

“People need to understand the implications of that, and this is one very stark example of where we are heading.”

Hawkins explained Dunedin would be impacted more than anywhere else because the council chose to maintain control of its supply of community housing, rather than transferring ownership in various forms into community trusts or community housing providers.

“That was the right thing to do, but it certainly does mean that the city is more exposed to this kind of outcome.”

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More scope for private sector to ease public healthcare woes, report says

Source: Radio New Zealand

A new report is calling for more collaboration between the public and private health sectors. Unsplash / RNZ

A new report from Westpac NZ is calling for more, and faster, collaboration between the public and private health sectors.

The Future Role of Private Healthcare in New Zealand report found the public health system was under growing pressure, with an ageing population and wider social challenges pushing demand ever further beyond capacity.

The end result was longer waiting times and widening health inequalities, particularly for Māori and Pasifika, said Westpac NZ industry economist Paul Clark.

He said the private sector was already delivering a range of services, including elective procedures.

“The opportunities for greater collaboration between the private sector and public health don’t stop there. We see scope for greater private involvement in areas such as infrastructure development in underserved communities, the upgrading of IT systems and the adoption of digital technologies,” said Clark.

The report recommended using public-private partnerships to improve efficiency, lower costs and expand timely access to diagnostics, rehabilitation, and elective care through more predictable service arrangements.

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Robin Beets was killed at a dementia unit but his family don’t want the other patient charged

Source: Radio New Zealand

Robin Walter Beets, 84, died in November 2023. Supplied

The death of an elderly man at a dementia unit following an altercation with another patient was a “tragic outcome that was preceded by a sudden eruption of anger without a known cause or warning”, a coroner says.

Police decided not to charge the patient with manslaughter. The family of the man did not want the patient charged and said the “best outcome is to ensure this doesn’t happen again to other families”.

Coroner Ruth Thomas’ report into the death of Robin Walter Beets in November 2023 was released to RNZ.

The report said the 84-year-old was living in the Stokeswood Care Home dementia unit in Lower Hutt.

Nurses and caregivers said Beets was a “gentleman” and a “lovely guy”.

In August 2023 Beets was assessed as needing Dementia Level 3 secure residential care and placed in the dementia unit operated by BUPA Care Service.

The unit co-ordinator said Beets required full assistance with daily living, orientation and direction.

“She said he liked to keep himself busy, he had previously worked as an engineer and would try to fix things like the stereo at the dementia unit even when it was working fine. He would sometimes move furniture around, which would frustrate other residents who became triggered by the noise of the moving,” the coroner said.

Coroner Thomas’ report discusses another patient who was staying at the facility. Staff recorded the patient could become “triggered by loud noises at times”.

“The staff had a care plan in place to manage [the patient’s] behaviour with de-escalation techniques and medication as needed. The staff found this was effective as he was easy to calm down and re-direct.”

A medical note for the patient said his “unsettled and aggressive behaviour” on some afternoons was due to sundowning.

“Sundowning is a deterioration in cognitive function and occurs in the late afternoon or evening. [The patient’s] medication regime was adjusted, and this was helpful in reducing his agitation. Staff were aware of this behaviour and would redirect and distract [the patient].”

On the evening of 9 November, 2023, Beets was seated at a table with two other residents near a bookshelf. The other patient was sitting at a different table with other residents.

A nurse said she was walking along a corridor when she heard the emergency alarm went off, so she ran back to the dementia lounge.

She saw Beets lying on his back near the bookshelf and the other patient was “on his knees with Mr Beets”.

The patient was shouting at Beets and was pointing at him with his hand “like the gesture you use to tell a person off”.

A caregiver said she was looking at some medication alongside a colleague and could hear some residents talking as well as the sound of chairs moving behind her and the patient shouting.

“In her peripheral vision she saw [the patient] near Mr Beets’ table. They were both standing, facing each other and [the patient] was holding Mr Beets’ collar. Mr Beets stepped backwards away from [the patient] and fell onto the floor.”

She described seeing the patient kneeling next to Beets with his arm raised and his fist clenched.

“Mr Beets was screaming in pain and [the patient] was yelling.”

The caregiver ran over and told the patient to stop and helped him to stand up. Another staffer got the patient away from the area.

The caregiver then noticed the dining chair Beets had been sitting on was on the floor, and thought he may have tripped over it.

The other caregiver who was also looking at the medication reported seeing both men standing face to face by the bookshelf.

The patient was holding Beets’ shirt collar. She described the patient as holding his right arm up with a closed fist.

“She then saw Mr Beets take two to three steps backwards, trip over a dining chair that was behind him, and fall to the ground.” She also saw the patient fall to the ground.

