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An ANZAC – In Memory of a Man of Peace

ANZAC Karakia - image by Selwyn Manning.

Feature By Selwyn Manning – first published in 1998, but Chino’s story and the concluding paragraphs show how poignant its message is today.

ANZAC Karakia – image by Selwyn Manning.

ANZAC Day – April 25 always brings to mind one man more than any other. Why? I don’t know, perhaps it was his honesty, his humbleness. This man lived in Papakura, a town about 30 kilometres south of Auckland City, New Zealand. He had witnessed the worst and the best of human endeavour. He called himself Chino.

His simple life’s story made an impact, he shared his wisdom and he passed hope for us all as we approached this new century, he left a legacy of hope.April 25 1998 was a special day for Papakura’s Chino Mulligan.

Every year since 1945 Chino joined his mates outside the Returned Services Association buildings. There they would shuffle into lines two files wide and an arm-reach space between each man.

Within the ranks there once were old-man soldiers who had braved the Turkish machine guns at Gallipoli on April 25 1914.Each year they were fewer in number, five, then, three, then one, and now, well they have all passed away.

This year Chino looked at all his World War II mates with tears in his eyes. There was little different about this march, except that Chino noted fewer of his friends there to make the grim pilgrimage to the Papakura Cenotaph. There was one difference this year though. Chino decided to talk to a southern Auckland journalist about his war experiences, he wished to be honest, to tell his own tale of what his life has meant to himself.

He began his memoirs with tears. And it was a fitting start he said because that is what war did to him.

“I spent most of my time on my knees, in tears, frightened and praying for my life to be spared,” Chino told me as we sat inside the lounge of his humble unit.

Chino said the weight he felt at the death of his brothers during the war had never left him. Never had he forgotten how his friends were killed in the Western deserts of Africa during the battles of El Alamein, against Field Marshal Erwin Rommel’s Panzer forces.

From the cool pre-dawn mist, Papakura’s returned soldiers turn from Wood St into Great South Road. Others wait quietly at the curb, we watch on as a stirring from the Palm Trees begins to flutter. First is heard a chucky-clunk noise as the soldier’s medals tap tap tap against each man’s chest.

Then comes a click of boots on road, resounding like hammers upon leather, as 200 men relive memories most care to leave untold.

There is Chino. He marches with one leg moving forward a little slower than the other. But he and all the men still march in time. Chino’s face, like all the other men’s, is taught. Concentration centres on keeping in file, on pride, on survival, on those to whom they have promised to remember: “Lest We Forget”.

This year the line of men is once again thinner. And again a tear breaks its shackles to trickle down Chino’s smile-line.The birds in the Palm Trees awake to herald the approaching dawn. Their chorus is the light-side of this solemn ritual. The men form at “attention”, then “at ease”. The service honours the sacrifice each man, alive and dead, has made in their attempts to create a free-world.And of course then, at the end, a bugler plays The Last Post. All who gather now remember friends, brothers, mates, fathers, uncles, lovers – the men who did not return home from war. And then the rays of a new day burst across the sky. All present say: “Lest We Forget.”

Chino sits surrounded by photos of his family, many in uniform. A black blazer decorated with a long line of service medals pinned to its chest is folded over an armchair.

Beside Chino, on the floor, is a grey woollen blanket. He has kept it with him since 1943 when it kept him warm on cool north African nights. That blanket is as good as new, neatly folded. The man shows it off with pride.

Chino says he was never a brave man. Not even wen he fought in the Maori Battalion in Egypt to halt the German advance.

“I spent more time on my knees than fighting. And I’m here today because I could run fast. I prayed then and I still pray today.”

The ageing man’s hands tremble. He glances at them, always aware of his approaching frailties.Back during World War II Chino was just a boy. He signed up for the Maori Battalion at just 15 years of age. His older brothers had already gone to war. Army recruiters were convinced the boy was “of age” after Chino showed them his father’s dole book. That book did not list a birthdate. But recruiters knew you had to be 21 years-of-age to get the dole, so Chino was in.

That dole book was his ticket for a journey that would consume the rest of his life.
Chino’s war began in North Africa in 1941. “I was a boy on a mission,” he said. “I had back-dated my age. My parents didn’t know I’d joined the Army until it was time to leave. My mother cried and they asked me to stay. But they did not stop me from going.”

Chino was with the 7th reinforcements, know as Maori Battalion 28. Egypt was his first base for about nine months. He did not see any fighting then. After this he was moved off to Palestine for six months. Then to Syria. There, Chino remembers: “We used to make our bed out of sacks. Lie it on the ground on the stones in the desert. We had ten men per tent. We would have to take a shower once each week, we had to walk five miles to take a shower.

“I first saw action in 1943. We were trucked from Syria, through Palestine, past the Sea of Galilee to Egypt.”

Chino and his battalion knew Rommel was waiting for them: “We were not too happy about that. But our job was to stop Rommel. But then he was a great general.”

A German Junkers Ju-87 Stuka dive-bomber attacking a British supply depot near Tobruk Libya in October of 1941.

The 7th reinforcements had only just arrived at their Egypt base when Rommel’s tanks surrounded them. News of an impending ambush swept through the gathering: “I had just arrived when a man said ‘go and have a feed Chino’. Then from out of nowhere came this screaming sound!”

It was a German Stuka bomber sweeping down on the Maori Battalion: “The screaming of the Stuka was a killer. As the screaming got louder we would dive for the stones. If you had a helmet on you were okay.”But the fear was there. I wondered then as I do now, ‘How did we get through it?’.

“The Stuka swept down and dropped a bomb. I wondered what the bloody hell had happened.”The earth shuddered. Dirt flew in all directions. The explosion left ears ringing.

“After that, after the attack was over, the man told me again to go and have a feed. But I wouldn’t.”

Chino had lost his appetite. First he dug a trench for protection in case more Stukas loomed in for the attack.With the night came confirmation that they were indeed surrounded by Rommel: “We were told the attack would come with dawn.”

The Maori Battalion got together. They decided to strike Rommel’s soldiers first. They got their weapons ready. Worked out their plan. Chino and his fellow soldiers stalked up to the German lines.

“We did the Maori Haka [a Maori war dance]. Ka mate! Ka Mate!” The Battalion all chanted in unison. The sound was electrifying, Chino said. It carried on the desert night air.

Chino felt the pride of his homeland. The boy became brave. “Ka Mate, Ka Mate!. We were all doing the war cry. It gave us courage and it scared the Germans. They didn’t like it. And we fought to survive.”

Chino and the Maori Battalion broke through he Panzer lines. They cut an opening for all the Battalion’s trucks and guns. They were surrounded no more.

Young Chino saw a lot more action. In World War II the Maori Battalion sustained extremely high casualties, and at a rate disproportionate to its members.

The effects of the slaughter were soon felt by the families back home in New Zealand. Generations of future Maori leaders were wiped out.

But of all his war experience the hardest thing for Chino was visiting his mates in hospital, seeing the wounded: “That always brings tears to my eyes,” he said.

World War II eventually came to its conclusion. Chino returned to New Zealand in August 1945. He then entered J-Force, the men whose task it was to help Japan get back on its feet.

Chino’s war didn’t end. “After the war I couldn’t settle.” He went on to serve four years as a Warrant Officer Class Two with the 163rd Battery in the Korean War, mainly at a place called Kap Yong.

“We were often in the thick of it, but it was the cold that was our worst enemy,” Chino said. While at Kap Yong, Chino heard that his brother, also fighting the Chinese and North Korea, had “got smacked”.

“I visited a clearing station and I heard someone moaning. I thought ‘I know that voice’. It was my brother Raymond!”

Raymond was paralysed, had a shrapnel wound to his spine. He was eventually shipped back to New Zealand. Had his leg amputated. Married. Had children, and died of cancer “some years ago”.

Chino said: “As I get older all of my friends are dying off. Many were killed during the wars. All those buddies were lost over there,” he gestures with his hand.

“Please remember I was no hero. I was not brave. I was scared. I ran often. I did more praying. Still do it.

“I lost two brothers in El Alamein and another wounded in Korea.”ANZAC Day is sad,” Chino’s hands shake as eyes relive memories of pain.

“I don’t want young people today to go to a war and see what we went through. That is my wish.”

ANZAC Day April 25 1998 was a special day for Chino Mulligan. It was his last.

Chino Mulligan died from cancer several months after this interview. He is survived by his wife, daughters, sons, and grandchildren.

His life is a poignant reminder of the most destructive century in the history of this world. His wish for a lasting peace was an impassioned cry, for all who remain, to approach the advent of this new century with a desire for conciliation at home and abroad. Lest We Forget.

The uncanny eeriness of ANZAC Day

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By Carolyn Skelton. “The Colour of Earth … was dull and browny red” P j Harvey’s the “Colour of Earth”, is an anti-war song that channels the ghostly voice of a soldier, Joey, who died fighting in an ANZAC trench at Gallipoli – his bones are left lying for two decades on a eery hill. The video positions the song within an English pastoral scene, where the sounds of the ANZAC lament overlays a dehumanised, melancholic landscape. This song is on an album that is included in a vast array of creative works that Robert McFarlane says depict an eeire uncanny – uncanny here being both somewhat spooky, with various discordant elements that are out of place. Spectres and ghosts are historically displaced, lurking behind present day landscapes that mix mythology and lived culture. They are exemplified by the early 20th century ghost stories of MR James.  In his writing, peaceful rural locations are stripped back by some freaky binoculars that can see the brutal past lurking behind the landscape. The past is temporarily uncovered as spectres or ghosts that eerily appear and disappear – representing the continual forgetting of historical traumas and brutalities. McFarlane argues that much of the current interest in the eerie uncanny comes from a “dissenting” left against “austerity politics”:

What is under way, across a broad spectrum of culture, is an attempt to account for the turbulence of England in the era of late capitalism. The supernatural and paranormal have always been means of figuring powers that cannot otherwise find visible expression.
The video of the P J Harvey song about a Gallipoli casualty is a dissident visualisation from the (once) imperial centre. The video begins with the band standing somewhat awkwardly and out of place, in front of green foliage, singing the song acapella. The later parts of the video visualise pastoral settings, calm and seemingly peaceful, of “England’s green and pleasant land”, but eerily empty of people :thatched cottages, cultivated woodland landscapes, farmhouses with the tools, chattels and animals of agricultural labour signify activities of the missing people.  England flags hang on the farmhouse walls.  The images of two men’s weathered faces appear, silently in front of the camera – out of place, and strangely very real. ANZAC Day & historical forgetting The dominant way of talking about Gallipoli in Aotearoa/NZ and Australia today seems very different. It’s all independent nationhood, sacrifice and fighting heroically so our country could be free. Here there is a great deal of historical amnesia.  This particular instance of forgetting is compounded by historical amnesia about an earlier trauma – the brutal suppression of Māori resistance in the mid- late 19th century Waikato.  Consequently, while some Māori joined the imperial forces in the European war, others were opposed to supporting the British Crown in WWI. However, in recent weeks, beyond NZ’s mainstream media, alternative voices have been challenging the dominant portrayal of ANZAC Day. Chris Trotter for instance, explains how New Zealand went to war, not as some democratically decided vote in parliament, but by an official announcement once Britain decided to go to war:
…all the key decisions that led New Zealand into the First World War were made in London – not Wellington. New Zealanders officially learned that they were at war with Germany and Austria-Hungary when, on 5 August 1914, the Governor of New Zealand, one Arthur William de Brito Savile Foljambe, fifth Earl of Liverpool, stood upon the steps of Parliament, in front of a crowd of 15,000 Wellingtonians,” committed NZ to support Britain in the war.
Searches on the NZ National Library’s Papers Past website, reinforces this perspective. In 1914, newspapers were the main media through which New Zealanders go their news.  The telegraph was the means by which international news was transmitted quickly to NZ news media. Radio did not go fully national until the 1920s. Papers past Aug 5 declare war Prior to Britain’s declaration of war on 5 August 1914, the papers were closely monitoring developments in Europe, and the NZ government was also watching closely, and preparing to send NZ troops, once Britain declared war.   When Britain declared war, it was announced in NZ newspapers with large letters – a way of emphasising the significance in the days before more sophisticated graphics and images. The proclamation, quoted By Trotter at the above link was met in Wellington with cheers and the singing of the (British) National Anthem. Papers past war declaration_4 A Poverty Bay Herald article expressed enthusiasm for New Zealanders going to war in support of the British Empire:
Germany’s overpowering’ ambition to break England’s mastery of the seas and to become Overlord of Europe was ‘bound to produce a crisis sooner or later. … The Motherland has been assured of the fullest support of all the Dominions.
An article in The Colonist gives more of a background to the outbreak of war, citing Germany’s breaking of international conventions, its violation of the independence of the “little state of Luxembourg” and then the setting in motion of a plan to go through Belgium to invade France. The article then goes on to characterise Britain imperial power in terms we now see attributed to the US:  with the (alleged) manifest destiny to protect “freedom” and peace in the world:
Her glorious traditions and her position among the nations have laid upon Great Britain: the supreme duty of interposing to thwart the realisation of Germany’s Bismarckian schemes, which, as Mr. j Balfour prophetically declared in 1912,… The British nations will make those sacrifices cheerfully, realising that the Empire is fulfilling its destiny and that it has never unsheathed the sword in a more just and righteous cause. The hour of crisis has found the Empire united.
Papers past roll of honour The war that followed was a national trauma for New Zealand and Australia.  It is sobering to read the endless NZ newspaper articles listing the dead and injured – mostly young men in their teens and early twenties. Such trauma, like the earlier ones experienced by Māori as the result of colonisation and land wars, are prone to historical forgetting – diversions, glorification, selective amnesia – because the reality is very hard to bear.  And such realities return in cultural forms of eeriness, ghostliness, and spectres that appear and disappear. –]]>

