Page 264

Schools only legally obliged to teach te reo Māori if parents ask for it under law change

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Education Ministry says under the amended legislation schools will “be required under s127 of the Act to provide Māori language education on request of a parent or caregiver”. RNZ / Tom Furley

A sudden law change means the only legal obligation for schools to teach te reo Māori is if parents ask for it.

The government is removing a requirement for schools to give effect to the Treaty of Waitangi that included “taking all reasonable steps to make instruction available in tikanga Māori and te reo Māori”.

Government ministers said they were making the change because treaty obligations were the Crown’s responsibility and teaching Māori would still be protected by law.

Asked what regulation or legislation would require schools to use te reo, the Education Ministry said under the amended legislation schools would “be required under s127 of the Act to provide Māori language education on request of a parent or caregiver”.

“This is the same requirement in relation to te reo Māori that was in place between 1989 and 2020,” it said.

“The proposed amendment will also require a school board to seek to achieve equitable outcomes for Māori students. It must take reasonable steps to ensure that the policies and practices for the school reflect New Zealand’s cultural diversity.”

Some teacher and principal groups reacted angrily to this week’s change which took them by surprise.

The move followed the publication last week of draft curriculum documents that teachers said contained fewer Māori words and meaningful references to the treaty.

However, the revised primary school English curriculum included guidance for teaching children to read Māori words in English texts during their second and third years of schooling – something the government had previously flagged as a new development.

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

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

Legendary Ngāti Porou filmmaker Lee Tamahori dies

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lee Tamahori on location while filming “The Convert” in 2022. Supplied / Kirsty Griffin

One of the biggest names in New Zealand film-making has died.

Lee Tamahori from Ngāti Porou, made his directorial film debut with the ground-breaking Once Were Warriors.

Born in Tawa, in Wellington he started Flying Fish, one of the country’s most successful advertising production companies.

His first short film, Thunderbox, was developed during the Te Manuka series with Don Selwyn and Larry Parr.

He went on to forge a remarkable international career, directing Hollywood and independent films such as Mulholland Falls, The Devil’s Double, and the James Bond film Die Another Day.

Lee Tamahori with Nancy Brunning on the set of “Mahana”. supplied

In a statement his family said Tamahori died peacefully at home surrounded by his long-time love Justine, his beloved children Sam, Max, Meka, and Tané, his daughter-in-laws Casey (who is expecting) and Meri, his darling mokopuna Cora Lee, and whānau.

“His legacy endures with his whānau, his mokopuna, every filmmaker he inspired, every boundary he broke, and every story he told with his genius eye and honest heart. A charismatic leader and fierce creative spirit, Lee championed Māori talent both on and off screen.

“He ultimately returned home to tell stories grounded in whakapapa and identity, with Mahana and his latest film The Convert, reaffirming his deep connection to Aotearoa. We’ve lost an immense creative spirit.

Moe mai rā e te rangatira.

Haere rā e hika koutou ko ō mātua,

Unuhia i te rito o te harakeke,

Ka tū i te aroākapa,

Aku nui, aku rahi e,

Aku whakatamarahi ki te rangi.

Waiho te iwi e,

Māna e māe noa.

Farewell, beloved Lee, go to your elders,

Plucked from the heart of the flax bush.

You stand now before the ranks of ancestors

My great ones, my esteemed,

My towering figures who reach to the heavens.

Leave us, your people,

To bear the ache of your absence.”

Friends and colleagues are invited to pay their respects on Sunday, 9 November, at Te Mahurehure Marae, in Point Chevalier in Auckland.

More to come…

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

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

One of two Te Pāti Māori factions willing to meet – iwi leaders

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Pati Māori co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Te Pāti Māori’s leadership is willing to meet with estranged MPs Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris, the National Iwi Chairs Forum says.

Ngāti Kahungunu chairman Bayden Barber sat down with the party’s president and two co-leaders at Parliament this afternoon.

“It was a great meeting and we’re looking forward to bringing the factions of the party together to have a hui on a marae here in Pōneke.

“We just got agreement from this side so that’s a great start. Need to talk to Mariameno and Tākuta, but from Rawiri and Deb they were supportive.”

The National Iwi Chairs Forum would be reaching out to Kapa-Kingi and Ferris this evening to put the same hui request to them, Barber said.

“The sooner the better, we want it to happen ASAP.

“We’re keen to try and find a resolution this month because we know that as it gets beyond this year, there’s a very low chance of having success in the election. So yeah, there’s time pressure to get this sorted.”

After what he had heard today, Barber said he still believed things could be patched up.

“[The leadership] laid it all out, timelined the whole thing and that was helpful to understand the context but at the end of the day, the question goes back to, is this surmountable?

“We think it is, as iwi chairs, and hence why we’ve called a hui and they’ve agreed to attend. We look forward to having similar conversations with Mariameno and Tākuta shortly.”

Using the waka-jumping legislation to boot Kapa-Kingi and Ferris out of Parliament had not come up today, Barber said.

“We’re looking for a solution to maintain unity within the Māori Party. That’s what we’re focused on because that’s going to get us the most chance of success at the next election.

“If it comes down to that outcome, that’ll be something for them sort out.”

‘Nothing that would preclude’ waka-jumping in party’s constitution

Te Pāti Māori’s co-leaders were asked if they would waka-jump the rogue MPs this afternoon.

“We haven’t considered that particular option at this time,” Rawiri Waititi said.

“We’re allowing our national council to work through the constitution and we need to be able to allow them to do that without having to deal with that through the media.”

Political scientist Dr Lara Greaves has had a look at the constitution and said it did not prohibit the party from using the legislation.

“There’s nothing that would preclude any kind of enactment of the party hopping legislation. There’s nothing explicit in there.”

She said the Māori Party’s constitution was an “interesting” political document that gave the party’s president a lot of power, relative to other positions in the party.

“The president has a key role in dispute resolution.”

She added timing was also a key consideration for any party invoking the waka-jumping rules.

“If it’s six months before the election, that’s when there’s no by-election.

“So we’re starting to run into this really strange period where we have potential by election, or by elections, running close to the election or the cut off stage.”

Greaves said it would be easiest for for Kapa-Kingi and Ferris to meet with the party’s leadership and stick it out, over going solo and setting up their own party.

“Starting up a political party is incredibly hard with incredibly long hours. You’ve got to find money, you’ve got to find resources. We’re a year out from a general election.

“You’re going to split the Māori vote, potentially the Māori Party vote, allow Labour to come through the middle.

“They’re ultimately in quite a stressful situation where it might be a case that they bow out quietly or resign or retire at the election instead of going through that whole rigmarole of starting up a political party.”

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

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

Optimism Te Pāti Māori crisis can be sorted at hui

Source: Radio New Zealand

National Iwi Chairs Forum chairperson Bayden Barber is playing a role in trying to reconcile disaffected factions within Te Pāti Māori. RNZ / Kate Green

Te Pāti Māori’s co-leaders and their offside MPs are set to meet on Thursday to try to find headway in their open conflict.

The party is in crisis, with party president John Tamihere calling on Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris to “do the honourable thing” and step down while Tamihere said there was “a process in play” for the two MPs to be expelled from the party.

That’s after a petition saying Tamihere should be the one standing down.

As well, there are allegations of intimidation and financial mismanagement

Iwi leaders are hopeful they can bring Te Pāti Māori MPs back together and make the party a credible force leading into next year’s election.

National Iwi Chairs Forum chairperson Bayden Barber believes outstanding issues can be patched up.

At a hui he led yesterday, party co-leaders Rawiri Waititi and Debbie Ngarewa-Packer agreed to meet with the estranged MPs.

Barber said after the meeting at Parliament the factions of the party would be brought together for a hui on a marae in Pōneke.

He told Morning Report the first priority he stressed at the meeting was the need for “a ceasefire” on all social media barbs which hadn’t been helpful.

He also wanted to see a hui to thrash out the issues in the hope of a resolution so that Te Pāti Māori could go on to play a part in the next government.

While the problems among the party’s caucus were serious they weren’t “insurmountable”.

“Our view would be let’s get to a hui and face to face between the parties and go from there.”

He wanted a a pause on any “consitutional stuff” such as moves to expel the two disaffected MPs.

While there was talk of a coup and expulsion, the two factions weren’t talking to each other.

Barber said the crisis appeared to have begun when Kapa-Kingi objected to the loss of the whip role within the party, however, he was a little unsure on the core problem.

“It’s headed south since.”

Ferris had agreed to a meeting this week, while Barber was still trying to contact Kapa-Kingi.

“We’ll sit down, put those issues on the table … let’s get to a hui face to face on the marae in Pōneke and let’s work things out.”

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

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

Rowing: Emma Twigg a world champion at 38

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ rower Emma Twigg. PHOTOSPORT

Former Olympic champion Emma Twigg has set herself up for yet another tilt at the games after winning the women’s title at the World Rowing Beach Sprint Finals in Turkey.

38-year-old Twigg won gold in the women’s solo event.

She beat defending champion Magdalena Lobnig of Austria to reclaim the title she won at the world championships in Wales in 2022.

Twigg can now set her sights on contesting the LA 2028 games, where coastal rowing will be included for the first time at the Olympics.

 ”My commitment is that I’m going to keep going if I keep enjoying it and I keep winning,” Twigg said.

“LA seems like a long way away to me, especially at my age, but I’m loving it. I’m loving being part of the team.  I’m loving the challenge of something different.”

Twigg has competed at five Olympics in flat water rowing, winning gold in Tokyo in 2021 and silver in Paris in 2024.

The beach sprint format of 500 metres racing, as opposed to the 2000m of flat-water, is part of the appeal.

 ”We’re just scratching the surface really, because I think physiology is so different. The skills are so different – the way you have to be able to get around buoys and use different forces – it’s all a challenge that I’m enjoying trying to master.

“I’m happy to be at the front of the pack and so long as I’m there and enjoying it, why not give it a nudge?”

Twigg came out on top in a gruelling morning session of sudden death racing, outclassing Lithuania’s Raminta Morkunaite in the quarter-final, then Great Britain’s Laura McKenzie in the semi-final before taking on Lobnig.

Her ability at the turning buoy proved decisive on the final day of the championships.

Meanwhile, Finn Hamill was eliminated in the first round of the men’s solo and Erin James and Matt Dunham were eliminated in the first round of the mixed double sculls.

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

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

Silver Ferns start Northern Tour with 63-41 win over Scotland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Martina Salmon in action for the Silver Ferns. AAP / Photosport

The Silver Ferns tipped off their Northern Tour with a comfortable 63-41 win over Scotland in Glasgow.

New Zealand won all four quarters and led 33-22 at half-time.

Amelia Walmsley and Martina Salmon were the shooters for the Ferns with Salmon shooting 33 goals from 37 attempts to be named player of the match.

Amelia Walmsley and Parris Mason of the Silver Ferns. Jeremy Ward/Photosport

She said it was a pleasing first up effort but there are plenty of things for the Silver Ferns to work on ahead of the second test.

“We just went out there and did our best, but we can lift it to a whole other level. Lots of mistakes and a lot of learnings (sic) to take into the next game,” Salmon said.

“Just the finishing touches, balls that went out of court, little mistakes. We’ll come together and figure out where we need to improve for the next game.”

The test was New Zealand’s first in Scotland since the 2014 Commonwealth Games.

The Silver Ferns second and final test against Scotland is on Wednesday morning (NZT) at the same venue.

New Zealand then take on England in a three-test series starting in London on Sunday.

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

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

Live: Kiwi Ferns v Australia Jillaroos – 2025 Women’s Pacific Championships Final

Source: Radio New Zealand

The world champion Australian women’s rugby league team have trounced the Kiwi Ferns 40-8 in the Pacific Championships final in Sydney.

Scoring four unanswered tries in the first half, the Jillaroos raced to a big 24-point lead at halftime.

The seven-try demolition capped a dominant campaign for Australia, who go back-to-back as Pacific Championships winners.

Kiwi Ferns challenge Jillaroos before the Pacific Championships final. David Neilson/Photosport

Follow the action here:

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

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

Live: Black Caps v West Indies – third T20

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kyle Jamieson bowls a delivery against West Indies. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

The Black Caps have held their nerve to claim a tense nine-run T20 win against the West Indies in Nelson.

The West Indies fell short of the 178 target in a dramatic final over.

A late partnership between West Indies tailenders Sharmar Springer and Romario Shepherd wasn’t quite enough.

New Zealand’s Kyle Jamieson dismissed Shepherd on 49 runs in the final over, as he skied a ball to Daryl Mitchell on the boundary.

Devon Conway hits out against the West Indies at Nelson. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Batting first, the Black Caps they may have felt they left a few runs out on Saxton Oval, after a late-innings collapse.

Devon Conway topscored with a fluent 56 off 34 balls, before he was run out by a brilliant throw from the deep.

Mitchell blasted 41 from 24 deliveries, including a huge 80-metre hit for six.

New Zealand lost wickets cheaply late to end on 177/9, with Sharmar Springer bowling two tidy overs at the death.

Follow the action here:

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

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

Close call? What the world thinks of All Blacks win

Source: Radio New Zealand

[embedded content]

Hopes of a historic win have been denied, after the All Blacks managed to maintain their unbeaten record against Scotland.

The Murrayfield game had the Edinburgh crowd on the edge of their seats, with the second-half being one to remember – or world media sure thought so.

New Zealand’s dominant first half, up 17-0, stepped onto shaky ground early in the second half, with Scotland’s Ewan Ashman and Kyle Steyn both scoring tries.

That wasn’t enough, with the All Blacks momentum building, resulting in a 25-17 score favouring the New Zealanders.

Damian McKenzie’s gravity-defying try, the All Blacks surviving three yellow cards and Scotland’s struggle to capitalise have been deemed the game’s top talking points.

International media had plenty to say – from praise to disbelief. Here’s how the world media reacted to the All Blacks’ win over Scotland.

BBC Scotland

BBC Scotland honed in on the home side’s heartbreak, after trailling by three points at 51 minutes.

“All Blacks shatter Scotland’s hopes of historic win,” its headline reads.

The outlet’s post-match piece goes on to list the yellow-carded All Blacks – Leroy Carter, Ardie Savea and Wallace Sititi. It takes aim at Carter’s player trip, describing it as “cynical”.

Damian McKenzie scores a spectacular try against Scotland. ActionPress

However, it goes on to acknowledge the skill and dominance of replacement fullback Damian McKenzie.