Beets was eventually transferred to Hutt Hospital where he underwent hip surgery the following day. There were no complications from the surgery, however his health declined in the days afterwards and he developed aspiration pneumonia. Beets died on 20 November.

A falls investigation report, carried out by BUPA, recommended new registered nurses receive further education to increase their knowledge of the fall prevention management in the dementia unit. The shared learning lessons part of the review said the unit had a staff meeting about early detection and intervention of residents in an altercation and ensuring clear documentation of an event and management.

Police sought an expert opinion from a consultant psychiatrist as part of its investigation. The psychiatrist said the patient would be “entirely unable to understand the charge, nature, purpose or consequences of court proceedings, unable to instruct defence counsel, unable to enter a plea and unable to participate in a hearing”.

It was his opinion that the patient would be unfit to stand trial. Police decided not to charge the man with manslaughter. As part of the investigation, police spoke with Beets’ family who said they did not want anyone charged adding “the best outcome is to ensure this doesn’t happen again to other families, in Stokeswood, or any care facility.”

Coroner Thomas said Beets’ family had questioned the circumstances surrounding his fall to understand whether anything could have been done to prevent it.

A Coroners Court Clinical Advisor reviewed the evidence and said the incident was “very unfortunate but unpredictable and not preventable”.

“Although incidents like this can be assumed at some level to probably have some sort of trigger in the person’s mind, it is often impossible, even in retrospect, to identify what it was. I am of the view, based on the provided information, that the staff provided very good care for [the patient], and did everything in their power to prevent the assault.”

Coroner Thomas said her assessment of the evidence in the inquiry revealed a “tragic outcome that was preceded by a sudden eruption of anger without a known cause or warning”.

“The staff had been actively managing [the patient’s] behaviour in the unit, but tragically on this occasion with no warning of a change in [the patient’s] behaviour, and both staff momentarily facing away from where the incident started, there was not enough time for staff to pre-emptively intervene and redirect [the patient] before he had grabbed Mr Beets by his collar. This incident took the staff by surprise, was unpredictable and I do not find the staff could have done more to prevent this altercation and therefore the tragic consequences that followed.”

In a statement to RNZ, Beets’ family said he was a “much-loved” husband, father, Grandad and Poppa who was “very practical, mechanically capable and a friend to many in Petone”.

“He was a very caring man, had a great laugh and was always willing to help others.”

Beets was diagnosed with dementia formally in early 2021, and as he deteriorated the family made the decision to go into full-time care in August 2024.

“Dementia is a terrible disease for both the individual and their family. As is expressed in the report, we have never wanted the other party who also suffered from this disease to be charged or punished for this incident.

“What was important for us as a family was to see if there were lessons to be learnt which may prevent another family suffering a loss in the same way. We appreciate the thorough work done by both the Police and the Coroner, especially that the specific questions we asked were addressed within her report. We also note the internal review that the Care Facility undertook which resulted in additional training and support being put in place.”

A BUPA spokesperson said acknowledged the coroner’s findings and the conclusion that this incident was “unpredictable and surprising”.

“Our thoughts remain with Mr Beets’ family, and we recognise the distress this event caused them. Moments like this are profoundly sad for everyone involved, and we continue to extend our sincere sympathy to the family.”

Aged Care Association chief executive Tracey Martin said in a statement to RNZ the case highlighted a “broader and growing reality”.

“Aged residential care is supporting residents with increasingly complex behavioural and clinical needs, particularly within dementia care settings.

“Dementia units are caring for people with significant behavioural and psychological symptoms, often in environments that were not originally designed for the intensity of today’s care requirements. As the acuity of residents rises, so too does the need for workforce support, training, clinical backup, and appropriate funding settings.”

She said while the coroner had not made recommendations, the case reinforced the importance of “continued investment in dementia capability, staff training, and system settings that recognise the complexity of modern aged care”.

Detective Inspector John van den Heuvel said as New Zealand’s median age continued to rise, the number of people living with dementia was also expected to grow.

“While fatal incidents within dementia units remain rare, resident‑on‑resident assaults do occur from time to time that require Police investigation. This can be a difficult and sad situation to deal with for everyone involved.”

People living with dementia often experienced significant cognitive impairment, meaning they may not fully comprehend their actions or form the intent required to be held criminally responsible, he said.

“As a result, the evidential test for prosecution is frequently not met, and pursuing criminal charges is unlikely to be in the public interest. Police assess these matters carefully and in close consultation with medical specialists, care providers, and legal advisors. In cases involving a death the coroner is also consulted.”