Media interest in public interest media: #SaveCampbellLive

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By Carolyn Skelton. One interesting aspect of the SaveCampbellLive demonstrations today throughout NZ, was the amount of media coverage of them. [caption id="attachment_3614" align="alignleft" width="300"]Rally save Campbell Live K Rd April 2015 Protesters gather at the corner of Karangahape Road and Symonds Street, Auckland.[/caption] I have been on much larger protests (ones against the TPPA for instance) that have got far less attention. (Anti-TPPA campaigner, Professor Jane Kelsey was present among the small crowd at Auckland’s SaveCampbellLive rally today). As mainstream news articles have stated, the couple of hundred protesters today in Auckland were tooted by a large number of passing vehicles – all kinds of vehicles, buses, trucks, private cars, commercial vehicles.(Stuff Report here.) A Māori TV crew were present from the beginning of the march, and covered the march along Symonds Street, to the Media Works Studios on New North Road. [caption id="attachment_3615" align="alignleft" width="300"]Ruth Crichton speaks to crowd Ruth Crichton speaks to crowd outside MediaWorks[/caption] The march was organised by a student at Unitec, Ruth Crichton.  Her lecturer, John Stansfield was also at the protest, reminding onlookers that Campbell live had given some pretty significant critical coverage to the awfulness of Zero Hour Contracts.  Speakers and protesters frequently pointed to the importance of public interest news and current affairs coverage for democracy.  Many lamented the fact that Campbell Live is one of the last bastions in NZ of such mainstream media coverage. Stansfield noted that it wasn’t the mainstream media that broke the ponytail story.  One of the protest chants was “Speak truth to Power: save Campbell Live”. [caption id="attachment_3616" align="alignleft" width="225"]David Beatson speaking at protest David Beatson speaking at the protest[/caption] In his speech, David Beatson continued the theme of the importance of public interest media for democracy.  He ended by saying ‘Save John Campbell”.  This implies that if Campbell Live is not saved, there needs to be a future for Campbell elsewhere. John Drinnan reports that RNZ is interested in taking Campbell should his TV3 programme not be saved.  Drinnan states that Campbell has said he is not in talks with another broadcaster. Lisa Owen, whose TV3 programme, The Nation has been strongly criticised for almost no coverage of the Campbell Live issue, came out to observe the protest at Media Works, smartphone in hand (see for instance Bradbury’s critique of The Nation).. She did give this protest a fair amount of exposure by tweeting her video of John Campbell talking to the demonstrators. https://twitter.com/lisaowennz/status/591407030822313984 [caption id="attachment_3617" align="alignleft" width="300"]Maori TV and Lisa Owen Māori TV & Lisa Owen watch protest outside MediaWorks[/caption] Drinnan points out that Labour also made political appointments to broadcasters.  But such an appointment is only part of the current speculations.  There are accusations of possible politically-motivated interference by such an appointee with respect to programming.  And these concerns occur in a context in which there has been an extensive erosion erosion of public interest media under John key’s watch.  The mediascape is now thoroughly dominated by commercial imperatives.  The potential axing of Campbell Live is thus part of a significant moment in our media history – one that could take a turn for the worse… or maybe the betterment of us all?  Perhaps that is why there is so much media attention to the Save Campbell Live protests. As Beatson said, Campbell Live (and public interest media’s importance) is not about delivering eyeballs to advertisers, but about its contribution to democratic debate. Funds had been raised to produce a video to be included in one of Campbell Live’s ad spots tonight.  However, an organiser at the protest said TV3 would not broadcast it so they were going to put it online.  They hope it will go viral. https://youtu.be/1oEG14sOS1g]]>

NZ: ‘Peter Arnett’ journalism school forced to close over lack of students

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MIL OSI Analysis – Te Waha Nui/Pacific Media Watch

Pulitzer prize-winning correspondent Peter Arnett with Osama Bin Laden. The SIT journalism school was named after Arnett. Image: Hong Kong University

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Item: 9232

Madeleine Grimshaw AUCKLAND (Te Waha Nui/Pacific Media Watch): The journalism school at the Southern Institute of Technology (SIT), named after the celebrated local foreign corresondent Peter Arnett, has closed due to a severe lack of enrolments. Over the last four years there has been an average of only six graduates a year and only one student graduated at the end of 2014. Senior SIT tutor Paddy Lewis said a majority of students who started the course dropped out half-way through for a variety of reasons. “We were starting off the year with anywhere between 15 and 20 students, but there was a huge drop-off at the end of the first semester. We were ending up at the end of the year with less than half of that. “Most of them didn’t feel comfortable in the journalist role; being bold and asking questions. A lot of them did not see it as a valid career option.” Lewis added that unfortunately only a small component of the diploma was based around journalism in a digital environment. He said tutors at SIT inserted aspects of digital journalism into the course – even though those components were not part of the unit standards that the diploma comprises – because they felt it would increase the graduates’ chance of getting a job in the industry. Digital training Megan Richards of Competenz, the industry training board that is responsible for designing and administering journalism qualifications, said the lack of digital training in the diploma was being addressed. “We are aware that the industry is ever changing and we are due for a review of the qualifications this year, where we will address the changing digital environment in relation to the diploma.” Richards said enrolments in the National Diploma of Journalism had been increasing overall around the country, although she did not give exact numbers. “From my observation of the industry, there seems to be a very healthy appetite for journalism training. “Obviously there will be highs and lows in enrolments, but lately we have had an increase in enrolments across New Zealand.” The Western Institute of Technology in Taranaki is also struggling with low numbers. It has had to postpone the start of its journalism programme from March to July this year, because not enough students have enrolled in the course so far. AUT University in Auckland, however, has had increasing enrolments in journalism in the last 8 years. Helen Sissons, curriculum leader of journalism at AUT, said that the course still sees a huge interest in journalism as a career, and that the papers are constantly being developed to accommodate the ever-changing media environment. “We have actually had to increase the numbers of people that we let into the course. When I started in 2007 we were letting in around 30, then we had to increase it to 40 and this year we have 50 students.” AUT runs a three-year Bachelor of Communication Studies degree with a major in journalism and a Post Graduate Diploma in Communication Studies. Madeleine Grimshaw is a student reporter for Te Waha Nui.

Creative Commons Licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 New Zealand Licence.  ]]>

Ban condemns deadly xenophobic violence in South Africa

MIL OSI – Source: United Nations – Ban condemns deadly xenophobic violence in South Africa 22 April 2015 – United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has condemned the wave of xenophobic violence in South Africa that has resulted in the deaths of at least seven people in the past few weeks. “He expresses his condolences to the families of the victims,” said a statement released today in New York by Mr. Ban’s spokesperson. “The Secretary-General notes the actions and statements of the President of South Africa and the Government to address the violence,” that statement added. Mr. Ban in the statement also welcomed the public expressions of the many South Africans who have been calling for peaceful coexistence and harmony with foreign nationals. “He urges that all efforts are made to avert future attacks, including any incitement leading thereto, and encourages peaceful solutions,” the statement said. –]]>

‘Big Picture’ thinking on child poverty at Fresh Gallery, Otara

MIL OSI – Source: Child Poverty Action Group – ‘Big Picture’ thinking on child poverty at Fresh Gallery, Otara

Child Poverty Action Group is delighted that the wonderful artworks produced for The Big Picture Competition are being shown at Fresh Gallery in Otara, Auckland.

The nationwide schools’ competition which ran last year gave students a chance to learn about child poverty and be part of making a difference.  To enter the competition, schools and youth groups created big pictures to show what children in their neighbourhood need to be healthy and free from poverty.

The pictures were exhibited at Parliament last year and are now being shown in Auckland with the support of the Anglican Trust for Women and Children.  “Don’t Waste Let Them Taste” will run at Fresh Gallery in Otara, from 23 April – 2 May.

CPAG spokesperson Michael O’Brien said, “The pictures entered in the competition were of a very high standard and showed great understanding of the causes of child poverty as well as innovative and creative solutions.  We are delighted that they will be shown in Auckland.   It is important for children and young people to know their voices are heard and that they can contribute and make a difference.”

Child Poverty Action Group will speak about child poverty on the final day of the exhibition, at Fresh Gallery, Saturday 2 May, at 10am.

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Cricket and holiday periods boost visitor arrivals

MIL OSI – Source: Statistics New Zealand – Cricket and holiday periods boost visitor arrivals Visitor arrivals to New Zealand numbered 291,800 in March 2015, a record high for a March month, Statistics New Zealand said today. The latest figure was 15 percent higher than in March 2014, and 8 percent higher than in March 2013. “Visitor numbers in March 2015 were boosted by the Cricket World Cup, and the earlier timing of Easter and overseas school holidays compared with 2014,” population statistics manager Vina Cullum said. “Although Good Friday fell on 3 April this year, travel generally increases several days before the start of holiday periods.” The earlier holidays saw more arrivals from Australia (up 13,900) and the United Kingdom (up 3,800) compared with March 2014. The recent large monthly increases continued from China (up 7,700), while the Cricket World Cup contributed to more visitors from India (up 1,700). New Zealand-resident travellers departed on 168,200 overseas trips in March 2015, up 14 percent from March 2014. This was also influenced by the earlier timing of Easter and school holidays, and trips to watch New Zealand play in the Cricket World Cup final in Melbourne. The biggest increases were to Australia (up 6,600), the United States (up 3,100), China (up 2,200), and India (up 1,400). Almost half of the New Zealand residents travelling to China and India were citizens of those countries.

Net inflow of 5,000 migrants in March

New Zealand had a seasonally adjusted net gain (more arrivals than departures) of 5,000 migrants in March 2015, consistent with the average monthly net gain of 4,900 since August 2014. The apparent levelling of net migration since August comes after two years of increasing net gains, following net losses averaging 300 per month between March 2011 and August 2012. The annual net gain of migrants was a record-high 56,300 in the March 2015 year, well up from 31,900 in the March 2014 year, and 2,500 in the March 2013 year. Migrant arrivals were up 16 percent from the March 2014 year, while departures were down 13 percent. The net loss of 2,300 people to Australia in the March 2015 year was the smallest since the March 1992 year (also 2,300). The biggest net gains of migrants in the March 2015 year were from India (12,100), China (7,700), the United Kingdom (4,900), and the Philippines (4,000). About three-quarters of migrants from India, and half of migrants from China, arrived on student visas. Ends For media enquiries contact: Nicholas Thomson, Christchurch 03 964 8700, info@stats.govt.nz Authorised by Liz MacPherson, Government Statistician, 23 April 2015 –]]>

Earthquake hits Wellington and Seddon

MIL OSI – Source: Earthquake Commission – EQC – Earthquake hits Wellington and Seddon Two earthquakes rattled Wellington and the upper South Island this morning at around 10.40am. Stuff.co.nz reported that they were assessed as being at a depth of 24kms and 20kms East of Seddon. They consisted of a 5.3 magnitude quake followed by a 4.4 some minutes after. The Geonet website details can be viewed here. – -]]>

British Council: New Zealand joins biggest ever global celebration of Shakespeare

MIL OSI – Source: British Council – New Zealand joins biggest ever global celebration of Shakespeare NZ will participate in Shakespeare Lives, an unprecedented global programme of events and activities celebrating Shakespeare’s life on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of his death in 2016. Launched today, the activities will include visits to NZ from a leading practitioner at the Globe Theatre London, working in partnership with the Shakespeare Globe Centre NZ. Patrick Spottiswoode, Director Globe Education, will attend the National SGCNZ University of Otago Sheilah Winn Shakespeare Festival and other engagements at tertiary institutes and in relation to the Globe to Globe Hamlet Tour. Acclaimed NZ actor Shakespeare Lives is an invitation to the world to join in the celebrations by participating in a unique online collaboration and experiencing the work of Shakespeare directly on stage, through film, exhibitions and in schools. Ciarán Devane, Chief Executive, British Council said: “Power struggles, brutal politics, murder, love, passion, bitter feuds, human weakness and plain farce are universal themes as relevant now as they were when Shakespeare was writing. Shakespeare Lives will engage audiences overseas and in the UK with both the work of the Bard and with the best of contemporary Britain and will open up opportunities for UK institutions, businesses and organisations to work around the world, and for organisations around the world in the UK.” The programme aims to reach over half a billion people around the world. The British Council and the GREAT Britain campaign are working with host of British theatres, museums, educators and artists on brand new productions of Shakespeare’s plays, film adaptations, public readings and educational resources for schools and English language learners of all ages in the UK and around the world. Engaging over half a billion people Launching this autumn, Shakespeare Lives will run throughout 2016, exploring Shakespeare as a living writer who still speaks for all people and nations. Activities across English, education and the arts will explore the story of how a playwright from England came to be shared all over the globe. A major highlight will be All The World’s A Stage, a mass participation project that will invite people from all over the world to upload and share clips of themselves performing lines from Shakespeare plays. It
Rawiri Paratene is the only non-British actor travelling by boat, train, plane and
tall-ship across seven continents from village squares to national theatres, starting and ending at The
Globe theatre over the next two years following what would have been The Bard’s 450th birthday.
This ‘never been done before’ venture opens at The Globe on April 23rd, 2014 (Shakespeare’s 450th
birthday) then will be taken to EVERY country on the planet – 205 in all – over the next two years.
Even countries as small as Samoa and the Solomon Islands can expect performances.
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will culminate in a record breaking, crowd-sourced performance and a new digital version of Shakespeare works. Research carried out for the British Council in five overseas countries in 2014 showed Shakespeare’s enduring status as the UK’s greatest cultural icon in the eyes of the world. When young adults were asked to name a person they are interested in and associate with contemporary UK Arts and culture, William Shakespeare was by far the most popular response. Other Highlights of Shakespeare Lives include:
  • –  Screenings of leading Shakespeare productions including the film of Manchester Royal Exchange Theatre’s Hamlet starring Maxine Peake as well as a new film adaptation of a Shakespeare play developed by Indian and UK Asian filmmakers.
  • –  A MOOC (massive open online course) aimed at intermediate level English language learners exploring the key themes and characters in Shakespeare’s plays and his continuing resonance around the world. Other teaching resources include Shakespeare-themed lesson plans for all levels, a series of webinars for English language teachers and animated Shakespeare stories for children.
  • –  The British Council is offering ten research and development grants for artists and companies to develop new collaborative project ideas with counterparts overseas.
  • –  A global tour of Royal Society of Literature poets who have written responses to the Sonnets. There will also be opportunities for emerging poets and graphic novelists from around the world.
  • –  A global short filmmaking competition in partnership with straight 8 called ‘Bitesize Bard’ that invites budding filmmakers from around the world to reinterpret one of eight iconic Shakespeare scenes in a single take. The twelve best films will be selected by a renowned panel taken from the world of theatre and film with prizes awarded.
  • –  A series of workshops and public panel discussions on Shakespeare in translation involving world renowned academics, experts and performers in partnership with the National Centre for Writing and Shakespeare’s Globe.
  • –  Inspiring global celebrations of Shakespeare Day a downloadable toolkit will be developed in partnership with Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. It will include a Shakespeare speech available in many world languages and fun resources such as a Shakespeare quiz, Elizabethan recipes and playlists.
  • –  World Voice, the British Council’s international singing programme for young people, will commission a special Shakespeare-inspired song that will feature in the World Voice songbook. The song will be used in World Voice workshops and teacher training sessions around the world, and will be sung by children at a variety of events during 2016.
  • –  A touring programme of the best British Shakespeare films available to screen internationally in partnership with the British Film Institute. This will include everything from early silent films to new productions.
More detailed plans and partners will be announced over the coming year. Find out more at britishcouncil.org/shakespearelives or follow the hashtag #ShakespeareLives or email Ingrid.leary@britishcouncil.org.nz About the British Council The British Council is the UK’s international organisation for cultural relations and educational opportunities. We create international opportunities for the people of the UK and other countries and build trust between them worldwide. We work in more than 100 countries and our 8,000 staff – including 2,000 teachers – work with thousands of professionals and policy makers and millions of young people every year by teaching English, sharing the arts and delivering education and society programmes.
We are a UK charity governed by Royal Charter. A core publicly-funded grant provides 20 per cent of our turnover which last year was £864 million. The rest of our revenues are earned from services which customers around the world pay for, such as English classes and taking UK examinations, and also through education and development contracts and from partnerships with public and private organisations. All our work is in pursuit of our charitable purpose and supports prosperity and security for the UK and globally. For more information, please visit: www.britishcouncil.org. You can also keep in touch with the British Council through http://twitter.com/britishcouncil and http://blog.britishcouncil.org/. —
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NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for April 22, 2015