“Damian McKenzie – a dazzling presence when he entered the game – had the last say, touching down under pressure late on then adding a penalty to ensure Scotland’s long wait for a win against the All Blacks goes on.”

Guardian

The theme of “McKenzie magic” continues in the UK’s Guardian newspaper.

Labelled “deadly, deadlier than Scotland”, the paper attributes the All Blacks point of difference to McKenzie.

“His stunning 50-22 with 10 minutes remaining and the scores still locked at 17-17 set up pretty much New Zealand’s first attacking position of the half. His brilliant finish in the corner a couple of minutes and a couple of attacking lineouts later gave the All Blacks the lead just when it matters.

“Then, with a minute to go, he landed a penalty from an angled 45 metres or so to put them more than a score ahead. Crushing. Or, more accurately, piercing, agonisingly, fatally piercing.”

The paper acknowledged Scotland’s bravery, but said: “There remains a dimension of performance when it matters to which the All Blacks have long held a key.”

Cam Roigard takes a gap against Scotland. Paul Thomas / Photosport

Daily Record

Scottish newspaper Daily Record places Scotland’s comeback centre frame.

Tries from Ewan Ashman and Kyle Steyn, both converted by Finn Russell, gave the Scots a level scoreboard at 17-17.

“It was a different Scotland that emerged after the break, while three yellow cards for the Kiwis saw the momentum swing towards the hosts,” the paper wrote. “It seemed as if the Scots were about to claim a first ever win over the Southern Hemisphere powerhouse.”

However, the historic comeback was stopped in its tracks by what the article described as an “outrageous finish” from McKenzie – noting his last-minute penalty and try.

RugbyPass

RugbyPass honed in on Scott Robertson’s response to his side’s “ill-discipline and yellow cards”.

“Couple yellow cards, like you’re playing with 14 men defending, like there was some amazing efforts on defence, wasn’t there?

“Like, we were so proud of that and we could have just rolled over and gave up on one of the efforts, but we didn’t,” the article read, quoting Robertson.

It said Robertson went on to acknowledge the game “wasn’t perfect” and highlighted the “clutch” efforts from McKenzie.

The All Blacks will face off against England at Twickenham next week, followed by Wales in Cardiff.

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

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

Live: NZ Kiwis v Toa Samoa – Pacific Championships final

Source: Radio New Zealand

Five-eighth Dylan Brown offloads against Toa Samoa. Darrian Traynor/Getty Images

A massive second half has seen NZ Kiwis defeat Toa Samoa 36-14 at CommBank Stadium in Sydney.

The result means coach Stacey Jones’ side has lifted the Pacific Championship title, after an unbeaten campaign.

Tries to second-rowers Isaiah Papali’i and Erin Clark were the turning point in the match, as both scored within 10 minutes of each another before the hour mark.

Both former Samoan internationals made big impacts, benefitting from a smooth halves pairing of Dylan Brown and Kieran Foran.

Earlier, Samoa took the lead through wing Brian To’o after 10 minutes and then Simi Sasagi raced almost the length of the field, after intercepting a Foran pass.

Interchange forward Naufahu Whyte answered back for New Zealand to make it 14-6 at the break.

Erin Clark celebrates a Kiwis try against Samoa. David Neilson/Photosport

The Kiwis came out with a mission to simply hang onto the ball and it worked, utterly dominating proceedings, until they were able to unlock the Samoan defence for tries to Papali’i and Clark.

By the time Brown danced his way through the left edge to set up Casey McLean to score, the momentum was so well and truly with the Kiwis that they’d completed a full 10 sets more than the Samoans.

Meanwhile, Keano Kini was outstanding at fullback, enduring some rough treatment at the hands of the Samoan defence.

Jamayne Isaako – another former Samoan player – knocked over a penalty goal with seven minutes to play, adding a little insurance, allowing Foran to relax and enjoy the final moments of his long career.

The veteran half was retiring at the end of this season and his partnership with Brown during the tournament had been very good, with Brown playing a massive role in the Kiwis’ win.

He played a hand in the last couple of Kiwis tries, first smashing To’o to jar the ball loose for Papali’i to eventually score out wide, then stepping and offloading for Charnze Nicoll-Klockstad to complete the 30-point swing.

Read how the game unfolded here:

Kiwis: Keano Kini, Jamayne Isaako, Matthew Timoko, Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, Casey McLean, Dylan Brown, Kieran Foran, James Fisher Harris (captain), Phoenix Crossland, Moses Leota, Briton Nikora, Isaiah Papali’i, Joseph Tapine. Interchange: Te Maire Martin, Naufahu Whyte, Erin Clark, Xavier Willison, Scott Sorenson, Zach Dockar-Clay, Josiah Karapani.

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

‘It’s easy until it’s not’- Arrowtown Backyard Ultra was about testing runners’ limits

Source: Radio New Zealand

Competitors set off on their 27th lap of the Arrow River Trail. Katie Todd

Some races end at a finish line – instead, the Arrowtown Backyard Ultra is all about how many times runners can cross the start line.

On Saturday, 150 competitors lined up to see how many laps of the 6.7 kilometre loop alongside the Arrow River they could complete, on the hour, every hour, until they could go no further.

Race organiser Brandon Purdue said the sold-out event was designed to test the grit and resolve of even the most determined runners.

“One of the catchphrases is ‘it’s easy until it’s not’ – so runners might do the first 3-6 laps, thinking ‘this is super easy, I can go all day,’ and then you get to like 12, 18 laps and slowly but surely it wears you down and it just gets harder and harder,” he said.

Arrowtown Backyard Ultra race organiser Brandon Purdue. Katie Todd

Wānaka runner Dan Hammett made it right through the first night and found his breaking point at 27 laps.

He said his knees were seized up, and he “couldn’t think straight anymore”.

“A tough day, a tough night, but a great bunch of people. I’m just knackered,” he said.

Nick Doig from Christchurch said the key was in the precious minutes of recovery in his tent between laps.

“Legs up, fuelling, salt pills, whatever I need,” he said.

Last year’s event was won by Paul Maxwell from Waitati, who clocked up 302 kilometres over 45 laps.

Christchurch runner Hadani Woodruff – last year’s women’s winner – was aiming to beat her previous record of 37 laps partly to “beat the boys”.

She said her feet “felt like a big hammer had been mashing into them,” and she was trying to eat around 250 calories each hour to keep going.

Hadani Woodruff re-fuelling in her tent with Froot Loops. Katie Todd

On the upside, by the second day, the course took on a meditative quality, she said.

“It’s a bit like mindfulness, actually. You just go into quite a calm, relaxed state when you’re running. You follow the path, you chat to people. It’s a cool experience – until it hurts.”

That was an experience shared by Cromwell’s Kieran Philip.

“You kind of learn where your walk spots are, where your running spots are. You get all these little characteristics you get familiar with. I haven’t named everything yet, but that will come later,” he said.

He said he was driven by a need to see how far he could push himself.

“You don’t know until you try,” he said.

Behind each stubborn runner was a patient support crew – including, in Kieran’s case, his parents.

Lynne Philip said she was enjoying being part of the race, and fielding requests for different supplies and food.

“Kieran tells us basically what he thinks he will want next time when he comes in. So we make sure it’s here, instantly ready for him so all he has to do is sit down and grab it, eat it, drink it, whatever.”

Backyard Ultras began in Tennessee in 2011 and have since amassed a global following.

Over the next year, at least 16 races following the same format were scheduled across New Zealand.

Brandon Purdue said the community and atmosphere were what made them special.

“If you think about a marathon – it’s amazing that feeling you get when you cross the finish line. Now our runners get to do that on the hour, every single hour,” he said.

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

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

Rugby: Springboks pull off remarkable win over France at Stade de France

Source: Radio New Zealand

Grant Williams dives in to score his team’s third try during the Autumn Nations Series 2025 match between France and South Africa. David Rogers/Getty Images

Despite being reduced to 14 players, the Springboks have pulled off a remarkable 32-17 win over France in Paris. Lock Lood de Jager was shown a straight red card by referee Angus Gardner just before halftime for a clumsy shoulder to the head of Thomas Ramos, however the underhanded world champions kept the home side to just a penalty goal from then on.

The match was billed as a rematch of the epic World Cup quarterfinal two years ago that saw the Springboks break French hearts, as well as being talismanic Springbok captain Siya Kolisi’s 100th test match. However, it was the hosts who started in perfect fashion with a try to Damian Penaud after only four minutes.

Sacha Feinburg-Mngomezulu struck back with two penalties, before Penaud scored his second to give France a 14-6 lead. France looked to be in control of the game before Cobus Reinach scored a brilliant individual try to pull the Springboks back within three points.

De Jager was marched just before the break, then Ramos extended France’s lead after the resumption. After that, it was all one way traffic as the Springboks silenced the Stade de France crowd with tries to Andre Esterhuizen, Grant Williams and a stunning individual effort to Feinburg-Mngomezulu to make the score a veritable blowout.

It’s a big statement for Kolisi and Rassie Eramus’s side, who have won the Rugby Championship this season and now have knocked off the Six Nations champions at home. They face Italy next weekend, while France take on Fiji.

Read how the game unfolded here:

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

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

All Blacks’ fantastic finish can’t hide some serious yellow fever

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s Damian McKenzie celebrates scoring a try against Scotland. AFP

Analysis – The All Blacks’ unbeaten record against Scotland has remained intact – just . The 25-17 win at Murrayfield was on track to being a brilliant statement, turned into a thrilling spectacle, but ultimately ended up posing a lot of the same questions about Scott Robertson’s All Black side.

One thing is for sure, though. When the Scottish team and their fans wake up tomorrow, their hangovers are going to feel worse than usual, because they absolutely blew it. The All Blacks handed them a one-man advantage for a full half an hour, couldn’t capitalise on their two early tries, then rolled out the welcome mat to the 22 for almost the entire second half.

It was all there for Scotland to break their 120 year duck. But even a brave display from a banged-up Finn Russell, a captain’s knock from Sione Tuipulotu and an absolute glut of possession couldn’t stop them doing what they’ve always done.

[embedded content]

Because when it came down to it, they got inside their own heads and fell to bits when they needed it most. Which admittedly does say a bit about the All Blacks, who tapped into the team’s historic ability to ruthlessly exploit even the slightest bit of hesitation. Damian McKenzie’s try didn’t just come off the back of his stunning 50/22, with Ardie Savea’s call to go for a lineout off a subsequent offside penalty a smart, high-percentage play.

As far as smarts go, there’s not much else to report. Josh Lord’s perception to pick and gallop up field to set up Cam Roigard was a good start, while Savea and Peter Lakai’s work at the breakdown was crucial. But the three yellow cards shattered a very good trend for the All Blacks in the back half of the season.

They’d given up six yellow cards in the first five tests, but none since, so this sudden and brainless lapse in discipline is the real talking point once Scotland’s tears are wiped away.

Caleb Clarke attempts to evade Darcy Graham of Scotland. ActionPress

Savea’s yellow felt unavoidable when he pulled down a drive that led to Ewan Ashman’s try, but it ultimately wouldn’t have made any difference, so can’t be classified as a desperate roll of the dice. Besides, Savea shouldn’t be doing anything as skipper and best player on the park to potentially have him leave it.

The other two were just dumb, especially when Leroy Carter didn’t even realise he’d been binned after his foot trip on Darcy Graham. Wallace Sititi fell victim to rugby’s most unpopular law, but that made it four knock down yellow cards this year for the All Blacks, easily the most out of any test side. The most annoying thing is that without the cards, this would be a good news story as the penalty count ended 10-8 in the All Blacks’ favour.

Both sides spent long periods on defence and the All Blacks’ resilience in the second half should be applauded, but it’s hard not to question why they waited till the Scots were 10 metres away from the tryline to start tackling them properly.

McKenzie’s shift off the bench once again proved that the All Blacks are developing some serious problem-solving ability in that area. It’s not the first time he’s been the difference on an end of year tour match, while around him the replacement forwards simply did what they needed to in the game’s critical last 10 minutes.

Fabian Holland looks to offload the ball whilst under pressure during the Scotland v All Blacks match. ActionPress

So there was a bit to like in all of it, plus it’s worth remembering that this tense result and Scotland’s positive performance are very much on brand for this fixture. The last three matches at Murrayfield, two of which involved Steve Hansen’s then-world champion All Blacks, ended with almost identical scorelines.

But given the importance this tour now has for Robertson since he has a chance to close out an up and down season in the right way, the introspection this week needs to be high. There should be plenty of pride to take out of the defensive effort, however the point should be getting hammered home that, after being up 17-0, it never should have come to that in the first place.

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

Blair Tickner retains place in Black Caps after back to back four-wickett games

Source: Radio New Zealand

Blair Tickner took his chances against England, after receiving a late call-up. Photosport

Blair Tickner retains his place in the Black Caps one-day side, after taking successive four-wicket hauls against England.

The Central Districts paceman was called into the squad last month for the first time in two years, as injury cover for Kyle Jamieson.

Both Tickner and Jamieson have been named in the ODI squad to face the West Indies, but Kane Williamson remains sidelined with a groin injury.

Tickner took his chances, claiming figures of 4/34 and 4/64 in his two matches.

He steered New Zealand home with the bat in the third ODI in Wellington, as the team sealed just their second-ever ODI series win over England.

“We couldn’t have asked for more from Ticks against England,” said New Zealand coach Rob Walter. “He brought plenty of energy, and his pace and bounce proved to be a big test for some of the best batters in the world.

“It was pleasing to see him come in at short notice and perform at that level, and that’s a testament to the hard work he’s been putting in.”

Matt Henry returns to action, after missing the final two one-dayers against England with a calf strain.

The pace-bowling group also includes Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes and Nathan Smith, with captain Mitchell Santner, Michael Bracewell and Rachin Ravindra providing spin options.

The squad assembles in Christchurch on 14 November, before the series-opener at Hagley Oval on 16 November.

Williamson, who is recovering from injury, will not take part in the series, but he is preparing for the test series against the West Indies, starting in December.

New Zealand squad for West Indies ODI

Mitchell Santner (captain), Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Devon Conway, Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes, Matt Henry, Kyle Jamieson, Tom Latham (wk), Daryl Mitchell, Rachin Ravindra, Nathan Smith, Blair Tickner, Will Young.

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

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

Watch live: Te Pāti Māori expels Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi

Source: Radio New Zealand

A composite image of Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. RNZ/Liam K. Swiggs

Te Pāti Māori’s national council has voted to expel MPs Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris, after a period of internal conflict.

The National Iwi Chairs Forum had been hopeful the party’s two factions could patch things up at a hui at a Wellington marae this week.

