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Israeli society has ‘become completely genocidal’, says B’Tselem head

Team Zeteo

The cost of telling the truth from inside a society that has become “completely genocidal” is very high, says Yuli Novak, executive director of the human rights watchdog B’Tselem.

Novak, one of the most uncompromising dissident voices within Israel, speaks frankly in this latest episode of Zeteo’s Beyond Israelism with Simone Zimmerman in a “deeply honest and impactful conversation about political rupture and moral clarity”.

She reflects on her journey from an upbringing shaped by patriotism and belief in Israeli democracy to a painful reckoning with what she now calls an apartheid regime — and with the conditions that enabled mass complicity with genocide.

“Genocide is never done by a small group of people. It is always done with the cooperation, and often the support, of an entire society,” she said.

Novak also revisits her years leading Breaking the Silence — a group of former Israeli soldiers that documented abuses under occupation — which became the target of an all-out smear campaign involving government officials, mainstream media, legal harassment, and infiltration by right-wing groups.

That experience, chronicled in her memoir Who Do You Think You Are?, marked a turning point — she realised she had become a dissident against the regime.

Today, as head of B’Tselem, Novak explains why the organisation chose to name Israel’s actions in Gaza as genocide in its report “Our Genocide”.

Regime needs ‘taking down’
“This regime needs to be taken down and replaced with something just and democratic — because a regime that commits genocide is an illegitimate regime,” she says.

Novak insists that facing reality honestly is the only path toward justice, equality, and collective liberation.

Zimmerman and Yuli grapple with fear, trauma, and complicity, but refuse despair. In a moment when fascism feels ascendant and denial remains loud, this conversation offers something rare: an unequivocal insistence that another future is still possible.

Beyond Israelism with Simone Zimmerman is a provocative new video podcast series from Tikkun Olam Productions, the team behind the viral and award-winning 2023 film Israelism.

In this series, Simone hosts bold and inspiring conversations that face the growing global reckoning with Zionism, the debates over Jewish identity, and the urgent struggle for Palestinian freedom.

Republished from Zeteo under Creative Commons.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Man pulled from water at Mt Maunganui beach dies

Source: Radio New Zealand

A man was pulled from the water on Saturday at Pilot Bay, on the harbour side of Mount Maunganui. Supplied/ Bay of Plenty Regional Council

A man has died after being pulled from the water at a beach in Mount Maunganui.

Police said they were called to Pilot Bay on Saturday, just before 8:30am.

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

Police looking for footage after after fatal two-vehicle crash in Rotorua’s Tikitere

Source: Radio New Zealand

The fatal two-vehicle crash happened early on Thursday morning. NZ Police / Supplied

Police are appealing for information after a fatal crash in Rotorua’s Tikitere.

The two-vehicle crash happened around 4.20am on Thursday on State Highway 30.

Two people were found dead at the scene and another person had moderate injuries.

Police would like to hear from anyone with CCTV or dashcam footage between the areas of Fenton Street, Rotorua and Curtis Road.

Officers say they are looking for footage of a Green Honda Spike, or any information on the vehicle’s movements during the early hours of Thursday morning.

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

Late lapses costly as Auckland FC go down to Melbourne City

Source: Radio New Zealand

Logan Rogerson of Auckland FC (left) reacts after missing a shot on goal during the A-League Round 13 match against Melbourne City, in Melbourne on Friday. photosport

Auckland FC coach Steve Corica has bemoaned a lack of killer-instinct, following the A-League leaders’ 2-1 loss to Melbourne City.

Friday night’s defeat in Melbourne was Auckland’s third of the season – the same number of losses they suffered last season across their entire maiden campaign when they comfortably finished top on the ladder.

They remain top of this season’s standings, but Sydney FC are just two points back with two games in hand. Sydney will go to the top if they are victorious at home to Wellington Phoenix on Sunday.

Corica said his side should have done better after taking the lead into the break courtesy of a fine goal from in-form forward Lachlan Brook – the Australian’s sixth of the campaign.

“We had a couple of counter-attacks in the second half but we weren’t ruthless enough,” Corica said.

“You know, we go up 1-nil, we need to finish teams off by getting the second goal and we didn’t do that.”

Players celebrate a goal from Melbourne City’s Medin Memeti. photosport

The visitors had the better of a tense first half, but Melbourne City created the better chances after break, rewarded by two late goals.

The first was a contentious penalty, questioned by Corica, after a City shot struck the hand of defender Francis de Vries.

Corica was forced into an early change when captain Hiroki Sakai went down when challenging for a header.

The coach later revealed it was a hamstring problem, after the former Japanese international had returned from a lengthy stint on the sideline recovering from a similar issue.

The change meant de Vries picked up the captain’s armband, after earlier in the day it was announced that the All Whites wing back had signed an extension to stay at the club until the end of 28/29 season.

Auckland FC are at home to face the Central Coast Mariners next Saturday, 24 January.

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Cricket v Rugby: What you need to know about Black Clash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Leon MacDonald is bowled with the last ball, as Team Cricket secure victory in 2025. Blake Armstrong/Photosport

Black Clash T20 – Cricket v Rugby

6.30pm, Saturday, 17 January

Bay Oval, Mt Maunganui

Live blog updates on RNZ

History

Billed as “New Zealand’s most electrifying sporting crossover”, Black Clash was created by Duco Events in 2019, adding to a stable that included Joseph Parker’s heavyweight boxing career and the Fight for Life charity event.

Traditionally, it pits some of rugby’s biggest names against former cricketing stars, with a mix of other personalities, for a night of sporting entertainment, some surprising skills and orchestrated finishes.

Over the seven previous matches, Team Cricket have won five – as you would expect – although Team Rugby actually prevailed in the inaugural match-up. That roster, coached by Sir Graham Henry, featured then-All Blacks skipper Kieran Read, predecessor Richie McCaw, and Beauden and Jordie Barrett, along with former Aussie cricket international David Hussey.

The cricket contingent that night included former Black Caps captain Stephen Fleming, World Cup hero Grant Elliott, batting star Nathan Astle, Black Ferns rugby star Kendra Cocksedge and former White Fern Liz Perry.

Only five players have contested all seven fixtures and return for this year – Hamish Marshall, Kyle Mills and Nathan McCullum among the cricketers, and Kaylum Boshier and Ofisa Tonu’u among the rugbyheads.

Last year’s encounter ended in a last-ball, five-run win to Team Cricket, with former All Black and Blues coach Leon MacDonald needing a six off the last ball for victory, but losing his stumps to former Black Caps spinner Todd Astle.

Team Cricket captain Nathan McCullum celebrates victory in the 2025 Black Clash. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Played under T20 rules, Black Clash is more like rugby sevens or darts than an international whiteball match. Patrons are encouraged to dress up in outlandish costumes, with the Alternative Commentary Team whipping the crowd into a collective frenzy.

Attending the match

The event generally switches between Christchurch, where it was staged last year, and Mt Maunganui, although the 2020 match took place at Napier.

Generally, there are more rules for spectators than players, as organisers try to keep their riotous spectacle family friendly.

Identification will be needed for access to hospitality zones. Costumes are encouraged, but no gang patches and no hi-vis clothing.

Costumes must conform to standards of decency, so maybe leave the ‘onesies’ at home.

With limited parking available in surrounding streets, organisers recommend carpooling or uber for transport to the ground.

Team Rugby celebrate a wicket in 2025 Black Clash. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

There’s a long list of items you CAN’T bring into the ground, but most fall under the category of commonsense – alcohol, pets (apart from assistance animals), dangerous weapons, large or offensive banners, fireworks, drugs etc.

Smoking or vaping is not allowed, and drunks will be turned away at the gate.

Teams

Team Rugby: Kieran Read (captain), Jordie Barrett, Kaylum Boshier, Andy Ellis, David Hill, Michael Hussey, Ngani Laumape, Colin Slade, Tim Southee, Jason Spice, Ofisa Tonu’u, Joey Wheeler

Team Cricket: Nathan McCullum (captain), Neil Broome, Grant Elliott, Hamish Marshall, Kyle Mills, Hadleigh Parkes, Adam Parore, Jesse Ryder, Lou Vincent, Neil Wagner, William Waiirua

Players to watch

Jordie Barrett: Perhaps the most highly decorated of the non-cricket players on display – he actually played Hawke Cup for Taranaki, while still at college – but he’s missed the last couple of Black Clash events.

All Black Jordie Barrett is also a pretty fair cricketer, as he shows annually in the Black Clash. Photosport

Barrett has featured in many of the close finishes, guiding Team Rugby to an upset win in the inaugural 2019 match, scoring an unbeaten 42 with the bat, taking two wickets with the ball and effecting a spectacular run out with a direct hit from the boundary.

Michael Hussey: Known simply as ‘Mr Cricket’, due to his encyclopaedic knowledge of the sport, Hussey was a respected member of the successful Australian side from 2004-13, playing 79 tests, 185 one-dayers and 38 T20s. He averaged 51.52 runs across his test tenure, scoring 19 centuries.

At 50, Hussey’s been called up as a ‘wildcard’ to bolster the rugby line-up, along with Blackcaps legend Tim Southee.

Jesse Ryder: Simply one of the most talented cricketers to strap on pads for New Zealand, Ryder never quite fulfilled his immense potential, due to a series of injuries and off-field misadventures.

Known as a powerful hitter of the ball, he scored a one-day 107 off 46 balls and compiled a test double-century, so his contributions could be spectacular.

Sometimes the best seats in the house are not dry ones. Chris Symes/Photosport

What will happen

Absolutely anything can happen, but after a tumultuous week, rugby could sure use something to celebrate.

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

Local pilots to the rescue after dozens left stranded in Waioeka Gorge

Source: Radio New Zealand

More than 40 people were evacuated after flooding and slips shut State Highway 2 between Matawai and Ōpōtiki on Friday. Police/Supplied

A local helicopter pilot helped bring stranded people to safety last night, after they were trapped in the Waioeka Gorge.

A police-led rescue was launched on a stretch of State Highway 2, between Gisborne and Ōpōtiki on Friday night, after dozens of people were stranded by huge slips caused by heavy rain.

Bay of Plenty Helicopters pilot Luke said he had made two rescues of four people, before being asked by police to begin taking people to Maunganuku carpark.

Luke said many people were confused.

” A lot of them just had a slip in front of them, they didn’t know there were multiple slips, so they were asking ‘are we going to be stuck here for the day, will it be cleared tomorrow, and what is going to happen to my car?’”

Luke said the people could have been taken to safety a lot sooner, if it was up to the local pilots.

“We could have got everyone out quite quickly and easily given we had most of the afternoon to do it, but things were sort of pushed out to the afternoon.

“It’s a very dangerous environment in there, there’s a single strand wire that criss-crosses all the way up so a lot of us operators we fly that a lot so we know the area.” he said.

It is believed Motu Helicopters were also involved in the rescue operations.

Police said more than 40 people were evacuated.

Eastern Bay of Plenty Area Commander Inspector Nicky Cooney said by midnight, helicopters had brought out everyone stuck between the slips.

“It’s been a significant effort to reach so many people who were trapped, and I want to acknowledge the efforts of local helicopter pilots, New Zealand Defence Force staff, local and regional councils, and Police Search and Rescue staff.

“It’s been a long operation, but we’re just thankful that everyone is safe – everyone we know about has been accounted for.”

Inspector Cooney said helicopters took the evacuated motorists to a local campsite, where an NZDF NH90 helicopter ferried them to evacuation centres at Matawai and Ōpōtiki.

“The recovery of the vehicles will take some time given the significant damage and number of slips through the gorge, but the main thing is nobody was hurt.”

Another eight people in two private addresses will be evacuated on Saturday morning.

Police said it will take some time to recover the vehicles given the significant amount of damage.

The Transport Agency said the stretch of road will be closed all weekend.

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I’m 65 and working, what happens to tax on my pension?- Ask Susan

Source: Radio New Zealand

What happens to tax on your pension if you’re 65 and working? 123RF

Got questions? RNZ has a new podcast, No Stupid Questions, with Susan Edmunds.

We’d love to hear more of your questions about money and the economy. You can send through written questions, like these ones, but – even better – you can drop us a voice memo to our email questions@rnz.co.nz

I’ll be 65 this February. I have had a notification from IRD that I need to apply for New Zealand Superannuation. As I am continuing to work (at least for the next five years) as I have a mortgage to pay I’m wondering what this means for my tax rate? Should I claim it or wait until I’ve retired?

You can claim NZ Super, you don’t need to wait.

There is no income test or asset test on the pension, so anyone can claim it, no matter what they’re earning.

If you have a job, you might find that NZ Super needs to be taxed with a secondary tax rate – this doesn’t mean you pay more tax overall, it just reflects that the pension is coming in on top of your existing income and may be pushed into a higher tax bracket because of that. If you end up paying too much tax, you’ll get it back at the end of the tax year.

You won’t be worse off for having claimed NZ Super because New Zealand’s tax system means you only pay the higher rates of tax on the higher amounts earned – if your pension means your total annual income is now over $53,501 a year, for example, it’s only the bit over that threshold that is charged at 30 percent. The rest remains taxed as it was previously.

I am looking at retiring back in NZ at the end of the year so as to access the NZ superannuation as I turn 65 later this year. My question: If I sell my home in Australia will I be taxed in New Zealand on the sale? I have lived here for five years.

I asked Robyn Walker, a tax partner at Deloitte. She said you’ll need to determine whether you are a New Zealand tax resident.

People are counted as a tax resident when they have been in New Zealand more than 183 days in any 12-month period or have a permanent place to live here.

If you are, then you could be subject to the bright-line test to tax the capital gains you make on the sale of overseas property, but only if you’ve bought and sold your home within two years.

There might be taxes you’ll need to be prepared for in Australia, too.

I would like to know the rules for gifting money and the tax implications associated with it. Could you please answer this question for me or let me know where I could find the answer.