Newsroom Digest This edition of NewsRoom_Digest contains 8 media release snippets and 5 links of the day from Wednesday 22nd April. Top stories in the news cycle include Prime Minister John Key apologising to an Auckland waitress for grabbing her ponytail, figures from TradeMe Property show the national median rent is up 7.7% from last year, and a New Zealand citizen is killed fighting Islamic State militants in northern Iraq. SNIPPETS OF THE DAY PM’s Behaviour “Unacceptable: The union representing café and restaurant workers is shocked by Prime Minister John Key’s behaviour towards a worker at an Auckland café, and is calling for all politicians and public figures to be role-models when they interact with hospitality workers. An anonymous blog written by a worker at the café details a pattern of disrespect and inappropriate behaviour from Mr Key, who tugged on the worker’s ponytail multiple times on different occasions, starting during the election campaign last year. Service and Food Workers Union hospitality organiser Chas Muir said that the behaviour was completely unacceptable, and that Key’s apology didn’t address the wider issue. Goff: Cabinet Papers Show Case For Iraq Deployment A heavily redacted copy of a Cabinet paper on New Zealand’s military deployment to Iraq reveals how weak the case is for military involvement in that conflict, says Labour’s Defence spokesperson Phil Goff. The paper warns that given the failure of US and NATO efforts to train the Iraqi Army, the deployment of New Zealand trainers ‘may not achieve the desired results’ while increasing the risk of New Zealand being targeted by IS. Brownlee Leaves For Belgium: Defence Minister Gerry Brownlee leaves today for Belgium, where he will be New Zealand’s official representative at Anzac Day commemorations. Mr Brownlee will attend a number of commemorative services at key Western Front sites in Flanders. More Schools Sign Up For Communities: Education Minister Hekia Parata says 129 schools from across the country have signed up for the second round of Communities of Schools. The schools, which together have more than 45,000 students, will form 18 new Communities of Schools dedicated to systematically lifting the quality of teaching and learning in their classrooms. Communities of Schools are part of the Government’s $359 million Investing in Educational Success initiative announced in 2014. Schools in the programme receive additional funding to enable teachers and principals to share teaching and leadership expertise. Battle For Our Birds: Conservation Minister Maggie Barry says the success of the Battle For Our Birds programme is a welcome victory for endangered native species. The Department of Conservation today released preliminary monitoring results for the eight-month long anti-predator campaign. “There are thousands more native birds alive today than there would have been without the work done by DOC’s Battle For Our Birds last summer,” Ms Barry says. Last spring brought with it a once-in-15 year beech mast, with more than a million tonnes of seed dropped by beech trees in South Island forests. NZ Dollar Near Parity With Aussie: The New Zealand dollar traded close to parity with the Australian dollar amid speculation weak Australian inflation data today could push it through the historic milestone. The kiwi touched a record against the euro on concern about whether Greece will exit the common currency. The kiwi hit 99.59 Australian cents overnight and was trading at 99.51 cents at 8am in Wellington, from 99.35 cents at 5pm yesterday. The local currency touched a fresh record of 72.02 euro cents and was trading at 71.42 cents at 8am from 71.28 cents yesterday. It advanced to 76.65 US cents from 76.51 cents yesterday. NZ Easy Target For Overseas Property Speculators: Revelations that New Zealand is being marketed in Malaysia and other parts of Asia as an easy place to make a quick property buck show why we desperately need restrictions on non-resident foreign buyers in our overheated market, the Green Party said today. “These cashed-up non-resident buyers must think New Zealand and the National Government are easy marks,” said Green Party housing spokesperson Kevin Hague. “They can come here, score a bunch of properties, pay no capital gains tax and charge a premium for rent – and they know John Key and his Government will do nothing to stop them. Corrections Land Bought By Iwi: The Tūwharetoa Settlement Trust and six other Tūwharetoa entities will buy about 8500ha of land from the Crown in the central North Island, Corrections Minister Peseta Sam-Lotu-Iiga has announced. The Central North Island Forest Collective Settlement deed which was signed by the Crown and eight central North Island iwi in 2008 granted the iwi collective the right to purchase Crown-owned land from Corrections. The Tongariro-Rangipo Corrections Facility sits on approximately 8500ha of land which includes the Hautu prison farm near Turangi. The iwi group paid about $20 million for the land and the price paid for the forestry crop on the land is subject to commercial confidentiality. LINKS OF THE DAY SOUTH ISLAND INDEX: After record gains in recent years the Deloitte South Island Index achieves modest 0.8% growth for year to 31 March 2015. South Island listed companies have collectively experienced the smallest year-on-year increase in market capitalisation over the past three years, according to the annual review of the Deloitte South Island Index presented this evening in Christchurch. The Index, which tracks the quarterly performance of listed companies with operations in the South Island, gained a modest $96.4 million (0.8%) in the year ended 31 March 2015. This comes after a 0.2% drop in the most recent quarter, the Index’s third quarterly decline in the past four quarters. To download the full report, go to: http://www2.deloitte.com/nz/southislandindex RISING RENT PRICES: Rents across New Zealand continue to steam ahead of inflation with the median asking rent in March 2015 up 7.7 per cent compared with March 2014. By comparison, inflation across the wider economy is at a 16-year low and up just 0.1 per cent year-on-year. In March, the median rent being asked for by landlords bounced up to a record high of $420 per week, up from $390 per week a year ago. According to Trade Me Property’s Rental Price Index, median rents were up 6.5 per cent year-on-year in February and up 9.1 per cent year-on-year in January.More details here: http://www.trademe.co.nz/property/price-index/for-rent/march-2015/ ONLINE VACANCY SURGE: The number of skilled vacancies advertised online in New Zealand rose 0.2 per cent for the month of March, and were up 5.8 per cent in the past year to March 2015, according to the latest Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment’s Jobs Online report. The March increase in skilled vacancies was driven by the accounting, human resources, legal and administration industries (up 1.2 per cent), followed by the hospitality and tourism, and education and training industries (both up 0.9 per cent). The occupation group with the biggest month-on-month increase was managers (up 0.8 per cent). See the statistics: http://www.dol.govt.nz/publications/jol/index.asp TENANCY WEBSITE LAUNCHED: A new tenancy services website designed to be a one-stop shop for all tenancy-related advice, information and education has been launched today by Building and Housing Minister Dr Nick Smith. “Good information for tenants and landlords on their legal responsibilities and how to resolve disputes is essential for the 450,000 homes that are let in New Zealand. This new website is about ensuring all the information is in one place and that it is as easy as possible to navigate,” Dr Smith says. The new website can be found at: www.tenancy.govt.nz. SEA GETTING WARMER: A fisheries expert believes warming sea temperatures will change the way the industry looks in years to come. Temperatures in the Tasman Sea have already risen 1.5 degrees in the past 70 years. An audio file of a RNZ interview on Nine to Noon on this topic can be listened to here:http://www.radionz.co.nz/audio/player/201751455 And that’s our sampling of the day that was on Wednesday 22nd April 2015. Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest. –]]>

Ponytail-Gate: Council of Women Send Open letter to John Key

Prime Minister John Key. Prime Minister John Key.[/caption] We are disappointed to learn of your unwanted touching of a cafe worker. We appreciate your apology to her and we understand that your actions were well-intentioned and not meant to offend or do the worker any harm. You no doubt know that it’s never okay to touch someone without their permission. You probably think that you’ve never touched someone in such a way before. However, this incident shows that you have crossed the line. You will now be aware of the impact – the worker described how vulnerable and embarrassed she felt. We don’t see this as an isolated case and the real story is not about you. Rather, the fact that our Prime Minister has joined the list of people outed for sexism highlights how much sexism is a part of our culture. And it starts at the top. Up and down this country, day after day, people are touched without giving their consent. At one end of the scale, it is an unwelcome pull on a pony-tail. At the other end, it’s our shocking levels of violence against women. We need to change our culture so we don’t see touching someone as being our right, unless we know that it’s welcome. We need you to lead from the top. It’s really hard for women to speak up when men’s sexist actions are ‘well-intentioned’. The National Council of Women of New Zealand commends this worker for her bravery in speaking up, as we expect that given our culture she will now face as much criticism as understanding and support. We are happy to meet with you to discuss how sexism is playing out in our society. This type of well-intentioned sexism might seem harmless. But sexism has serious impacts. It’s behind the statistics your Government releases showing inequality in our pay, violence, and the lack of women in leadership. Our organisation works to improve these statistics. We’re currently consulting on a draft white paper that outlines what our country needs to do to achieve gender equality. It looks at the role our attitudes and actions around gender play in our current state. A copy is with your Minister for Women for feedback. Now your eyes have been opened to how easily sexism can occur, we call on you, as Prime Minister, to do more to reduce sexism and its effects in New Zealand. Yours sincerely, Sue McCabe, Chief Executive, National Council of Women of New Zealand. – –  ]]>

Goff says Cabinet paper reveals weak case for Iraq deployment

Phil GoffA heavily redacted copy of a Cabinet paper on New Zealand’s military deployment to Iraq reveals how weak the case is for military involvement in that conflict, says Labour’s Defence spokesperson Phil Goff. The paper warns that given the failure of US and NATO efforts to train the Iraqi Army, the deployment of New Zealand trainers ‘may not achieve the desired results’ while increasing the risk of New Zealand being targeted by IS. It also points out:

  • That the effectiveness of the training will rely on collaboration with the Iraqi military and broader governance initiatives, ignoring the corrupt and incompetent nature of the Iraqi military leadership and the sectarian nature of its governance which has pushed the Sunni minority toward support for IS
  • that two thirds of the countries involved in the Coalition will be making contributions that are not military in nature and that there are other actions required to defeat IS
  • while we are spending more than $30 million a year to deploy troops, of which only 16 are specialised trainers, we are spending less than $4 million on humanitarian assistance to help victims of the conflict
  • the training being provided is in combat and weaponry.  Nowhere is there any suggestion that these skills won’t be used to commit atrocities akin to those committed by IS, as happened with some units trained by the United States
  • the role of 37 of the 143 troops deployed is ambiguous, meaning some may become involved in ‘advise, assist and accompany’ missions
  • there is no guarantee that mission creep will not result in the size and duration of the deployment being increased.
“The release of this document with its extensive deletions simply highlights the obsessive secrecy of the Government about its actions and the serious doubts that exist as to the appropriateness and effectiveness of the path it has chosen,” Phil Goff said. —  ]]>

Iwi collective to buy Corrections land

Tongariro-Rangipo-Prison-Site Current map of the full Tongariro-Rangipo prison site (Current land bordered in red, future Corrections land to be leased bordered in yellow) —  ]]>

IMF Survey: Ebola Subsides, Economic Impact Lingers

MIL OSI – Source: International Monetary Fund – IMF Survey: Ebola Subsides, Economic Impact Lingers

SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA

IMF Survey

April 21, 2015
  • Ebola epidemic recedes, leaving deep economic scars
  • Falling commodity prices hindering recovery
  • Infrastructure investment needed to help increase growth

Finance ministers from three fragile states in sub-Saharan Africa said their economies were struggling to get back on track.