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NZ economy ‘on precipice’ as markets wobble, oil price rises

Source: Radio New Zealand

Economist Shamubeel Eaqub said there would be a wider inflation effect for New Zealand, beyond the increase in petrol prices that has already begun. Screengrab / Facebook

New Zealand’s economy is on a “precipice”, one economist says, as the country faces increasing pressure as a result of war in Iran.

The price of oil has almost doubled from where it was at the start of the year, pushing up fuel prices and creating the potential for inflation across a wide range of goods and services.

Economist Shamubeel Eaqub said there would be a wider inflation effect for New Zealand, beyond the increase in petrol prices that has already begun.

“The way to think about it is where it originates… essentially, the Middle East provides up to 80 percent of the crude oil to the main refineries we buy oil from in South Korea and Singapore. Already in Singapore, the refining crack spread – the difference between refined product versus crude, has increase from $3.5 to $35. That means 10c more at the pump, roughly. That’s the first wave.”

“The second is around how we use oil in so many parts of the economy. It’s true that for transport we’re far less dependent, that was the case in the past. But there are particular industries and regions that are very influenced by it. The biggest is, of course, aviation. I feel sorry for Air New Zealand… if you look at the aviation fuel prices, they have skyrocketed because it has to be processed from a particular type of crude.

“It’s all the transport sectors. It’s us driving cars, the diesel for our trucks, which is really the backbone of logistics in New Zealand is diesel. It comes through there.”

He said construction would be the most affected industry initially. “Paint, plastics, paint, chemicals, you name it. Everything is related or affected by the price of oil. Then it’s people like the agricultural sector, hugely affected through fertiliser, diesel… particularly dairy and horticulture.”

He said it could also have an effect on consumer risk appetite, which would influence air travel and tourism.

“If the conflict lasts longer, prices go up, it might damage demand for our goods and services that we export, which then turns to jobs and slows down an already precarious recovery that I hope we continue to have.”

ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner told RNZ the increase in oil prices had been “quite exponential.”

“It’s a pretty substantial shock that is negative for activity and growth.”

She said it would be inflationary beyond the price of petrol because fuel was an input into “pretty much everything”.

“All goods generally need to be moved around,” Zollner said.

Sharp increases in gas prices led to higher fertiliser prices, which could affect food costs.

“There’s a train of thought that thinks of economics as energy transformed, that’s how important energy is. If it spikes up, then down again quickly, there’s no harm done. If it stays high, it’s a problem.”

ANZ chief economist Sharon Zollner says the increase in oil prices had been “quite exponential.” ABC / Luke Bowden

She said there was already evidence in surveys that businesses’ inflation expectations were increasing, which added pressure.

“We’ve seen the New Zealand dollar come off a couple of cents which makes not only oil more expensive but all imports.”

Finance Minister Nicola Willis said on Monday that there could be a range of potential consequences for supply chains, trade, inflation and future economic activity. She said the Commerce Commission had been asked to step up its fuel price monitoring.

What does it mean for interest rates?

How the Reserve Bank is likely to respond is not yet clear – it could be argued that it will need to increase interest rates to combat inflation, or decrease them to soften the blow to the economy.

“The kind of inflation we’re talking about is supply shock increases,” Eaqub said. “Which could become embedded if the economy is too strong. But the flip side is the economy might not be strong enough and we spiral. So we’re kind of in that precipice at the moment, just as the war is on a precipice.”

Zollner said the Reserve Bank would be weighing up the inflation effect against the fact it was bad for growth and employment if the war was sustained.

“People aren’t sure whether this makes the bank likely to raise rates sooner or later… It’s difficult for markets to deal with.”

Westpac chief economist Kelly Eckhold said petrol prices were on track to return to levels not seen since the invasion of Ukraine.

Beyond that, he said it seemed reasonable to expect inflation could pick up, but he did not think interest rates would follow quickly.

He said the Reserve Bank would probably view the increase as being for a finite period, and demand could be reduced in future because of it, as well as there being more pressure on household budgets.

“They’ll probably be thinking that if they look forward 18 months ahead, which is around about the period where a policy action now would have its impact, if anything, the issue might be a need to move interest rates the other way.

He said there was a risk that for the next three to six months the economic recovery would “take a pause”.

“Consumer confidence in particular, I think, is often related to changes in fuel prices because that’s a really frequently purchased item in the budget. So, you know, I can easily imagine that there might be a bit of a hiccup or a delay in the recovery that goes for a little while.”

Westpac chief economist Kelly Eckhold said petrol prices were on track to return to levels not seen since the invasion of Ukraine. Supplied / LinkedIn

He said it was not impossible that the government might act to cut the fuel tax again, as had happened last time petrol prices spiked. Eaqub agreed. Willis said on Monday that the Government was not considering it.