New Zealand hasn’t had a gift duty since 2011 so you won’t pay tax on gifts you make to family members or other people.

The main way that it can be a problem is if you’re gifting assets in the years before you apply for a rest home subsidy. If you gift more than the limit in the years before you apply, you can find that amount is included in the Government’s calculation of assets.

The Ministry of Social Development says: “We won’t count up to $8000 of assets you’ve gifted each year in the last five years (from when you apply for the subsidy). This is a total of $40,000 of any assets you and your partner (even if they’ve died) have gifted in the last five years.

“If your partner applies at the same time, this amount will double to $80,000 (but we won’t count $40,000 each if you apply at different times).”

Ther could also be situations where the gift of a house to a family member could trigger the bright-line test if you’ve only owned it for a short time. When you gift a house you are considered to have sold it for its market value even if there is no money moving.

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

Kiwis and Australians struggling to experience an OE in London due to difficult job hunts

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kiwi Oliver Tattersall at a football match in London during his OE. Alice Wilkins/RNZ

An OE in London is often viewed as a right of passage for New Zealanders and Australians, but UK-based recruiters say it is a difficult time to secure work in the city, even for experienced expats.

Oliver Tattersall, 28, has been working as a software developer for six years.

He moved to London from Auckland in June to begin his OE, and was initially looking forward to the job hunt.

“There are a lot of exciting job opportunities in London, especially in software development, so I had pretty big dreams of all these cool companies I could work for,” Tattersall said.

However, the reality of finding work soon became clear.

Tattersall sent off 200 applications during his search – many never returned a response.

On several occasions he progressed through to the end of an interview process, only to miss out to another candidate.

“Those were the down days, when you’d go through an interview process and miss out after the second or third round, and be back at square one, when you’re just sending off several applications a day and hearing nothing,” he said.

After months of unemployment, Tattersall was relying heavily on his savings, and had signed up for temporary work.

He also started posting about his job hunt on social media, to give himself something creative to focus on.

The posts were viewed by his friends, but he received several messages asking questions about what type of work he was looking for, and what experience he had.

“If you know people it’s a lot easier to get a job, and so I thought sharing my journey was a way to put myself out there,” Tattersall said.

Finally, after four months of searching, Tattersall secured a position as a senior associate developer in financial services.

However, other London jobseekers have not been as lucky.

Imogen Haylock, 29, has temporarily moved back home to Adelaide after being unemployed for six months.

She secured a marketing job when she first moved to London in 2024, but was later made redundant.

Finding work for a second time has been significantly harder.

Haylock eventually had to move out of her flat, and live with her sister in London to save rent.

She made the difficult decision to return to Australia, after a particularly promising job opportunity fell through.

“I realised, it has been six months, and I am back at absolute scratch on this job hunt,”

“It just felt like absolute logic to leave and go home at that stage, and just recoup and actually have the chance to stop job hunting for a minute and just reset, because it is very draining,” Haylock said.

She has also been sharing the highs and lows of unemployment on social media, and started a Whatsapp group of 150 followers who are also seeking work in the city.

“I wanted to be really honest and be like, yes I’m unemployed, and yes I can be optimistic about this temporary break and this ability to enjoy London in my spare time, but the reality is that it’s really hard and I’m really struggling with this,”

“I didn’t realise how many people were going through what I was going through, particularly in marketing,” Haylock said.

Deb Brown, a recruiter at Armadillo Connect, which specialises in helping New Zealanders, Australians and Canadians find work in accounting, marketing, and legal roles, said it has been a challenging time for London jobseekers – and that’s likely to continue.

“Corporate and commercial lawyers, who usually have found it fairly easy to secure work in London, particularly if they’re coming from the top tier legal firms in Australia and New Zealand, this year, even those guys are struggling, and in some instances we’re suggesting people just to hold off coming to the UK,” Brown said.

She said London companies are struggling, and cutting back on recruiting to save money.

Brown advised New Zealanders who are thinking about moving, to make sure they have at least several years of industry experience, and have started planning for their job search before arriving.

She said clearly stating whether you have the ability to obtain a longer-term visa on your CV is also a good idea.

“What I will say is Australian and New Zealand professionals are highly regarded in the London job market, and we have all those Aussies and Kiwis before us to thank for that because they have created a great work ethic and a great reputation.”

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

Man injured after being hit by car in Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

A pedestrian has moderate to serious injuries after being hit by a car in Newtown. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A man has been injured after being hit by a vehicle in the Wellington suburb of Newtown.

Emergency services were called to a report of a collision between a vehicle and a pedestrian in Riddiford Street about 6.40pm on Friday.

Police said the pedestrian had moderate to serious injuries.

“There will be some disruption to traffic flow while emergency services work at the scene, especially in the south bound lane of Riddiford Street.

“Motorists are advised to take alternative routes,” police said.

“Police will investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident and the Serious Crash Unit has been notified.”

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

Eugene Doyle: Iran in the vortex – what’s really going on and the ‘invisible hand’ of Israel?

COMMENTARY: By Eugene Doyle

If you want to understand what’s going on in Iran, abandon what the Persians invented centuries ago: Manichaeism. We use the term today to denote political framing which is simplistic, black-and-white, two-dimensional — a world of Angels (us) and Demons (them).

This article recognises multiple perspectives, including those of an activist associated with the anti-government Woman Life Freedom movement whom I interviewed this week.

First, however, let us look at the geopolitical manoeuvres at work and “The Invisible Hand of Israel”.

The invisible hand of Israel
Former Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant told Israeli army radio this week that Israel must be ready to act when the Iranian “regime” is ready to fall.

“At this moment, when what matters most is the mass action on the ground, we need to stay in the background and steer things with an invisible hand,” said Gallant, who is the subject of an International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant.

Former CIA director and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted this week: “Happy New Year to every Iranian in the streets. Also to every Mossad agent walking beside them.”

I don’t believe this was a case of letting the cat out of the bag; I think this is both true and a form of psy-ops (psychological warfare), trying to unnerve the Iranian government and encourage the kind of harsh crackdown that regimes resort to when they feel cornered.

MI6, CIA and Mossad are active in Iran, much to the frustration of many of the large numbers of anti-government protesters determined to end the rule of the clerics.

According to Israeli and Western sources, tens of thousands of Starlink terminals were smuggled into Iran to bypass any internet shutdown. Yet the government — apparently using sophisticated Chinese “kill switches” — were able to disable most of them, thus decoupling people within Iran from external coordinators.

Trump: ‘Help is on the way’
“Help is on the way,” Trump said menacingly on January 12.  How did that kind of “help” go for Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan or so many other countries going back to the Guatemalan Silent Genocide or the Vietnam War?

American “help” resulted in the overthrow of the democratically-elected Mossadegh government and the installation of authoritarian rule under Shah Pahlavi in 1953. The West got their hands on the oil.

This time if they cannot get regime change they will be happy with regime destruction, civil war and the end of the multi-century project for a unified and sovereign Iranian state. So far, things have not gone to plan.

Long-standing Israeli security analyst Ehud Ya’ari told Israeli Channel 12 this week that the Iranian government remained firmly in control and that there was no evidence of momentum in the protests.

“I want to say things that disappoint not only the viewers, but also me,” he said. “At the moment, we do not see a continued expansion of the uprising.

“It is not taking on new and larger dimensions, as it did in 1978–1979 before Khomeini returned to Tehran.”

This is inconvenient if the West indeed plans to launch a war.  The first Gulf War was partially sold on the killing of imaginary Incubator Babies, the Second Iraq War was sold on imaginary Weapons of Mass Destruction, the genocide in Gaza was launched amid lurid tales of imaginary Beheaded Babies.

War propaganda peddled by our mainstream media demands worthy victims.

Western contempt for international law could get a lot of people killed

As shown in Palestine and in Iran, the West tends to have a spitting contempt for international law if it is their team that tramples on it. Two cornerstones we should never forget are:

Article 2(4) of the UN Charter – Prohibition of Force: All Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state.

And, yes, that does include powerful white countries. And yes, that does include Russia.

As shown in Palestine and in Iran, the West tends to have a spitting contempt for international law if it is their team that tramples on it. Image: ww.solidarity.co.nz

Secondly, we should never forget the 1965 UN Declaration on the Inadmissibility of Intervention in Domestic Affairs.

Back in the 1980s the Reagan Administration secretly sold weapons to its enemy Iran to secretly fund Nicaraguan Contra death squads. In the 1984 Nicaragua Case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), international law was clarified by reaffirming that the principle of non-intervention “involves the right of every sovereign State to conduct its affairs without outside interference”.

Alastair Crooke, a former high-ranking member of Britain’s MI6, an expert on Islamist revolution, says Mujahedeen-e-Khalq fighters trained by the CIA in Albania, along with Kurdish fighters trained by the US in Syria, infiltrated Iran recently and played an important role in the violence.

“We’ve had demonstrations periodically in Iran but these were much more violent.” He suggests the ploy was to provoke retaliatory regime violence which could act as an accelerant to further popular escalation.

Some important truths about what is happening in Iran
There is a large anti-government portion of the population which has long-standing and genuine grievances.  I know and admire a few of them. There have also been equally large pro-government protests, largely unreported in the Western media.

Foremost among the anti-government protesters are women and, for that reason, I interviewed Aida Tavassoli, an Iranian women’s rights activist with the Woman Life Freedom movement.

“I think the people of Iran are just so fed up right now,” she told me. “I’ve always said Iran is like a pressure cooker. Each uprising is like you put more steam in the pressure cooker. Eventually it will explode.”

Foremost among the anti-government protesters are women. Image: Amnesty International

Aida became active in advocacy for women’s rights in Iran in 2022 when Jina Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman, died in a Tehran hospital after being arrested by Iran’s morality police for allegedly improper hijab wearing. Her death sparked major protests inside Iran and around the world.

The circumstances of her death are, typically, contested.

“The whole world basically erupted into protests over the lack of women’s rights in Iran,” Tavassoli says. “The entire legislation of Iranian law is against women; they treat us as second-class citizens. We have basically no right to divorce, to the custody of children, to say no to child marriage. There’s a lot of honour killings in Iran, which we think are perpetuated by these discriminatory laws.”

This time around the most prominent anti-government groups rally around Reza Pahlavi, the son of the deposed Shah, who lives in the US, is endorsed by Israel, the US and powerful parts of the Iranian diaspora. According to Iran watchers I follow, his popularity within Iran is limited.

Pahlavi is in direct contact with Trump.  He publicly supported the American bombing of his own country last year.  He has expressed a desire to be in Tehran sooner rather than later.

“We will soon be by your side.” he tweeted to protesters, urging them to stay on the streets.

Images of rallies around the Western world in support of the anti-government action inside Iran typically show three flags prominent in the protests – the Lion and Sun flag of the Pahlavi regime, the Israeli flag, and the US flag.  This alliance between the monarchists, the Israelis and the Americans is concerning for many Iranians, including anti-government people like Aida Tavassoli.

“It almost feels like Reza Pahlavi and his dear friends — the Israelis and Americans — are stealing our revolution,” Tavassoli says. She emphasises any change should come from civil society inside Iran not external actors.

London-based Middle East Eye, with reporters on the ground, says “Iranian protesters reject US and Israeli interference”.

MEE quotes one of the protesters, Sara: “We want regime change, but we do not want our country to be destroyed. And given Israel’s record, it would not be surprising if they tried to exploit this situation.”

Not in any way discounting the validity and determination of many anti-government protesters, the events of the past month show all the tell-tale signs of a US “colour revolution”.

The Islamic Republic is under the kind of pressure that the West has become adept at applying.

The US reneged on the JCPOA nuclear agreement in 2018. Subsequent sanctions and further isolation are powerful. US-Israeli assassinations and missile attacks triggered the 12-day War last year.

Some believe the sharp decline in the Iranian currency this month was part of an orchestrated destabilization campaign. Combine this with corruption and what is widely assessed as incompetent economic management and you have all the ingredients for serious discontent.

Ordinary Iranians are suffering and frustrated; many are turning against the government.

Whether Iran is capable of reform is a moot point but all regimes crack down on dissent in the face of serious external threats. Image: www.solidarity.co.nz

The US is moving more attack assets into the region; Israel apparently wants to try its luck again. Here we go, yet again.

Professor Glenn Diesen: “The result is always the same — from the Arab Spring onward. The country which was to be liberated is instead destroyed. So we’ve all seen this movie before.”

Government incapable of reform?
Protesters make the valid point that the Iranian government has shown itself incapable of the kind of reform that would recognise the pluralistic nature of Iranian society. Whether it is capable of reform is a moot point but all regimes crack down on dissent in the face of serious external threats and that is why I believe the US-Israel-EU approach is disastrous and counterproductive.

Change must come from within and not be imposed by powerful hostile countries — not least by ones actively pursuing genocide in Palestine.

Eugene Doyle is a writer based in Wellington. He has written extensively on the Middle East, as well as peace and security issues in the Asia Pacific region, and he contributes to Asia Pacific Report. He hosts the public policy platform solidarity.co.nz

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Sonny Bill Williams calls for All Black captaincy change

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sonny Bill Williams. Dan Himbrechts/ www.photosport.nz

Dual code star Sonny Bill Williams has added his voice to the current All Black discussion, saying that the changes to the team shouldn’t end with the firing of coach Scott Robertson.

In a video posted to Instagram, the multiple World Cup and NRL Premiership winner called for Ardie Savea to take over as captain.

“I love Scott Barrett. He’s one of the best players in the world, but I think we need to give the captaincy to Ardie,” said Williams.

“He’s our guy moving forward, just because of the mana he brings. He’s got the runs on the board, look at what he’s done with Moana this year.”

Sydney-based Williams, who played 58 tests between 2010-19 including several seasons alongside both Savea and Barrett, also said that the incoming coaching group should be focused on team culture.

“This is just my honest thoughts and opinion, but I think we need a coaching group that knows how to connect before correcting. Because these players know how to play and we do have the squad,” he said.