That plan has been scuppered, after the co-leaders on Monday announced the party’s council – made up of electorate representatives – met on Sunday night and voted “without opposition” to expel Kapa-Kingi and Ferris, with immediate effect.

In response to news of his expulsion, Te Pāti Māori MP Tākuta Ferris has issued a statement, saying the decision “is plainly unconstitutional”.

RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

“I do not acknowledge the decisions and illegal resolutions made through unilateral measures.”

The affiliation of the Ferris and Kapa-Kingi – whose son Eru has also been scathing of party president John Tamihere – has been in question as the stoush in the party escalated.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi confirmed last Tuesday the party was considering explusion.

Tamihere last week urged them to quit after the National Council voted to suspend Kapa-Kingi over office overspending accusations.

That followed a vote of no confidence in Tamihere from Ferris’ Te Tai Tonga electorate branch, which also called for his immediate resignation.

Tamihere accused them of plotting a coup against the co-leaders and said their behaviour was based on “greed, avarice and entitlement”.

The MPs have not been speaking to media but in a statement Kapa-Kingi said she was not going anywhere, and Tamihere did not speak for Te Tai Tokerau.

The council has been examining the party constitution to come to a decision on how it would handle the MPs, who met with the co-leaders last week.

More to come…

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

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

Watch live: Te Pāti Māori reveals fate of MPs amid turmoil

Source: Radio New Zealand

The press conference will be livestreamed from about 10am at the top of this page. This is a breaking story and will be updated.

Te Pāti Māori is set to reveal an update on the fate of two MPs who have been critical of the party leadership.

The affiliation of the MPs Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi – whose son Eru has also been scathing of party president John Tamihere – to the party has been in question as the stoush has escalated.

Co-leader Rawiri Waititi confirmed last Tuesday the party was considering explusion.

Te Pāti Māori MPs Tākuta Ferris and Mariameno Kapa-Kingi. RNZ

Tamihere last week urged them to quit after the National Council voted to suspend Kapa-Kingi over office overspending accusations.

That followed a vote of no confidence in Tamihere from Ferris’ Te Tai Tonga electorate branch, which also called for his immediate resignation.

Tamihere accused them of plotting a coup against the co-leaders and said their behaviour was based on “greed, avarice and entitlement”.

Te Pāti Māori co-leaders Debbie Ngarewa-Packer and Rawiri Waititi. RNZ / Mark Papalii

The MPs have not been speaking to media but in a statement Kapa-Kingi said she was not going anywhere, and Tamihere did not speak for Te Tai Tokerau.

The council has been examining the party constitution to come to a decision on how it would handle the MPs, who met with the co-leaders last week.

More to come…

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

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

Vital Healthcare takes management in-house

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

Vital Healthcare’s management is going in-house, with a $220 million capital raising to fund the change and position the property trust for near-term development projects.

The parties had reached a conditional agreement to buy out the external managers, Northwest, which had a long-term agreement to manage the trust’s hospitals and medical facilities property portfolio.

“Internalisation marks an important milestone for Vital, positioning the business to deliver stronger and more sustainable returns for Unit Holders,” Vital chair Graham Stuart said.

“By bringing management in-house under a strengthened governance framework, Vital will be well-positioned to unlock future growth, enhance transparency and accountability, and fully align management and investor interests.

“This transaction creates a scalable platform as Vital continues to grow its leadership in healthcare real estate.”

The capital will be raised by way of a $190m underwritten placement of units and a $30m unit purchase plan at a fixed price of $1.95 a unit.

The price per unit represented a 9.5 percent discount to the dividend-adjusted unit closing price of $2.156 on 7 November 2025.

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

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

Internal Affairs tells gambling website 20Bet to stop targeting New Zealanders

Source: Radio New Zealand

The offshore gambling website has been targeting New Zealanders with paid ads promoting online pokies and sports betting. 123rf

The Department of Internal Affairs has given notice to gambling website 20Bet to stop advertising in New Zealand.

The offshore gambling website is registered in Cyprus but has been targeting New Zealanders with paid ads on YouTube promoting online pokies and sports betting.

Promoting overseas gambling is prohibited under the Gambling Act, and sports and racing betting is banned outright unless controlled by TAB.

“The Department is aware of recent advertising by 20Bet on YouTube,” DIA’s director of gambling Vicki Scott told RNZ.

“We have instructed 20Bet to cease these activities. We will continue to monitor the situation and take further action if necessary.”

Copy on 20Bet’s website targets New Zealanders directly and claims that “taking risks is something that Kiwis like doing.”

RNZ has approached 20Bet for comment.

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

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

National to mull asset sales as part of next election, Christopher Luxon says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon says the government will “think about” possible sales of government assets.

While Luxon has ruled out an asset sales this term, he told Morning Report on Monday that governments needed to be able to “recycle” assets.

He said he is up for a conversation on whether there should be sales with the money redeployed to creating new ones.

His comments come after he was questioned about a Treasury Report last week which raised whether the government should sell state assets that are under-performing or no longer needed.

Treasury said there needed to be better asset management, that some assets were under-performing or poorly maintained.

“A formal capital recycling programme may be useful where government reallocates or reinvests capital from existing assets or infrastructure projects into new opportunities or projects to meet policy objectives,” the report said.

Luxon said New Zealand did need need a “more mature conversation” about asset sales.

“Owning everything we own forever is not the right thing to do, I suspect.”

He said governments have huge money tied up in assets and governments needed to refresh or recycle their holdings.

“To be able to sell an asst in order to buy or create a new asset is a good thing. Governments own a lot of stuff – there’s obviously some we must own. But over time you want to cycle assets in and out of a portfolio and that is a good conversation to have.”

Luxon said he suspects National would go into the election with policies in this space.

https://radionz.us6.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=211a938dcf3e634ba2427dde9&id=b3d362e693 Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero], a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Sam Neill ‘honoured’ to receive Screen Legend Award

Source: Radio New Zealand

The award recognises the 78-year-old’s five-decade career, from his breakthrough in Sleeping Dogs and international acclaim in Jane Campion’s Academy Award-winning The Piano and Jurassic Park and its sequels.

“I am very pleased and proud to be accepting this award amongst my friends and peers,” Sir Sam said.

“I just worked it out that it’s been 53 years in film – that does indeed sound like a lifetime! Thanks to all concerned. Very honoured.”

Fellow award recipient Kightley said Sir Sam was one of those people whose existence helped make others around them and the world a better place.

“He’s done so much for New Zealand and especially the screen industry here. He’s an inspiration to many. I’m stoked to be alive at the same time as him.”

He has also received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for his performance in the NBC miniseries Merlin (1998) and won a British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Award for Reilly: Ace of Spies (1983).

Beyond acting, Sir Sam is the founder and proprietor of Two Paddocks, a boutique vineyard and winery located in Central Otago.

The winners of this year’s New Zealand Screen Awards will be announced at a ceremony hosted by comedian Pax Assadi, on 21 November at the Viaduct Events Centre, Auckland.

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

Some people choosing DIY super are getting bad advice, watchdog warns

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Di Johnson, Senior Lecturer, Finance and Financial Planning, Griffith University

Maskot/Getty

It’s no secret Australians are big fans of a do-it-yourself (DIY) project. How many other countries have a weekend sausage sizzle at a hardware store embedded in their national mythology?

That DIY attitude may be flowing into the way we save for retirement. Since the early 1990s, it has been compulsory for employers to pay part of their employees’ income into a superannuation account.

Typically, that money is then invested and managed on their behalf for retirement by their chosen super fund. But it doesn’t have to be. Australians can also elect to put their money in a “self-managed super fund” (SMSF) and choose how it’s invested themselves, for their own benefit.

This option comes with far more risk and personal responsibility for compliance. Yet increasingly, people are choosing it: over the year to June, the number of SMSF accounts grew by 6.2% to 653,062, with about 5% of Australian adults now an SMSF member.

SMSFs account for about a quarter – A$1 trillion – of Australia’s $4.3 trillion superannuation sector.

Last week, a review by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) raised serious concerns many financial advisers may be encouraging people to set up an SMSF even though it isn’t in their best interests.

The DIY approach to super

Most SMSFs have one (25%) or two members (68%), but they’re allowed to have up to six.

For some people, the benefits of an SMSF may outweigh those offered through a regular super fund. It can allow them to select from a wider range of investments – choosing exactly where they want to put their money, and how they want to diversify.

It may also allow some people to optimise the amount of tax they have to pay – by selecting more tax effective assets and timing the sale of investments.

Some company directors may be able to benefit from favourable tax arrangements by putting commercial properties into an SMSF – though this is a complex arrangement with strict rules.

Not for everyone

However, there are also many potential pitfalls. First and foremost, though an SMSF gives members control over how their savings are invested, poorly selected investments can result in losses.

All members of an SMSF are equally responsible for ensuring it meets its compliance obligations. This can be complex and expensive. Ongoing costs – such as audit fees and preparing financial statements – can be high.

On top of this, leaving an industry or retail fund could mean losing its included insurance coverage. It can also mean losing access to some compensation schemes and consumer protections.

Advice not up to scratch

In this context, corporate watchdog ASIC set out to understand why some clients were advised to establish an SMSF even though it was not suitable or beneficial for them.

It looked at 100 advice files that had recently been provided to real retail clients by financial advisers. It’s important to note this wasn’t a random sample – they were selected based on red flags that the advice may not have been suitable.

ASIC’s report found in 62 of the 100 files, the financial adviser failed to demonstrate compliance with the “best interests duty” and related obligations. Meeting this duty is a legal requirement. Advisers must provide appropriate advice, that is in the best interests of the client after taking all relevant circumstances into account, prioritising the client’s interests over their own.

Before recommending a financial product to a client, advisers must also conduct a reasonable investigation into the options.

Alarmingly, the review found 27 files – more than a quarter – raised “significant concerns about client detriment”. That is, these clients should not have been advised to set up an SMSF, but had been anyway.

‘Control’ and conflicts of interest

One of the biggest concerns raised in the report related to the way the idea of “control” was being used inappropriately to justify recommending clients set up an SMSF.

Using an SMSF does offer more control over how retirement savings are invested. But ASIC said many advisers weren’t exploring “what control meant” to a particular client.

This includes asking questions such as: does this client have the skills and experience to operate an SMSF? Is this option cost effective, and does it meet the client’s goals?

The report also found many advisers weren’t sufficiently investigating existing products or alternatives for their clients, and in some cases, where there was a conflict of interest, didn’t act in the best interest of clients.

Why this matters

ASIC’s report points out there were still examples of good quality advice about establishing an SMSF. They do not suggest the sample is representative of all SMSF advice.

But a targeted focus on SMSF red flags seems warranted, with significant interest from Australians on lower incomes: in the June quarter this year, 47% of new members entering into an SMSF had taxable incomes under $100,000.

Relatively low incomes don’t necessarily mean an SMSF was established inappropriately.

However, they do raise questions about whether other options (often lower cost, lower risk) are being properly explored and offered to clients seeking advice.

Di Johnson is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, an academic member of the Financial Advice Association of Australia (FAAA), a member of the Academy of Financial Services (AFS), and the Economic Society of Australia (ESA) including the Women in Economics Network (WEN). Di Johnson has received research funding in the past from the Financial Planning Education Council (FPEC), and contributed to projects partly funded or supported by financial planning industry partners.

ref. Some people choosing DIY super are getting bad advice, watchdog warns – https://theconversation.com/some-people-choosing-diy-super-are-getting-bad-advice-watchdog-warns-269196

Employers forking out more for employees in ‘talent-short’ market

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied/ Kenny Eliason

Top shelf employees are expected to cost employers much more to retain and recruit as the economy recovers.

Recruitment consultancy firm Robert Walters said the brain drain to Australia was already sending ripples of concern, particularly in Wellington, which saw its workforce gutted after the last change of government.

Wellington-based Robert Walters associate director Tim Wright said there was a looming talent shortage, as many senior level executives had already relocated to Australia for better pay and conditions.

He said winning them back would not be cheap.

The strong labour market conditions seen in 2022 and 2023 favoured those looking for work, but in the past couple years, it was the other way around.

“And so salaries were going up and up and up. And then that bubble, if you want, almost burst,” he said.

“So as a result, we’re really feeling it, and in Wellington, even more so than in Auckland.”

Latest data for the year ended in March indicates 47,734 migrants left New Zealand for Australia, with New Zealand citizens accounting for 86 percent of the exodus.

“What happens is you lose a lot of that senior level IP (intellectual property), and people below that aren’t capable of taking on what’s left.

“So you find yourself in a talent-short market again, and then organisations starting to fork out more than what they should ideally need to.”

Wright said it would take more than money to attract the best and brightest back to New Zealand, with many competing markets offering much better conditions, such as parental leave packages.

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

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

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon ‘deeply supportive’ of social media ban for under 16s

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. Nick Monro

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is “deeply supportive” of protecting young people by restricting social media use under 16 and will introduce a bill before next year’s election to enable it.

Speaking to Morning Report, the National Party leader said society imposes restrictions on teens in the physical world and should do it in the online space too to keep them safe.

Earlier this year, National MP Catherine Wedd put forward a member’s bill to restrict social media access for under 16s.

The government then picked up the work and said it will introduce a bill raising the age limit for New Zealanders accessing social media to 16.

He told Morning Report’s Ingrid Hipkiss that the Australian model was “of interest” to the government.

From next month, the Australian government can impose fines on social media companies if they fail to prevent people under 16 having accounts on their platforms.

Luxon said the government is looking at the model and other bans with a view to introducing legislation before next year’s election – “or certainly within this term”.

He said Education Minister Erica Stanford is leading the investigation.

Last week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he was confident the social media age limit would be a success when it comes into force on 10 December, and he believed people would voluntarily comply over time.

Critics had worried that Australian parents would be left to enforce or explain a ban to their children on their own, but the Australian government has said it would put resources into schools and its eSafety Commission for the change.

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

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

Part of Canterbury’s State Highway 73 blocked by serious crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

State Highway 73 in Canterbury is blocked due to a serious crash.

Emergency services were called to the crash involving a ute and a truck between Kirwee and Darfield about 8am on Monday.

Police said there appears to be serious injuries.

The serious crash unit has been advised and the road is expected to be closed for some time.

Motorists are asked to avoid the area or expect delays.