Infometrics chief forecaster Gareth Kiernan said it felt a bit like the 2025 US tariffs again.

“Suddenly, a whole lot going down overseas and any hopes of a recovery sort of getting hit in the kneecaps again.”

He said the longer the conflict continued, the worse it would be for the New Zealand economy.

But he was less convinced that it wouldn’t mean higher interest rates.

“There’s a real risk there with the economy.”

He said 10 years ago, businesses facing cost pressures tried to cut costs elsewhere.

“Whereas now you go and talk to businesses and there is still a sense that if cost pressures are coming through, we had no choice but to pass them on five years ago when everybody was in the same boat and everything was rising in price.

“But we feel like there’s a pretty good chance we could do that again… it hasn’t taken long for transport organisations, companies to be going, okay, I’ve got a fuel adjustment factor in place and you’re going to be feeling that from next week… There is a real risk that inflation does [pick up] and possibly that the Reserve Bank might just be a little bit slow to realise what’s going on.

“Which means, ultimately, they need to be raising rates sooner and probably further as well, despite the fact that economic growth and the economy are not in a particularly great space.”

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One in two large businesses successfully attacked by cybercriminals in last year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Almost one in two large businesses were successfully attacked by cybercriminals in the last year. Unsplash / RNZ

AI-empowered cybercriminals are attacking businesses at unprecedented speeds with more than 80 percent of phishing emails containing AI-generated content that is difficult to detect.

Kordia’s 10th annual New Zealand Business Cyber Security Report indicates 44 percent of large businesses were successfully attacked in the past 12 months, and 61 percent suffered a serious business disruption, including extortion in one-in-five cases.

Vulnerabilities exploited

“This year’s survey actually showed that we had a lot more voice-based and video-based attacks reported by participants,” Kordia-owned Aura Information Security general manager Patrick Sharp said, adding that biometric data had been used for a long time to authenticate users.

“One of the problems with using things like voice or your face as a form of authentication is that you can never change it.”

Harsher penalties and ecucation

Top of the wish list was for government-supported, educational programmes to raise cyber security awareness, with harsher penalties for businesses who failed to protect data and mandatory reporting requirements for businesses hit by major attacks.

“To date, New Zealand’s privacy laws have not been as punitive as other countries’ when it comes to privacy breaches,” it said.

For example, New Zealand penalties of up to NZ$10,000 were available for a small number of offences – compared to maximum penalties of more than A$50m in Australia.

“The EU, UK and Australia are all explicitly tying cyber resilience to director accountability, expanding mandatory incident reporting, and moving from voluntary guidance to enforceable standards,” it said.

“These are decisive moves to unify government and business standards to defend against the scourge of state and criminal threat actors assaulting their countries.”

Global trends

Among Kordia’s findings was a Microsoft Digital Defence Report 2025, which found AI-assisted phishing campaigns achieved click-through rates of around 54 percent, compared with 12 percent for traditional phishing emails.

Sharp said AI-assisted attacks preyed on people’s emotions.

“They’ll try to get you to do something because they have ingratiated themselves with you, or because they’re threatening, or because they’re trying to pressure you to do something. So if you feel pressure to do something, if you feel slightly uncomfortable about it, there’s not someone you know or anything like that. Just don’t trust it,” he said.

McKinsey reported phishing volumes increased 1200 percent from 2022 to 2025, targeting an organisation every 39 seconds with a daily economic loss totalling $18m.

New Zealand’s concerns

Kordia’s survey of business leaders found 24 percent were concerned about the misuse of AI in their business, with improper use among the top three cyber-security priorities.

Survey respondents were focused on improving or implementing employee training, maintaining best practice, higher security and software for detection with more frequent updates and improved response coordination.

Threat perceptions varied by business size.

Smaller organisations with 50-99 employees were most concerned about phishing and ransomware attacks leading to extortion, with organisations with 100-200 employees concerned over AI misuse and malicious insider threats.

Larger businesses with 201-500 employees were most concerned about distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, which could disrupt operations, while those with more than 500 employees saw AI-generated cyber-attacks as a major threat.

Half of the business leaders said they would be willing to pay a ransom to a cyber criminal, and 8 percent of them had paid a ransom over the past year.

Insurance costs reflect risks

“Companies are certainly still using insurance, but it’s not the first thing they should be doing. The first thing companies should be doing is trying to reduce their risk down to the minimum level possible,” Sharp said.