Williams name-dropped Jamie Joseph, Tony Brown, Dave Rennie and Tana Umaga as potential heirs to Robertson, as the All Blacks embark on an incredibly challenging 2025 season. They begin in July with tests against France and Ireland, before heading away for four against the world champion Springboks.

Ofa Tuungafasi, Sonny Bill Williams and Ardie Savea © Photosport Ltd 2019 www.photosport.nz

In his last press conference as an All Black, after their semifinal exit at the 2019 World Cup, Williams took an unprompted opportunity to call for “more brown faces” in the All Black coaching set up and NZ Rugby administration. It was a point he stands by, saying in his post that “we need more flavour”.

“I know that rubbed up a few people but that’s my honest opinion. Why? Because I’m a big believer that in order to connect, you must connect, and these players at this level know how to play rugby. They know how to kick, tackle, pass. But what got the best out of me was believing in the systems, believing in the coaches…wanting to go out there and run through a brick wall.”

Former All Black coach Sir Steve Hansen rated Williams “the best athlete I’ve coached in a pure athlete sense. His training habits and his off-field habits were world-class.”

As well as his oval-ball exploits, Williams also became the third All Black after Maurice McHugh and Kevin Skinner to win the New Zealand heavyweight boxing title.

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March planned across Auckland Harbour Bridge has permit declined

Source: Radio New Zealand

There is a very high threshold for accepting requests to access the bridge for special events said the NZTA. 123rf

A planned protest across the Auckland Harbour Bridge organised by the Freedom and Rights Coalition has had its permit declined.

The event is being organised for 31 January by the Brian Tamaki-associated protest group.

Transport Agency national manager maintenance and operations Andrew Clark said there was a very high threshold for accepting requests to access the bridge for special events.

NZTA declined the request for access on 31 January because the traffic management plan provided did not meet the criteria, he said.

“The Auckland Harbour Bridge is New Zealand’s most critical transport asset and is designed for a steady flow of vehicles. The bridge is not designed for use by pedestrians,” Clark said.

“Large groups of people walking across the Auckland Harbour Bridge generates swaying of the structure, which causes vibrations leading to large movement between the clip-ons and the central truss bridge lanes.”

Clark said the timing and duration of these sorts of events over the Auckland Harbour Bridge also caused substantial and widespread disruption to Auckland’s transport network.

Police said a significant police operation was well-advanced in its planning.

Superintendent Naila Hassan said any unlawful access to the motorway would be met with enforcement action.

“Police recognise the right to peaceful and lawful protest. Any access to the motorway network requires a permit, and as no such permit has been issued. Any protest action on the Auckland Harbour Bridge would be unlawful,” she said.

“Police has been advised recent marches on the ‘clip-on’ lanes posed a risk of damage to infrastructure and put participants at risk of serious injury.

“This advice has changed Police’s position on facilitating any future access for marching across the bridge.”

Hassan said any protest action through the centre lanes of the bridge would most likely force the closure of at least all lanes in one direction of the bridge.

“This could also potentially put lives at risk due to attendees’ proximity to live traffic and disruption to emergency services,” she said.

“The right to protest must be balanced against the rights of the community and road users to go about their lawful activities.”

Hassan said police had offered to work with organisers on finding a suitable location so that they could carry out peaceful and lawful protest.

RNZ has approached the Freedom and Rights Coalition for comment.

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IT issue means Hutt Hospital nurses underpaid says Union

Source: Radio New Zealand

The payroll system at Hutt Hospital went down on Wednesday. RNZ / REECE BAKER

A nursing union delegate says an IT issue at Hutt Hospital meant nurses were underpaid for their most recent pay run.

Health New Zealand has since fixed the problem, which it said affected more than a thousand nurses.

But the delegate said the situation had been “a real concern” for staff, while Health New Zealand grapples with outages in different regions.

The payroll system went down on Wednesday, meaning staff were unable to check whether they have been paid correctly.

The New Zealand Nurses Organisation delegate said members had first noticed their pay packets “were a little bit light” on Wednesday evening, leading them to believe there were some discrepancies with payroll.

“At the moment it’s hard to know, because we can’t access our payroll system,” the delegate said.

“We couldn’t access our payslips, which was a bit of a worry, so we don’t know how much we’ve been underpaid, what discrepancies there may be. So it’s a real concern for members from that point of view, because I’ve heard, sort of anecdotal from some staff, that some staff may have been paid up to $1000 less than what they should have been for the fortnight.”

The delegate said they had been told payroll was trying to rectify the problem, but it had huge implications for people with expenses like rent or mortgages.

An email from the Hutt Valley payroll team to staff on Friday afternoon, seen by RNZ, explained approximately 1132 nursing staff were affected by the issue with PAYE calculation, and the underpayments were of “varying values”.

“We have identified the cause, fixed the issue and are currently preparing to bank all underpayments to employees today,” the email said.

Health New Zealand apologised to the staff, and encouraged them to contact the payroll team if they had been affected by penalties on defaulted payments.

“We will do our best to support you, however we need to consider each request on a case-by-case basis.”

The delegate encouraged members who may have been underpaid to speak to their landlord or bank to explain it was beyond their control.

“Hopefully people won’t suffer any penalty payments or any adverse financial hardship as a result of this occurring. Hopefully they’ll get it sorted and there might be a supplementary pay run.”

In April, Health New Zealand confirmed it would [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/559510/health-nz-confirms-a-third-of-all-it-roles-will-be-cut

cut around a third of IT roles].

Stuff has reported a consultancy firm had been contracted to fill gaps on the IT service desks until the end of January.

The delegate questioned whether this had played a part in the outages.

“No doubt the poor people are working as hard as they can, with all of the restructuring and redundancies that’ve gone on. Is this a result of these things? Who knows,” they said.

“The government talks about getting rid of all these back office people. It’s these back office people that are vital to keeping the frontline going. It’s the vital IT staff that we need, those back office administrators which keep the oil in the engine, and they keep the cogs turning, because without them we’re absolutely stuck. We’re really, really stuck.”

RNZ understands a close call in Tairāwhiti almost led to a similar situation, but it was resolved in time.

According to an email, staff were told on Wednesday morning that the payroll system was unavailable due to a server issue, and it meant pay would be delayed.

That evening, staff were then told the issue had been resolved and pay was on track.

RNZ has contacted Health New Zealand for comment about the payroll issues.

It had earlier confirmed a major technology outage at Capital and Coast, which had affected a range of clinical and administrative systems.

It followed an [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/584026/public-service-association-says-southern-hospitals-experienced-major-it-outage

outage across Southern hospitals] earlier in the week, which had prevented clinicians from accessing applications that track dosage information, lab results, and patient notes.

Parties point fingers over outages

Health minister Simeon Brown said doctors, nurses, and healthcare workers deserved reliable IT systems that supported them in reducing wait times for patients, and he shared patients’ expectations that the systems worked reliably.

“I’ve asked Health New Zealand to work urgently to resolve these recent issues, ensure stability for our health workforce, and deliver the digital improvements Kiwi patients expect and deserve,” he said.

Brown’s office said Health New Zealand was best placed to respond to specific technical questions about outages, system ownership, and timeframes for resolution.

Labour’s health spokesperson Dr Ayesha Verrall said the government had taken a “lax” approach to the health system’s IT needs, and it was putting patients at risk.

“The recent ManageMyHealth fiasco and continued IT outages are examples of what happens when you cut one third of IT staff and cut funding for data and digital capability as this government has done,” she said.

But Brown’s office said Health New Zealand was dealing with “significant legacy problems” caused by Labour’s reforms to the health system.

“Under Chris Hipkins and Ayesha Verrall, Labour then cut investment in health data and digital in late 2023, while spending millions on creating new layers of bureaucracy. This left Health New Zealand with fragmented, ageing systems, and increased vulnerability across the network,” a spokesperson for the minister said.

The spokesperson said the result was a “complex and fragile” digital environment, and the recently-announced Health Digital Investment Plan would stabilise critical systems and modernise healthcare technology.

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Police rescue underway near Gisborne after slips block SH2 in Waioeka Gorge

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Transport Agency (NZTA) said the closure was caused by a large slip between Matawai and Waioweka. NZTA

A police rescue is underway to reach people stuck in between land slips blocking State Highway 2 in the East Coast’s Waioeka Gorge.

The Transport Agency (NZTA) said the road would remain closed between Matawai and Waioweka, after slips and surface flooding meant it was not safe to clear debris.

Eastern Bay of Plenty Area Commander Inspector Nicky Cooney said police were working with partner agencies on the rescue operation.

“If you have any loved ones travelling on State Highway 2 in the area, that haven’t checked in with you, please contact 105.

“Please quote event number P065149924.”

Although SH2 between Matawai and Gisborne had reopened at 6pm Friday, the closure meant the arterial route would not connect to the rest of the North Island.

Drivers using that section of SH2 were advised to continue driving to the conditions and with caution on this stretch of road and throughout the region.

Road users in the area should stay alert to the potential for more flooding, debris and short notice closures, NZTA said.

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Sir Tim Shadbolt remembered as ‘absolutely extraordinary’ by family in public service

Source: Radio New Zealand

Invercargill has bid farewell to the “absolutely extraordinary” late Sir Tim Shadbolt in a service marked by humour and reflection, but a stinging rebuke of his final term in office.

Hundreds of friends, family, community members and political leaders gathered at the Civic Theatre for the public funeral on Friday afternoon, while thousands of others watched on an online livestream.

Tributes at the service moved between Sir Tim’s capacity for mischief to his powerful advocacy and leadership, tracing Sir Tim’s life from activism to public office, as the Waitematā and Invercargill mayor.

However, partner Asha Dutt said she could not speak without raising an “truly awful” time in Sir Tim’s life – which was his final term as Mayor of Invercargill.

The Invercargill City Council of 2019 should be ashamed of how Sir Tim exited his career, she said.

“I made the promise to Tim that I’d raise these points,” she said.

During that term, Sir Tim walked into the council chambers each day with no friends, she said.

“Let me clearly state, it wasn’t Tim who ailed and wasn’t capable of doing his job. It was the extreme stresses that were placed upon him by people that should have supported him, that turned his health, and turned my own,” she said.

“The council of 2019 have blood on their hands. That’s the shot I want to fire, Tim would be proud.”

She said she was staggered by the number of people who had come forward with “Tim stories” following his death – who had been touched or moved by him.

“He was receptive to everyone. He gave everyone the time of day,” she said.

“He was a unique person at a time when the world needs more unique people to propel themselves from the mould.”

Sister Tui Shadbolt recalled Sir Tim’s ability to communicate, lift spirits and mobilise people.

He devoted himself to making communities stronger with warmth, wit and humanity, she said.

“He spent his life fighting the apathy. He just wanted people to vote,” she said.

“He was always, always happy to serve.”

Son Robert Shadbolt recalled his father’s relentless honesty, work ethic, and can-do attitude.

“Dad – he was an ideas man, and planning was never something to slow him down,” he said.

“We miss you – your empathy, humour, warmth – and we come together today to celebrate someone who really, really lived.”

Family friend Sue Roswell described an “amazing friendship, through many life changes” with Tim, while lifelong friends, “Tim’s Team” – consisting of John Bower, Margaret Evans, Doug Owen and John Bower, paid tribute to a “truth-seeker” and “change maker”.

A haka performed by Mana Tuakiri Katie Todd/RNZ

“I’m actually a little bit envious that we don’t have more people around like Tim that can inspire and get people moving. Invercargill is a model for the rest of New Zealand,” Owen said.

“He had this immense ability to put the spotlight on stuff that was really important to New Zealanders…he was an aggressive reformer, but it was filled with love,” Evans said.

“May the name of Tim Shadbolt stay forever.”

Sir Tim first came into the national spotlight as a student activist in the 1960s, drawing attention to issues including apartheid and the Vietnam War.

Māori activist and artist Tame Iti recalled working with Sir Tim at the Bastion Point occupation in 1977.

Sir Tim was proof that “even the establishment surrenders if you shout at it enthusiastically for a long time”, he said.

“Tim did not just attend protests. He was the protest,” he said.

Māori artist and activist Tame Iti speaking at Sir Tim Shadbolt’s funeral. Katie Todd

Long-time friend Pita Turei recalled uniting with Sir Tim over a shared belief in the working man.

Both came from violent and rugged homes, and neither grew up with their fathers, he said.

They talked about the idea of revolution, he said.

“We were going to change the world – he did.”

During his time as Invercargill’s leader, Sir Tim championed the Zero Fees scheme at the Southland Institute of Technology, in a bid to attract more to the south and keep more young people in the region.

Major buildings including Stadium Southland were built during his term, and others including the Civic Theatre were refurbished.

Invercargill MP Penny Simmonds described Sir Tim as “unconventional, unexpected…hilarious and deeply loved.”

An “immense” capacity for compassion underscored his leadership, and his decision to advocate for zero-fees was part because he saw an economic opportunity, but also because he saw its power to open tertiary education to those long-excluded, she said.

“Today…we mourn the loss of an absolutely extraordinary man,” she said.

The spirit of Sir Tim will live through his community for a long time, son Ben Shadbolt said.

“I’ll always feel so much love for this bugger,” he said.

Pastor Graeme Pope thanked mourners who had come from near and far.

He described Sir Tim as humble and generous with his time, attention and love.

Attention was often put on what Sir Tim achieved, but what truly mattered was who he was, he said.

Sir Tim was made a Knight Companion of New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2019 New Year’s Honours List for his services to local government and the community.

Sir Tim’s cortège heading through the main streets of Invercargill. Katie Todd/RNZ

He died on 8 January, aged 78.

The funeral was followed by a cortege through the city out to Invercargill Airport’s Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal, and to Eastern Cemetery for a private interment.

The Invercargill City Council has been approached for comment.