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

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

How scientists are hacking bacteria to treat cancer, self-destruct, then vanish without a trace

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Josephine Wright, Senior Research Fellow,, South Australian Health & Medical Research Institute

Could engineered bacteria, including <i>Listeria monocytogenes</i>, help treat cancer? quantic69/Getty

Bacteria are rapidly emerging as a new class of “living medicines” used to kill cancer cells.

We’re still a long way from a “cure” for cancer.

But one day we could have programmable, self-navigating bacteria that find tumours, release treatment only where needed, then vanish without a trace.

Here’s where the science is up to.

Current treatments aren’t perfect

Many tumours are hard to treat. Sometimes, treatments cannot penetrate them. Other times, tumours can “fight back” by suppressing certain parts of the immune system, reducing the impact of treatments. Or tumours can develop resistance to treatments.

Using bacteria could overcome these obstacles.

More than a century ago, surgeons noticed some people with cancer who developed bacterial infections unexpectedly went into remission. That is, their cancer signs or symptoms decreased or disappeared.

Now we’re learning what could explain this. Broadly speaking, bacteria can activate the body’s immune system to attack cancer cells.

In fact, this approach is already used in the clinic. Bacteria are now the treatment of choice worldwide for certain cases of bladder cancer. When doctors deliver a weakened version of Mycobacterium bovis directly into the bladder through a catheter, the body’s immune response destroys the cancer.

Why bacteria?

Certain bacteria have an unusual talent. They can naturally find and grow inside solid tumours – ones that grow in organs and tissues – but leave healthy tissue relatively untouched.

Solid tumours are perfect homes for these bacteria as they contain lots of nutrients from dead cells, are low in oxygen (an environment these bacteria prefer), and typically have reduced immune function, so cannot defend themselves against the bacteria.

All this suggests possible careers for these bacteria as delivery couriers to carry targeted, anti-tumour therapies.

Over the past 30 years or so, more than 500 research papers, 70 clinical trials and 24 startup companies have focused on bacterial cancer therapy, with growth accelerating sharply in the past five years.

Most bacterial cancer therapies in clinical trials today target solid tumours, including pancreatic, lung, and head and neck cancers, which are the kinds that often resist conventional treatments.

Bacteria could deliver cancer vaccines

Cancer vaccines work by presenting a cancer’s unique molecular “fingerprints”, known as tumour antigens, to the immune system so it can hunt down and eliminate tumour cells displaying those antigens.

Bacteria can serve as couriers for these anti-cancer vaccines. Using genetic engineering, the genetic instructions (or DNA) in bacteria that might make us unwell can be removed and replaced with DNA for immune-stimulating tumour antigens.

Listeria monocytogenes is the main character in more than 30 cancer vaccine clinical trials. Unfortunately, most of these trials did not show that these treatments work better than current ones.

The challenge is teaching the immune system to recognise cancer’s telltale antigens strongly enough to remember them, without pushing the body into dangerous overdrive.

Bacteria could boost existing cancer therapies

Nearly half of current clinical trials using bacteria in cancer therapies pair bacteria with immunotherapies or chemotherapy as part of personalised treatment plans to enhance the body’s attack on cancer.

Various approaches have finished phase 2 clinical trials. These include using immunotherapy combined with modified Listeria to activate the immune system for recurrent cervical cancer.

Another trial used modified Salmonella in people with advanced pancreatic cancer alongside chemotherapy to increase survival.

Bacteria could be ‘bugs as drugs’

Arming bacteria with a drug means they could destroy the tumour from the inside, creating “bugs as drugs”.

For this, we need precise genetic control over how bacteria behave. Researchers can already reprogram bacteria to sense, compute and respond to molecular signals around the tumour.

Researchers can also engineer bacteria to self-destruct after delivering a drug, secrete immune-boosting molecules, or activate other therapies on command.

Researchers are building “multi-function” strains that combine several treatment strategies at once.

Probiotic species used in humans for many years are also candidates, including Escherichia coli Nissle, Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium. These can be engineered to produce cancer-killing molecules or alter the environment around the tumour.

How close are we, really?

While early human trials have shown this approach is generally safe, finding the right dose remains a delicate balance.

Bacteria are also living entities that can evolve in unpredictable ways, and their use in humans demands strict safety controls. Even strains modified for safety can cause infection or trigger excessive inflammation.

So scientists are developing “biocontainment” strategies – engineered safeguards that prevent bacterial spread beyond tumours or triggers them to self-destruct after treatment.

If we can overcome these issues, such “living medicines” would still need to successfully complete clinical trials and receive regulatory approval before being commonly used in the clinic.

If so, this could mark a profound shift in how we treat cancer, from static drugs to adaptive biological systems.

The Conversation

Susan Woods receives funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council, Gastroenterological Society of Australia Bushell Research Fellowship, Faculty of Health Science at the University of Adelaide, Tour de Cure, The Hospital Research Foundation. She has equity in GenCirq Inc, a biotechnology company that engineers bacteria to treat cancer. The company was not involved in clinical trials mentioned in this article.

Josephine Wright 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. How scientists are hacking bacteria to treat cancer, self-destruct, then vanish without a trace – https://theconversation.com/how-scientists-are-hacking-bacteria-to-treat-cancer-self-destruct-then-vanish-without-a-trace-266486

Brazil claims to be an environmental leader. Are they?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Pedro Fidelman, Associate professor in environmental policy and governance, The University of Queensland

World leaders and delegates are meeting in the northern Brazilian city of Belém for COP30, this year’s major UN climate summit.

This is the first time the global climate meeting has been held in the Amazon. The world’s largest rainforest helps keep the planet’s climate in balance by removing carbon dioxide from atmosphere and storing it in dense forest and nutrient-rich soil. The Amazon Rainforest holds an estimated 56.8 billion tonnes of carbon in its trees, more than one and a half times the carbon released by human activities in 2023.

For host nation Brazil, this meeting is both an opportunity and a test.

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (known as Lula) wants to show the world his country can lead on climate action and speak for the global south. He has also proposed a new Tropical Forests Forever fund to channel long-term financing to countries that protect rainforests.

Brazil is already known for its low-emissions electricity system (mostly hydropower), long-established biofuel industry (biofuels supply about 25% of the country’s transport energy), and expanding wind and solar sectors.

What’s at stake?

COP30 will take place at a critical moment for global climate action. The world is not on track to limit warming to 1.5 °C, and trust between rich and developing nations remains fragile.

Brazil has signalled it will use the summit to highlight the Amazon’s role in stabilising the global climate and to press for fairer access to climate finance for the global south. Lula has called for stronger international cooperation and more support for countries protecting tropical forests.

For Australia, which is bidding to host COP31 in 2026, Brazil’s experience may offer a preview of the opportunities and political tensions that come with hosting a global climate summit.

Brazil’s environmental credentials

Brazil describes itself as an environmental leader. In some areas, this claim holds weight. More than 80% of its electricity comes from renewable sources, mainly hydropower. It has a strong biofuel industry and rapidly expanding wind and solar power. Brazil’s ethanol program, launched in the 1970s to reduce dependence on imported oil, remains one of the most established in the world.

Even so, environmental pressures remain intense. Land-use change, especially rampant deforestation in the Amazon and Cerrado (tropical savanna) regions, still accounts for about half of Brazil’s greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time the agribusiness sector – broadly defined as farm production, processing, inputs and services – is a major economic force (about a fifth to a quarter of GDP) and carries substantial political influence.

Official data shows deforestation in the Amazon fell by about 11% in 2024-25, with around 5,800 square kilometres of forest lost (roughly half the size of greater Sydney). Illegal mining continues to affect Indigenous territories and river systems, while large cities struggle with air and water pollution.

Adding to the tension, Brazil’s environment agency recently authorised Petrobras, the state-owned oil company, to drill exploratory wells off the mouth of the Amazon River. Belém, where COP30 is being held, is also on the mouth of the river.

The approval is for research drilling to assess whether oil extraction would be viable, yet the timing, weeks before COP30, has drawn criticism from environmental groups. It raises questions about how Brazil will reconcile its clean-energy reputation with its fossil-fuel ambitions.

Political whiplash takes a toll

Brazil’s recent political upheavals have left a deep mark on its environmental record. During Jair Bolsonaro’s presidency (from 2019 to 2023), key environmental agencies were weakened, enforcement declined, and illegal deforestation and mining surged. Protections for Indigenous lands were largely ignored, and international partnerships such as the Amazon Fund were suspended. By 2021, Amazon deforestation reached its highest level in more than a decade.

Lula’s return to power in 2023 signalled a change in direction. His government restored the Amazon Fund, resumed environmental enforcement and reengaged with global climate negotiations.

Deforestation rates have since fallen, and Brazil’s reputation abroad has partially recovered. Yet Lula faces competing pressures at home. Agribusiness remains politically powerful, and the government’s focus on economic growth makes it difficult for Brazil to fully align its environmental goals with its development agenda.

Brazil’s climate diplomacy and COP30 ambitions

COP30 gives Brazil a rare chance to shape the global climate agenda from the heart of the Amazon. The government says it will use the summit to seek stronger financial support for forest protection and to promote fairer climate cooperation among developing countries.

Brazil is drawing new investment in clean industries. In 2025, Chinese carmaker BYD opened a US$1 billion factory in Brazil. The project strengthens ties with China on green technology and shows Brazil’s ambition to build its clean-energy economy.

Brazil’s position is complex. Its success with renewable power gives it credibility, but the country’s reliance on farming and fossil fuels still limits how far it can push others to act. This mix of progress and compromise reflects a broader challenge for many developing countries – how to grow while cutting emissions.

As Brazil hosts COP30, it stands between climate leadership and economic reality. The summit in Belém will test if those goals can translate into environmental progress at home and cooperation abroad.

The Conversation

Pedro Fidelman is a researcher in a project funded by Brazil’s National Scientific and Technological Development Council (CNPq).

ref. Brazil claims to be an environmental leader. Are they? – https://theconversation.com/brazil-claims-to-be-an-environmental-leader-are-they-267441

Extraordinary and occasionally inept: before The Dismissal, the Whitlam government changed Australia forever

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Arrow, Professor of History, President, Australian Historical Association, Macquarie University

Wikimedia, facebook.com @Australian Labor Party, facebook.com @Whitlam Institute, Graeme Fletcher/Keystone/Getty Images, Australian Information Service/National Library of Australia

When Australians of a certain age imagine Gough Whitlam, they probably think of him standing on the steps of Parliament House, addressing the crowd after Governor-General John Kerr’s shocking decision to dismiss his government. The Dismissal marked an astonishing end to an extraordinary, occasionally inept, government.

In 1975, it seemed Whitlam would be forever defined by The Dismissal, especially after his defeat at the subsequent federal election. Yet his vision for Australian social democracy has been burnished by the intervening decades.

When Whitlam died in 2014, ordinary Australians eulogised the impact of his reforms on their lives, and his courage in pursuing them. Not only did his comprehensive policy agenda change the nation, but the urgency and passion he brought to politics inspired devotion. His bold, at times reckless, approach to government has shaped the possibilities for Australian politics ever since.

In his 1972 election speech, Whitlam outlined his “three great aims” for government. They were to:

  • promote equality
  • involve the people of Australia in the decision-making processes of our land
  • liberate the talents and uplift the horizons of the Australian people.

In practice, this meant a wide-ranging program of reform that touched almost every aspect of Australian life.

1. Promote equality

Labor had always represented working people – but in practice, this meant foregrounding the interests of white male breadwinners. Whitlam’s policies were based on a new conception of equality that stretched beyond the traditional Labor allegiances of class to recognise race, ethnicity and gender difference.

At the same time, policies such as increasing pensions, Medibank and legal aid benefited low-income Australians and traditional Labor voters.

The Whitlam government officially ended the White Australia policy in 1973, introducing the new policy of multiculturalism in its place. While it was the Fraser government that introduced key multicultural infrastructure such as SBS, Whitlam set the tone for a new policy approach.

The great coincidence of the emergence of a progressive government and an energetic women’s movement produced a raft of important reforms for Australian women. These included the supporting mother’s benefit, a women’s advisor to the prime minister, overdue actions on equal pay, and the first Commonwealth funding for feminist-created women’s refuges and health centres.

The Family Law Act reformed divorce and Whitlam’s abolition of tertiary student fees transformed the lives of many women.

Aboriginal land rights had emerged as the central issue of Aboriginal politics in the late 1960s. The Whitlam government’s Land Rights Act was introduced to parliament in late 1975 and passed by the Fraser government in 1976.

The Whitlam government returned traditional lands in the Northern Territory to the Gurindji people, who had been struggling to reclaim their traditional country since they went on strike in 1966. It also passed the landmark Racial Discrimination Act in 1975.

2. Involve the people of Australia in the decision-making processes of our land

In his 1972 campaign speech, Whitlam emphasised his commitment to participatory government:

we want (the Australian people) always to help us as a government to make the decisions and to make the right decisions.

Empowering citizens in this way had far-reaching implications for many areas of government, including the creation of community health centres, establishing the Law Reform Commission, lowering the voting age to 18, and the Australian Assistance Plan, which funded social welfare services at the grassroots level in communities across the country.

Whitlam also established 13 royal commissions, diversifying sources of advice for decision-making. The Royal Commission on Human Relationships, for example, not only featured expert evidence from doctors and social workers, but also reached out to the community, asking “what do you think?” about family life, sexuality, gender relations, and childcare. In this way, it helped establish the principle that people deserved input on policy that shaped their lives.

3. Liberate the talents and uplift the horizons of the Australian people

“Liberating the talents” of Australians took many forms, including increasing education funding, expanding preschools and abolishing university fees. Whitlam nurtured the “new nationalism” of the 1970s, creating a system of Australian honours and replacing God Save the Queen with Advance Australia Fair as our national anthem.

His foreign policy encouraged Australians to focus on our region, rather than Britain’s distant shores.

But this aim also animated Whitlam’s arts policy. His government established new support for artists, writers and performers through schemes such as Public Lending Rights, the Australian Film Commission and the revamped Australia Council. Australian music was boosted by the introduction of 2JJ and community radio. Whitlam foregrounded the arts in a way few governments have done before or since.

Whitlam’s legacies

Whitlam presided over an impatient, untested government, which inevitably led to self-inflicted scandals. He was also unlucky to come to office at the end of the long boom, as stagflation took hold. While these economic challenges confounded governments around the world, they were a particular blow to Labor’s ambitious reform agenda, which depended on expanding the role of the state.

Whitlam’s bold and sometimes undisciplined approach has haunted progressive politics ever since. Should governments hoard their political capital or spend it?