The ministers from Liberia, Central African Republic, and Madagascar told a news conference during the IMF-World Bank Spring meetings in Washington that the slow global economy is making recovery more difficult. Abdalla Kadre Assane, of the Central African Republic, said after almost three years of massive insecurity, the country lacks the resources required to stabilize its institutions ahead of general elections scheduled for August. And Gervais Rokotoarimanana said Madagascar will be asking the IMF for funds under the Extended Credit Facility to help the country recover from the effects of a political crisis that ended in January 2014. But the overriding issue was Ebola. “The disease ravaged our economy beyond imagination”, said Amara Konneh, Liberia’s finance minister. Konneh said Liberia had survived the crisis, and the authorities hoped to declare the country Ebola-free by May 15, but added the devastation left by the disease is overwhelming. “Our health care system collapsed, we need to rebuild for resilience. We need to get the kids back in school; we have more orphans, widows and widowers today than we ever had. So we’re redirecting spending and making hard decisions—but the demand is too high, and our resources too little.” Depleted resources Konneh said the Ebola crisis has isolated Liberia from the rest of the world. The pandemic has limited imports, exports, and travel to the point where the government had to increase spending on goods and services “so the country would not collapse.” “It scared everybody away from us. So we’ve had to take some fiscal and monetary measures to maintain macro-economic stability.” Meanwhile, growth projections for the three countries most affected by the Ebola epidemic have been significantly marked down, and Konneh says the current state of the global economy— notably China’s slow down— isn’t helping get growth back to pre-crisis levels. “We want to go back from 1 to 6 percent growth in the shortest period of time, so we’ll need to invest in activities that will diversify the economy. Because with the declining commodity prices driven by slow global growth, our major commodities like iron ore and rubber have suffered a lot.” Knock-on effects of Chinese slowdown Assane and Rokotoarimanana said they too were worried about the impact of China’s slowing economy not only because of the effect on commodity prices, but because China has been involved in infrastructure improvement projects in both their countries. Rokotoarimanana said they were looking forward to more Chinese investment in Madagascar, but those projects are now on hold. “China has built hospitals, and some cultural infrastructure, and we were hoping they would help us rebuild our road infrastructure” The three finance ministers agreed that infrastructure investment is key to increasing economic growth. Konneh said the single most important hindrance to the region’s economic development is the lack of reliable and cheap electricity. They wouldn’t be so dependent on China buying raw materials, he said, if only they could start manufacturing products themselves. “We have commodities, but we cannot add value to the commodities because we don’t have electricity.” –  ]]>

SAMOA: PM attacks Bainimarama as ‘drum playing’ leader over Forum

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MIL OSI Analysis – Pacific Media Watch/Pacific Media Centre

Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sa’ilele Mailelegaoi … New Zealand and Australia are needed. Image: Omar Torres/RA

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Item: 9230

Mata’afa Keni Lesa APIA (Samoa Observer/Radio New Zealand International/ Pacific Media Watch): Fijian Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama is back on Samoan Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sa’ilele Malielegaoi’s hit list. This time, Bainimarama has upset Tuilaepa by calling for the removal of New Zealand and Australia from the Pacific Islands Forum. Asked for a comment, Tuilaepa did not hold back. “Bainimarama’s issue is insignificant,” he said. “Remember all the man did was to play the drums (in the military) and train.” “So he doesn’t understand these things. He is only new and he is still learning about matters of international relations.” Tuilaepa said Bainiamarama’s area of speciality was to “play the drum and yell left, right, stop!” Forum needs funds If New Zealand and Australia are not removed from the Forum, Bainimarama wants China to be included in the group. New Zealand’s Prime Minister,John Key, rejected the call, saying it was a joke. “A Pacific Forum without Australia and New Zealand would be an interesting thing I suppose, in that those leaders would be able to talk about things,” Key told the media. “But exactly where would they get the money to do anything, and the answer is nowhere.” Tuilaepa agreed with Key. He said that many years ago the body known as the South Pacific Commission (now the Secretariat of the Pacific Community) involved only Samoa, Fiji and Tonga. New Zealand and Australia, he said, were brought in to fund the plans of the Forum. Fast forward to today, and the Forum now had 16 members. “The Forum is made up of 14 very poor nations and then these two nations who fund the plans by these 14 very pour nations,” Tuilaepa said. “Now John Key is right. He has hit the mark because that’s why New Zealand and Australia came in, they fund our stuff.” Key ‘dangling funds’ But Bainimarama last week rejected Key’s comments, accusing him of “dangling funds” over the Forum. “They only see our relationship is to do with funding and that is their outlook on what our relationship is in the Forum, to dangle funding in front of us,” Bainimarama told Radio Tarana. “Obviously that is a poor view of what our relationship should be like.” Tuilaepa disagreed. “He’s perhaps forgotten that the Forum relies on funding,” he said. “It’s not a body where you talk, talk, talk and go away with air. We talk and implement these plans but we rely on New Zealand and Australia to fund it. “So you need to talk and be mindful of whether there is enough in your pocket to pay for your plans.” Asked about claims that New Zealand and Australia were too domineering, Tuilaepa said this was far from the truth. “No, that’s not the case,” he said. Tuilaepa a ‘lap dog‘ “The decisions are made at the Forum. If Fiji doesn’t want to join the Forum, so what? “The Forum is not going to die. “It’s not as if any money comes from Fiji. It’s the money we get from New Zealand and Australia we are using for our stuff.” Bainimarama responded to his Samoan counterpart’s comments, labelling Tuilaepa a “lap dog”. He said he was not bothered about Tuilapea as he was dancing to the tune of the Australians and the New Zealanders. Bainimarama also took Australia and New Zealand to task for not leading with strong commitments to alleviate climate change.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 New Zealand Licence.  ]]>

FIJI: Chiefs taking ‘breaches’ of indigenous rights to UN

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MIL OSI Analysis – Pacific Media Watch/Pacific Media Centre

The claims of violations have been supported by chiefs Ro Teimumu Kepa and Ratu Naiqama Lalabalavu. Image: Gregory Ravoi/ Republika

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Item: 9231

Sally Round WELLINGTON (Radio New Zealand International/ Pacific Media Watch): Indigenous chiefs from Fiji are calling on United Nation (UN) experts and agencies to step in over alleged international treaty breaches by the Fiji government. The claims that indigenous people’s group rights are being violated are contained in a submission signed by the paramount chiefs Ro Teimumu Kepa and Ratu Naiqama Lalabalavu. The submission and a petition are part of a presentation by Fiji non-governmental organisations at the 14th Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues at the UN’s headquarters in New York taking place over the next fortnight, from April 20. Niko Nawaikula of the Fiji Native Tribal Congress told Radio New Zealand Interbnational’s Sally Round it was following up on what had already been noted by several UN bodies in the past few years:
NIKO NAWAIKULA: There have been breaches of our group rights by the passing of these decrees and laws that terminated the Great Council of Chiefs, that take away our name that is our intellectual property, that nationalise the administration and the administration’s use and management of native land and that removed the entrenched provision from our constitution that protected the group rights of indigenous people which included laws relating to native land and laws relating to the establishment of the Great Council of Chiefs. So we asserted that in 2012 and the outcome or the concluding observation of that (UN) Human Rights Committee is: yes, these constitute breaches of the permanent and inalienable rights which are recognised in the ILO C169 which Fiji ratified and all of which are reflected in the United Nations Declaration on Indigenous Rights, by the fact that number one, those documents require as a right for indigenous groups to be first consulted and give their prior and informed consent before any change in any laws or policies that affect them.
SALLY ROUND: What can be done at this forum? In terms of what you are trying to achieve?
NAWAIKULA:  Well you know how it is with the UN, the UN is not able to do much, but we want to have the UN informed as well as the international community.  We want the UN to, at the very least, remind Fiji as a member state that it had, as every other nation, undertaken to respect and implement the UN Declaration on Indigenous Rights and Fiji especially by ratifying ILO convention 169.  Since 2012, since the concerns were noted Fiji has not done anything but in fact has continued with its programme of what it calls mainstreaming to purposely remove the group rights of indigenous people. That’s an aim of this regime to achieve what it calls equality.
ROUND:  So this is mainly to shine a spot light on what you feel are breaches by the Fiji government of indigenous rights?
NAWAIKULA: Correct, because you know, that’s the most the UN can do and it’s the same not only for Fiji, it’s the same for any country.

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Fiji needs independent watchdog to watch MIDA for future elections

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MIL OSI – Source: Dr David Robie – Café Pacific – Analysis published with permission of Café Pacific WHILE the Multinational Observer Group’s final report on the first post-coup Fiji general election since 2006 last week found the poll “credible” – as expected based on its preliminary report in spite of the cries of “fraud” by critics – it has offered a raft of recommendations for improvement, including with the news media. Among these recommendations is a call for an independent watchdog for the controversial Fiji Media Industry Development Authority (MIDA), which had a mixed role during the elections. Arguing that should MIDA continue its role in future elections, the final MOG report said there was a need for “an independent institution to adjudicate complaints about its actions”. Citing the 2013 Constitution’s section 17 providing for freedom of “speech, expression and publication”, MOG was in general complimentary about the Fiji news media, saying they “made good efforts to cover the election”. And thus political parties were “to varying degrees” able to communicate to the public. However, the restrictive and vague media framework, including potentially harsh penalties, “limited the media’s ability to rigorously examine the claims of candidates and parties”, the final report said. The amended Political Parties Decree in February 2013 prohibited media for describing prospective parties as “political parties” until they were registered, noted MOG. Fines, jail terms “This included established parties that were seeking reregistration (news organisations faced fines of up to FJ$50,000 or a five-year jail term for violation),” said the report. The report also highlighted the threat of penalties under the Media Industry Development Decree 2010, that established MIDA, but it did not go so far as to recommend scrapping the decree, which Café Pacific advocates. However, in spite of these media restrictions, MOG acknowledged the efforts of the Fiji media. “The press began to report more widely on the political process, including some criticism of the government,” MOG said. The report added that MOG believed that engagement through the media was “essential in order to encourage public ownership of the electoral process”. According to Agence France-Presse, which had the most thorough international coverage of the MOG report, it said the report “criticised the threat of draconian punishments for media deemed to have broken Fiji’s restrictive media laws, or breached a three-day blackout on election reporting in the lead-up to polling day”. Actually, the report never said “draconian” and used surprisingly diplomatic language about the media decree. Campaign blackout MIDA carried out several functions for the elections and the areas most closely monitored by MOG were the authority’s role in media accreditation, policing the campaign blackout and ongoing investigative work. The Fiji Elections Office required all media workers to be accredited by MIDA for the poll. Two days before the election on September 17, MIDA announced that 431 local and 37 international media staff or freelancers were registered with MIDA and accredited by the FEO. The Pacific Media Centre sent two journalists from Auckland to cover the elections but they were interned with local media organisations and accredited as local journalists and filed their stories for Pacific Scoop. The MOG noted that it had received several complaints about this process, “which generally related to a lack of clarity over accreditation procedures”.

The deadline set for submitting applications was considered too early by some media organisations (this was subsequently extended after a suggestion by the MOG) while others were unaware that they had to apply both to MIDA and the FEO for accreditation. The MOG is not, however, aware of any media organisations that applied for accreditation and did not receive it.
Under the Electoral Decree, MIDA had authority to investigate any breaches of the 48-hour campaign blackout before polling day. MIDA also had authority to “approve” – ie be chief censor – reporting during the blackout period.
MIDA provided briefing to local and international media in order to explain the campaign blackout, although many commented this was unclear … The burden this placed on MIDA and media organisations was heavy.
But the report added that MIDA did not take any action against media outlets for breaching the blackout, and it “did not directly hinder” election reporting. Mixed effectiveness The MOG also found the effectiveness of media in providing information for an informed choice on polling day mixed – especially “between the urban and rural areas”. It also noted the coverage of the election campaign in the final stages “included both instances of both neutrality and partiality among the local media”. While the report did not point the finger at any individual media organisations, it said any complaints about biased media coverage “should be addressed and adjudicated by an independent institution regulated by law”. It did not mention MIDA in this context, but clearly the MOG has in mind a “super” watchdog to keep watch on MIDA. The report’s key media recommendations were:
  • The media accreditation process should be simplified and all media outlets, including international media, should have sufficient advance notice of deadlines and timelines.
  • The Media Industry Development Authority [MIDA] should issue clear, timely and practical reporting guidance.
  • Penalties for breaching election-related reporting rules should be reviewed.
  • Should the MIDA continue in its role in future elections, there is a need for an independent institute to adjudicate complaints about its actions, consistent with Fiji’s legal and constitutional framework.
  • There is a need for a regulation as well as an independent institution to prevent and adjudicate media biases, thus ensuring a level playing field among election participants.
The MOG website –]]>

Relationship between high birth weight and socio-economic status is complicated, researcher says

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MIL OSI – Source: University of Canterbury – Headline: Relationship between high birth weight and socio-economic status is complicated, researcher says [caption id="attachment_44249" align="aligncenter" width="565"]Dr Rachel Webb, graduating last week. Dr Rachel Webb, graduating last week.[/caption]

A University of Canterbury economics and finance doctoral researcher who examined issues relating to heavy babies, says the relationship between high birth weight and socio-economic status, obesity, and iron supplements is complicated.

Dr Rachel Webb has just graduated at the University of Canterbury after exploring issues and factors relating to heavy new-born babies.

“Although low socio-economic status is generally detrimental to most health outcomes, it doesn’t appear to be clearly so when it comes to high birth weight risk,” she says.

“Obesity is highly correlated with high birth weight risk. My findings have implications for other people undertaking obesity research in that they should be careful about assuming causal effects of obesity to detrimental health outcomes when the relationship may be partially driven by other factors.

“I didn’t find enough evidence to conclude that iron supplement intake increases high birth weight risk, but I wouldn’t rule it out as a possibility. I unearthed some new evidence relating to fast food restaurants while researching the relationship between maternal obesity and high birth weight risk. A significant relationship between fast food restaurant density and obesity has been a prominent finding by health researchers.

“There are strong correlations between fast food restaurants and obesity risk in a number of studies. However many fail to account for underlying factors that affect both the fast food restaurants location and obesity risk.

“Issues such as ethnicity, whether it is an urban or rural area, age, socio-economic status, level of deprivation of the area, other nearby food options available can all affect both restaurant location and obesity risk.

“It is generally asserted that fast food proximity lowers the cost of eating high calorie food and can lead to higher obesity risk, however many dispute that there is a causal relationship.