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Tennis: Mensik v Baez for ASB Classic final

Source: Radio New Zealand

The ASB Classic finalists Sebastian Baez and Jakub Mensik Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

After rain delays and double-duty Jakub Mensik and Sebastian Baez have prevailed to set-up a showdown on centre court in the final of the ASB Classic men’s tennis tournament on Saturday.

Friday started with three quarterfinals still needing to be completed, a catch-up from rain delayed matches on Thursday.

Third seed Mensik began the day by defeating France’s Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard 6-4, 6-2 in the quarterfinals before returning to court to face Hungary’s Fabian Marozsan in the first semifinal.

Mensik finished strongly against Marozsan for a 7-6, 4-6, 6-1 victory which included 16 aces.

The Czech has now won both of the two matches he has played against Marozsan.

Marozsan came into the semifinal on centre court after defeating USA’s Eliot Spizzirri 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 on an outer court in his quarterfinal but could not do enough to upset the highest seed still remaining in the tournament.

Seventh seed Sebastian Baez booked his place in the final after knocking over two Americans.

Baez first upset top seed Ben Shelton in the quarterfinals in a match that Baez led 7-5, 0-1, when the rain became too relentless on Thursday. Baez finished off Shelton with ease on Friday, eventually winning 7-5, 6-3.

The Argentine then turned his attention to a relatively rested Marcos Giron.

Giron’s quarterfinal, against Italy’s Luciano Darderi, was the only match completed on Thursday so he was the only semifinalist not playing two matches in a day.

However, Baez was dominant and wasted no time in getting past a player ranked 21 places below him in the world rankings and who had a special exemption to be playing at the Classic.

Baez won the first set 6-1 in 24 minutes and the second set 6-4.

The Auckland final will be the first time Mensik and Baez have played each other.

The Czech is ranked 18th in the world, compared to Baez’s 39th, but Baez has been in top form of late, with Shelton the second top-10 player he has beaten already this year.

Baez is also undefeated in 2026 after playing in the United Cup in Australia for Argentina before coming the to Classic, whereas Mensik’s had two losses at the United Cup.

After Saturday’s final in Auckland the players will be making a swift exit to Melbourne for the Australian Open which begins on Sunday.

In the first Grand Slam of the year, Mensik’s first round match is against Spain’s Pablo Carreno Busta and Baez will play a familiar face in Mpetshi Perricard.

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NZTA warning Wellingtonians to expect traffic delays ahead of long weekend

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZTA said motorists should expect lane closures and temporary speed limits on Transmission Gully/SH1, as chip seal works and pavement reconstruction continued (file image). RNZ / Reece Baker

The transport agency is warning drivers to expect delays on Wellington’s Transmission Gully over the long weekend and is encouraging those travelling to keep an eye on the weather and the latest road conditions.

According to NZTA cameras, traffic on SH2 at Melling was building by 4pm on Friday amid rainy conditions, with MetService forecasting showers to continue into Saturday.

Traffic heading north out of the city at the SH1/2 interchange appeared to be flowing freely.

NZTA said motorists should expect lane closures and temporary speed limits on Transmission Gully/SH1, as chip seal works and pavement reconstruction continued.

It said night-time road closures in both the north and southbound directions would resume from Monday 19 January at 9pm, with detours in place.

It asked drivers to be careful.

“Chip seal works are happening in both the southbound and northbound lanes next week, so people should follow the advertised speed limit, as loose chip can fly and cause damage to vehicles.”

NZTA regional manager Mark Owner urged drivers “to do the right thing on the roads” , this weekend, to be patient, and ensure everyone was wearing seatbelts.

“It is the simplest thing to do and, if the worst happens, it can mean the difference between life or death. Please, make it click.”

He said too often small mistakes had devastating consequences.

“Driver distraction, fatigue, impatience – they can all lead bad decisions.

“And remember, it’s not just you that bears the brunt of a mistake. It is also your passengers, other drivers on the road around you, and anyone in the near vicinity,” he said.

Owen recommended drivers use NZTA’s Journey Planner to avoid peak holiday traffic.

“If you can, time your trip to avoid these times. Your passengers will very likely thank you for it,” he said.

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A first look at Liam Lawson’s F1 car for 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

3D render of the Visa Cash App Racing Bulls livery for the 2026 F1 season. VCARB / Red Bull Content Pool

Racing Bulls have unveiled their 2026 Formula One livery, introduced Liam Lawson’s new teammate and showcased a new partnership with Ford at an event at the Central Michigan train station.

On Friday (New Zealand time) in front of 1500 guests the New Zealand driver joined the team’s new driver Arvid Lindblad, chief executive Peter Bayer and team principal Alan Permane to show-off the new livery which retains an all-white look, enhanced by a subtle nod to its partnership with Ford.

Blue accents now trace the contours of the chassis, which the team described as elevating the design with a sharper, more streamlined finish.

“Launching the 2026 livery here in Detroit makes the moment feel even more special,” Lawson said.

“The history of innovation in this place really reflects what this team is building for the future. The partnership between Ford and Red Bull, the energy around the team, and the ambition for what’s ahead make this an incredibly exciting time to be part of VCARB. I’m more motivated than ever to push forward and help turn that vision into results on track.”

For the upcoming season Racing Bulls, along with the Red Bull team, will race with Ford manufactured power units in the cars.

“2026 represents one of the biggest technical resets Formula One has seen, and partnering with Ford at the very start of this journey is hugely significant for us,” Permane said.

“The Red Bull Ford Powertrains project brings together world-class engineering, innovation and racing DNA, and it puts us in a strong position as the sport enters this new era. We have been working closely with the team and are proud of what the Red Bull family have developed. It’s something we’re excited to have in our race car as we hit the track in the coming weeks.”

It is the first time Red Bull have manufactured their own power unit.

Testing for F1 starts in Bahrain in February.

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Death of Bay of Islands kiwis investigation continues with two dogs seized

Source: Radio New Zealand

The kiwi were killed at Wharengaere Bay (centre) on the Purerua Peninsula. Topshot Media / Dan Apiata

Two dogs have been seized in the Bay of Islands as authorities investigate the deaths of around 20 highly protected kiwi – including four around Boxing Day alone.

All the maulings occurred in one bay on Purerua Peninsula, north of Kerikeri.

DOC Bay of Islands ranger Adrian Walker confirmed “a significant number” of kiwi had been killed on the peninsula, in the past four months in particular.

He said two dogs had been seized by Far North District Council animal management officers from a property in Wharengaere Bay.

Walker said the dead kiwi were being tested to determine whether the seized dogs were responsible.

The peninsula boasts a major pest-control operation, Predator-free Purerua, and the highest kiwi call count ever recorded in New Zealand.

About 20 kiwi have been killed at Wharengaere Bay, in the northern Bay of Islands, in the past year. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

However, ongoing killings by roaming dogs, and perceived slow action by authorities, have led to frustration among conservationists working to protect the national bird.

RNZ understands the number of kiwi killed in the bay since this time last year is around 20.

That includes nine killed between late January and early March, four found dead on the beach in November, and another four kiwi carcasses found on 26 and 27 December.

The Far North District Council has been approached for comment. It is believed the dogs were seized on 13 January.

The timing of the latest kiwi deaths is potentially embarrassing because it coincides with the arrival on Purerua of an international film crew.

The CNN team has been on the peninsula this week filming kiwi and documenting the work of Predator-free Purerua as the group works to eradicate pests and safeguard native wildlife.

The documentary’s main focus is on feral cats, with one feline in particular – nicknamed “Nine Lives” – thought to be responsible for decimating the local pāteke (brown teal) population.

It’s not the first time roaming dogs have been implicated in kiwi deaths at isolated Wharengaere Bay.

A previous spate, in mid-2019, led to a rare prosecution in which a 50-year-old woman pleaded guilty to owning a dog that caused the deaths of six kiwi.

Some of the dead birds had been found on the lawn outside her home.

One of the dead kiwi found after an earlier spate of maulings at Wharengaere Bay. Supplied/DOC

According to court documents, she was convicted and ordered to pay $300 in reparations. The dog, which had been allowed to roam freely, was destroyed.

Elsewhere in the Bay of Islands, at least six kiwi were killed in Ōpua Forest, near Paihia, in 2023.

Post-mortem examinations found the Ōpua kiwi had been mauled by dogs but the owners were never identified.

Another spate occurred at Wharau Road, east of Kerikeri, in 2015, when at least eight kiwi were killed.

In that case, two owners were fined for failing to keep their dogs under control and three dogs were destroyed.

In 2021, a Russell man with previous convictions relating to roaming dogs was fined a record $4500 for owning a dog that caused the deaths of two kiwi.

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Police believe Onehunga shooting that left one critically injured was a targeted attack

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police at the scene of a shooting in Onehunga Kim Baker Wilson / RNZ

Police investigating a shooting that’s left a person critically injured believe it was a targeted attack.

They are now appealing for information or any security camera footage from Arthur Street in the Auckland suburb of Onehunga.

The shooting victim was transported to Auckland Hospital by St John and is still in a critical condition

Police say residents can expect to see more officers in the area, but there is no risk to the public.

Do you know more? Get in touch at: iwitness@rnz.co.nz

An investigation is underway after the shooting at Onehunga. Kim Baker Wilson / RNZ

Police said they received reports a person had received injuries consistent with a gunshot wound at a property shortly after 11am.

A woman who lived near the dairy said its owners were due to go to Dubai on Saturday for their son’s wedding. They were a lovely family, the woman – who did not want to be named – said.

She said the family had been running it for a long time.

Police tape surrounds a dairy and accompanying property on the corner of Arthur and Alfred Street. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

“My daughter was home alone and I came home from work and drove my car into the garage, and I saw a policeman with a big gun on the corner,” she said.

“I was worried obviously for my daughter, she didn’t hear it.”

The woman said it was “a really sad thing”.

A police officer at the scene. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

A person living opposite the cordoned property said her granddaughter heard a loud crashing bang.

An increased police presence will remain in the area while an investigation is underway.

Anyone with any information is asked to contact the police.

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Mourners gather to remember Sir Tim Shadbolt at funeral

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sir Tim Shadbolt’s casket at his funeral. Katie Todd

Sir Tim Shadbolt has been remembered at a funeral service at Invercargill’s Civic Theatre.

During the service, Sir Tim was recognised as a man who always chose to see the best in every situation and the person in every person.

Pastor Graeme Pope thanked mourners who had come from near and far to remember and celebrate him at the service.

He said Sir Tim was very humble and very generous with his time, attention and love, and he cared deeply for Invercargill.

Sir Tim’s youngest son Declan Lawton-Dutt said his dad ensured he made time for him.

Sir Tim was known as the protester, the concreter and the mayor, but he wanted to talk about his dad, he said.

He thanked his dad for being able to compose himself for hide and seek after long council meetings.

His dad wanted to be a good father and a good partner, and he was, Lawton-Dutt said.

Rodney Shadbolt, Sir Tim’s brother, said Sir Tim cared for him with good humour and love.

It was hard to take yourself too seriously with Sir Tim as your brother, he said.

He finished his speech by quoting Shakespeare.

“Now cracks a noble heart. Good night my sweet brother. A flight of angels sings you to your rest”.

The partner of Sir Tim said she was blown away by the public outpouring of love and grief in the wake of his death.

Asha Dutt told mourners that he shared his time with everyone, showing humanity and kindness, and that “everyone has a story of Tim”.

Dutt also hit out at the Invercargill City Council over his tumultuous final term.

Dutt said Sir Tim faced extreme stress with a total lack of support from other councillors during the term.

Dutt believed the council of 2019 had blood on their hands, and she asked certain councillors not to attend the funeral.

Sir Tim Shadbolt’s casket at his funeral. Katie Todd

Another who paid their respects was Māori activist and artist Tame Iti.

Iti thanked Sir Tim for his many years championing Māori issues including the Bastion Point occupation.

“Tim did not just attend protests. He was the protest,” he said.

Former mayor of Hamilton and part of “Tim’s Team”, Margaret Evans, said her friend Sir Tim loved Invercargill.

He promised to put Invercargill on that map and he did it, she said.

“Today, we have come to bury Caesar,” Evans said.

Earlier, mourners queued under umbrellas to pay their respects to Sir Tim.

The 78-year-old former mayor of Waitematā and Invercargill died last week.

The service was livestreamed on the Invercargill City Council’s website.

An RNZ reporter at the service said plenty of people lined up outside the theatre before the doors opened at 1pm.

People gather to pay their respects to Tim Shadbolt. Katie Todd

Among those waiting in line was Tim McPherson, who remembered running into Sir Tim at a pop-up ice rink.

“His son was skating and I went and had a go, and he saw this other old geezer having a go so he got his ice skates on and got out there and gave a credible performance,” he said.

“He wasn’t afraid to make a fool of himself.”

It was a great day to celebrate Sir Tim’s life, saying he made such an impression on Invercargill and led the revitalisation of a dying city.

McPherson was the dairy chairman at Federated Farmers when there was a promotion to attract North Island farmers down south.

“Tim always felt that he’d come down as part of the dairy boom,” he said.

Southlander Murray Warhurst remembered Sir Tim fondly, saying he had often met him at Anzac Day services, mostly at marches in Bluff.

“If you made it down there, well you’re alright. It’s one of the longest marches from the RSA to the Cenotaph,” he said.

He had changed his opinion about Sir Tim’s views on the Vietnam War, saying it was not about the armed forces, but about freedom of speech.

He was waiting in line to pay his respects for what Sir Tim had done for Invercargill, Southland and New Zealand as a whole, Warhurst said.

Supplied/LDR – ODT/Stephen Jaquiery

Tributes have been flowing in for Sir Tim since his death, describing him as a colourful and charismatic character who championed local politics and his city.

He was made a Knight Companion of New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2019 New Year’s Honours List for his services to local government and the community.

After the service, the funeral procession left for the Invercargill Airport – home to the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal, via Tay Street and Clyde Street, before making its way to Eastern Cemetery for a private interment.