The Hawke Labor government learned hard lessons from Whitlam’s mistakes, which saw it retain office for more than a decade. Labor under Anthony Albanese is determined to become the “natural party of government”, apparently at the cost of pursuing transformative reform.

Whitlam’s expansive national vision – democratic, fair and self-reliant – helped define the contours of contemporary Australia. His agenda for reform produced tangible improvements to the lives of millions of Australians. This policy impact is why Whitlam still matters.

The Conversation

Michelle Arrow receives funding from The Australian Research Council. She is a research fellow of the Whitlam Institute.

ref. Extraordinary and occasionally inept: before The Dismissal, the Whitlam government changed Australia forever – https://theconversation.com/extraordinary-and-occasionally-inept-before-the-dismissal-the-whitlam-government-changed-australia-forever-269101

New interactive map shows how flammable your part of Australia is right now

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Marta Yebra, Director, Bushfire Resaerch Centre of Excellence, Australian National University

Vegetation moisture changes in the Lake Magenta region, Western Australia, during 2020. Red shows drier vegetation, blue tones wetter areas. Digital Earth Australia Fuel Moisture Content

This year’s fire season in Australia feels unpredictable. One week brings torrential rain, the next a burst of heat, followed by a sharp cold snap.

This kind of “climate whiplash” – rapid swings between wet and dry conditions – is making it harder to know when the landscape is safe and when it’s ready to burn.

The latest official forecast reflects that same uncertainty. While large areas are likely to experience wetter-than-normal conditions for the rest of spring, parts of inland Western Australia, South Australia and Victoria face an elevated risk of fire due to persistent soil dryness and above-average temperatures.

Even regions showing a “normal” outlook aren’t immune; catastrophic fires can still occur under the right mix of heat, wind and fuel dryness.

But what if we could see how dry the vegetation is in near real time before fires start? That’s now possible thanks to a publicly available tool implemented by Geoscience Australia.

This tool draws on more than a decade of research that began when I was a PhD student in Spain and has evolved thorough collaborations with colleagues at the Australian National University and emergency services.

It’s a glimpse into the future of bushfire management, where satellites and other technologies act like a nervous system for the continent, constantly sensing and responding to changes in the landscape long before smoke fills the sky.

As Australia faces longer, more erratic fire seasons, tools like this may help us all for staying one step ahead of the flames.

How do we measure fire danger?

Fuel moisture content is the percentage of water inside leaves and twigs compared with their dry weight. When it drops below a certain level, vegetation ignites more easily, burns hotter and spreads faster.

A man wearing a hardhat and holding a slingshot in a forest.
Nick Wilson, a researcher from the Bushfire Research Centre of Excellence, collecting field data at the Australian National Arboretum using an arborist’s slingshot to reach the upper canopy for fuel moisture sampling.
Nicolas Younes Cardenas

It is one of the key predictors of fire danger because, for example, it strongly influences whether a source of ignition such as a lightning strike stays small or grows into a fast-moving wildfire.

Traditionally, measuring fuel moisture content relies on cutting samples in the field and weighing them wet and dry. This is a precise but time-consuming method that can only cover small areas.

Satellite-based estimates have existed for years, providing valuable, continent-wide data for seasonal bushfire outlooks.

But their coarse resolution means they’re too broad for guiding local decisions such as planning prescribed or cultural burns and only a few of these earlier approaches were made operational.

Turning satellite light measurements into moisture maps

The new bushfire management tool my team helped developed fixes this problem.

It uses a machine-learning model trained on fuel moisture content estimates developed as part of a precursor tool – the Australian Flammability Monitoring System.

This older system produced continental fuel moisture content at 500-metre resolution every four days since 2001 using data from NASA’s MODIS satellite sensor. It was validated and calibrated using extensive field measurements and biochemical reference data.

This provided a solid foundation for the new model, which provides near-real-time, 20m-resolution maps showing how wet or dry vegetation is across the continent. It does so by drawing on satellite imagery from the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-2 satellites, updated every five days with historical coverage from 2015 onward.

The new version applies the same physical principles to higher-resolution imagery.

Water in leaves strongly absorbs radiation in the shortwave infrared region. This means dry vegetation reflects more light than hydrated, green plants. Meanwhile, as plants lose moisture, the amount of visible and near-infrared radiation they reflect also changes. Chlorophyll breaks down, leaf structure deteriorates, and the red and infrared light signals weaken.

By learning from these patterns, the model can infer how much water is inside the vegetation. This effectively turns satellite light measurements into maps of live fuel moisture across Australia.

To cross-calibrate cultural indicators of flammability, such as plant colour, scent and seasonal cues with satellite observations, we have collaborated with Indigenous fire practitioners.

Indigenous-led field surveys across New South Wales have confirmed strong alignment between these traditional indicators and satellite results.

This two-way learning strengthens both scientific and cultural understanding. It ensures national monitoring systems are informed by generations of Indigenous knowledge about landscape health. It also enhances fire practice and community resilience through cutting-edge Earth observation tools.

Seeing the danger long before it ignites

With every update, the tool provides a continent-wide snapshot of how flammable Australia’s vegetation is.

Thanks to its higher spatial resolution, it can reveal subtle gradients in vegetation dryness that coarser sensors simply miss. This helps fire agencies and Indigenous communities pinpoint where prescribed or cultural burns can be carried out safely – and where fuels remain too moist to ignite.

The data are also being used in insurance and risk modelling for new developments to quantify the number of “flammable days” in a given region.

Meanwhile, the CSIRO is also collaborating with the Bushfire Research Centre of Excellence to better represent changing fuel conditions in fire-behaviour models. As part of this effort, our new fuel moisture content product is being integrated into the CSIRO’s fire spread simulation model.

In bushfire management, the advantage lies in seeing the danger long before it ignites. As Australia’s fire seasons lengthen and the weather swings between extremes, knowing how wet or dry our landscapes are may become as important as forecasting heatwaves or storms.

This marks a shift from reacting to fires to anticipating and preventing them. Other projects, such as OzFuel, will accelerate this by filling other crucial gaps in sustained, high-resolution monitoring of fuel conditions across Australia.


The author acknowledges the many scientists, fire practitioners and Indigenous partners whose work made the new fuel moisture content tool possible, and thanks Geoscience Australia for its operational implementation.

The Conversation

Marta Yebra is a member of the ACT Multi Hazards Advisory Council and The International Academy of Astronautics.

ref. New interactive map shows how flammable your part of Australia is right now – https://theconversation.com/new-interactive-map-shows-how-flammable-your-part-of-australia-is-right-now-268289

Kneecap is revitalising Irish. These 5 artists are doing the same for Indigenous languages

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jill Vaughan, Senior Lecturer, Monash University

Emily Wurramara/Instagram

Northern Irish hip hop trio Kneecap have been making waves, not just as musicians, but as language activists who rap in both English and their native Irish. In Belfast’s Gaeltacht Quarter, Irish is a living language. It is also a political statement – a form of resistance against British cultural dominance.

Kneecap’s music is having a big impact, particularly on young Irish people. While language study in Northern Ireland is declining overall, the number of students taking Irish at the GCSE level has increased in recent years.

This isn’t an isolated trend. Indigenous communities the world over are working to save and strengthen their own languages. Languages don’t die on their own. They are driven to endangerment by colonialism and assimilation – actively minoritised.

In the modern nation of Australia, all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages are now under threat. Australia suffers from a bad case of “monolingual mindset” which can blind us to the cultural and social benefits of multilingualism.

About 120 First Nations languages are spoken here today. A dozen traditional and several new languages are still learned by Aboriginal children.

Many other “sleeping” First Nations languages are being revitalised through inspiring work around the country.

Resistance through language and music

Kneecap’s impact shows music can be a powerful force for language revival. Songs are the crown jewels of cultural heritage, and a common way to connect with a treasured heritage language.

They belong to the family and community domains, which are crucial for passing on language. Songs can make language more visible, memorable, and even help it go viral.

From punta-rock in Belize to pop-folk in Chulym (Siberia), communities are using old and new songs to revitalise their languages.

In Australia, song has always been central to language keeping and storytelling. This is felt powerfully among the Yorta Yorta people, including co-author Josef Tye.

Take the song Ngarra Burra Ferra, a Yorta Yorta translation of the African-American spiritual Turn Back Pharoah’s Army. It was introduced in 1887, at the Maloga mission in New South Wales, by the African-American travelling Fisk Jubilee Singers. The song’s theme of escaping enslavement resonated with the Yorta Yorta’s own experiences of colonisation.

Translated by Yorta Yorta Elder Theresa Clements, and transposed by Tye’s great-great Grampa Thomas Shadrach James, Ngarra Burra Ferra became a powerful act of defiance and language preservation. It would go on to feature in the 2012 film The Sapphires.

In the Victorian context, language revitalisation is a key component of resistance to colonial oppression. It also plays a crucial role in implementing our Peoples’ ambitions around Truth Telling and Treaty.

Many Victorians are unaware they’re speaking terms from Indigenous languages every day. The linguistic landscapes of Victoria and Naarm are rich with Indigenous names and words, and should serve as a reminder of the First Peoples of this continent.

Activating languages through song

Many contemporary Australian artists are centring First Nations languages in their music. Earlier acts such Yothu Yindi, Warumpi Band and Saltwater Band paved the way for newer artists including Baker Boy, King Stingray and Electric Fields.

The public’s enthusiastic response suggests a bright future for musicians who look beyond English in their work. Here are five artists leading the way:

Emily Wurramara

A Warnindhilyagwa woman, Wurramara sings blues and roots in Anindilyakwa – the language of Groote Eylandt – and English. Her 2024 album Nara won the ARIA Award for Best Adult Contemporary Album, making Wurramara the first Indigenous woman to win the award. She was also named Artist of the Year at the National Indigenous Music Awards.

Ripple Effect

This all-female rock band from Maningrida (north-central Arnhem Land) sings about country, bush food, local animals and mythological beings in five languages: Ndjébbana, Burarra, Na-kara, Kune and English. Ripple Effect broke new ground in bringing female voices into Maningrida’s already prolific music scene. Their song Ngúddja (“language”) explicitly celebrates Maningrida’s linguistic diversity.

Neil Morris (also known as DRMNGNOW)

A Yorta Yorta, Dja Dja Wurrung and Wiradjuri yiyirr (“man”), Morris weaves together hip-hop, experimental electronic elements and sound design to explore Indigenous rights and culture in his work as DRMNGNOW. A passionate language advocate, he entwines Yorta Yorta language revitalisation with muluna (“spirit”), Yenbena (“ancestors”) and Woka (“Country”). His latest release Pray is out now.

Aaron Wyatt

Noongar man Wyatt is a violist, composer, conductor and academic, as well as the first Indigenous Australian to conduct a major Australian orchestra. He has conducted works that have been trailblazers of language revitalisation, such as Gina Williams and Guy Ghouse’s opera Wundig Wer Wilura in Noongar and Deborah Cheetham Fraillon’s children’s opera Parrwang Lifts the Sky, sung partly in Wadawurrung.

Jessie Lloyd

A musician, historian and song-keeper, Lloyd founded the Mission Songs Project to collect songs from the Aboriginal mission era. She recently launched the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Songbook to support schools in bringing Indigenous music into the classroom.

For First Nations languages to thrive in the music scene and beyond, they need support through grassroots initiatives in communities, schools and public life. One such example is an award-winning song project run by Bulman School in the Northern Territory.

This project is revitalising the local Dalabon and Rembarrnga languages, showing music can be a powerful and fun way to keep languages strong.

Where communities are supported to strengthen, use and teach their languages, the benefits for cultural and emotional wellbeing are clear.

The Conversation

Jill Vaughan receives funding from the Australian Research Council and the Endangered Languages Documentation Programme.

Josef Noel Tye serves on the Yorta Yorta Traditional Owner Land Management Board and is a member of the Yorta Yorta Nation Aboriginal Corporation.

ref. Kneecap is revitalising Irish. These 5 artists are doing the same for Indigenous languages – https://theconversation.com/kneecap-is-revitalising-irish-these-5-artists-are-doing-the-same-for-indigenous-languages-261754

Praise as government launches plan to combat methamphetamine

Source: Radio New Zealand

Methamphetamine use had increased significantly and meth seized in New Zealand and offshore had increased by 266 percent over the past five years. Supplied / Customs

There’s widespread support for the government’s new action plan to combat methamphetamine use, with the Drug Foundation commending its “health focused interventions”.

A mental wellness provider from northland is also welcoming the news, saying it’s a “fantastic start,” and the Chair of the Ministerial Advisory Group on Transnational and Organised Crime saying it was positive that multiple ministers were involved in order to address the issue in its “totality”.

On Sunday, the government announced what Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith called a “comprehensive action plan to combat methamphetamine harm in New Zealand.”

It’s the result of the Prime Minister’s ‘meth sprint team’ made up of the Ministers for Justice, Police, Customs, Courts and Mental Health, who were tasked with tackling the issue.

That came after a drastic rise in consumption of methamphetamine last year. RNZ investigated what community providers needed in response, which was largely more funding for grassroots solutions.

Paul Goldsmith said yesterday methamphetamine was something “we’ve been fighting for 20 years, and it’s been getting worse in the last little while.”

“We know that meth is a scourge on society.”

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith said the government’s plan would help combat an increase in methamphetamine harm in New Zealand. RNZ / Mark Papalii

He pointed to parts of New Zealand who had been particularly affected, like Northland, where “communities have been blighted by meth.”

“Those communities are desperate for us to fight back, and that’s why we’re taking these extra steps to turn up the dial of our response.”

The response included a nationwide media campaign that will launch in the next few months, paid for by the proceeds of crime fund, that will raise awareness about the issue and the drugs harm.

An extra $30m over four years from the Mental Health and Addiction budget will go to front line services, increasing the services available to the hardest-hit communities.

Police will be able to intercept communications and search for electronically stored evidence with new enforcement powers, and an additional anti-money laundering unit will be set up.

It will also see more focus on disrupting supply chains in the Pacific Ocean, with Customs, the GCSB and the Defence Force conducting a series of maritime operations. There would also be consultation on strengthening border security.

Customs Minister Casey Costello said there was “a lot of risk” through South East Asia and South America, “but we are getting intercepts from all over the place.”

“We just had an arrest last weekend at the airport, 30 kilos of meth from citizens from the US trying to bring methamphetamine into the country.

“So it is coming at us from everywhere and we just need to be tighter across all of it.”

RNZ spoke to providers in Northland earlier this year about the spike in consumption.