While 17 percent of businesses made a claim on their cyber insurance over the past year, the cost of insurance was beyond the reach for many businesses, who were absorbing the costs, which included the loss of sensitive information, interrupted supply chains, fines and extortion.

A third of the businesses who suffered an attack estimated it took two months to resolve the issue, while a third doubted they could recover from a major attack.

Yet, 25 percent had not taken steps to secure the data, had no cyber security awareness programmes or had not practiced an incident response plan.

The World Economic Forum indicated the surge in successful attacks was compounded by a widening skills gap, with just 14 percent of organisations employing the right cyber talent, as the skills gap grew by 8 percent since 2024.

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

‘Sovereignty at stake’, Iranian diaspora says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Women members of Iran’s Red Crescent society stand near smoke plumes from an ongoing fire following an overnight airstrike on the Shahran oil refinery in northwestern Tehran on March 8, 2026. AFP

On 28 February, Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed by joint US and Israel attacks on his residence. A further week of strikes on Iran have targeted nuclear and military sites, including airfields, radar, and naval facilities.

The Red Crescent estimates the death toll has topped 1000 people across Iran, including at least 165 girls killed when their school was bombed in the city of Minab. Iran has retaliated against military and civilian targets across the Gulf states, and Israel has also attacked Hezbollah in Lebanon.

As the strikes continue, Iranians living here in New Zealand talk to Kadambari Raghukumar about their views on the war and the divide in the community that it has amplified.

Mahdis Azarmandi, an expert in Peace and Conflict studies and senior lecturer at University of Canterbury said: “I think what people need to understand that this war is motivated and it’s a continuation of the genocide in Gaza, the war in Lebanon, of the restructuring of West Asia. So it has to be seen politically in a broader context of how to rearrange the, you know, Middle East or West Asia more accurately. And that has been underway for a period of time. And Iran, as one of the few countries left that retains sovereignty, is a threat to the reordering of that part of the world.”

Many in the Iranian community are divided over the conflict.

Rubble of destroyed buildings is pictured at the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted Rweiss neighbourhood in Beirut’s southern suburbs, on March 8, 2026. AFP

While some Iranians around the world have celebrated the death of Khamenei and welcome the attacks, there are large numbers denouncing the assault on Iran and decrying the attack on their nation’s sovereignty.

Mahdis said: “This is not just about people who opposed the war and people who are celebrating the war in some park. It means that entire families and communities are going to be completely divided for a very long time. So that is what concerns me on a personal level. I think it’s that how many relationships are broken right now because of it.”

Separating the personal from the current politics is hard, Mahdis tells Raghukumar – especially for those who had to leave Iran during the 70s or 80s – either during the rule of the last Shah of Iran, Mohamed Reza Pahlavi, or after he was deposed in 1979, when the first Supreme Leader, the Grand Ayatollah Khomeini took power.

Mahdis said: ” I think I am constantly living through all of these layers of personal experience. So the personal experience of being in a diaspora Iranian with a particular kind of relationship to the Islamic Republic and who sees these things not in isolation from each other, but in conjunction. And I think that is what differentiates the people who are now more concerned and maybe taking a step back and defending the sovereignty of Iran, which I think is what is at stake.”

Smoke rises from the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese village of Kfar Tibnit on March 5, 2026. RABIH DAHER / AFP

The current bombings came after weeks of negotiations between Iran and US and are viewed by many commentators as a breach of international law.

Dr Behzad Dowran has been living in New Zealand for eight years. He said: “From the past, we can remember they invaded many countries. And the result was just, innocent people were killed over there. And nothing but misery they gifted to those countries.”

In January, Dowran happened to be in Tehran, a witness to the violent protests that saw thousands of people killed. Behzad said “nobody can imagine being attacked by negotiators”.

“We have had many internal issues, many internal problems, mismanagement or wrong policies, many things. But we have had this experience, and we were going to manage it in a way internally to solve it.

“It is not easy to solve these sort of problems when you have long term of sanctions. But we managed it, more or less. But they attacked the country just in the middle of negotiations.”

Dowran said he was “very angry” because it violated international law.

“Nobody has the right, no country has the right to invade another country and kill the head of another country. And I am sorry and I am very sad that I see my Iranian comrades here think this is a thing that they may celebrate.”

Another Iranian, who preferred to remain anonymous for concerns of their safety, told Here Now that “the Iranian community is very diverse. Whatever the people inside Iran want that is what should matter most. Many people believe that a lasting solution must come from inside Iran, not imposed from outside”.

“Different approaches doesn’t we mean are enemies to one another. Most of us want the same ultimate goal -a better, freer, more dignified future for Iranians. But the ways we reach that goal may be very different.”

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