Sir Tim first came into the national spotlight as a student activist in the 1960s, drawing attention to issues including apartheid and the Vietnam War.

He donned the mayoral chains for the first time in Waitematā in 1983, holding them for six years.

Mayor Shadbolt stands in front of his portrait in November, a piece that is titled Seriously. Stephen Jaquiery / ODT

He tried his luck again in 1992, standing for mayor in Auckland, Waitākere and Dunedin.

While he was unsuccessful in those races, he breezed into the top job the following year during a by-election in Invercargill.

He also dabbled in national politics, becoming the New Zealand First candidate for the Selwyn by-election in 1994 – less than a day after joining the party.

Sir Tim served in Invercargill until 1995, but was re-elected in 1998 and held onto the mayoral chains until an unsuccessful tilt in 2022.

Tim Shadbolt with a group of protesters outside the Auckland Town Hall in 1973 Te Ara / Public Domain

With the city in decline, he championed the Zero Fees scheme at the Southland Institute of Technology, in a bid to attract more to the south and keep more young people in the region.

Major buildings including Stadium Southland were built during his term, and others including the Civic Theatre were refurbished.

On the screen, he competed on Dancing with the Stars, broke the world record for the longest television interview – just over 26 hours – and made cameo appearances in the 2017 remake of Goodbye Pork Pie and The World’s Fastest Indian.

He became known as the man who put Invercargill on the map, with Invercargill Airport officially naming the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal last year to mark his legacy.

In a statement announcing his passing, his partner Asha Dutt said they lost the cornerstone of their family and the man who devoted himself to promoting Invercargill for almost 30 years.

“Tim was a kind-hearted man who cared deeply about the people around him. He was a champion for the underdog and an active political campaigner from his student days of anti-war protest, his activism for Māori rights, and his fight to keep the Southern Institute of Technology and Zero Fees autonomous.

“Tim will be remembered with gratitude, respect, and affection for his commitment to the south and his passion for life.”

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Ed Sheeran fans excited for premiere show in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ginger-nuts are among those queuing ahead of Ed Sheeran’s Auckland concert today Gill Bonnett

Ed Sheeran fans are converging on Go Media Stadium in Auckland for the premiere of his worldwide tour.

The record-breaking British musician is playing two shows in Auckland, on Friday night and Saturday, before heading to Wellington and Christchurch the following week.

Fans going to tonight’s show say it’s exciting to be at the first concert of his Loop Tour.

British pop star Ed Sheeran is opening requests for songs on the new large video screen in the Auckland stadium. Gill Bonnett

Sheeran, known for his cameos in TV and film as well as his music, made his acting debut in Auckland more than a decade ago when he starred in an episode of Shortland Street.

British pop star Ed Sheeran is playing the first show of his Loop Tour in Auckland tonight. Supplied / Mark Surridge

Since then, his chart hits have gone from strength-to-strength, including breaking records for top 10 hits and sales. A single from his album ÷, “Perfect”, reached number one in the US, Australia, and the UK

Auckland deputy mayor Desley Simpson says an estimated 80-thousand fans will see him in Auckland alone, with the largest video screen ever built in New Zealand also taking centre stage.

Biird is one of the concerts opening acts. Gill Bonnett

Special event buses have been laid on leaving from Quay Street in the city centre.

Fans are being encouraged to set out early, with traffic building before the gates opened at 4pm.

Sheeran will wrap up the New Zealand leg of his tour with a show at Wellington’s Sky Stadium on 21 January and two shows at Christchurch’s Apollo Projects Stadium on 24 and 25 January.

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Wellington Hospital gastroenteritis outbreak likely caused by contaminated food

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington Hospital’s emergency department. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Health officials said a gastroenteritis outbreak at Wellington Hospital was likely caused by contaminated food.

Dozens of the hospital’s emergency department staff have fallen ill over the past week and Health New Zealand has confirmed the outbreak has now spread to a general unit.

Spokesperson Jamie Duncan said no patients had been affected and there is no risk to the general public.

He said no further spread within the hospital had been identified.

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NZTA warning Wellingtonions to expect traffic delays ahead of long weekend

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZTA said motorists should expect lane closures and temporary speed limits on Transmission Gully/SH1, as chip seal works and pavement reconstruction continued (file image). RNZ / Reece Baker

The transport agency is warning drivers to expect delays on Wellington’s Transmission Gully over the long weekend and is encouraging those travelling to keep an eye on the weather and the latest road conditions.

According to NZTA cameras, traffic on SH2 at Melling was building by 4pm on Friday amid rainy conditions, with MetService forecasting showers to continue into Saturday.

Traffic heading north out of the city at the SH1/2 interchange appeared to be flowing freely.

NZTA said motorists should expect lane closures and temporary speed limits on Transmission Gully/SH1, as chip seal works and pavement reconstruction continued.

It said night-time road closures in both the north and southbound directions would resume from Monday 19 January at 9pm, with detours in place.

It asked drivers to be careful.

“Chip seal works are happening in both the southbound and northbound lanes next week, so people should follow the advertised speed limit, as loose chip can fly and cause damage to vehicles.”

NZTA regional manager Mark Owner urged drivers “to do the right thing on the roads” , this weekend, to be patient, and ensure everyone was wearing seatbelts.

“It is the simplest thing to do and, if the worst happens, it can mean the difference between life or death. Please, make it click.”

He said too often small mistakes had devastating consequences.

“Driver distraction, fatigue, impatience – they can all lead bad decisions.

“And remember, it’s not just you that bears the brunt of a mistake. It is also your passengers, other drivers on the road around you, and anyone in the near vicinity,” he said.

Owen recommended drivers use NZTA’s Journey Planner to avoid peak holiday traffic.

“If you can, time your trip to avoid these times. Your passengers will very likely thank you for it,” he said.

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First offshore oil and gas exploration permit since ban under official consideration

Source: Radio New Zealand

An oil rig off the coast of Taranaki. Supplied

An Australian firm incorporated weeks before New Zealand’s offshore oil and gas ban ended will have its application for an exploration permit considered uncontested.

EnZed Energy is the first company to apply for a petroleum exploration permit since the 2018 ban, which was overturned by the government last year.

It applied for a block off the coast of Taranaki last October, triggering a three-month competitive process where other companies could also apply to explore in the same area.

However, the competitive window closed at 5pm on Friday with no other applicants published on the Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment’s (MBIE) website.

Despite the lack of competitors, the permit is not guaranteed. MBIE confirmed it would now complete a full assessment of the application, which would include the work programme EnZed Energy submitted, along with the company’s technical and financial capability, its compliance history and its ability to meet health and safety and environmental requirements.

MBIE would also consult with other relevant government agencies, such as the Department of Conservation, and mana whenua.

Resource markets general manager Katherine MacNeill said there was no legal timeframe, but MBIE expected the process to take about six months.

A fast-tracked seabed mining application in a similar area, off the coast of Pātea and Hawera, has been strenuously opposed by some locals, including Te Runanga O Ngāti Ruanui.

The block EnZed Energy is interested in also significantly overlaps with the West Coast North Island Marine Mammal Sanctuary, which prohibits seismic surveying in almost all circumstances.

However, the work programme submitted by the company said it would reinterpret the data from previous seismic surveys in the area, with no new surveying planned.

The block EnZed Energy has applied to explore for oil and gas is shown in purple. Screenshot (NZPAM)

Resources minister Shane Jones said last year that overturning the offshore ban was necessary to shore up the country’s medium-term energy security.

But the reversal was condemned by climate advocates, and energy resources experts and even gentailers have warned a large new find is unlikely.

University of Waikato law professor Barry Barton, who specialises in energy and natural resources law, said even if EnZed Energy was granted a permit, it could be years before any explorative drilling happened – if at all.

“Quite often the first couple of years is desk work, analysis, reinterpretation, and that’s what the company is offering here – to take existing seismic work and reevaluate it.

“That would then lead to a decision about whether they’re actually going to drill an exploration well.”

Even if the company found something, there was no guarantee they would pursue it, Barton said.

“Bringing an offshore drilling rig to New Zealand is hideously expensive, so that may or may not happen.”

In recent decades, contending with New Zealand’s geology had not been “terribly attractive” to many companies, he said.

“The oil and gas ban obviously would not have helped, but the fact that the ban has been lifted doesn’t necessarily mean that the geological circumstances have changed.”

A permit for part of the area was surrendered in 2016 after the permit-holders decided it was uneconomic to proceed.

There could be other reasons why no other companies had expressed interest, Barton said.

“It’s also possible that companies could be waiting for the gas security fund that the government has announced to kick in.”

The $200 million ‘co-investment’ fund, which was announced in last year’s Budget and extended in November to include extraction of natural gas from existing fields, opened to expressions of interest this week.

The swift rise in natural gas prices, as reserves depleted faster than expected, could also make exploration more attractive, Barton said.

“There will be niches, there will be geological plays that someone spots that nobody else had noticed or nobody else had thought was worth pursuing,” he said.

“It may not be on a huge scale, but you can’t eliminate those possibilities completely.”

EnZed Energy was registered in Australia on 23 August, 2025, one month before oil and gas exploration applications were re-opened. It shares some governance, including directors, and a shared premises with Australian Carbon Vault, a carbon capture and storage (CCUS) firm.

CCUS involves capturing the carbon dioxide created during the extraction process at its source, condensing it and storing it deep underground – allowing companies to offset other emissions.

However, the government has only recently begun developing regulations for the technology, and the only planned scheme, at Kapuni gas field, fell over last year.

EnZed Energy’s work programme does not mention carbon capture.

The company did not reply to emails and phone messages from RNZ seeking comment about its plans.

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Ed Sheeran fans excited for premiere show in South Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

British pop star Ed Sheeran is playing the first show of his Loop Tour in Auckland tonight. Supplied / Mark Surridge

Ed Sheeran fans are converging on Onehunga, host to the premiere of his worldwide tour.

The record-breaking British musician is playing two shows at Go Media Stadium, on Friday night and Saturday, before heading to Wellington and Christchurch the following week.

Fans going to tonight’s show say it’s exciting to be at the first concert in his Loop Tour.

Sheeran, known for his cameos in TV and film as well as his music, made his acting debut in Auckland more than a decade ago when he starred in an episode of Shortland Street.

Since then, his chart hits have gone from strength-to-strength, including breaking records for top 10 hits and sales. A single from his album ÷, “Perfect”, reached number one in the US, Australia, and the UK

Auckland deputy mayor Desley Simpson says an estimated 80-thousand fans will see him in Auckland alone, with the largest video screen ever built in New Zealand also taking centre stage.

Special event buses have been laid on leaving from Quay Street in the city centre.

Fans are being encouraged to set out early, with traffic building before the gates opened at 4pm.

Sheeran will wrap up the New Zealand leg of his tour with a show at Wellington’s Sky Stadium on 21 January and two shows at Christchurch’s Apollo Projects Stadium on 24 and 25 January.

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Woman charged with murder after death in Napier

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hastings District Court.

A woman has been arrested and a homicide investigation launched after the death of a man in Napier.

Emergency services were called to Savage Crescent in Marewa just after 11.10am after receiving reports a man had been assaulted.

He was found critically injured and died at the scene.

A 26-year-old woman is in custody, and will appear in Hastings District Court on Saturday charged with murder.

Savage Crescent was cordoned off while a scene examination was done.

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Swiss man sentenced for careless driving after fatal Canterbury crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Patrick Keusch, 32, appears for sentencing on a charge of careless driving causing death in the Christchurch District Court. ALDEN WILLIAMS/THE PRESS

A Swiss man cried in court as he was sentenced for careless driving after a fatal head-on crash in Canterbury.

Glenda Sally Douglas, 68, died following the two-vehicle crash on State Highway 73 near Sheffield on 19 November.

Patrick Keusch pleaded guilty to careless driving causing death, and was sentenced at the Christchurch District Court on Friday.

The 32-year-old was disqualified from driving for 18 months and ordered to pay a $10,000 emotional harm reparation payment to the Douglas family.

Keusch addressed Douglas’ family in court, saying he was deeply remorseful.

“I’m very, very sorry from the depths of my soul and the bottom of my heart for the mistake I made on the 19th of November which caused unthinkable tragedy,” he said.

“Even two months after the accident, I still cannot explain why this happened. The only thing I know is that there’s no one to blame except myself.

“You have every right to be angry and I don’t blame you for it.”

Judge Tony Zohrab said the crash was caused by a momentary lapse in judgement.

He said Keusch was driving on State Highway 73 towards Darfield and Douglas was driving the opposite way.

“You began to slow your vehicle in preparation to make a right hand turn towards the intersection of State Highway 73 and the Inland Scenic Route 72. As you crossed the centre line turning into the intersection you collided head-on with Glenda’s vehicle,” he said.

“She didn’t have a chance to react to your change in direction. Tragically, as a result of the impact she died at the scene.”

Keusch’s defence said he had offered a $7,500 emotional harm reparation payment to Douglas’ family, and a $2,500 payment to St John.

Judge Zohrab said Keusch’s willingness to face the consequences of his mistake spoke to his character.

“I acknowledge the devastating and truly unimaginable grief that the family have had to deal with as a result of this. I also acknowledge the grace and understanding that they have shown to you Mr Keusch,” he said.

“You have not sought to diminish your responsibility at any stage.”

Judge Zohrab disqualified Keusch from driving for 18 months, and ordered him to pay Douglas’ family $10,000 and St John $2,500.

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In a new production of Turandot, Opera Australia has found a star vehicle for Young Woo Kim

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Larkin, Senior Lecturer in Musicology, University of Sydney

Opera Australia © Keith Saunders

Were operas to be identified like episodes of Friends, Turandot would be “the one with Nessun Dorma”.

This beloved tenor aria has achieved a life of its own away from its parent opera. Consequently, it is often front and centre in the marketing for performances of Puccini’s final work. Even Ann Yee, the director of the new Opera Australia production of Turandot, claims in her program note not to have known anything else from the opera before 2022.