Rākau Ora managing director Vanessa Kite told RNZ following the announcement she “absolutely” welcomed it.

“I don’t think we’ll ever have enough bloody money, to be honest. But right now it’s a fantastic start.”

She said the need was “huge” in Te Tai Tokerau, and it was “growing in a different way”, with younger people affected and more complex cases presenting.

What was required to tackle it was “long-term” and “sustained” investment, rather than the short term boosts they’d been getting, she said.

Kite welcomed the focus on meth as a social health issue, rather than an enforcement one.

“Prevention is everything,” she said. “We really need to be putting a lot of money into prevention, but also, education, support and connections.”

She suggested what was needed was more detox beds, and residential rehab options. She also wanted to see more focus on lived experience community providers.

“We’re often seen as the first port of call and the priority in meth help, and we’re paid the worst. In fact, many are doing voluntary work.”

Kite said at a community and grassroots level, she believed they had the solutions, “we just need the support to scale them up.”

The Executive Director at the New Zealand Drug Foundation Sarah Helm said she was “particularly pleased” with the health focused interventions.

“It’s good to see some emphasis on health approaches and additional investment that’s being made, because we know we can’t arrest our way out of the issue.”

What’s needed, Helm said, was treatment and assistance both earlier on in somebody’s journey, but also closer and more accessible to their lives.

She said it wasn’t about waiting until somebody’s experiencing the worst harms before they are offered help.

In order for the nationwide campaign to be effective, it would need to focus on destigmatisation, and promote the option of seeking help she said.

“Those communities who already experience the worst methamphetamine harms already know how negative the impact can be.

“So really grounding that campaign in what they’re experiencing and helping them to get information and support quickly will make that as effective as it possibly can be.”

Chair of the Ministerial Advisory Group on Transnational and Organised Crime Steve Symon told RNZ many of the planned actions were consistent with the recommendations made in the MAG’s reports.

Overall, he said the announcement is great, provided it is part of the solution to organised crime, not the whole solution.

“Methamphetamine is certainly an important issue, but it’s a subset of the bigger organized crime issue.”

The focus on health was also welcomed, because “as we’ve said in the reports, we don’t think locking people up is necessarily the solution,” said Symon. The government should be tough on those committing this crime and addressing that, but it wasn’t the only way to deal with it.

Looking at cutting off the supply coming into the country was important too, as well as “working on our customer base”, he said, “working on how many New Zealanders are willing to consume these drugs.”

The coalition government parties had campaigned on being “tough on organised crime” he said, and it was about understanding “what tough means.”

“It’s not just building more prisons and locking more people up.

“It’s certainly locking those up who need to be locked up because of the crimes that they’ve committed, but it’s also looking the broader social problem of how our country has been willing to consume twice as much methamphetamine as we did last year.”

Symon suggested being tough on crime could be possible by removing the customer base.

Ultimately though, what was missing was the coordination to pull it all together, “how to be accountable” he said, which was why the MAG had recommended a single minister in charge of responding to organised crime.

But he thought it was possible multiple ministers had come together to look at the issue of meth.

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

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

Papamoa residents call chip seal resurfacing ‘road vandalism’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Papamoa Residents and Ratepayers Association chair Philip Brown says residents living in a number of Papamoa roads do not think they need to be resealed at all. Supplied

“Bloody minded road vandalism.” That’s how many residents in Papamoa have reacted to news their previously asphalted roads are going to be resurfaced in chip seal.

Residents said they would rather their streets had no resealing work and were left as they were.

However, Tauranga City Council said roads were only scheduled for resealing if they were showing early signs of surface deterioration and leaving a road to deteriorate further would result in higher costs.

In October RNZ reported on the surprise many residents had when their roads were resealed with a different surface and a general public preference for asphalt.

Papamoa Residents and Ratepayers Association chair Philip Brown said residents of Santa Monica Drive, Montego Drive, Santa Barbara Drive, Checketts Place, Sovereign Drive and The Gardens Drive were not consulted by the council before discovering their roads were to be resealed this summer. All the roads were going from asphalt to chip seal.

He said the residents did not think there was a need for the resealing to happen at all.

“There is nothing wrong with the roads as they are now,” he said. “They look good, they are quiet, they are just nice stable roads, there are no engineering problems with them, council has never produced an engineering document saying that the roads are having a problem and they are just that well-built .”

Brown said the council should save money and just leave the roads alone.

“We cannot understand why they want to do the chip sealing.”

Tauranga City Council general manager of operations and infrastructure Reneke van Soest said each road was individually inspected before going on the maintenance schedule.

Van Soest said that depending on the condition of each individual site it might be possible to delay treatment for one or two years, but the Papamoa sites that had been selected for resealing were showing early signs of failure.

“If we do not address that deterioration, we risk significant damage to the structural layers beneath the road surface, which would result in greater repair costs and inconvenience for everyone,” she said.

Council said the most cost-effective way of maintaining a road was to intervene before potholes, cracking and other quality issues occur.

“So that we can prevent damage to the underlying road layers. [Road] repairs or rehabilitation are much more expensive maintenance processes, which can be managed by timely resurfacing to waterproof the road foundations,” van Soest said.

One of the issues was that Tauranga had many roads in residential areas that were surfaced in asphalt by subdivision developers. Developers likely know that people prefer asphalt which would be a motivation for using it.

“Those roads are progressively reaching the end of their serviceable surface life and maintenance is becoming a priority,” van Soest said.

The New Zealand Transport Agency funds 51 percent of local roads but for NZTA to co-fund resurfacing in asphalt, councils must show NZTA that asphalt was worth the investment as it was five times more expensive. This case was often unable to be made for suburban streets and so council would have to fund 100 percent of the road renewal if it went with asphalt.

“Using the example of Santa Monica Drive, the cost difference between chip seal and asphalt is almost $400,000.

“If that additional cost is divided by the number of households served by the road, resurfacing with asphalt would require each household to contribute approximately $3000 to make up the funding shortfall,” van Soest said.

The Papamoa Residents and Ratepayers Association had started a survey online of residents and Brown showed some of the feedback to RNZ. It was overwhelmingly against the resealing work.

One resident who had lived on the street for 20 years said they had already written to the council regarding the matter.

“There is nothing wrong with the road, there are far more urgent road resurfacing works that need doing!”

Another questioned how it would affect their children.

“My kids enjoy riding their scooters on our street and have recently purchased a skateboard too. If the street is covered with chipseal then they will lose this area to play outside.”

“I feel that the footpaths need more urgent attention than the road surface,” said one resident.

Brown said asphalt lasted longer so the cost may even out over time. He thought it would last 30-plus years.

NZTA told RNZ the longevity of asphalt was dependent on a range of factors, for example heavy trucks and electric buses would wear the surface much faster than a light vehicle. However, generally they would expect it to it last for approximately 12 years.

Brown said the association had reached out to council to ask them to hold a community meeting next week to work through the issues.

“Continuing on regardless would show a lack of care for the community.”

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

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

Live: Out of control Tongariro National Park fire spreads to 2500 hectares

Source: Radio New Zealand

A wall of smoke from the Tongariro National Park fire is providing a spectacular but worrying vista for a central plateau village.

The blaze has burned through up to 2500 hectares and is 20 percent contained.

Whakapapa Village was evacuated on Sunday, and the fire has forced the evacuation of trampers and closed lodges. All tracks and huts within the Tongariro National Park are closed, and State Highway 48 leading to Whakapapa Village and State Highway 47 at the intersection with State Highway 4 at Waimarino are also closed.

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

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

Education Review Office says ‘stronger consequences’ needed for struggling schools

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Education Review Office said there is a need for a stronger, system-wide approach in order to improve struggling schools. Unsplash/ Taylor Flowe

The Education Review Office wants tougher action on struggling schools that do not improve.

In its annual report the office criticised the lack of support for under-performing schools and called for “stronger consequences” for those that did not demonstrate progress.

It told RNZ that could see high-performing schools provide intensive mentoring for the leaders of schools that did not improve.

It said school principals were the key to lasting improvement.

The report said ERO was involved with 168 “schools of concern” and published reports for 54 of them in 2024/25 year, recommending statutory intervention or Education Ministry support for 32.

The report said review office staff had increased their engagement and support for struggling schools but “results are mixed”.

Only one-third of schools receiving support had improved, a third got worse and a third did not change.

“Too many schools are not turning things around fast enough. There is a real need for a stronger, system-wide approach,” the report said.

“In particular, we need to provide better and more sustained support for school leaders, since strong leadership is key to making lasting improvements in schools and helping all learners succeed.”

“ERO’s view is that schools of concern will benefit not only from ongoing support, but also from stronger accountabilities placed on them as part of the education system. Clear expectations, regular and rigorous follow-up, and robust mechanisms should be in place to monitor progress.

“Schools that do not demonstrate the necessary shifts in practice and outcomes should face meaningful and timely consequences.”

The review office told RNZ in a statement that underperforming schools had low regular student attendance, a large proportion of students who were regularly and chronically absent, low student achievement, and a significant number of students leaving school without NCEA qualifications.

“These schools face complex challenges, including around health, safety and wellbeing, leadership and teaching capability – which impacts the ability for the school’s leaders to turn things around and drive the necessary improvements,” it said.

The office said the school system already provided support for struggling schools, but more was needed for their principals.

“As a system, we haven’t invested deeply enough in leadership capability. Investing in leadership development, targeted professional learning for teachers, and robust support systems for learner wellbeing is critical to narrowing the equity gap and ensuring every student achieves and can thrive,” it said.

“We need to wrap around our school leaders better than we have in the past, so they are set up to meet the unique challenges that their school is facing – turning things around, so that every child gets a quality education.”

Asked what “meaningful and timely consequences” should be applied to schools that did not improve, the review office said its approach was educative, not punitive.

“Where traditional intervention has not been able to shift the dial for these schools, we have to think differently. This could be intensive mentoring for school leaders and boards by leaders from high performing schools – sharing their insights, strategies and successes,” it said.

It also said higher-level interventions, like replacing boards with commissioners, needed “more vigour and fidelity”.

“Interventions need to be carefully targeted, better planned in relation to improvement actions signalled in ERO’s reports, tightly monitored with more resources and stronger accountability for everyone involved,” it said.

It’s not the first time the review office has criticised the support provided to struggling schools.

It made similar warnings in its briefing to then-incoming Education Minister Erica Stanford in November 2023 when it said the process for turning around the worst-performing schools was too slow and needed immediate attention.

In its 2022 annual report, the review office said responsibility for improving schools was shared across multiple agencies including ERO and was not a problem teachers and principals should deal with on their own.

Most schools on track to meet government goals

The report said ERO reviewed 745 schools in 2024/25.

It said most schools were not meeting government targets for regular attendance or achievement against new reading, writing and maths curriculums, but most were on track to improve.

But about a third were not doing enough.

It said only 29 percent of schools visited in the 12-month period were yet to see improvement in attendance and 33 percent were not making sufficient progress in reading, writing and maths.

The report said most schools, 92 percent, were offering “sufficient or rich opportunities to learn across the breadth and depth of the curriculum” but academic achievement was a complex challenge.

“While 13 percent of almost all schools are considered high performing in achieving learner success and wellbeing, over one-third of schools (35 percent) are not yet meeting expected standards for learner success and wellbeing.”

The report said a large portion of schools had not yet embedded student wellbeing and engagement practices and their leadership and strategic planning might lack the coherence to drive sustained improvement.

“These figures signal a significant systemic concern. When over one-third of schools are not yet meeting expected standards for learner success and wellbeing, it reflects a widespread vulnerability in the foundational conditions that support learner achievement and equitable outcomes.”

The report said overall the education system was making progress but it needed to be more widespread and urgent.

“High compliance with government directives, such as close to 100 percent of schools implementing “phones away for the day” and 98 percent delivering daily literacy and numeracy instruction, shows that schools are responding to clear expectations for urgent improvement and a stronger system.”

It said 14 of the schools it reviewed were not meeting the requirement for an hour-a-day of reading, writing and maths.

The report said ERO had monitored 517 schools over two years.

It found in that time teaching and learning improved at a quarter of the schools, but declined in 16 percent.

Teachers key to good early childhood education

The report said ERO completed 1260 ECE reviews in 2024/25.

It said the reviews included 567 stand-alone early childhood services and 53 percent of those met or exceeded the quality threshold, up from 36 percent in the previous 12-month period.

Results were less good for governing bodies that oversaw multiple early childhood services.

It said a sample of 14 governing organisations which were responsible for 545 services showed 58 percent were below ERO’s quality threshold and 42 percent were above.

The report said the figures indicated “system-level changes and leadership development are still required”.

The report said trained teachers were important.

“Well trained teachers foster rich learning environments leading to better cognitive social and emotional development. Centres with a strong professional learning culture show a better learning environment for children. This needs to be at the heart of early childhood education. It helps teachers stay current with best practise,” the report said.

“ERO finds high quality services encourage reflective practise and shared learning through professional learning development. Teaching in these services often work as a team around the child taking a collective responsibility for the child’s learning and development.”

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

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

‘I would definitely recommend getting on all-fours with your dog’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Coming from a family who’d farmed for generations, Amelia Thomas expected that she’d inherited some understanding of animals.

The day her family moved to an old dairy farm in Nova Scotia, the former journalist was divebombed by a hummingbird, and had to deal with escaped piglets, screaming horses, fighting dogs and cat pee on her bed.

She set off on journey to better understand animal communication that led to the new book What Sheep Think About the Weather: How to Listen to What Animals Are Trying to Say.

Supplied

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

Auckland community feeling optimistic shoplifting is under control

Source: Radio New Zealand

Woolworths Point Chevalier reduced its hours last year following safety concerns. RNZ / Jessica Hopkins

Residents and business owners in Auckland’s Point Chevalier are feeling optimistic as shoplifting is finally brought under control.

It comes just over a year after the local supermarket started closing early over safety concerns.

On a main thoroughfare parallel to Auckland’s north-western motorway, the Point Chevalier shops are nestled between two worlds.

Despite being the de facto town square for one of Auckland’s more expensive suburbs, the strip has had a troubled history of crime and antisocial behaviour.

Residents like Bob have long lamented the closure of the Point Chevalier library, which was shuttered in late 2022 due to a leaky ceiling.

But a new interim library finally opened its doors to visitors on Saturday.

“I think losing the library for such a long time was a big deal because it was kind of part of the package. It was for me anyway, so it’s nice that it’s come back,” Bob said.

Margi Watson, the newly elected local board chair, said the library’s absence had been felt throughout the community.