“A curious finding from my results was that the fast food restaurant density in a city did not have the expected effect on obesity measures. Many of the big chain fast food restaurants were shown to lower the risk of obesity holding other factors constant.

“This finding cannot be explained as merely substitution away from less healthy takeout options such as fish and chips, towards big chain fast food as I found the overall number of fast food outlets per person in a city was generally insignificant. More research into the effect of fast food on obesity is needed.’’

Dr Webb’s research was supervised by the university’s Dr Andrea Menclova. Dr Webb is teaching at both University of Canterbury International College and for the university’s Department of Economics and Finance.

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Nuclear testing legacy haunts Pacific Island countries

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MIL OSI – Source: Pacific Media Centre – Report published with permission of the Pacific Media Centre Headline: Nuclear testing legacy haunts Pacific Island countries The Pacific will be virtually absent from the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) review conference at the United Nations next week. Some regard this as an apparent sign of the overall decline of anti-nuclear advocacy in the region, which is seen as a worrying trend that needs to be arrested, writes Shailendra Singh. ANALYSIS: Prominent Pacific Island anti-nuclear campaigners want a revival of their once-robust movement to support the international effort against “nuclearism”. Their call coincides with a major international meeting at the United Nations in New York – the 2015 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) from April 27 to May 22. The NPT is a landmark international treaty whose objective is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology while promoting co-operation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. However, besides Palau, there were no Pacific island countries represented in the 148 States parties that participated in one or more of the annual preparatory meetings held in the lead up to the 2015 NPT. This is despite the Pacific region’s immense contribution to the nuclear disarmament movement, as recorded by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN). At the height of the U.S.-Soviet arms race, members of the South Pacific Forum signed and ratified the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty (SPNFZ). Moreover, Pacific governments have traditionally voted in favour of resolutions calling for a global treaty banning nuclear weapons at the UN and at various international disarmament summits. This latest NPT review conference will consider ways to promote engagement with civil society in strengthening NPT norms and in promoting disarmament education. Yet, participation by Pacific Islands-based civil society organisations in the conference will be scant. According to Emele Duituturaga, head of the Pacific Islands Association of Civil Society Organisations (PIANGO), none of their national liaison units are represented at the 2015 NPT. Neither is Duituturaga aware of any other NGOs that will represent the region at the conference. Overall decline The Pacific’s absence from a major event such as the NPT is another apparent sign of the overall decline of anti-nuclear advocacy in the region, which some see as a worrying trend that needs to be arrested. Stanley Simpson, formerly assistant director of the now non-operational Fiji-based regional pressure group, Pacific Concerns Resource Centre, said that “nuclearism” was still a threat, even if it might appear dormant. “The danger is not over,” insists Simpson. “We still live with the legacy of nuclear testing and activity.” Nuclear testing in the Pacific began in 1946 and ended in 1996, with the former colonial powers – United States, Britain and France– collectively conducting more than 300 detonations in the region. Nearly 70 years on, the continued refusal of the concerned powers to own up to their past transgressions and compensate victims deepens the sense of injustice felt in the region. In February this year, the Fiji government pledged financial assistance to 24 surviving Fijian soldiers who were on Christmas Island (now Kiribati) during British nuclear tests in the late 1950s. Fijian Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama said: “We owe it to these men to help them now, not wait for the British politicians and bureaucrats. We need to erase this blight on our history.” A recent article by the President of the Marshall Islands, Christopher J. Loeak, outlines the callous manner in which his country was treated by the United States. The article appeared in the 2014 publication, Banning Nuclear Weapons: A Pacific perspective, published by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN). Loeak points out that besides the “Bravo” test, which was 1000 times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb, 17 other tests
 in the Marshall Islands were in the megaton range. The total yield of the tests in the Marshalls comprised nearly 80 percent of the atmospheric total detonated by the United States. Clean up order French Polynesians were similarly treated by the French government, which conducted 193 atmospheric and underground nuclear tests at Moruroa and Fangataufa atolls. The ICAN publication relates the case of a local Maohi (Polynesian) worker at the testing centre after an atmospheric test in September 1966 on Moruroa. The worker was among those instructed to clean up all the debris that littered the roads. The worker stated that the supervisors told them: ‘It’s OK, you can go over there.’ According to David Robie, a journalism professor at AUT University’s Pacific Media Centre in Auckland, New Zealand,  the Pacific anti-nuclear movement grew out of a sense of outrage that countries like Britain, France and the United States were using vulnerable Pacific island territories as pawns to carry out  tests that they were not willing to carry out in their own backyard. Dr Robie, who covered anti-nuclear issues as an independent jourmalist, authored a book in 1986, Eyes of Fire, about the bombing of the Rainbow Warrior by French state terrorists in 1985. “The arrogance of the North really upset a lot of people in the Pacific,” Dr Robie said. “Newly emerging countries like Vanuatu, led by the late Walter Lini (Prime Minister of Vanuatu) and political leaders like Oscar Temaru, then mayor of the Pape’ete suburb of Fa’aa, declared themselves ‘nuclear-free’ to make a statement of independence.” After Pacific-wide protests forced a halt to French nuclear tests in 1996, the civil society groups at heart of the anti-nuclear movement either scaled down or closed their operations. Some turned their attention to what became regarded as immediate hazards, such as global warming. Dr Robie states that while France was conducting nuclear tests in the Pacific, there was still a big “power ogre” to focus attention on. Once the end of these tests were achieved, other issues took precedence. “In the 1980s, the buzzword was nuclear refugees. Now it is climate change refugees,” says Dr Robie. Anti-nuclear frontline The Fiji anti-Nuclear group (FANG), which was at the frontline of the anti-nuclear movement in the 1980s, is no longer active. The group opposed both French testing in Tahiti and the Fiji government’s policy on allowing nuclear-powered and nuclear-armed ships into the country. The Suva-based Pacific Concerns Resource Center (PCRC), which acted as the secretariat for the Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific (NFIP) movement, has since closed operations. PIANGO’s Duituturaga states that with the closure of the PCRC, the nuclear issue “went off the radar”. Asked if the nuclear danger was over for the Pacific, Duituturaga replied: “No – of course not. Nuclear arms are destructive to all of us – whether or not we are directly involved.” Dr Robie too believes that the Pacific remains exposed. Specific threats include the persistent radioactive contamination from 
the tests; the issue of newer fallout from the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan; and the China-US rivalry, especially with speculation about China’s eventual plans for Taiwan, which raises the spectre of nuclear conflict. According to Simpson, it behoves the Pacific to be part of the disarmament movement. “Nuclear testing is an emotional issue for Pacific Islanders. Pacific people can strengthen the movement’s heart and soul,” states Simpson. Unfortunately, the Pacific presence is unlikely to be felt at the 2015 NPT, which will consider a number of crucial issues, such as nuclear disarmament, and the promotion and strengthening of safeguards. Shailendra Singh is coordinator and senior lecturer in journalism at the School of Language, Arts and Media at the University of the South Pacific. This article was commissioned and first published by IDN-InDepthNews. More information about Eyes of Fire –]]>

iPredict: National/New Zealand First Government Picked – But Without John Key?

iPredict New Zealand Weekly Economic and Political Update

Tuesday 21 April 2015

www.ipredict.co.nz

iPredict: National/New Zealand First Government Picked – But Without John Key?

The probability of a National Party prime minister after the next election has reached 58% but he or she would govern only with the formal or tacit support of NZ First which would hold the balance of power, according to the combined wisdom of the 8000+ registered traders on New Zealand’s predictions market, iPredict.  Moreover, that prime minister may not be incumbent John Key, with traders giving him just a 35% probability of being leader of the National Party by the end of 2017.  Paula Bennett remains favoured to replace him, with 44% probability, well ahead of Steven Joyce on 12%.  Gerry Brownlee is expected to be the next Speaker of the House of Representatives, replacing David Carter who appears set to replace Sir Lockwood Smith as New Zealand’s next High Commissioner to the United Kingdom.  David Cameron is narrowly picked to cling on as prime minister of the UK, while Tony Abbott is expected to hold on in Australia.  Hillary Clinton remains favoured to be the next president of the United States.  Boris Johnson has a 30% probability of being UK prime minister by 2020.

New Zealand Politics:

·       John Key is expected to remain National leader until at least the end of 2016 (90% probability, steady compared with last week) but has just a 35% probability of remaining National leader until at least the end of 2017 (down from 37% last week).  Mr Key has a 73% probability of being National leader on Nomination Day before the next General Election (steady compared with last week)

·       Andrew Little is expected to remain Labour leader until at least the end of 2016 (83% probability, up from 80% last week) and has a 64% probability of remaining Labour leader until the end of 2017 (up from 63% last week).  Mr Little has a 85% probability of being Labour leader on Nomination Day before the next General Election (up from 73% last week)

·       Paula Bennett remains the clear favourite to become National Party leader if a vacancy arises (44%, steady compared with last week), followed by Steven Joyce (12%, steady) and Amy Adams (10%, steady)

·       Stocks on who is favoured to become Labour Party leader if a vacancy arises will be launched in the near future

·       Kevin Hague remains strongly expected to be the next co-leader of the Green Party (78% probability, down from 79% last week), followed by James Shaw on 21% (steady)

·       Judith Collins is not expected to be appointed to Cabinet before next election (43% probability she will be, down from 53% last week)

·       Tim Groser is expected to be New Zealand’s next Ambassador to the United States (96% probability, up from 91% last week) and Maureen Pugh is expected to become eligible to be a list MP before the next election (95% probability, steady)

·       Phil Goff is expected to stand for the Auckland mayoralty (94% probability, up from 91% last week)

·       Next election expected in 2017 (91% probability, down from 92% last week) with a turnout of 75% (steady)

·       Forecast party vote shares at next election:

o   National                             43.8% (steady compared with last week)

o   Labour                               33.1% (steady)

o   Greens                              10.8% (steady)

o   NZ First                              7.5% (up from 7.4%)

o   Others                                4.8% (steady)

·       NZ First has a 68% probability of holding the balance of power after the next election (steady compared with last week).  If NZ First does hold the balance of power, there is a 52% probability it will back National on confidence and supply (steady compared with last week), a 32% probability it will back Labour on confidence and supply (steady) and a 16% probability it would sit on the crossbenches (steady)

·       National prime minister expected after 2017 General Election (58% probability, up from 54% last week)

·       David Carter is expected to be New Zealand’s next High Commissioner to the United Kingdom (79% probability, steady compared with last week) and Gerry Brownlee has a 62% probability of being the next New Zealand Speaker (up from 48%)

·       Almost no chance Wellington councils will be amalgamated by end of 2015 (only 5% probability they will be, steady compared with last week) 

New Zealand Business & Economics:

·       Fruit-fly outbreak expected to be contained with fewer than 20 Queensland fruit-flies expected to be found in New Zealand as part of current outbreak (92% probability, up from 89% last week)

·       New Zealand dollar expected to reach parity with Australian dollar by the end of 2015 (82% probability, up from 79% last week), with a 79% probability if will do so before July 2015 (up from 69% last week)

·       Quarterly GDP growth expected to be:

o   0.76% in the March quarter (steady compared with last week)

o   0.65% in the June quarter (steady)

o   0.86% in the September quarter (steady)

o   0.85% in the December quarter (steady)

·       Annual growth expected to be 3.15% in the 2015 calendar year (steady)

·       Unemployment expected to be:

o   5.44% in the March quarter (up from 5.42% last week)

o   5.29% in the June quarter (steady)

o   5.25% in the September quarter (steady)

o   5.37% in the December quarter (up from 5.30%)

·       New Zealand pay gaps in 2014/15 expected to be:

o   Gender                                  9.95%

o   Maori                                   12.28%

o   Pacific                                 23.12%

o   Asian                                   20.43%

·       Current account deficit expected to be:

o   3.61% of GDP in the March quarter (steady compared with last week)

o   3.56% in the June quarter (steady)

o   3.39% in the September quarter (steady)

o   3.49% in the December quarter (new stocks)

·       Annual inflation expected to be:

o   0.33% to end of June 2015 quarter (down from 0.42% last week)

o   0.52% to end of September 2015 quarter (down from 0.61%)

o   0.83% to end of December 2015 quarter (down from 1.04%)

·       Stocks on 2016 inflation will be launched in the near future

·       Official Cash Rate priced to be:

o   3.495% on 30 April (up from 3.494% last week)

o   3.482% on 11 June (up from 3.481% last week)

o   3.457% on 23 July (up from 3.456%)

o   3.409% on 10 September (up from 3.406%)

o   3.391% on 29 October (up from 3.387%)

o   3.370% on 10 December (up from 3.366%)

o   3.360% on 28 January 2016 (up from 3.356%)

o   3.357% on 10 March 2016 (up from 3.354%)

o   3.347% on 28 April 2016 (up from 3.344%)

o   3.335% on 9 June 2016 (up from 3.331%)

·       This implies the OCR is more likely than not to be cut on 10 December 2015 to 3.25% (steady compared with last week) and to remain at that rate until at least 9 June 2016 (steady)

·       Stocks on Australian interest rates are now available for trading

·       7% probability of a fiscal surplus in 2014/15 (up from 6% last week)

·       Fiscal balance expected to be:

o   -0.29% of GDP in 2014/15 (down from -0.28% last week)

o   0.68% of GDP in 2015/16 (down from 0.72%)

o   1.79% of GDP in 2016/17 (down from 1.98%)

o   2.15% of GDP in 2017/18 (down from 2.32%)

·       Fonterra’s final payout (before retentions) expected to be:

o   $4.67 in 2014/15 (down from $4.71 last week)

o   $5.35 in 2015/16 (down from $5.40)

o   $6.10 in 2016/17 (down from $6.16)

·       Campbell Live expected to be cancelled this year (73% probability, down from 77% last week)

·       Stocks on tourism arrivals and gender and ethnic pay gaps are now available for trading

Foreign Affairs/Constitution:

·       Next UK Parliament expected to consist of:

o   Conservatives                               42.6% of seats in the House of Commons (down from 43.0% last week)

o   Labour                                          39.6% of seats (down from 40.3%)

o   Nationalist parties                            8.0% of seats (up from 7.6%)

o   Liberal Democrats                            4.0% of seats (down from 4.1%)

o   UKIP and similar                              3.8% of seats (up from 1.0%)

o   Green and similar                             1.0% of seats (steady)

o   Independents and Speaker      1.0% of seats (steady)

o   Unionist parties                                0.0% of seats (down from 1.0%)

o   All others                                         0.0% of seats (down from 1.0%)

·       David Cameron narrowly expected to be prime minister after next UK election (53% probability, down from 57% last week)

·       Boris Johnson expected to be elected to UK House of Commons this year (99% probability, steady compared with last week) and has a 30% probability of being prime minister before 2020

·       Socialist Workers’ Party expected to defeat People’s Party in next Spanish election (67% probability, down from 73% last week)

·       All Eurozone countries, including Greece, expected to remain in Euro in 2015 (20% probability of an announcement of a departure this year, steady compared with last week)

·       Tony Abbott expected to remain leader of the Australian Liberal Party until 1 July 2015 (only 2% probability of departing before then, down from 5% last week) and narrowly expected to be leader of the Australian Liberal Party on nomination day (53% probability, up from 30% last week)

·       Bill Shorten expected to be Labor leader at next Australian Federal election (89% probability, steady compared with last week)

·       Liberals marginally ahead of Labor for next Australian Federal election in 2016 (53% probability of Liberal win, steady compared with last week)

·       Hillary Clinton is favoured to be the Democratic Party’s nominee for US president in 2016 and to be elected to that office (54% probability, up from 52% last week).  Jeb Bush has a 40% probability of being the Republican nominee (steady compared with last week) followed by Scott Walker (23% probability, up from 21%) and Rand Paul (15% probability, steady)

·       There is a 21% probability New Zealand will sign the Trans-Pacific Partnership this year (down from 35% last week), and the Trans-Pacific Partnership is not expected to be ratified by the US Congress before 1 July 2017 (only 38% probability it will be, up from 29% last week)

·       Helen Clark’s prospects of being the next UN Secretary General are 35% (up from 26% last week)

·       There is a 10% probability New Zealand will become a republic by 2020 (steady compared with last week)

Notes:

·       iPredict Ltd is owned by Victoria University of Wellington.  Details on the company and its stocks can be found at www.ipredict.co.nz.

·       The weekly economic and political update is prepared by Exceltium Ltd on a pro bono basis and is based on a snapshot taken at a random time each week.  This week’s was taken at 12.26 pm today. 

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Government Declines Request for Commission of Inquiry into Peter Ellis case

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MIL OSI – Source: New Zealand Government – Request for Ellis Commission of Inquiry declined Justice Minister Amy Adams has declined a request from supporters of Peter Ellis for a Commission of Inquiry on the basis that an inquiry cannot be used to determine the liability of any person. [caption id="attachment_3523" align="alignright" width="243"]Peter Ellis. Peter Ellis.[/caption] Mr Ellis was convicted in 1993 on multiple charges of sexual offending against children. He was sentenced to ten years imprisonment. Since then, his convictions have been the subject of extensive consideration including two appeals, an inquiry by former Chief Justice Sir Thomas Eichelbaum and two overseas experts, and a 2003 petition to Parliament. In 2008, a similar request for a Commission of Inquiry was made to and rejected by former Justice Minister Simon Power. “After careful consideration of the public interest and legal issues, I have decided to decline the request for an inquiry,” says Ms Adams. “The new Inquiries Act 2013 is clear that a Commission of Inquiry is not an appropriate vehicle for inquiring into the correctness of a person’s convictions.” Section 11 of the Inquiries Act expressly states that an inquiry has no power to determine the criminal liability of any person. “Furthermore, the request is almost identical to the one made to former Justice Minister Power, and contains no new evidence. I’m not satisfied there is any new information or development that warrants reconsideration of Mr Power’s decision,” says Ms Adams. Ms Adams said the other contributing factor in her decision was that Mr Ellis had not exhausted the appeal rights available to him through the court system. “There are proper channels for Mr Ellis to challenge his convictions, if he wishes to do so. An application for leave to appeal to the Privy Council was first mentioned by Mr Ellis’s lawyer over a decade ago but has not been pursued. That option remains open, as does a further application for the Royal prerogative of mercy. “Notwithstanding the lengthy history of the case and its numerous reviews, it remains open to Mr Ellis to challenge his convictions through the proper channels, particularly if there is now new and compelling evidence relevant to his convictions that has not previously been considered. That is a matter for Mr Ellis to decide,” says Ms Adams. –]]>

Auckland’s Former Heart of the City Boss Alex Swney pleads guilty to SFO fraud charge

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MIL OSI – Source: New Zealand Serious Fraud Office – Alex Swney pleads guilty to SFO fraud charge [caption id="attachment_3526" align="alignleft" width="300"]Alex Swney. Alex Swney.[/caption]Alex Swney, former Chief Executive of Heart of the City, has appeared in the Auckland District Court to answer a charge brought by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) of dishonestly using documents to obtain $2.5 million. Mr Swney has pleaded guilty to the charge. Mr Swney admitted that while at Heart of the City he created fictitious invoices which when submitted, resulted in payments into accounts controlled by him. SFO Director, Julie Read said, “Mr Swney dishonestly obtained funds to which he knew he was not entitled. The misappropriation of funding intended to benefit Auckland businesses increased the cost of the services provided by Heart of the City and reduced the benefits delivered by what has otherwise been a very successful venture. Fraud of this size by employees who are entrusted with the management and expenditure of substantial sums of money is very costly for both the businesses concerned and more broadly for the community as it harms the integrity of these organisations. In bringing this prosecution the SFO is helping to protect the reputation of New Zealand as safe place in which to do business and invest.”

Mr Swney has been remanded on bail and his next appearance is scheduled for 30 April.

Note:
Background to investigation
Heart of the City Incorporated, an entity funded by property owners and commercial tenants, was established by Mr Swney in 1995. Mr Swney held the position of Chief Executive Officer reporting to the Board until October 2014 when his contract was terminated.
Crimes Act offences
Section 228 Dishonestly taking or using document Every one is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 7 years who, with intent to obtain any property, service, pecuniary advantage, or valuable consideration,- (a) dishonestly and without claim of right, takes or obtains any document; or (b) dishonestly and without claim of right, uses or attempts to use any document.
About the SFO
The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) was established in 1990 under the Serious Fraud Office Act in response to the collapse of financial markets in New Zealand at that time. The SFO’s role is the detection, investigation and prosecution of serious or complex financial crime. The SFO’s focus is on investigating and prosecuting criminal cases that will have a real effect on: • business and investor confidence in our financial markets and economy • public confidence in our justice system and public service • New Zealand’s international business reputation. The SFO operates three operational teams; the Evaluation and Intelligence team along with two investigative teams. The SFO operates under two sets of investigative powers. Part 1 of the SFO Act provides that it may act where the Director “has reason to suspect that an investigation into the affairs of any person may disclose serious or complex fraud.” Part 2 of the SFO Act provides the SFO with more extensive powers where: “…the Director has reasonable grounds to believe that an offence involving serious or complex fraud may have been committed…” In considering whether a matter involves serious or complex fraud, the Director may, among other things, have regard to: • the suspected nature and consequences of the fraud and/or; • the suspected scale of the fraud and/or; • the legal, factual and evidential complexity of the matter and/or; • any relevant public interest considerations. The SFO’s Annual Report 2014 sets out its achievements for the past year, while the Statement of Intent 2014-2018 sets out the SFO’s strategic goals and performance standards. Both are available online at www.sfo.govt.nz –]]>

DOC: Pest wasps cost economy $130 million a year

MIL OSI – Source: Department of Conservation – Pest wasps cost economy $130 million a year Paper_wasps_and_nestThe study, An evaluation of the cost of pest wasps (Vespula species) in New Zealand, by the Sapere Research Group, was jointly funded by the Department of Conservation and the Ministry for Primary Industries. Wasps are one of the most damaging invertebrate pests in New Zealand; they harm our native birds and insects and compete for food with our native species. If you put together all the wasps in honeydew beech forests they would weigh more than the weight of birds, rodents and stoats combined. Wasps taking beech honeydew, Pelorus Bridge Reserve, Marlborough This new study has found that wasps also have a major financial impact on primary industries and the health sector. This includes:

  • More than $60 million a year in costs to pastoral farming from wasps disrupting bee pollination activities, reducing the amount of clover in pastures and increasing fertiliser costs.
  • Almost $9 million a year cost to beekeepers from wasps attacking honey bees, robbing their honey and destroying hives.
  • Wasp-related traffic accidents estimated to cost $1.4 million a year.
  • Over $1 million each year spent on health costs from wasp stings.
  • On top of the direct costs, almost $60 million a year is lost in unrealised honey production from beech forest honeydew which is currently being monopolised by wasps. Honeydew is also a valuable energy source for kaka, tui and bellbirds.
DOC Scientist Eric Edwards says these numbers are conservative. The actual cost of wasps is much higher especially if you take into account the impact on tourism and our love of the outdoors, which this study wasn’t able to measure in full. “It’s hard to put a dollar value on people’s attitudes to wasps and to what extent wasps prevent them from visiting conservation land or taking part in outdoor tourism activities,” he says. “But we know that wasps are a massive annoyance and their multiple stings can cause a lifetime effect of making young people reluctant to return to forests and parks,” Eric Edwards says. The Ministry for Primary Industries Dr Erik van Eyndhoven says that reducing wasp abundance would produce major flow on benefits to pastoral farming and horticulture through increased bee pollination services. “This study shows that it makes economic sense, as well as environmental sense, to invest in research to control wasps,” he says. “MPI is working with DOC to encourage the science community, and their funders, to further explore a range of tools needed to control wasps in the long term,” Erik van Eyndhoven says. The MPI Sustainable Farming Fund has recently supported investigations into the biocontrol potential of a new mite discovered in wasp nests. DOC has been actively working on a programme to better control wasps and has been piloting a targeted bait station method on conservation land. –]]>

NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for April 21, 2015

Newsroom DigestThis edition of NewsRoom_Digest contains 7 media release snippets and 4 links of the day from Tuesday 21st April.

Top stories in the news cycle include the Government announcing Christchurch residents will have their say on renewed buyout offers to some red-zoned home owners, the sacked head of Auckland’s Heart of the City promotion agency pleading guilty to new fraud charge, and the Government is accused of reneging on its promise of free doctors’ visits for under 13 year-olds.

SNIPPETS OF THE DAY

Defence Force Contingent Depart For Australia: The main body of the New Zealand Defence Force training contingent bound for Iraq departed for Australia today from Royal New Zealand Air Force Base Ohakea. The contingent was farewelled by the Governor General Sir Jerry Mateparae, Commander Joint Forces New Zealand, Major General Tim Gall, and the Chief of Army, Major General Dave Gawn. Consistent with the requirement to keep New Zealand personnel safe, the departure of the main body was not publicly advised in advance, and the NZDF will not be supplying details in advance of the onward deployment of the main body to the Middle East from Australia.

Green Party: Government Breaks Pledge: The Government has already broken a key election promise by reneging on a pledge to make all doctors’ visits for under 13 year olds free, the Green Party says. Documents obtained by the Green Party show that the Government decided to fund only 90 percent of doctors’ visits for children suffering from an injury in an attempt trim the cost of the so-called “free” visits. “This makes a lie of the promise to provide free doctors’ visits for all children under 13,” Green Party Health and ACC spokesperson Kevin Hague said.

Kiwi Dollar Moves Close To Aussie: The New Zealand dollar gained against the Aussie after Reserve Bank of Australia governor Glenn Stevens raised the prospect of an interest rate cut as early as next month to bolster a weak economy. The kiwi touched 99.27 Australian cents overnight, and was trading at 99.08 cents at 8am in Wellington, from 98.69 cents at 5pm yesterday. The local currency slipped to 76.54 US cents from 77.01 cents yesterday.

Quick Rise And Fall Of Petrol Prices: Rising global prices for crude oil and a 4 cents per litre increase in petrol prices this week saw Z Energy release updated research today from the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research showing petrol prices react to international price changes within a fortnight and fall as quickly as they rise. In a report titled “Petrol prices (still) rise and fall at the same speed”, NZIER says the main change it has noted since about 2010 is that international oil price changes are passed through mostly within the following one or two weeks, rather than taking three or four weeks to filter through to the motorist at the petrol pump.

Red Zone Crown Offers: Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee has announced a process to give everyone a say on the Crown offers to owners of vacant, commercial/industrial and uninsured properties in the Residential Red Zone. “I have asked the chief executive of the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (CERA) to prepare a Recovery Plan that looks at the offers to property owners in these categories,” Mr Brownlee says. “Following a legal challenge by the Quake Outcasts group, the Supreme Court directed that the decision on the offer to properties in these categories should be revisited and that a Recovery Plan was an appropriate approach.”

Dreamline To Take More Kiwi’s To Fiji: Air New Zealand has announced it will introduce the Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner on the Auckland – Nadi route this summer (November – March) adding 8,000 more seats to the route than last year. When Air New Zealand’s revolutionary new Boeing 787-9 lands at Nadi International Airport on 27 November 2015 it will be the first time this aircraft has operated to the Pacific Islands.

NZ/CHINA Research Projects: Science and Innovation Minister Steven Joyce has opened the fourth New Zealand/China Joint Commission Meeting on Science and Technology Co-operation in Wellington by announcing three new joint research projects between the two countries. Sixty delegates have travelled to Wellington for the meeting, which is held every three years and is hosted alternately by New Zealand and China. Each New Zealand team will receive government funding of $300,000 over three years, with the Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology providing equivalent funding for its researchers.