We have to wait until act three for the killer number, even though Puccini provides a kind of teaser for it late in act two – as if to reassure patrons it’s worth coming back after the interval.

Given all this build-up, it is a relief to report on opening night, Young Woo Kim absolutely nailed it, bringing a heady mixture of power and sensitivity to his portrayal of the character of Calaf.

Kim stands on a blue stage.
Young Woo Kim is the undoubted star of the show.
Opera Australia © Keith Saunders

A tale of trauma

Nothing else in the production quite comes up to this level, although there are other good things about both staging and singing.

Yee’s intriguing take on the opera focusses on the notion of intergenerational trauma. In Turandot’s big number, In questa reggia (In this kingdom) we learn of the rape and murder of her ancestor, Lou-Ling. The memory of Lou-Ling has determined Turadot’s cruel practice of executing would-be suitors who cannot answer her riddles.

Unusually, here this ancestor is turned into an actual character on stage, danced by Hoyori Maruo. Before a note is heard, we see Maruo mime the attack on the ancient princess, writhing, hurling herself acrobatically around the stage, and finally sinking into Turandot’s arms, blood pouring from her mouth. Thereafter she returns periodically, visible only to Turandot, her succesor.

Lou-Ling in blue and Turandot in black.
Hoyori Maruo as Lou-Ling and Rebecca Nash as Turandot.
Opera Australia © Keith Saunders

Perhaps to avoid initiating another round of trauma in the audience, this production dispenses with the torture of Liù, the young slave girl. Instead, the principals stand far apart from each other in this scene.

Thematically, this renders Turandot less of a monster than in other productions. Dramatically, it makes Liù’s anguished cries and suicide seem unmotivated and faintly ridiculous.

Understated design and performances

Set design by Elizabeth Gadsby is somewhat bare, even drab – at least when compared to the likes of Franco Zeffirelli’s sumptuous visual feast, still being revived at the Met nearly 40 years after it premiered.

Most striking is the enormous stylised mask of Turandot herself, projected onto the back wall (video designer Andrew Thomas Huang). This changes colour, dissolves and reappears as necessary, before symbolically breaking into pieces after Calaf correctly guesses the answer to the third riddle.

The chorus stands in front of the giant mask.
The enormous stylised mask of Turandot projected onto the back wall is striking.
Opera Australia © Keith Saunders

Costumes (David Fleischer) are again deliberately understated. Turandot is in black almost throughout; the Emperor looked like Chevy Chase cosplaying as Mao Zedong; the crowds were factory workers in two-tone garb.

The presence of dancers clad in sparkly blue seaweed during the riddle season is a puzzle. The persistent use of choreographed gesture from these and other non-singers during solo numbers becomes a little tedious after a while, speaking to a lack of confidence in the power of the music and acting to retain the audience’s interest.

In the title role, Rebecca Nash conveys well the sense of historical pain that guides her actions and her transition in the final scene from despairing tyrant to newly awakened lover is convincing. Vocally she came through well, although up top things were a little vague courtesy of a generous vibrato.

Turandot stands on stairs, surrounded by dancers in blue.
As Turandot, Rebecca Nash conveys well the sense of historical pain.
Opera Australia © Keith Saunders

Maria Teresa Leva as Liù really comes into her own in act three after a less-than-stellar Signore, ascolta in act one.

Richard Anderson is secure and pathetic as the blind Timur; Shane Lowrencev a solid Speaker; and Gregory Brown an underpowered Emperor – perhaps a deliberate choice, given the character’s heart attack during the closing seconds of act two. The chorus and orchestra under new conductor Henrik Nánási were solid all night, with the children’s chorus worthy of special commendation.

A reinterpretation

When Turandot was put on at the Sydney Opera House in 2022, it aroused some controversy for its alleged use of “yellow face”. That production, a revival of Graeme Murphy’s classic from the 1990s, has now been replaced by this new, firmly de-orientalised version.

The trigger point four years ago was the costuming of Ping, Pang and Pong (the grand chancellor, general purveyor and chief cook, respectively), a largely indistinguishable trio providing comic relief.

There are no obvious changes in the sung text, but here their names are rendered in the surtitles as P1, P2 and P3. Instead of flowing robes and exaggerated facial hair, they are tech assistants sporting fanny packs and walkie talkies.

The three nerdy men stand in three boxes.
P1, P2 and P3 are tech assistants sporting fanny packs and walkie talkies.
Opera Australia © Keith Saunders

As these characters, Luke Gabbedy, John Longmuir and Michael Petruccelli provide chuckles and sound ensemble singing, particularly at the start of act two, where they are positioned high up on a wall of circuitry and screens.

But the tenor Kim is the undoubted star of the show, with his powerful, burnished notes soaring effortlessly across the orchestra all evening. “Vincerò!” (I will be victorious) he sings at the end of Nessun Dorma: the applause which followed told him he had already won.

Turandot is at the Sydney Opera House for Opera Australia until March 27.

The Conversation

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

ref. In a new production of Turandot, Opera Australia has found a star vehicle for Young Woo Kim – https://theconversation.com/in-a-new-production-of-turandot-opera-australia-has-found-a-star-vehicle-for-young-woo-kim-271301

All Blacks: Scott Robertson, David Kirk, player power and reputations

Source: Radio New Zealand

Who and what does Scott Robertson’s historic firing as All Black coach say the most about? Or is the most important statement about the team, rugby union itself and both crossing the final threshold into what can finally be considered true professionalism?

We’re into over three decades of pro rugby, which may seem like a while but it’s hardly any time at all compared to other sports. Ma’a Nonu has been an active player for almost 80 percent of that time, so it’s not surprising that for better or worse, it’s held on to quite a few of the amateur era protocols.

One of those is that once you’ve been given a coaching job, it was more or less yours until you didn’t want it anymore. Coaches got let go but generally at the end of their contracted tenures and never in the middle of a season. That sort of thing was for football, the NRL or American sports, a cutthroat mentality that seemed far too ruthless for our national game and relatively small community.

Scott Robertson after the All Blacks’ loss to England at Twickenham, 2025. www.photosport.nz

That’s changed now. Robertson’s firing halfway through a World Cup cycle was something that NZ Rugby (NZR) wasn’t prepared to do with Ian Foster, although the situations around both are poles apart. So it was fitting that chairman David Kirk, who has effortlessly taken up the role of NZR’s main character, strode out to explain the situation at NZR’s Auckland office.

“The All Blacks are not on track,” was Kirk’s key message, delivered with the conviction of someone who knew he was standing in front of a collage of images that included one of himself holding up the World Cup.

“We mutually agreed that he would step down from his post. I really have a great deal of respect for Scott Robertson…(but) we believe this is in the best interests of New Zealand rugby and of the team.”

The swiftness of the move has certainly made the new chairman a formidable presence, as if he wasn’t already, as his words started to feel more like an NFL team owner after they’d missed the playoffs. While cards were kept close to the chest regarding the now highly discussed review by senior players, Kirk did give enough to suggest that whatever was said was serious enough to justify the unprecedented move.

Damian McKenzie and Beauden Barrett. Kerry Marshall / www.photosport.nz

“I think fans will probably share that view that there were ways that we were playing, ways we were falling short of the excellence that we’re looking for that never really got addressed over the year.”

So what of the players themselves? We’ve already been through one national team feedback saga in the past 12 months that could be charitably described as incredibly ugly, with the unfortunate irony that Netball NZ’s first good news story in a long time got completely buried by the Robertson axing.

Kirk was very keen to downplay the nature of the feedback.

“I can be absolutely definitive: there is no revolt by the players. The players were very measured and very thoughtful in their responses.”

Really though, that almost makes it harder to swallow for Robertson. If the players had enough calculation to articulate their thoughts in such a way that impressed a Rhodes Scholar, it shows that it was very much a decision taken in cold blood. Kirk called his own number in collating the evidence, handling the feedback process personally along with Keven Mealamu.

Interestingly, Kirk made a point of defending Ardie Savea, who has been linked the most heavily to unhappiness at the outgoing regime.

David Kirk lifts the Webb Ellis Cup at the 1987 Rugby World Cup. Photosport

“It’s very unfair to say that Ardie somehow led something. Not at all. He expressed public opinions … but all of the players are individuals and they make their own decisions, they analyse things in ways that they think are appropriate for them and for the team.”

Savea’s stock is at an all-time high, so it’s understandable that he would’ve been confident speaking his mind to Kirk in the review. He’d played in all but one test match in 2025, so was in probably the best position to comment on the All Black situation and also held some serious leverage around committing to another World Cup as plenty of teams around the world would be happy to buy him out of his NZR contract. It’s important to note that he was certainly not alone in his feedback and didn’t initiate it, as it is a standardised process that involved 20 players and up to 10 management staff.

Will this episode follow him? Even though the public reaction has been far more nuanced than the very one-sided netball saga, Savea has probably unwittingly become the face of change. His outrageous talent will have the most attention from now until he hangs up his boots, but the question could still linger around about what sort of ultimatum may have been issued in order to keep said talent in an All Black jersey.

Then there’s Robertson. It’s too early to say where he’ll end up but his side of this story will be eagerly anticipated, even if it takes a while to come out. If there is one lesson here though, it’s that his regime unwittingly gave pretty much everyone a very familiar touchpoint that drove the thinking around coaching and management.

Scott Barrett dejected after the All Blacks’ loss to England. www.photosport.nz

Everyone, rugby fan or not, has had a new senior in a workplace that they’re unsure of. Someone who you immediately question how they got the job and what business they have telling you what to do. Unfortunately for Robertson, that narrative ended up around Scott Hansen, who took on the tactical element of the All Blacks that most people would assume the head coach would do.

Rightly or wrongly, that feeling was what came through and stuck – especially since it’s been implied that Robertson delegated selection feedback to Hansen and other assistants.

So if Robertson does give this another nudge in a different coloured tracksuit, it’s likely he’ll be far more wary of how every single aspect of what he does is analysed and followed. It’d be a shame if that came at the cost of the wide-eyed way he approaches life, but then again rugby’s aforementioned sharp turn to ruthlessness probably leaves no room for that sort of thing anyway.

While those are the key men of all of this, there are some reputations offshore that have been unintentionally enhanced as a result. Whoever takes over the All Blacks now faces the toughest schedule in decades, starting with tests against full-strength France and Ireland, then followed by four tests against the Springboks.

If nothing else, the players and Kirk’s judgement that Robertson wasn’t up to that task shows just how powerful the All Blacks’ opponents are right now – and how drastic the measures are being taken to ensure ultimate victory.

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Waka Ama Sprint Nationals growing with 800 more paddlers than previous year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Rau Oranga o Ngāti Kahungunu Waka Ama Club, J16 Men compete at the Waka Ama Sprint Nationals. Supplied/Waka Ama Aotearoa NZ

This years Waka Ama Sprint Nationals have seen 800 more paddlers take to the water than last year, which organisers say reflects the growth of the sport in Aotearoa.

The week long competition wraps up on Saturday at Lake Karapiro in Waikato.

Waka Ama Aotearoa New Zealand (WAANZ) chief executive Lara Collins told RNZ there are 4700 kaihoe at this years competition and she believes its the largest event Lake Karapiro has had.

There are some 100 waka ama clubs from Kaitaia to Invercargill in Aotearoa, with four or five new clubs getting started in 2025, she said..

“We’re just seeing an increase of clubs, an increase of paddlers and just a general wave of more people participating in Waka Ama, whether that’s competitively or socially, or just for their hauora (health) in their life. It’s certainly more than just a sport. It is a way of life for lots of people, and it’s very cool that lots more people are wanting to do it.”

There are also some 900 taitamariki paddlers, aged between five and 10 competing at Nationals, she said.

“There’s a lot of little kids running around, which is so, so good… They’re the future of our sport, and it’s just great to see so many kids happy, having a great time, and all of their whānau, because for every cute five, six, seven-year-old that’s here, they bring with them four or five or six whānau members to watch them.”

Collins said managing the growth of the sport is a good problem to have and WAANZ is working to ensure they can manage it in a way that ensures the capacity of the sport is sustainable.

WAANZ chief executive Lara Collins (left). RNZ / REECE BAKER

Spots at World Champs in Singapore up for grabs

The event is also a qualifier for the 2026 International Va’a Federation World Sprint Championships happening in Singapore in August.

“So we have a number of… club teams that are trying to qualify to go to the World Club Championships in Singapore. And that just adds another level of competition here at the event and a little bit more excitement,” Collins said.

Six teams in each age category, from Junior 16 to Master 75, can qualify for the World Championships and in for singles racing three people in each age category can qualify, she said. There are also three spots available in the double hull W12 per age division.

“We will end up with a New Zealand contingent of around about 600 paddlers going to Singapore in August, which is quite a huge contingent of people to be sending overseas. And it’s a great experience for those paddlers that are going and for some of them, really life-changing to be representing Aotearoa and their club and their community at a World Championship.”

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Longest ever lull in nuclear testing – but record already on shaky ground

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Brad Lendon, CNN

Firework displays in North Korea, as the state held a rally days after its last test of a nuclear weapon on 3 September 2017. KCNA VIS KNS / AFP

The world passed a nuclear milestone this week. And, perhaps surprisingly given the recent run of saber-rattling from the likes of Russia and the United States, it’s a positive one.

“As of today, the world has gone eight years, four months, and 11 days without a nuclear test … From now on, every day without a nuclear explosion will set a new record,” Dylan Spaulding, senior scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), wrote in a blog post Wednesday noting the milestone.

Wednesday’s (local time) watershed means the planet has seen its longest period without a nuclear explosion since the dawn of the nuclear era on 16 July , 1945, when the US exploded an atomic device in Alamogordo, New Mexico – the Trinity test – leading up to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, near the end of World War II.

North Korea conducted the world’s last nuclear test on 3 September 2017.