“You know, when the library was closed off and the town square was all fenced off, there were some safety concerns,” she said.

“Now we’re hoping that the library’s open, the town square’s open, there’s less concerns from people about security.”

Last year, in response to brazen shoplifting and harassment, Woolworths Point Chev restricted its hours and boosted its security.

Since then, new high-density apartments, a competing New World supermarket, and the much-anticipated reopening of the local library have given residents and businesses hope.

Lotto shop owner Chirayu Patel said he hadn’t encountered shoplifters in some time.

“Better than last year. Like, yeah, the cops also coming and visiting here twice a week. And then Auckland Council security guys also visiting. Yeah, so it’s better than last year,” he said.

However, another shopkeeper who asked not to be identified told RNZ shoplifting was still a common occurrence at his store.

A spokesperson for Woolworth’s said its security measures had paid off, with a steady reduction in shoplifting over the past year.

“In line with our $45 million investment over three years, announced in 2023, we have put in place a number of both covert and overt security measures across our stores, including Pt Chevalier,” they said.

“We have seen an improvement and we will continue to work with Police, community groups and other retailers in our communities.”

Workers First Union retail secretary Rudd Hughes, who represented supermarket staff, said Woolworth’s deserved credit.

“What they’ve done is that they’ve actually now put on properly trained security people. Those security guards are able to stop shoplifters. They have two security guards on at the peak times, which is something that we asked for,” he said.

“So to be fair to Woolworths, they’ve picked up their game around this.”

He said other improvements had made the supermarket safer for staff and customers alike.

“They’ve changed the configuration at Point Chev a little bit, so there’s only one door for customers to exit,” he explained

“And the other thing is they’ve got the shark-teeth doors fixed and the trolley lock in place. So all those things have meant that verbal abuse, physical abuse and the shoplifting has calmed down in that store.”

Margi Watson hoped safety improvements and the new library would attract more people to the suburb.

“The new library will go back to a full-service library where there’s books, where there’s activity, there’s events like Wriggle and Rhyme for children, where there’s printing and computers to access. So it’ll become the heart of the community again.”

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

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

Mental health worker strangled, but NZ Health denies staffing to blame

Source: Radio New Zealand

Workers at North Shore Hospital’s He Puna Waiora secure mental health unit have reported multiple assaults. RNZ

  • Another serious assault at North Shore Hospital mental health unit
  • The PSA says staff had been pleading for help
  • Health NZ says it added extra workers before it opened five new beds last month.

A mental health worker was strangled by a patient a day after their colleagues pleaded for extra staff, but Health New Zealand has rejected the idea that short-staffing played any part in the incident.

Workers at North Shore Hospital’s He Puna Waiora secure mental health unit have been protesting for months about the violence, alleging they are bullied if they speak up.

Health NZ has confirmed there was a “serious assault” on 18 October.

This occurred just after the unit added five extra beds, and while HNZ was looking into a previous assault where a staffer was injured after hitting their head.

“On the 18th October there was another serious assault involving strangulation,” said PSA union national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons, adding this was partly due to being overstretched.

“Just the day before, our staff said they were pleading for staff numbers to be increased,” the union said in a separate statement.

“Their request for extra staff was only acted on for two shifts – staffing had decreased again at the time of the assault.”

Health NZ Te Whatu Ora group director of operations for Waitematā Brad Healey said the unit had added seven new positions this year before the 18 October assault.

“There is no evidence linking this incident to the recent bed increase, as it occurred in the high-care area of the unit, where no bed or staffing changes were made.

“At the time, the unit was fully staffed,” he said in a statement to RNZ.

He added the assault was “managed appropriately, with immediate support provided to those affected”.

The secure unit had five beds added in mid-October, making a total of 40 beds.

Healey said the beds were opened following extensive preparation and recruitment.

“The unit has been funded and staffed for this level of capacity for some time, with an increase of seven FTEs [full-time equivalents] this year prior to the opening of the beds.”

Fitzsimons pushed back: “This is wrong.

“We stand by our previous statement – there have been no additional staff recruited to cover the additional beds.

“There was a consultation period, but we disagree it was extensive. The PSA was not provided the documentation needed to do meaningful consultation, and Health NZ consistently misled both PSA officials and members of staff on what the process would look like.”

Healey responded: “We acknowledge we have more work to do to further improve our communication with staff and intend to raise this at the next meeting with staff and PSA.”

Fitzsimons said the core problem was the unit’s minimum safe staffing levels were too low, saying this illustrated why healthcare workers were striking nation-wide.

The latest violence came while the two sides were preparing to meet to talk about violence and a half dozen other problems listed in a safety notice in September that 50 of the staff had signed.

That meeting would now take place on 17 November.

The problems had mostly not been resolved and it would ask at the meeting for staff to be increased, the PSA said.

Part of the problem was four elderly patients that staff said they were not equipped to deal with, and who should be moved to a specialised facility. HNZ rejected moving them.

The unit lacked equipment to work with them, and staff lacked the training, the PSA said.

Healey acknowledged that training was “an area for improvement”. About a quarter of staff had been trained, and that was set to rise to a third by the end of the year.

Another problem – bathroom drains that regularly got blocked and flooded the unit, sometimes with faeces – had been fixed.

Health NZ had previously acknowledged that staff suffered “real and valid” trauma from witnessing another worker hitting their head when restraining a patient a few weeks ago.

That case and the strangulation have sparked internal reviews.

The September notice raised the “increased risk of physical violence; high likelihood of serious injury” at He Puna Waiora.

The secure unit has a troubled history, including a 2020 inquiry into two patient suicides, and critical Ombudsman reports in 2019 and 2022, including about staff shortages.

The government last week announced $60m of mental health funding over four years, including $7m a year for 40 more front-line clinical staff nation-wide and two new 10-bed acute services so fewer people would need to be admitted as inpatients.

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

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

How a rural bootcamp is boosting mental health

Source: Radio New Zealand

Car headlights cut through the darkness of an early morning bootcamp. Ke-Xin Li

It’s 6am in Pukehina – a rural community down the coast from Tauranga. Leaves are rustling against the gentle breeze as tyres crunch through the gravel driveway.

The basketball court – surrounded by kiwifruit orchards and dairy farms – is getting busy.

The sun is not yet up, but car headlights cut through the darkness.

Tuesday is women’s bootcamp, an hour-long workout session run by Moses Mohi Beckham.

He expanded the bootcamp to the community after starting with friends in 2020.

“It was just myself and a vet and another farmer, we just started running around in a paddock doing push-ups, then it just evolved from there and we were probably getting up to 10 to 15 dudes a couple of times a week.”

After moving to Pukehina, two locals asked him to start one for women.

“We just started with just doing squats out in the paddock there and then a court was built, then just kind of evolved from there.”

Now, Mohi runs four bootcamps a week – two for men, two for women.

After Mohi started running the bootcamp, a friend built a basketball court for the group on their farm. Ke-Xin Li

After bootcamp, Mohi works in many jobs, one of them being a facilitator for the Rural Support Trust, which he calls “have a cup of tea”.

The job has given Mohi insights into the mental health challenges faced by the rural community.

And he says it’s not all about having the right answers.

“[It’s about] sit and listen, and if you can carry some of that stress off them, especially if they’ve got no one to vent to, and if it’s been bottled up so long, it probably can be pretty tough. It’s weird, the more you listen, things just seem to kick in and words come out and seem to work.

“If I give them a hug by the end of it, I think I’ve cracked it.”

Mohi Beckham runs the bootcamp for locals as a way to boost physical and mental health. Ke-Xin Li

The 44-year-old says after going through a dark period in his own life, bootcamp was a way to boost not only physical health, but also mental health.

“We’ve developed friendships. When we first started, they were quite awkward, some of these fellas they wouldn’t even shake your hands, but now a hug is a normal thing.

“I’m just trying to break through that and actually yarn about the good stuff, the real things, like family. And once you start chewing the fat after the workout, then people start talking about anything. Farmers will have problems, but they may hold it to themselves, but once they share it out, someone may have a way to get around it, or someone knows someone that could help, and it kind of works out from there.”

He says rural living can mean “a lot of isolation”, making mental health a challenge, but the smaller community compared to cities means once they open up a space, it can be easier to support each other.

Mohi runs the bootcamp for free and has paid for equipment himself. But seeing how it’s bringing the community closer, he says all is worth it.

Cathryn Wattam has been coming here for three summers. While life as a dairy farmer and kiwifruit orchardist is busy, she says the group exercise keeps her body and mind strong.

Cathryn Wattam has been coming to the bootcamp for three summers. Ke-Xin Li

“Mental health – it’s about getting out, having conversations with people that aren’t your husband, just having fun and just creating a community.”

This summer, she’s bringing her 14-year-old daughter to bootcamp.

“The alarm goes off and you get your clothes out the night before and you just make it happen. You just gotta get up. You gotta go.”

Hypnotherapist Tania Vinson recently moved to Pukehina for the beach life, and she says the bootcamp is a good way to get to know the community.

Tania Vinson is new to the area and joins the bootcamp to boost her physical health and find community. Ke-Xin Li

“Well, I haven’t died yet, so that’s good. I was a little bit sore, but a good sore.”

It’s her second time at the bootcamp, and she says she will be coming for the third.

Parents sometimes bring their kids, so the workout is designed for a range of fitness levels.

Mohi says even though men’s and women’s sessions run separately, it’s the same challenge.

“I do the exact same workouts with the men. I just say it differently, but they all have to do the same bloody thing. If you think about it, everything’s all based around the core, the groin, the hips. Because men are not very flexible, they think they’re tough, but some of these dudes can’t even tie their shoelaces up. Whereas for the women, most of them are the opposite. So across the board we try to do a bit of everything.”

And at the end of the morning, making sure everyone’s included is what matters most. Mohi says his trick is to always end on a round of high-fives.

“It’s just a finish, especially the new ones there and try to get them included.”

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

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

Mental health in-patient killed herself after being given leave to go home for Christmas

Source: Radio New Zealand

  • Mental health in-patient killed herself after being given leave to go home for Christmas
  • Family unaware of previous attempt and ongoing risks
  • Health NZ says it’s introduced new protocols for the inpatient unit at Palmerston North Hospital on leave, discharge planning, documentation and communication with families
  • Coroner’s recommendations include review of staffing levels and compliance with new procedures.
  • The family of a mental health patient who killed herself after being allowed to go home for Christmas was not aware of her suicide attempt a week previously.

    Gabriella Kathleen Ann Freeland – known as Kate – died on Christmas Eve 2021 at her family home in Auckland, the day after her father picked her up from the psychiatric in-patient ward at Palmerston North Hospital.

    In her findings, released on Monday, Coroner Janet Anderson found the decision to grant the 28-year-old leave was “unwise”.

    “I also have concerns about the adequacy of the information provided to Gabriella’s father at the time of her discharge,” she wrote.

    “Robert Freeland was not properly informed about the seriousness of Gabriella’s situation, and he was not provided with information that might have helped reduce the risk of her ending her life while she was on leave.”

    Her brother Jared Freeland, who was the one to discover her body, said the family wanted Gabriella’s death to be a catalyst for positive change within the mental health service.

    He told the coroner that Gabriella’s case was not an isolated incident, and he wanted to draw attention to the “parlous state of mental health services” in New Zealand, which he described as a “national disgrace”.

    Gabriella was diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) as a child and treated with Ritalin, going on to complete a computer science degree at university.

    Her mental state deteriorated from 2017, the year that her mother Lydia died of motor neurone disease.

    She started drinking heavily, and her behaviour became increasingly erratic.

    In mid-2020, she consulted several GP clinics and emergency medical centres about shortness of breath and other symptoms, which she feared could be caused by liver damage from alcohol.

    Her symptoms were thought to be related to anxiety.

    She left Auckland in August 2020 without telling her family, who reported her as a missing person.

    It is believed she was living “itinerantly” when she was discovered by police in early June 2021, carrying several items that could be used for self-harm.

    After being assessed by an acute mental health team she was discharged from care the following day because she had declined help and did not meet the criteria for compulsory treatment under the Mental Health Act.

    However, the next month she was admitted to Palmerston North Hospital mental inpatient unit after being arrested for “train hopping” on top of moving carriages.

    She had knives and other items in her possession, and admitted she was suicidal and had made other attempts to end her life.

    “She was dishevelled, malodorous, quiet, contradictory, incongruent and at times perplexed. She reported that she believed people were trying to kill her and she was diagnosed with a psychotic illness, including schizophrenia. The opinion of multiple clinicians was that psychosis was a major part of her clinical picture.”

    She was placed under compulsory treatment, as she had “a clear intention to suicide”.

    The assessing doctor regarded her as “psychotic, at high risk of going ‘absent without leave’ from the unit and at high risk of suicide if she was not hospitalised”.

    She was discharged in September and lived in a flat, where mental health workers continued to visit her.

    On 17 December 2021, she was reviewed by her community psychiatrist, who found she was not suicidal, but noted her disorganisation and medication non-compliance put her at risk unless she was “closely managed”.

    The next day, she tried to kill herself – but was saved by her landlady and re-readmitted to hospital.

    During that admission, she told clinicians the suicide attempt was not planned and she was “happy to be alive” and looking forward to spending Christmas with her family.

    The psychiatrist’s clinical notes at the time said it appeared Gabriella had ADHD, not schizophrenia, and they planned to reduce some medications and restarted her on Ritalin.

    He later told the coroner he was of the opinion that Gabriella suffered from ADHD, in addition to depression and a personality disorder – mainly impulsivity and unpredictability.

    There was a Zoom meeting with her father, who had been unaware she was back in hospital.

    “Robert recalls asking why Gabriella was back in the mental health ward and being told it was because her ‘medications were wrong’, but that she was ‘all right now’.”

    According to the medical notes from the meeting, the psychiatrist explained Gabriella had been readmitted because she was depressed and having thoughts of harming herself.

    The notes show the father asked what clinical support she needed and was advised that Gabriella needed support and medication, i.e. Ritalin.

    He arrived in Palmerston North on 23 December to pick her up, and had a meeting with staff and given some paperwork about medication.

    He told the coroner he was not aware that Gabriella had been admitted to hospital because she had tried to kill herself, and that he did not know that she was a danger to herself.

    “He recalls that one of the doctors may have said something about suicide or suicidal tendencies, but he was not sure.”

    When they stopped at her flat to pack for the trip, one of the flatmates whispered to Robert Freeland that Gabriella had some specific items in her bag and he needed to “get them out”.