LINKS OF THE DAY

TOBACCO CONTROL PROTOCOL: Public feedback is being sought on whether New Zealand should sign up to an international agreement aimed at getting rid of the illicit trade in tobacco products. “These illegal products are usually cheaper than legal tobacco, which is taxed. Smokers buying illicit products may be less inclined to quit and non-smokers may be more likely to take up smoking.The illicit trade in tobacco products results in lost government revenue through tax evasion, and can be used to fund other criminal activity,” Associate Health Minister Peseta Sam Lotu-Iiga says. The consultation document is available on the Ministry of Health’s website:https://www.health.govt.nz/our-work/preventative-health-wellness/tobacco-control/who-framework-convention-tobacco-control/illicit-trade-protocol

HISTORY OF VICTORIAN FEMALE BODY AND “TROPHY WIFES”: You might think that trophy wives are a modern phenomenon, but according to research from the University of Auckland, the idea of women being treated as their husbands’ status symbols is not that different from past generations. For her PhD in English Literature, Dr Kirby-Jane Hallum studied the late Victorian marriage market, whereby families sought to arrange financially and socially advantageous marital unions between their sons and daughters. She discovered that although the valuing of women according to their beauty dates back for centuries, the arrival of the Aesthetic Movement in the second half of the nineteenth century generated new standards for female beauty. The Art of Female Beauty is available to purchase as an e-book or hardback directly from the publisher’s website: www.pickeringchatto.com/marriagemarket

BILATERAL ARBITRATION TREATY: A proposed bilateral arbitration treaty and the 30th anniversary of the sinking of the Rainbow Warrior will be the focus of a visit from world leading international arbitrator and litigator Gary Born next month. Mr Born has been awarded the New Zealand Centre of International Economic Law’s (NZCIEL) Inaugural Senior Visiting Research Fellowship for 2015 and will visit New Zealand from 1 to 9 May While in New Zealand, Mr Born will discuss his recent initiative—a Bilateral Arbitration Treaty regime—with government representatives and businesses. More information on Gary Born’s visit and his Bilateral Arbitration Treaty regime is available at http://www.victoria.ac.nz/law/centres/nzciel/news

NETHUI LAUNCHED: InternetNZ is pleased to announce the launch of the NetHui 2015 website, formally announcing NetHui 2015. InternetNZ Chief Executive Jordan Carter is looking forward to hearing the New Zealand Internet community’s ideas for this year’s event. “NetHui is New Zealand’s premier Internet event. This year the theme is “the Internet is everybody’s business” and we’ve already locked in some cool speakers. People who are keen to help shape the Internet are encouraged to visit www.nethui.nz and get involved.

And that’s our sampling of the day that was on Tuesday 21st April 2015.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest. –]]>

US-led Coalition Air-Strikes Target ISIS in Ramadi and Beiji

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MIL OSI – Source: United States Department of Defense – Coalition Strikes Target ISIL in Ramadi, Beiji By Cheryl Pellerin DoD News, Defense Media Activity WASHINGTON, April 20, 2015 – The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s tentacles are spreading beyond Iraq and Syria to Afghanistan and Libya, but the pressure of coalition air and ground power has weakened the terrorist group, a Defense Department official said here today. The focus on ISIL is to fight them now in Iraq and Syria, Pentagon spokesman Army Col. Steve Warren told reporters. But he also discussed the increasing danger posed by ISIL in Afghanistan and Libya, and coalition and ground-force efforts against ISIL fighters in the Iraqi cities of Ramadi and Beiji. “Ramadi remains highly contested — it’s a tough fight there right now,” said Warren, adding that Iraqi security forces continue to hold there but are under pressure from ISIL fighters in the area. Operation Inherent Resolve In coalition military airstrikes against ISIL near Ramadi, the Combined Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve reported that five airstrikes hit three ISIL tactical units, one large and two small. The attacks destroyed an ISIL fighting position and an ISIL armored vehicle, the task force said. “We’re hopeful,” Warren said, “that coalition airpower along with the resolve of the Iraqi ground forces will be able to hold.” The city of Beiji, a major industrial center with the largest oil refinery in Iraq, is under ISIL control but the refinery is secure, the colonel said. “In Beiji, [Iraqi forces] successfully linked up with forces on the ground in the refinery and … have thus far been able to secure the refinery,” Warren said. He added, “We are dedicating some air power to that fight and it remains a contested situation.” Coalition Air Power In coalition strikes reported by the task force today, eight airstrikes near Beiji hit four ISIL tactical units, destroying two ISIL vehicle bombs, an ISIL machine gun, an ISIL artillery piece, an ISIL ammo storage facility and an ISIL vehicle. In Afghanistan, where the spring fighting season has begun, Warren said the department is concerned about and is watching for the potential emergence of ISIL there. “We don’t necessarily believe that conditions in Afghanistan are such that ISIL would be welcome,” he said. “In fact, the Afghan government has been very clear that ISIL is certainly not welcome [and] it’s interesting to note that apparently even the Taliban has indicated that they don’t welcome an ISIL presence in Afghanistan,” Warren added. Rebranding as ISIL Still, he said, disaffected members of the Taliban and other terrorist groups have been rebranding themselves as ISIL, most likely to achieve greater notoriety or to gain access to more resources. “We don’t see this yet as a cause of increased violence in Afghanistan,” he said, “but it is certainly something we’re going to continue to watch.” In Libya, the department is beginning to see what Warren characterized as “more than a rebranding effort.” He added, “I think Libya is probably where ISIL most wants to gain a foothold. At this point they have gained at least a toehold in Libya based on an extraordinary amount of unrest [there] and an almost completely deteriorated security situation.” Significant Blows to ISIL ISIL has made its own aspirations very well known, Warren said, and a clear uptick in violence attributed to ISIL or claimed by ISIL in Libya are causes of concern for the department. But, he said, coalition efforts continue to inflict significant blows to ISIL. “Nearly every one of the press releases that we issue every day indicates damage to tactical units –- that’s fighters being killed. So I would submit to you that we’ve delivered several punishing blows to ISIL over the last six months,” Warren said. “We’ve started to see cracks in ISIL’s ability to bring on new forces. ISIL is turning now to conscription, to forcing people into their armed forces and in some cases to [using] child soldiers,” he added, “so the pressure that the combination of air and ground power we’re applying to ISIL is having an effect.” (Follow Cheryl Pellerin on Twitter: @PellerinDoDNews) –]]>

Security Council deeply concerned about humanitarian situation for refugees in Syria’s Yarmouk camp

MIL OSI – Source: United Nations – Security Council ‘deeply concerned’ about humanitarian situation for refugees in Yarmouk camp The United Nations Security Council has today expressed deep concern about the grave humanitarian situation in Yarmouk refugee camp, located on the outskirts of the Syrian capital, Damascus. In a press statement issued after being briefed by Pierre Krähenbühl, Commissioner General of the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), Council members welcomed recent efforts by UNRWA and Secretary-General’s Deputy Special Envoy, Ramzy Ramzy, and called for unhindered humanitarian access to Yarmouk and for the protection of civilians inside the camp. They stressed the need to support the emergency relief effort for civilians in Yarmouk including through funding the $30 million emergency appeal and to provide diplomatic and political support for the agency. Supporting UN efforts to assist trapped Palestinian refugees in Yarmouk, the Council highlighted a three-point plan including assistance for civilians in the camp, assisting those wanting to ‘temporarily relocate’ from the camp in accordance with international humanitarian law, and assisting residents who have already fled. The Council called for support of the UN framework in line with legal obligations, and condemned all acts of terrorism, demanding that Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and Al-Nusra Front withdraw from Yarmouk immediately. In addition, members called on all parties to immediately implement the relevant Security Council resolutions including Security Council resolutions 2139, 2165 and 2191, all adopted last year. Mr. Krähenbühl, who briefed the Council from Jerusalem via video link, spoke to journalists at UN Headquarters afterwards, updating them on the briefing and on recent happenings in Yarmouk. Having recently returned from a four-day humanitarian mission to Damascus, he said that he told the Council about the situation inside Yarmouk and his concerns about the security, safety and levels of protection of civilians in the camp. While he acknowledged that the humanitarian situation remains “very extreme” in terms of the circumstances and hardships faced, he pointed to “concrete achievements” coming from discussions with the Government about possibly widening the scope of humanitarian access. Many people had described the terrible impact of the situation they faced in the last two years, he said. Several thousand people remain in Yarmouk and he said he was determined to establish distribution points to allow them to access humanitarian aid, and to enhance distribution of assistance to those who had managed to escape to nearby neighbourhoods. Describing some of the assistance that UNRWA was distributing, he underscored the need for ongoing financial assistance. A total of $30 million was needed for immediate emergency aid in addition to over $400 million requested for the overall Syria Appeal, which had received only 19 per cent funding. Mr. Krähenbühl stressed that the Council should remain seized of the matter and said a visit by members to Syria would be a strong signal of the importance that it attaches to the situation. –]]>

NewsRoom Digest: Top NZ News Items for April 20, 2015

Newsroom Digest

This edition of NewsRoom_Digest contains 6 media release snippets and 6 links of the day from Monday 20th April.

Top stories in the news cycle include Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott visiting New Zealand ahead of the Anzac Centenary, China’s consul-general in Auckland expressing concern over claims that spy agencies in New Zealand and the United States have plotted to spy on the Chinese Consulate, and the Prime Minister saying at least two families in New Zealand have contacted police concerned about the radicalization of their children by extremists.

 SNIPPETS OF THE DAY

Extension of NZDF commitment in Afghanistan: The New Zealand Defence Force’s commitment of mentors and support staff to the Afghan National Army Officer Academy in Afghanistan has been extended out to December 2016, Defence Minister Gerry Brownlee said today.

CTU Calls On RBNZ To Cut CPI:“With prices rises at just 0.1 percent over the last year, the Reserve Bank must reduce its Official Cash Rate next week. It is well past time it did so,” says CTU Economist Bill Rosenberg. “A housing price bubble is forming in Auckland – but only Auckland. That cannot be dealt with the interest rate that the Reserve Bank controls. It needs to find other tools such as stopping property investors from further inflating prices. The Government is also failing in its responsibility to treat the situation with urgency by attacking land banking and building affordable good quality houses itself, either for rent or resale,” Rosenberg said.

Labour: Key’s Housing Comments ‘Bizzare” Labour’s Housing spokesperson Phil Twyford has described the Prime Minister’s latest comments on the Auckland housing crisis as bizarre. “John Key is deep in denial. He must be one of the only people left who are not concerned about the risk of the market going bust and causing immense human and economic damage. “When the Reserve Bank is insisting on new solutions to cracking down on speculators it is time the Prime Minister wasn’t quite so relaxed about Auckland’s housing crisis,” Phil Twyford says.

Team NZ Funding Decision Welcomed: Responding to the reported comments of the Prime Minister, that taxpayer-funding of Team New Zealand was “at the end of the road”, Taxpayers’ Union Executive Director, Jordan Williams, says: “Taxpayers have already stumped up significant amounts of money in order to support what is a rich sport. The return to taxpayers of propping up a team to go and sail on the other side of the world was always questionable.”

Māori Affairs Minister Urged To Stop Holmes Farm Sale: New Zealand First wants the Minister for Māori Development to seek an injunction against the Māori Education Trust to block the sale of the former Holmes Farm – Mapuna Atea.

REINZ All Farm Price Index: Data released today by the Real Estate Institute of NZ (“REINZ”) shows there were 425 farm sales in the three months to end of March 2015, compared to 464 farm sales for the three months ended February 2015 (-8.4%) and 472 farm sales for the three months to the end of March 2014.  1,802 farms were sold in the year to February 2015, 2.2% fewer than were sold in the year to March 2014.

LINKS OF THE DAY

COMMUNIQUE ON FOSSIL FUELS: New Zealand, along with Costa Rica, Denmark, Ethiopia, Finland, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland endorsed a statement over the weekend to be delivered to the Paris conference that supports the elimination of inefficient subsidies to fossil fuels on environmental, economic and social grounds. For the full text of the communique see: http://www.iisd.org/publications/fossil-fuel-subsidy-reform-communique

COMMEMORATIVE ANZAC COINS:  More than three quarters of the coloured circulating commemorative coins minted to mark the Anzac centenary have been taken up by the public.The Reserve Bank minted one million of the special 50 cent Anzac coins to commemorate the centenary, on 25 April 1915, of the Anzac landings on the Gallipoli Peninsula. The coins are available at PostShop and Kiwibank branches nationwide, and online at NZ Post’s website here: https://coins.nzpost.co.nz/new-zealand/2015/1915-spirit-anzac?utm_source=AnzacCoin&utm_medium=RBNZwebpage&utm_campaign=AnzacCoin

MINISTER ADDRESSES GEOTHERMAL CONGRESS: Energy and Resources Minister Simon Bridges will be promoting New Zealand’s world-leading renewable energy expertise at an international conference in Melbourne this week .Along with Australia, New Zealand is co-hosting the 2015 World Geothermal Congress where Mr Bridges will deliver the keynote address.For more information, visit here: http://wgc2015.com.au

DISABILITY SUPPORT SERVICES DATA RELEASED: Demographic information about the disabled people allocated the majority of disability support services funded by the Ministry of Health’s Disability Support Services (DSS) – that is: home and community support, carer support, community residential, supported living and respite – was released on Friday. Read the report here: http://www.health.govt.nz/publication/demographic-information-clients-using-ministry-healths-disability-support-services

CPI FALLS IN MARCH QUARTER: The consumers price index (CPI) fell 0.3 percent in the March 2015 quarter, following a 0.2 percent fall in the December 2014 quarter, Statistics New Zealand said today. The last time the CPI showed two consecutive quarterly falls was in the December 1998 and March 1999 quarters. Visit Consumers Price Index: March 2015 quarter: http://www.stats.govt.nz/browse_for_stats/economic_indicators/CPI_inflation/ConsumersPriceIndex_MRMar15qtr.aspx

DRAFT CODE FOR VICTIMS’ RIGHTS: Justice Minister Amy Adams says a new draft Victims Code of Rights will help to ensure victims are better informed and put them at the heart of the justice system. The draft code outlines victims’ rights, the services available to victims and their families from government agencies and other organisations, and the obligations of justice sector agencies when dealing with victims. Both the draft code and questionnaire can be found on www.justice.govt.nz/publications/global-publications/v/draft-victims-code-for-consultation.