The previous longest period without a test was from May 30, 1998, when Pakistan conducted its last test, to 3 October, 2006, when North Korea conducted its first.

Spaulding cautions how fragile this “winning streak” has become, given threats by US President Donald Trump to resume nuclear testing.

“Reopening this Pandora’s box is both unnecessary and unwise,” Spaulding wrote.

“Unrestrained tests lead to competition, instability, and a degree of uncertainty that can scarcely be afforded on top of our existing global precarity,” he wrote.

In another warning sign, Trump has said he’s willing to allow the expiration on 5 February of a US-Russia treaty that caps the number of deployable nuclear weapons each side has.

Russia maintains the world’s biggest stockpile of nuclear weapons with more than 4300, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. The US has about 3700, with Moscow and Washington together accounting for 90 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons, the SIPRI says.

Decades of nuclear testing

Since the Trinity test, the world has seen 2055 nuclear tests by eight nations, according to the Arms Control Association.

The US has conducted the most tests – 1030, followed by Russia/USSR, 715; France, 210; China and the UK, 45; North Korea, six; India, three; and Pakistan, two.

Those tests have occurred in places ranging from Pacific atolls to deserts in the US and China to the Russian Arctic, often with heavy tolls on human and environmental health.

Widespread nuclear testing stopped in the late 1990s, when the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty was opened for signature.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz (6R) stands with officials in front of the nuclear-capable missile Hatf VI (Shaheen II) prior to its test fire at an undisclosed location on 29 April 2006. AFP / ISPR

Though it’s never come into force – mainly because the US signed but never ratified it – nations have largely abided by its conditions, with the exception of North Korea, which has been regarded as a rogue state and put under United Nations sanctions.

And since that 2017 test at North Korea’s Punggye-ri test site, much of the world has been on watch for Kim Jong Un to conduct another, given his enormous investment in a missile program that has given him weapons capable of reaching the continental US.

But in recent months, attention has turned to Washington and Moscow as Trump and subsequently Russian leader Vladimir Putin have threatened to restart nuclear testing in their countries.

The US last tested a nuclear weapon on 23 September, 1992. And Russia last exploded a nuclear device in 1990, when it was still the Soviet Union.

New threats to test

During a visit to South Korea in October, Trump vowed to begin testing US nuclear weapons “on an equal basis” with Russia and China, saying he had instructed the Defense Department to begin immediate preparations for such testing.

A week after Trump’s announcement, on November 5, Putin directed the Russian military to begin preparing for weapons tests.

Nuclear weapons tests are conducted to gauge the effects of new advances in the bombs or to ensure existing weapons will still work if fired.

Trump has vowed to begin testing US nuclear weapons “on an equal basis” with Russia and China. JIM WATSON / AFP

Spaulding and other scientists say it’s all unnecessary. That’s because the nuclear powers now have the technology to conduct “sub-critical” tests, which can mimic a nuclear process right up to the point of detonation.

“Advanced nuclear states are technically well beyond the point of exploring whether their weapons will detonate reliably,” he wrote.

Any US testing now brings into question whether Washington has been a reliable steward of its huge nuclear arsenal, according to Spaulding.

“While the Trump administration may view a test as a contribution to deterrence, it may actually have the opposite effect by projecting an irreconcilable lack of confidence in the US stockpile,” he said.

START treaty to lapse

The fears of renewed nuclear testing are being exacerbated by the impending lapse of the New Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (START), implemented in 2011, which limits the number of nuclear warheads the US and Russia can deploy to 1550.

According to a report this week from the Union of Concerned Scientists, those numbers could spike quickly after 5 February.

“Within weeks, the United States could field another 480 nuclear weapons at bomber bases. Within months, it could load almost 1000 additional nuclear warheads onto submarines. And within years, it could load an additional 400 nuclear warheads onto land-based missiles. Russia could do the same, increasing the stakes of political tension and the possibility of deeply catastrophic miscalculations,” the UCS said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin. MIKHAIL METZEL / POOL / AFP

“Both Russia and the United States already have more than enough nuclear weapons to devastate each other many times over. Adding more to the mix increases the chances of an accident, and the consequences of miscalculation or escalation,” said report author Jennifer Knox, a policy and research analyst at the UCS.

START has been on shaky ground since 2023, when Putin suspended Russian participation in it, citing among other reasons US support for Ukraine in the aftermath of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of its neighbour.

Moscow has stopped allowing verification inspections, and the US has reciprocated.

But the Russian leader last September offered to extend observance of START’s limits by a year after 5 February.

Trump, however, seems inclined to let it lapse.

“If it expires, it expires,” he said. “We’ll do a better agreement,” he told The New York Times earlier this month, while indicating China should be part of any new pact.

So in this record-setting week, there is more unease than celebration among those who watch nuclear proliferation closely.

“While the world has quietly broken a record for the longest period of time without a nuclear test, it is clear that this stability is fragile,” the UCS’s Spaulding wrote.

CNN

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Auckland councillors in the dark over government’s housing intensification rethink

Source: Radio New Zealand

The housing minister has confirmed the coalition is taking another look at housing intensification plans in Auckland after pushback from critics.

Last year, Auckland Council approved the initial phase of a new plan to accommodate 2 million homes in the coming decades.

The move was in response to the government agreeing to let the council opt out of medium-density rules that apply to most major cities.

This was in exchange for setting up zoning for 30 years of growth, which Auckland Council went on to calculate as 2 million homes.

The council’s Plan Change 120 set out the process for doing this, but the government has since come under pressure from proponents of heritage homes who have raised concerns about further intensification in character areas that were already seeing major development.

Housing Minister Chris Bishop confirmed to RNZ on Friday afternoon the coalition was now considering weakening housing intensification laws in a move that could decrease the 2 million figure.

“The government is considering a range of options around housing capacity targets for Auckland, and as minister of housing I will have more to say soon,” he said.

It was understood this would not affect housing intensification around major public transport hubs, like the Auckland City Rail Link (CRL) that is due to open later this year.

National under Judith Collins’ leadership originally supported the medium-density residential standards, but signalled a backdown under Christopher Luxon, who said changes were needed.

Wayne Brown.

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown. Photo: Jessica Hopkins / RNZ

Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown said he had not had any direct contact with government ministers recently and certainly had not had any phone calls about scaling back intensification laws.

“Nobody in the government has rung me back and said we’re going to be taking this back… they’re leaking to the press down there in preparation for it, but nobody in the government’s rung me to say that they’re going to do that.”

Brown said he supported intensification and believed there had been “scaremongering and nonsense going on” around the 2 million homes figure.

“I still remain of the view that intensification, where we’ve got good public transport and all of the infrastructure in place already, makes sense.

“I think that some people have oversold the worry about things. The people in those suburbs which [are] apparently upset are already facing rules where every section can have three-storey houses right up to the boundary, which would be a lot worse for them than having a multi-storey one every so often.”

The mayor said he expected to be briefed on any updates when he saw government ministers later this month.

The council’s Policy, Planning and Development Committee chair Richard Hills said he had heard rumours of the government relenting all summer but had “no clarity at all” – and it was unclear how a change would fit into the consultation process.

North Shore councillor Richard Hills

Richard Hills. Photo: LDR/SUPPLIED

“Unless you are spending millions of dollars on putting a new plan out again, I am not sure what the law change the government will be doing would enable… coming in halfway through a process without talking to us, again, leads to even more confusion.”

Another councillor, Christine Fletcher, welcomed the potential change as “the only sensible thing to do”, saying the 2 million extra homes approach was “blunt and ill-considered and it did not take into account physical and social infrastructure”.

“I think that the majority of Aucklanders will welcome this. There will obviously be some activists who will criticise the government… but slow and steady is the way to actually win this particular race.”

She said people were not opposed to intensification, but it had to be done properly.

This article was amended at 8.10pm 16 January to clarify the 2 million homes figure was total, not in addition to existing homes.

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As Victoria’s Great Ocean Road flash floods show, we need to get better at taking warnings seriously

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rory Nathan, Honorary Professor Hydrology and Water Resources, The University of Melbourne

The images and stories of flash flooding coming out of Victoria’s Great Ocean Road overnight have been described as “terrifying”. It’s easy to see why.

Holidaymakers at Victoria’s Wye River watched as cars were swept out to sea and a caravan park was rapidly inundated. Some had to get new clothes at an op-shop.

One resident at nearby Separation Creek told the ABC:

We missed being killed probably by about ten seconds […] we just ran for our lives.

I’ve been studying floods and flood risks for decades. On the one hand, this was a shocking event, due partly to the bad luck of such a heavy downpour occurring in an area with many geographic risk factors for flash flooding.

On the other hand, it was not surprising. These one-in-hundred chance floods will occur somewhere every year, and with climate change these kinds of events will become more intense and more frequent.

In fact, due to global warming over the last 30 years, there is clear evidence the intensity of such thunderstorm events have increased by 15–20%.

Hard to predict

The challenge with these kinds of floods is that they are caused by thunderstorms; it’s notoriously difficult to predict exactly where they will occur.

You might see a thunderstorm on the radar and know it’s heading in a certain direction, but it’s very hard to know exactly where it will actually impact.

In this case, it just happened to hit the Wye River catchment, which is particularly bad luck for the locals who live near the coast and the visiting holidaymakers. This area features very small and steep catchments draining the southern slopes of the Otways (a forested mountain region in Victoria).

These catchments respond very quickly to thunderstorms; it doesn’t take long for rainfall to produce runoff from all parts of the catchment.

This is a real problem for catchments along the surf coast areas of Victoria as there is little or no opportunity to provide effective flood warning.

At Wye River, the most intense part of the thunderstorm was only a tiny percentage of the whole area of forecast rainfall. That makes things really difficult to predict.

In a catchment like that, flash flooding can happen unbelievably quickly – things can go within minutes from OK to really dangerous.

All that was needed was maybe a few hours of intense rainfall. Most of the rain appeared to fall on the upper reaches of the catchment, so it wouldn’t necessarily have been evident to campers and holidaymakers.

But once it’s in the waterways, the floodwaters can rapidly shoot down the river system. The first anyone might know there is a problem is when the flood suddenly arrives.

What can we do to reduce risk?

The best thing we can do is educate communities about what warnings mean and how to respond when authorities say there’s a storm on the way.

If you’re in a high risk area, you shouldn’t just be saying, “Oh it’s just a bit of rain, we’ll wait it out.”

Look at the effort governments have put into raising awareness about bushfire risk and response. They have worked hard on grading messages so people leave high risk areas when the risks are catastrophic, often before there are any fires in their actual area. We have learned to take such warnings seriously.

I don’t think the community is there yet with floods – but we do need to get better at this.

The camp grounds in such areas are typically on nice flat grassy areas next to the river bank, so you can see why people camp and holiday there. But when floods arrive, that’s the worst place to be.

So, what would I have done, as someone who knows floods?

If I was in a floodplain or on a flat area next to a river, and had a warning severe thunderstorms are predicted to occur in this region, I would probably – at the very least – get the kids up and drive to higher ground. At least, I hope I would.

Even though I am attuned to flood risks in my professional life, I can imagine being caught out in holiday mode and being slow to respond. I can well imagine staying put and hoping for the best.

It can be difficult to think about risk when you’re on holidays; it’s easy to switch off and just think you’ll wait the rain out.

Nature can be capricious, floods especially so, and with climate change we must be more aware of risks.

More common as the climate changes

I spend a lot of time researching the impact of climate change on these events.

In Victoria, we can expect small floods will get smaller (due to drying soils), and large floods will get bigger (due to more intense rainfalls).

As a rough rule of thumb, the risk of flooding will double by the end of this century. The impacts of floods caused by thunderstorms will tend to be larger.

Overall, what hit Wye River was pretty rare. But flash floods like this will always happen somewhere, and unfortunately on this occasion they occurred in an area where a lot of people were on holiday and the steep slopes directed flood waters toward people.

Unfortunately, we will all have to get better at learning to live with floods, even when on holidays.

The Conversation

Rory Nathan has received funding from in the past from the ARC, industry partners, and Australian water authorities.

ref. As Victoria’s Great Ocean Road flash floods show, we need to get better at taking warnings seriously – https://theconversation.com/as-victorias-great-ocean-road-flash-floods-show-we-need-to-get-better-at-taking-warnings-seriously-273695

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for January 16, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on January 16, 2026.

World-first social media wargame reveals how AI bots can swing elections
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hammond Pearce, Senior Lecturer, School of Computer Science & Engineering, UNSW Sydney Antoni Shkraba Studio/Pexels On December 14 2025, a terrorist attack occurred at Bondi Beach in Sydney Australia, leaving 15 civilians and one gunman dead. While Australia was still reeling in shock, social media saw the

After Scott Robertson, the All Blacks face a deeper question than who coaches next
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hoani Kristin Smith, Lecturer in Sport Management and Sport Science, Lincoln University, New Zealand Hannah Peters/Getty Images With Scott Robertson’s departure as All Blacks coach, New Zealand Rugby finds itself at a familiar crossroads. Yet, while coaching appointments come and go in elite sport, this moment demands

After decades of decline, this is how unions can rebuild their role in Australian work
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Martijn Boersma, Associate Professor, University of Sydney Business School, University of Sydney As recently as the early 1990s, 40% of Australian workers were union members. While there was a slight increase in 2024 – the first in a decade – that membership is now at 13.1%. This

FLNKS sends in late request to join Paris talks on New Caledonia remotely
By Patrick Decloitre, RNZ Pacific correspondent French Pacific desk New Caledonia’s pro-independence Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS)  has put in a late request to join talks on the territory’s future remotely. The meeting, convened by French President Emmanuel Macron, is calling all politicians from the French Pacific territory back to the negotiating table.