    However, when he asked his daughter if she had anything potentially harmful in her luggage, she denied it.

    Home in Auckland the following day, they had a great time as planned, he said.

    They went shopping, bought groceries and had lunch together. Gabriella went for a walk and visited her aunt.

    That afternoon, she spoke briefly to her brother Jared, and they “had a little laugh” before she went into her room.

    That is where she was found dead a couple of hours later.

    ‘Tragic outcome’ continues to affect clinical team

    MidCentral District Health Board held an independent review into the death, which found “Kate” had a tendency to downplay her risk and this was not taken into account in planning.

    “During interviews some staff expressed disquiet about the leave process and were not confident that Robert knew about the suicide attempt.”

    The reviewers said two indicators should have prompted staff to reassess Kate’s risk: the change in her diagnosis; and her risk history and the serious attempt to kill herself only two days before.

    They made several recommendations, including improvements to assessment, treatment, leave and discharge planning and documentation.

    In its response to the coroner, Health NZ provided details of those new procedures, including the information that should be provided when a patient goes on leave and planning.

    The psychiatrist who was treating Gabriella on the ward told the coroner that the decision to give her leave for Christmas was made by the multidisciplinary team after “an intense five days of assessment, treatment and observation”.

    “It was in response to strong patient and father requests and was sanctioned when Gabriella appeared to be improving and future focused.”

    Plans and support measures were in place.

    “Despite that, and the team doing their best, a tragic outcome no-one wanted followed. The whole team and I remain affected by the tragic outcome in this case and our sincere condolences remain with Gabriella’s family.”

    Experienced psychiatrist Associate Professor Ben Beaglehole, who provided expert advice to the coroner, noted the diagnosis of schizophrenia was the best explanation for the mental problems that emerged for Gabriella from 2017.

    He said the change in diagnosis to ADHD over two days raised a number of questions, including whether it reduced vigilance to abnormal mental state, and influenced the decision to grant leave.

    The timeframe for moving from a serious suicide attempt on 18 December 2021 to extended overnight leave on 23 December 2021 was “relatively short if the driver of Gabriella’s risk behaviours is thought to be partially treated psychotic symptoms”.

    Ritalin did not help with psychotic symptoms, and could sometimes make them worse, although there was no evidence of this in Gabrielle’s case.

    He noted however, that acute inpatient services often ran near full capacity with high-risk patients, and care must be taken “when applying the benefits of hindsight to evaluating outcomes from complex clinical scenarios”.

    Coroner’s recommendations

    Coroner Anderson said she was mindful of “the dangers of hindsight bias” and accepted it was not possible to conclude that Gabriella would still be alive if she had not been granted leave, or if her father had received better information.

    However, she said the decision to grant Gabriella leave so soon after a serious suicide attempt, and a significant change in clinical diagnosis, was unwise.

    “There was no opportunity to properly consider the impact of the changed diagnosis or the recent alteration in medication before Gabriella left the unit with her father.”

    Furthermore, while there was uncertainty about exactly what Robert Freeland was told, it was clear he was not aware of the specific details of the suicide attempt days previously, nor the risks of taking her home.

    The coroner acknowledged the changes MidCentral had made to policies and procedures, but has further recommended that Health NZ:

    • Commission an independent review of culture at the in-patient unit, including staff communication
    • Review the resourcing of the unit to ensure that it is appropriately and safely staffed
    • Continue regular audits about compliance with the new policies and procedures, particularly those relating to Leave, Family-Whānau Meetings, and Multi-Disciplinary Team Meeting decision-making.

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

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

    COP30: NZ must commit to buying offshore credits to meet Paris target, climate experts say

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    World leaders gather for the COP30 UN Climate Change Conference in Belem, Para State, Brazil. AFP / LUDOVIC MARIN

    Climate scientists and advocates say the government needs to come clean on how New Zealand plans to meet its first international climate target.

    A decade on from the Paris Agreement, and as a New Zealand delegation heads to the annual UN COP climate summit, the government says its climate ambition has not changed.

    But it is yet to commit any funding, or announce detailed agreements, to purchase the estimated billions of dollars of offshore carbon credits it needs to meet New Zealand’s Paris obligations by the 2030 deadline.

    Failing to act could soon start to jeopardise free trade agreements and leave New Zealand vulnerable to an international legal challenge, climate experts say.

    The previous government pledged to slash net greenhouse gas emissions to half of 2005 levels by 2030, as New Zealand’s contribution to the Paris Agreement.

    The overarching goal of the agreement is to limit warming to no more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, and well below 2°C, and countries are required to present their pledges – known as nationally determined contributions – every five years.

    The current government has confirmed it would continue to pursue New Zealand’s first nationally determined contribution.

    It will also present its update contribution at this year’s COP30 summit, which starts today in Belém in the Brazilian Amazon.

    New Zealand will put forward an updated target of a 51-55 percent reduction in overall emissions by 2035 – criticised as “shockingly unambitious” when it was first announced at the start of this year.

    But first the 2030 target must be met – and climate experts say the government is rapidly running out of time to say how it will be achieved.

    When it was first announced, then-Climate Change minister James Shaw said domestic emissions would not be enough to meet the target and New Zealand would have to purchase offshore credits to make up the shortfall, at a cost of about $1 billion a year.

    An official tracking report submitted by New Zealand last year found the gap had narrowed, but still projected a shortfall of 84 million tonnes of emissions, taking into account all planned domestic reductions.

    The amount is roughly equivalent to a full year’s emissions.

    Former NZ Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern arrives at the COP30 UN climate conference in Belem, Para State, Brazil. AFP / MAURO PIMENTEL

    Lawyers for Climate Action executive director Jessica Palairet said successive governments had failed to act on offshore mitigation and it was time to commit.

    “For the government to just remain in a state of indecision, she’ll be right, we’ll work it out nearer the time, my view is that is contrary to international law.”

    An International Court of Justice opinion released earlier this year made it “very clear that we have to make best efforts to use all means at its disposal to achieve our [targets]”.

    “Save some extraordinary technological advance that no one sees coming having effect by 2030, I think avoiding offshore mitigation is next to impossible.”

    By insisting it was committed, but not explaining how it would actually meet the target, the government was “dancing on the head of the pin”, Palairet said.

    Climate change minister Simon Watts and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon have both affirmed New Zealand’s international target.

    However, their coalition partners are opposed to offshore mitigation, and they also face opposition around the Cabinet table: forestry and agriculture minister Todd McClay told Morning Report last year that the concept was not “palatable” to New Zealanders.

    Watts confirmed to RNZ that that there was no current Cabinet decision or agreement to purchase offshore credits and the focus was on domestic emission reductions.

    “When we came in, the gap was 149 [million tonnes] or so, it’s now down to 84,” he said.

    “Our emissions reduction plan does highlight that there is a gap and that is a significant challenge for us as a country, but the point that we’re optimistic around … is that, particularly in agriculture, there’s quite a lot of work underway that does have a material impact on [domestic] emissions reduction.”

    The shortfall was continuously monitored and the government would keep re-assessing the situation, Watts said.

    “It’s not cross your fingers and hope.

    “We’ve got to do everything we can domestically … and as time evolves, as it will, more things are coming on to the plate.”

    But independent climate change and carbon market expert Christina Hood said the government should be laying out a “really clear plan” right now for how it would meet the Paris target.

    “These [offshore] emission reductions have to occur by 2030 in order to be able to count, so we really need to get our skates on. The key issue is that the government is not committing any real money to do this.”

    Despite pushing for international carbon markets at successive COPs, New Zealand had done very little beyond signing a handful of “very high level agreements around just a general willingness to cooperate”, Dr Hood said.

    “Other countries that are going to be needing international cooperation to meet their targets, like Japan, like Switzerland, have been really active for a number of years already, not just setting up partnerships, but they’re actually been establishing projects and getting emission reductions happening.”

    Watts said there were no agreements at all in place when he came to office, and the cooperation agreements signed since then had been on his watch.

    In February, Watts told a meeting of farmers that there was no financial liability on the government’s books if it failed to meet the target.

    “No one sends you an invoice,” Farmers Weekly reported him saying.

    Jessica Palairet said although that was true, there were plenty of other consequences.

    “One is that we have free trade agreements with the European Union [and] with the United Kingdom that require us to effectively implement the Paris Agreement. So if we are seen to fall foul of that, it opens New Zealand up to the possibility of trade sanctions.”

    That was not far-fetched, she said.

    “Internationally, New Zealand is actually getting some pretty bad headlines for its backsliding on climate and you could see countries wanting to make an example of us.

    “We know that the EU likes to … try to use their influence to shape international law and international trade norms.”

    New Zealand could also face international legal challenges if it was perceived to not be genuine about trying to meet its targets, Palairet said.

    “The International Court of Justice also opens the door to the possibility of one state bringing legal proceedings against another state if it is seen to be breaching its international obligations.

    “You could imagine some of our Pacific partners, for example, looking at decisions being made in New Zealand and being really quite unhappy with those.”

    There were wider reputational consequences to consider, too, she said.

    “What side of history do we want to be on as a country?”

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

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

    ‘A fantastic start’- support for government’s plan to combat methamphetamine use

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Methamphetamine use had increased significantly and meth seized in New Zealand and offshore had increased by 266 percent over the past five years. Supplied / Customs

    There’s widespread support for the government’s new action plan to combat methamphetamine use, with the Drug Foundation commending its “health focused interventions”.

    A mental wellness provider from northland is also welcoming the news, saying it’s a “fantastic start,” and the Chair of the Ministerial Advisory Group on Transnational and Organised Crime saying it was positive that multiple ministers were involved in order to address the issue in its “totality”.

    Yesterday, the government announced what Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith called a “comprehensive action plan to combat methamphetamine harm in New Zealand.”

    It’s the result of the Prime Minister’s ‘meth sprint team’ made up of the Ministers for Justice, Police, Customs, Courts and Mental Health, who were tasked with tackling the issue.

    That came after a drastic rise in consumption of methamphetamine last year. RNZ investigated what community providers needed in response, which was largely more funding for grassroots solutions.

    Paul Goldsmith said yesterday methamphetamine was something “we’ve been fighting for 20 years, and it’s been getting worse in the last little while.”

    “We know that meth is a scourge on society.”

    Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith said the government’s plan would help combat an increase in methamphetamine harm in New Zealand. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    He pointed to parts of New Zealand who had been particularly affected, like Northland, where “communities have been blighted by meth.”

    “Those communities are desperate for us to fight back, and that’s why we’re taking these extra steps to turn up the dial of our response.”

    The response included a nationwide media campaign that will launch in the next few months, paid for by the proceeds of crime fund, that will raise awareness about the issue and the drugs harm.

    An extra $30m over four years from the Mental Health and Addiction budget will go to front line services, increasing the services available to the hardest-hit communities.

    Police will be able to intercept communications and search for electronically stored evidence with new enforcement powers, and an additional anti-money laundering unit will be set up.

    It will also see more focus on disrupting supply chains in the Pacific Ocean, with Customs, the GCSB and the Defence Force conducting a series of maritime operations. There would also be consultation on strengthening border security.

    Customs Minister Casey Costello said there was “a lot of risk” through South East Asia and South America, “but we are getting intercepts from all over the place.”

    “We just had an arrest last weekend at the airport, 30 kilos of meth from citizens from the US trying to bring methamphetamine into the country.

    “So it is coming at us from everywhere and we just need to be tighter across all of it.”

    RNZ spoke to providers in Northland earlier this year about the spike in consumption.

    Rākau Ora managing director Vanessa Kite told RNZ following the announcement she “absolutely” welcomed it.

    “I don’t think we’ll ever have enough bloody money, to be honest. But right now it’s a fantastic start.”

    She said the need was “huge” in Te Tai Tokerau, and it was “growing in a different way”, with younger people affected and more complex cases presenting.

    What was required to tackle it was “long-term” and “sustained” investment, rather than the short term boosts they’d been getting, she said.

    Kite welcomed the focus on meth as a social health issue, rather than an enforcement one.

    “Prevention is everything,” she said. “We really need to be putting a lot of money into prevention, but also, education, support and connections.”

    She suggested what was needed was more detox beds, and residential rehab options. She also wanted to see more focus on lived experience community providers.

    “We’re often seen as the first port of call and the priority in meth help, and we’re paid the worst. In fact, many are doing voluntary work.”

    Kite said at a community and grassroots level, she believed they had the solutions, “we just need the support to scale them up.”

    The Executive Director at the New Zealand Drug Foundation Sarah Helm said she was “particularly pleased” with the health focused interventions.

    “It’s good to see some emphasis on health approaches and additional investment that’s being made, because we know we can’t arrest our way out of the issue.”

    What’s needed, Helm said, was treatment and assistance both earlier on in somebody’s journey, but also closer and more accessible to their lives.

    She said it wasn’t about waiting until somebody’s experiencing the worst harms before they are offered help.

    In order for the nationwide campaign to be effective, it would need to focus on destigmatisation, and promote the option of seeking help she said.

    “Those communities who already experience the worst methamphetamine harms already know how negative the impact can be.

    “So really grounding that campaign in what they’re experiencing and helping them to get information and support quickly will make that as effective as it possibly can be.”

    Chair of the Ministerial Advisory Group on Transnational and Organised Crime Steve Symon told RNZ many of the planned actions were consistent with the recommendations made in the MAG’s reports.

    Overall, he said the announcement is great, provided it is part of the solution to organised crime, not the whole solution.

    “Methamphetamine is certainly an important issue, but it’s a subset of the bigger organized crime issue.”

    The focus on health was also welcomed, because “as we’ve said in the reports, we don’t think locking people up is necessarily the solution,” said Symon. The government should be tough on those committing this crime and addressing that, but it wasn’t the only way to deal with it.

    Looking at cutting off the supply coming into the country was important too, as well as “working on our customer base”, he said, “working on how many New Zealanders are willing to consume these drugs.”

    The coalition government parties had campaigned on being “tough on organised crime” he said, and it was about understanding “what tough means.”

    “It’s not just building more prisons and locking more people up.

    “It’s certainly locking those up who need to be locked up because of the crimes that they’ve committed, but it’s also looking the broader social problem of how our country has been willing to consume twice as much methamphetamine as we did last year.”

    Symon suggested being tough on crime could be possible by removing the customer base.

    Ultimately though, what was missing was the coordination to pull it all together, “how to be accountable” he said, which was why the MAG had recommended a single minister in charge of responding to organised crime.

    But he thought it was possible multiple ministers had come together to look at the issue of meth.

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

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