And that’s our sampling of the day that was on Monday 20th April 2015.

Brought to EveningReport by Newsroom Digest. –]]>

AUDIO: PMW’S Alistar Kata talks Pacific Forum issues with 95bFM

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AUDIO: PMW'S Alistar Kata talks Pacific Forum issues with 95bFM
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MIL OSI Analysis – Pacific Media Watch/Pacific Media Centre.

PMW’s Alistar Kata has revived the Southern Cross programme on Radio 95bFM.

Monday, April 20, 2015

Item: 9227

AUCKLAND (Pacific Media Watch): Host of 95bFM’s Southern Cross programme Nick Bond talked to Pacific Media Watch’s Alistar Kata today about whether New Zealand and Australia should remain in the Pacific Islands Forum. The Forum has lifted its suspension of Fiji, but Fiji Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama does not want to rejoin the forum while Australia and New Zealand are still members. Kata said Bainimarama wants the key decisions that come from the Forum to be made by Pacific Island leaders themselves. “He thinks that Australia and New Zealand have too much influence and control over the decisions the Forum makes,” she said. “Where Bainimarama is coming from is that he wants the responsibility of those big decisions that come out of the Forum to be made by the Pacific leaders themselves, and no longer donor countries or donor institutions.” Kata said although she understood what Bainimarama was trying to say, there was a “reason” why more developed countries were involved in the Forum. “In a way I understand where he is coming from, but at the same time you can’t have a Pacific Forum without Australia or New Zealand.” New Zealand Prime Minister John Key’s response to Bainimarama’s claims was that without Australia and New Zealand, the Forum would not have the money to keep it running. Today was the second broadcast in a return of the Southern Cross programme on 95bFM http://www.95bfm.com/assets/sm/220885/3/SouthernCross20Apr2015.mp3 Listen to Alistar Kata’s comments Last week’s new Southern Cross programme

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Who calls the shots? Acne & Isotretinoin II – Big Pharma & research

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Who calls the shots? Acne & Isotretinoin II - Big Pharma & research
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Investigation by Carolyn Skelton. [Part I. Part II.] The bigger picture big pharma the global eliteIn the first part of this series, I outlined issues related to acne and to the powerful drug Isotretinoin and the devastating consequences for some users.  In today’s appearance-focused world acne can be pretty depressing and confidence-sapping for many young people. At its most extreme it can lead to brutal bullying and/or suicidal thoughts. The powerful drug isotretinoin can seem to be a magical cure for acne.  However, after starting the medicine, some have experienced extremely negative psychological disturbances.. Professor J Douglas Bremner tells of one father’s story about his son taking Accutane.  The young man

told the family that the deceased rocker Jim Morrison was talking to him through monkeys and telling him to commit suicide On April 15, 2004…. After he stopped taking Accutane his psychosis and suicidal thinking stopped, and he continues to be free of symptoms to this day. 

(Before You Take That Pill, 2008: p49)

 The story of this drug provides insights into the processes of the research and marketing of powerful prescription medicines.  The drug companies have a lot of influence over the kinds of research conducted, with the aim of producing financially profitable “cures”.  Some governments are being criticised for increasingly prioritising such commercial imperatives over people’s health and well-being. The isotretinoin story: birth defects Isotretinoin was first developed by Dr Werner Bollag for possible use in cancer chemotherapy.  It was found to effectively clear severe acne.  Bollag dissociated himself from the use of the drug to treat acne.  He allegedly said that,
 deploying such a toxic substance for such a trivial matter would be like using a thermonuclear warhead to demolish a garden shed.
As reported by Julia Green at Harvard Law School in 2002, the Swiss company Roche rushed to make it available in 1982, using the brand name Accutane. Very soon people began to claim some very horrific side effects, most particularly being associated with birth defects in the babies of a large percentage of US women who were pregnant when they took Accutane.   Green puts some of the blame down to Roche’s rush to market the drug because of its potential for profits, while also suppressing the results of some of their own research. There were also later concerns that Roche was promoting Accutane for moderate acne, and not using it as a last resort medication. Following publicity for of the birth defects in the US, strong warnings were put on the medicine cautioning that it should not be taken by pregnant women, or if it is used by sexually active heterosexual women they should use two different forms of contraception.  Roche has had thousands of law suits against them, resulting in Accutane being withdrawn from the US market.  Other drug companies now supply the US, while Roche continues to sell the drug in the UK and Europe under the name RoAccutane. Isotretinoin and adverse psychiatric reactions [caption id="attachment_3453" align="alignleft" width="300"]accutane-cure-acne-fb From mercola.com[/caption]   With the decrease in cases of birth defects in the US, and the low number of such cases in the more strongly regulated European context, the controversy shifted to focus on associations between isotretinoin and psychological disturbances, depression and suicidal thoughts.  Statistics show that a minority of users experience negative side effects, but there may be significant under-reporting of such incidents.  The side effects usually occur up to a few months after starting to use the medication.  Consequently, many people probably don’t make the connection. Last November, the UK government drug monitoring agency published the results of their latest review of isotretinoin and adverse psychiatric reactions. Their conclusions were in keeping with previous arguments that there is no proof of such side effects. It is argued that such reactions can be caused by acne itself.  However, they also state there is no absolute proof that it doesn’t have such effects.  Consequently they call for education and information for users.  They also state that the “Group” that considered the available research concluded that such studies had limitations, and further research was needed.  They expressed concern that
standard epidemiological studies were unlikely to provide sufficient data to establish a causal association
Epidemiological studies look for patterns in selected populations of the causes and impacts of health issues and diseases. The UK report does not mention some earlier research done in the US by professor of psychiatry, J Douglas Bremner. It was funded by Liam Grant, the parent of a young man who had suicided following taking Accutane. Bremner did PET scans of brains of isotretinoin and non-isotretinoin users, as reported in his book, Before You take That Pill (link above). His findings showed that Accutane resulted in the decrease in functioning of the orbitofrontal cortex, “identical to what we found in patients who developed depression.” (p47-9) In other research funded by Grant, it was shown that
Accutane inhibited the growth of neurons in an area of the brain called the hippocampus, which is involved with memory and emotion.  This area is smaller in patients with depression. Other studies showed that Accutane caused behavior abnormalities in animals.
Roche remained committed to the view there was no “causal relationship”, even though one of their senior staff members acknowledged their research showed Accutane “‘probably caused” depression and other psychiatric ailments in some users ….” (p49) The neurological line of research has not been continued. Bremner met with intense opposition from Roche. A review of Bremner’s later book, The Goose that Laid the Golden Egg, explains that Bremner was put under intense pressure by Roche’s defense lawyers.  Roche was also implicated in encouraging the ethics charges brought against Bremner at the university where he worked.
 …Bremner’s life slipped out of control as one of the world’s richest corporations did everything they could to publicly discredit him.
It is astounding that more than a decade after Bremner’s books, the research has not gone beyond the epidemiological focus to look more intensely and directly at the impact of isotretinoin on brain functioning. Many now look to the US Ipledge system as a way of regulating the use of isotretinoin. It outlines some of the negative associations, though unproven, after taking Isotretinnoin. Prescribers, pharmacists, wholesalers  and users of isotretinoin must all be registered. The bigger picture: scientific research and NZ There are also concerns in NZ, that scientific research in general is being skewed by powerful organisations. On 10th April, 2015, on RNZ Dr Nicola Gaston, President of the Association of Scientists reported that a recent survey shows scientists reported they were being gagged, their integrity questioned or their results tampered with. A climate of fear, including in universities, was resulting in scientists self-censoring the kinds of research they conducted. Gaston stated that funders can choose sympathetic authors and have unfavourable ones removed from reports. She talked of studies very often being commercially directed or funded. Furthermore, government funding was often on subject matter where a group has a commercial relationship. http://podcast.radionz.co.nz/ntn/ntn-20150410-0932-scientists_speak_out_about_fears_of_attacks_on_freedom-048.mp3 In the next part, I will look at the isotretinoin situation in NZ. –]]>

REGION: Private contractor backs bill allowing use of force in detention centres

MIL OSI Analysis –

Refugees on Nauru protesting at Anibare camp. Image: Refugee Action Coalition

Monday, April 20, 2015

Item: 9226

Mary Baines WELLINGTON (Radio New Zealand International/ Pacific Media Watch): A contractor, International Health and Medical Services (IHMS), says it supports an Australian Bill that would allow its staff to use force against detainees in immigration centres. But the Human Rights Law Centre in Australia has condemned the proposed increased powers to use force with fewer checks and balances. The Australian government is seeking to make immigration officers largely immune from liability for using force on detainees, if it is believed necessary to protect others in detention or maintain good order. There have been repeated violent incidents at Canberra’s camps in Nauru and Papua New Guinea. Mary Baines reported:
“In its submission to changes on the Migration Act, IHMS, which has 260 staff at Australian-run detention centres, says it has seen an increase in violent and aggressive behaviour. “It says that includes the damaging of furniture, walls and doors, throwing objects, and some isolated incidents of inappropriate touching and physical aggression. “It says there has been a small number of serious attempts to harm IHMS staff in which individuals have had to be physically restrained by security staff. “It says given the serious repercussions should security personel not have the capability to restrain an individual who is harming themselves or another person, IHMS supports the Bill.”
Former judge ‘horrified’ In an earlier article, Radio New Zealand International reported a former Supreme Court judge in Australia had said proposed new powers for security guards at immigration detention centres would allow them to beat asylum seekers to death with impunity. In his submission to changes on Australia’s Migration Act, Stephen Charles said he was horrified at the systematic abuse the Bill will allow to be inflicted on vulnerable people. Charles said the law would allow an officer to act in a way that would cause grievous bodily harm without criminal charge if it was believed the force was used “in good faith”, or if it was “reasonably believed” it was necessary. He said that was a subjective standard, and would allow for excessive force to be used in almost any circumstance. Charles said the amendments would make it harder to bring legal action against a guard who inflicted harm, and might even encourage it. ‘Recipe for trouble’ Radio New Zealand International also reported that the Human Rights Law Centre in Australia said the bill was a ‘recipe for trouble’. The HRLC’s director of legal advocacy, Daniel Webb, had raised concern about increasing powers to use force while decreasing checks and balances on the exercise of those powers. He said Australia was the only country in the world that subjected asylum seekers to mandatory and indefinite detention as a first resort and the average length of time people were spending in immigration centres was now more than 400 days. Webb said instead of creating excessive and unchecked powers to supress unrest, its root causes should be addressed – the amount of time innocent people were being locked in limbo. The bill is the subject of a Senate inquiry that is due to report next month.

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Women wait less time for breast care appointments

Waikato DHB Breast Care manager Clare Coles. Waikato DHB Breast Care manager Clare Coles.[/caption]Women waiting to see a breast care specialist at Waikato Hospital are now seen sooner than in the past because of an improvement in ‘did not attend’ rates by the Breast Care Centre. Waikato DHB Breast Care manager Clare Coles said the service had increased the number of booked appointments and reduced ‘did not attend’ rates in the past two years. “We have been tracking at less than 3 per cent of our appointments being missed since we introduced phoning women the day prior to their appointment,” she said. Women are referred to the centre by their GP typically with a new breast symptom that needs investigating and some women may also be asked to return for a follow-up appointment after the initial investigation has occurred, said Coles. With the demand for each appointment available always being higher than the actual capacity, it is vital that wastage of these appointments is kept to an absolute minimum to keep waiting times as short as possible. The centre year to date has over delivered on contracted numbers seeing more than 25 new women and 60 returns per week. It has four breast surgeons and three breast clinicians each working in one to three clinics per week. In the three months since November last year, only eight women out of 1112 did not attend their appointments. “The Breast Care Centre team leader started this [phoning women] as part of a several activities aimed to increase efficiency as a result of attending the Lean Thinking training.” Coles said the team tested how efficient it was to call women by moving from calls to texts. “Last month ourdid not attend rate shot up to 7.2 per cent. This is when we stopped phoning and texted women instead,” she said. As a result the Breast Care Clinic team will be doing some more investigative data analysis to try and reduce the rate further while still best utilising resources. Coles said while phoning women had not saved the service financially, it has impacted on being able to book appointments for other women sooner if an appointment was no longer needed. “Women like to be able to re-book there and then if they are unable to attend a planned appointment when we ring and it gives us a chance to offer their appointment to someone who is waiting.” —  ]]>

Second consecutive quarterly fall for CPI – Statistics NZ

Annual increase in prices slows The CPI increased 0.1 percent in the year to the March 2015 quarter. This is the smallest annual movement since the September 1999 quarter, when prices decreased 0.5 percent over the year. The prices of tradable goods and services (which face foreign competition) decreased 2.8 percent in the year, with lower prices for petrol (down 15 percent) and for audio-visual and computing equipment (down 13 percent). Tradable prices are now at their lowest level since the June 2009 quarter, despite petrol prices now being 12 percent higher than they were in that quarter. Non-tradable goods and services increased 2.3 percent, the lowest annual increase since the September 2012 quarter. The main contributor was cigarettes and tobacco prices (up 14 percent), influenced by the increase in excise duty in January 2015. Housing and household utility prices were up 3.0 percent in the year, with higher prices for newly built houses excluding land (up 5.0 percent), housing rentals (up 2.3 percent), and electricity (up 3.6 percent). Excluding cigarettes and tobacco, the annual CPI decreased 0.2 percent; excluding petrol, the CPI increased 1.0 percent over the year. The CPI measures the rate of price change of goods and services purchased by New Zealand households. Authorised by Liz MacPherson, Government Statistician, 20 April 2015 – –  ]]>

Public feedback sought on draft Victims Code

5pm Friday 29 May 2015. —  ]]>