Australia needs a canine brain bank to reduce the risk of dog attacks
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Paul McGreevy, Professor, School of Veterinary Science, University of Sydney Milan Krasula/Getty Dog attacks are on the rise in Australia. The most recent data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare show dog-related hospital admissions more than doubled in the eight years to 2021. Over 2021–22

5 things to make with mangoes that aren’t smoothies
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Margaret Murray, Senior Lecturer, Nutrition, Swinburne University of Technology Roman Odintsov/Pexels It’s mango season. They’re cheap, delicious, in the shops or you can buy trays at roadside stalls. But what can you actually do with a trayful? Sure, smoothies are great, but what if you want to

In the most cleared state in Australia, Victoria’s native wildlife needs our help after fires
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Euan Ritchie, Professor in Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, School of Life & Environmental Sciences, Deakin University Victoria has just suffered some of its worst bushfires since the Black Summer fires of 2019–20. Over 400,000 hectares are estimated to have burnt so far, an area more than five

Do Woolworths shoppers want Google AI adding items to buy? We’ll soon find out
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Uri Gal, Professor in Business Information Systems, University of Sydney Woolworths has announced a partnership with Google to incorporate agentic artificial intelligence into its “Olive” chatbot, starting in Australia later this year. Until now, Olive has largely answered questions, resolved problems and directed shoppers to information. Soon,

How adults can use Stranger Things to talk to young people about their mental health
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Stephen Goldsmith, Tutor in Mental Health Nursing, Swinburne University of Technology Netflix Beyond its monsters and 1980s nostalgia, Stranger Things resonates because it tells stories of struggles familiar to young people: trauma that lingers, identity that wavers, and friendships that buffer against fear. And by turning inner

One cure for sour feelings about politics − getting people to love their hometowns
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sean Richey, Professor, Georgia State University A young girl holds Old Glory at an Independence Day celebration. SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images Eileen Higgins won a historic victory in December. She became the first woman ever elected mayor of Miami, as well as its first Democratic mayor

Bondi Beach’s murderous terrorism aftermath – an Aotearoa perspective
COMMENTARY: By Ian Powell On 14 December 2025, a father and son, reportedly linked to the ISIS clerical fascist organisation, committed a murderous attack on innocent participants at a Jewish celebration on Sydney’s famous Bondi Beach. Fifteen were killed and around 40 seriously injured. There is no way this horrific event can be minimised. It

Mixed reactions to shock axing of All Blacks coach Scott Robertson
By Adam Burns, RNZ News reporter There has been mixed reaction in parts of New Zealand’s red-and-black country — Canterbury — following the shock axing of All Blacks coach Scott Robertson. New Zealand Rugby (NZR) confirmed today the 51-year-old known as “Razor” had departed the position two years early following a recent end-of-season review. A

View from The Hill: Sussan Ley wedged by her own troops on Albanese omnibus legislation
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Anthony Albanese’s omnibus bill on hate speech and gun reform is once again exposing Sussan Ley’s lack of authority over her colleagues. Ley on Thursday declared the bill was “pretty unsalvageable”, flagging the Coalition’s expected opposition in next week’s special

One uprising, two stories: how each side is trying frame the uprising in Iran
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ali Mamouri, Research Fellow, Middle East Studies, Deakin University Since the outbreak of the current wave of protests in Iran, two sharply competing narratives have emerged to explain what is unfolding in the streets. For the ruling establishment, the unrest is portrayed as a foreign-engineered plot. They

Caitlin Johnstone: On ‘leftists’ and ‘anarchists’ who cheer for regime change in Iran
Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – COMMENTARY: By Caitlin Johnstone Is there anything more undignified than “leftists” and “anarchists” who cheer on the fall of empire-targeted governments even as the empire moves war machinery into place? Ooh look at me, I’m sticking it to the man by supporting the same agendas as

Corrections to trial ‘hospital hub’, current model of hospital escorts ‘no longer fit-for-purpose’

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ Herald / Greg Bowker

Corrections are set to trial a pilot for a “hospital hub” with the current model of hospital escorts “no longer fit-for-purpose,” according to the CEO.

The news comes after a prisoner was on the run for more than a week after escaping while in a hospital escort in Auckland.

In an email sent to staff on Friday and seen by RNZ, Department of Corrections chief executive Jeremy Lightfoot said the Director of Physical Health and Chief Nurse within Pae Ora, Ben Storey, had joined Custodial Services for the next 12 months as Corrections Lead of Hospital Hub.

“Those of you who work in custody will know how resource intensive prison escorts to hospitals can be, as well as the risks they can pose. Considerable time is often spent in the Emergency Department or out-patient waiting rooms.”

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

Corrections was also aware that other patients could find it “intimidating” to be next to a person in handcuffs, Lightfoot said.

“The current model for hospital escorts is no longer fit-for-puporse. It’s not good for our custodial officers (the overtime hours required can potentially create a health and safety issue), the people being escorted, or other patients. We need a more coordinated and planned approach to managing prisoners in hospital.”

Department of Corrections chief executive Jeremy Lightfoot RNZ / Diego Opatowski

Storey would be working alongside Custodial and Pae Ora teams as well as external stakeholders “to develop new operating models,” Lightfoot said.

“He’ll be analysing our data to better understand where, why, and for how long our people are in hospital. This will help us build a stronger picture of our resourcing requirements to support hospital escorts.”

There was also the potential to secure a physical location to coordinate teams while based in the hospital.

“The focus will be on ensuring our custodial officers are well resourced and equipped, with the safety of our people and the community prioritised. We are also considering introducing a new roster to manage escorts in a more planned way.”

Lightfoot said it was intended there would be a pilot of a hospital hub at one of the Auckland hospitals.

“Auckland has been chosen given the high number of prisoners across the Auckland-based prisons that can be in hospital at any one time (on some days upwards of 30 Auckland based officers are undertaking escort duties).

“The lessons learned from the pilot will be applicable across the entire network. This is a critical piece of work, and we will keep you posted on progress.”

A Corrections spokesperson told RNZ the work was not connected to any particular incident, and that triaging would still be determined by medical staff at hospitals.

Commissioner of Custodial Services Leigh Marsh said in a statement public safety was the top priority. Each year Corrections carries out tens of thousands of prisoner escorts between prisons, courts, specialist medical facilities and rehabilitation providers, he said.

“Corrections is exploring what improvements can be made to ensure the health and safety of our staff, strengthening our prison operations and maintaining public safety.

“This will involve us looking at data to clearly understand where, why, and for how long prisoners are in hospital. From there we will be looking at whether we need to develop new operating models for our hospital escort process. This will not involve a reduction in the number of staff carrying out hospital escorts.”

Marsh said the purpose was to ensure corrections officers carrying out hospital escorts were well resourced and equipped, with staff and public safety paramount.

“Some of the options to be explored include how we better coordinate services and having a dedicated roster for hospital escorts to reduce the reliance on overtime.

“This work has only just started and Corrections will be working with stakeholders, including our unions on these potential opportunities.”

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Man charged after family harm incident in Masterton

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

Police have arrested a 25-year-old man following a family harm incident in Masterton.

Officers were called to a River Road address late Thursday afternoon and found a woman unconscious and bleeding.

She was taken to Wellington Hospital in a serious condition.

The man was due to appear in Masterton District Court on Friday, charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

“A scene examination is underway at the River Road address and residents can expect to see a continued police presence in the area while further enquiries are made,” Detective Inspector Jamie Woods said.

“We want to reassure the members of our community that there is no risk to public safety following this isolated incident.”

Anyone with information that could help police was urged to contact them via 105, quoting file number 260115/7089, or provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

Family Violence

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Watch: Mourners gather to remember Sir Tim Shadbolt at funeral

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mourners have queued under umbrellas to pay their respects to Sir Tim Shadbolt, whose funeral service begins in Invercargill.

The 78-year-old former mayor of Waitematā and Invercargill died last week.

The funeral service will be held at Invercargill’s Civic Theatre from 2pm with doors open from 1pm. The service will also be livestreamed on the Invercargill City Council’s website.

People gather to pay their respects to Tim Shadbolt. Katie Todd

An RNZ reporter at the service says plenty of people were already lined up outside the theatre before the doors opened at 1pm

After the service, people are expected to line the streets for the funeral procession that will travel via the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal at Invercargill Airport, before a private ceremony at Eastern Cemetery.

Tributes have been flowing in for Sir Tim since his death, describing him as a colourful and charismatic character who championed local politics and his city.

He was made a Knight Companion of New Zealand Order of Merit in the 2019 New Year’s Honours List for his services to local government and the community.

Supplied/LDR – ODT/Stephen Jaquiery

After the service, the funeral procession would leave for the Invercargill Airport – home to the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal, via Tay Street and Clyde Street, before making its way to Eastern Cemetery for a private interment.

Mayor Shadbolt stands in front of his portrait in November, a piece that is titled Seriously. Stephen Jaquiery / ODT

Anyone who wants to pay their respects is invited to line the streets for the procession.

Sir Tim first came into the national spotlight as a student activist in the 1960s, drawing attention to issues including apartheid and the Vietnam War.

He donned the mayoral chains for the first time in Waitematā in 1983, holding them for six years.

He tried his luck again in 1992, standing for mayor in Auckland, Waitākere and Dunedin.

While he was unsuccessful in those races, he breezed into the top job the following year during a by-election in Invercargill.

He also dabbled in national politics, becoming the New Zealand First candidate for the Selwyn by-election in 1994 – less than a day after joining the party.

Sir Tim served in Invercargill until 1995, but was re-elected in 1998 and held onto the mayoral chains until an unsuccessful tilt in 2022.

Tim Shadbolt with a group of protesters outside the Auckland Town Hall in 1973 Te Ara / Public Domain

With the city in decline, he championed the Zero Fees scheme at the Southland Institute of Technology, in a bid to attract more to the south and keep more young people in the region.

Major buildings including Stadium Southland were built during his term, and others including the Civic Theatre were refurbished.

On the screen, he competed on Dancing with the Stars, broke the world record for the longest television interview – just over 26 hours – and made cameo appearances in the 2017 remake of Goodbye Pork Pie and The World’s Fastest Indian.

He became known as the man who put Invercargill on the map, with Invercargill Airport officially naming the Sir Tim Shadbolt Terminal last year to mark his legacy.

In a statement announcing his passing, his partner Asha Dutt said they lost the cornerstone of their family and the man who devoted himself to promoting Invercargill for almost 30 years.

“Tim was a kind-hearted man who cared deeply about the people around him. He was a champion for the underdog and an active political campaigner from his student days of anti-war protest, his activism for Māori rights, and his fight to keep the Southern Institute of Technology and Zero Fees autonomous.

“Tim will be remembered with gratitude, respect, and affection for his commitment to the south and his passion for life.”

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

Could NZ have the best Elvis impersonator in the world?

Source: Radio New Zealand

What began as a casual rendition of ‘Blue Hawaii’ has led Wellington performer Taurean Kenny Mill to a win at the Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist’s preliminary round.

One of the region’s youngest Elvis tribute artists, Mill took home the honour last week in Australia and will travel to the USA later this year for the semi-final.

Growing up, Elvis was always part of the soundtrack at his home. Mill’s family were fans, but it wasn’t until a casual karaoke session that his path crystallised. After hearing the then 17-year-old sing, established Elvis tribute artist John Lancaster suggested he “do some more Elvis”.

For the next year or so, Lancaster trained Mill toward the Elvis Down Under competition at Upper Hutt’s Cosmopolitan Club.

Becoming Elvis requires mastering the physical vocabulary – the mannerisms, the choreography, the vocal flourishes – alongside the look, he says.

While many newcomers opt for the early rockabilly era, Mill has thrown himself headfirst into Elvis’s 1970s period. The pros tell him it’s a bold choice for a first-timer.

“The voice is definitely up there, it’s the top mark in the judging sheets, and mannerisms and choreography – that’s sort of my big three,” he says.

“So I sing from my stomach, maybe tuck a bit of chin in and try to get that sort of muffled Elvis sound. That’s just sort of a technique that I do.”

Even walking into the RNZ studio, Mill arrives in full character. He’s dressed in a lava-red puff shirt beneath a black jacket – something, he says, Elvis might have worn before heading onstage – paired with flared bell-bottoms, boots, and replica rings. Among them is a copy of the four-leaf clover ring Elvis famously wore during the final year of his performing life.

Mill has his costumes shipped from Canada, though his ultimate ambition is to source replicas from an American store that once designed outfits for the King of Rock ’n’ Roll himself.

Along the way, he’s found camaraderie within the tribute circuit.

“It’s actually quite a big brotherhood – a lot of us Elvis guys together. Everyone’s very supportive of each other.”

The Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist semi-final round is set for August this year in Memphis, Tennessee.

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

New Zealand vacates embassy in Iran as threat of violence escalates

Source: Radio New Zealand

Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

New Zealand’s embassy in Iran has temporarily closed due to what the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) says is a “deteriorating” security situation.

Human rights groups estimate the death toll has reached over 2500 since protests against the regime began last month.

A ministry spokesperson said all diplomatic staff left Iran on commercial flights overnight (NZ time), shifting operations to Ankara in Turkey.

On Thursday, Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters said New Zealand was “appalled” by an escalation of violence and repression.

“We condemn the brutal crackdown being carried out by Iran’s security forces, including the killing of protesters,” Peters said.

“Iranians have the right to peaceful protest, freedom of expression, and access to information – and that right is currently being brutally repressed.”

The government has continued to advise against all travel to Iran, and for any New Zealanders in the country to leave now.

“The ability of the New Zealand Government to provide consular assistance to New Zealanders in Iran remains extremely limited,” the MFAT spokesperson said.

“There are severe communication challenges in Iran, which are limiting the ability of people to get in touch with family and friends. When they are able to, New Zealanders in Iran should let family and friends know they are safe.”

Earlier this week the United Kingdom also temporarily closed its embassy in Tehran, with all staff evacuated.

Protests against the regime began in the capital Tehran in late December, sparked by the country’s dire economic conditions, and have since spread across the country.

US President Donald Trump had threatened military action over Tehran’s severe response to the protests.

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