MPI proposes new options to trace pigs and sheep for better disease response

Source: Radio New Zealand

The government has proposed new options to improve pig and sheep traceability. RNZ / Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

The government has proposed new options to improve pig and sheep traceability so it can better respond to disease outbreaks.

While counting sheep may put some to sleep – keeping track of the animals and where they had been could be vital when it came to disease management.

At the moment, when sheep were moved between farms, saleyards and meatworks, farmers were required to fill out animal status declarations or ASDs – on paper or in PDF form.

The Ministry of Primary Industries (MPI) has put out a proposal to improve traceability for sheep and pigs.

The three options included – staying with the status quo, moving to a fully electronic mob tracing system or including sheep in NAIT, The National Animal Identification and Tracing System.

Beef and Lamb chair Kate Acland said moving to electronic monitoring was the preferred option.

“Beef and Lamb supports doing it under it the ASD system but moving to fully electronic forms – it’s already in place and relatively low cost compared to the other options and it’s simple and practical.

“We support improving the traceability in the livestock system, sheep is a gap at the moment – we just need something that is practical and useful on farm.”

Currently cattle and deer were tracked individually under NAIT and farmers paid a levy per animal.

Acland said that was not necessary with sheep.

“Bringing sheep under NAIT would be a lengthy process as it would require changes to the legislation and there would be a greater cost for farmers whereas an ASD is something farmers already use so it just makes sense to use a system that’s already in place.”

Kate Acland © Clare Toia-Bailey / www.image-central.co.nz

One option the MPI proposal did not include was individually tracking each sheep – as Australia, Canada, the UK and the EU did.

The proposal pointed out that of the 38 members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), New Zealand was one of 11 countries that did not individually trace sheep.

“Of these 11 countries, New Zealand stands out as being highly reliant on exports of animal-based primary products.”

MPI said New Zealand could be expected to follow global practice and move towards traceability of individual sheep in the future.

“However, we do not discuss individual traceability as an option because a significant amount of work with stakeholders and providers is needed to understand the costs, benefits, and operational resourcing required for this option,” the consultation document said.

Acland said sheep were run in much larger mobs in New Zealand and the benefits of individual tracing would not outweigh the significant costs this would impose on farmers.

Submissions on the proposal close on 5 April.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/mpi-proposes-new-options-to-trace-pigs-and-sheep-for-better-disease-response/

Crash blocks lanes on State Highway 1 at Kaiapoi

Source: Radio New Zealand

A crash blocked lanes on State Highway 1 in Kaiapoi pm Wednesday morning. (File photo). RNZ / Tom Kitchin

A crash on State Highway 1 in Kaiapoi, Canterbury, brought early morning traffic to a near-standstill.

The Transport Agency said a crash shortly after 5am on the Kaiapoi River Bridge on Wednesday blocked the northbound lanes as well as one lane southbound.

It said motorists should expect delays.

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Will a couples therapist take sides? An expert explains

Source: Radio New Zealand

Should we do couples counselling? Are we happy? Are we both pulling in the same direction? How can we get our spark back?

These kinds of questions are normal in a society that places such importance on coupledom, despite there being no handbook or one-size-fits all approach.

Many people seek out couples counselling when going through a rough patch, or wondering how to improve their relationship. And no doubt the hit show Couples Therapy has boosted public interest in this type of counselling.

Many who seek couples counselling do so because they’re arguing and disagreeing a lot with their partner.

Unsplash / Rizki Ardia

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MediMap health portal hack ‘a wake-up call’, cyber security expert says

Source: Radio New Zealand

MediMap is used by some health providers in aged care, disability, hospice and the community to accurately record medication doses. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

A hack at a second healthcare portal is being labelled a concern and a worry by a cyber security consultant who also used to work at the National Cyber Security Centre.

MediMap has shut down access to its platform while it looks into how it was breached on Sunday.

Health New Zealand is supporting it but said as a privately owned company, it is MediMap that is solely responsible for its security and it needs to do everything it can.

“I think any incident involving health information is concerning,” Jan Thornborough from Outfox told RNZ.

“Because we expect our most sensitive information to be well protected.”

That’s what Health NZ says too.

Its digital services acting chief information technology officer Darren Douglass said New Zealanders expected companies involved in healthcare to secure systems and platforms so private information was safeguarded.

MediMap is widely used in the likes of aged residential care, disability services, hospices and community health for prescribing and giving medication, and administration.

Facilities using it are now back to manual pen and paper.

Palliative Care Nurses New Zealand said it was very worried by the breach.

“Palliative care nurses are deeply concerned about the impact this may have on the safety, privacy, and delivery of care for our patients,” the group said.

“Any disruption places vulnerable patients at risk.”

In a message provided by the Nurses Organisation, one of its members at George Manning Lifecare and Village in Christchurch said staff were worried for their residents.

“Since MediMap stopped working we have had to double the number of registered nurses on each shift just to give medication, this requires a paper form from the pharmacy, everything from paracetamol through to controlled drugs requires a second checker to observe and sign along with the registered nurse administering,” they said.

“This process makes each medication round longer and means the risk of residents not receiving their medicine on time is high.”

Jan Thornborough from Outfox said it was the right move by MediMap to close its platform down to put a halt to further damage.

“So usually in the first 24 to 48 hours, it’s really important for them to assess what’s happened so that they can contain the risk and preserve any evidence so that when they get the right experts in, they can investigate it properly and actually find out exactly how the hacker got in,” she said.

“And once they’ve contained the problem and they understand the scope of it, then they can determine what the impact is both on the service itself, but also for their customers and implement an appropriate recovery plan for them.”

MediMap said the breach, which it called unauthorised activity, resulted in patient records being modified.

It said this involved information like resident names, dates of birth, assigned prescriber, location of care and resident status.

Thornborough said users of software or platforms had their own responsibilities as well as the companies providing it.

“Really this is a wake-up call for all New Zealand organisations, if they haven’t worked it out yet that cybercrime is not going away,” she said.

“We’re all operating in a digitally connected environment these days and they need to take ownership of where they put their information and who they trust holding on to it because at the end of the day, it’s a shared responsibility between the business and the vendor of a particular piece of software or a portal.

She said software or platform users had to do their own due diligence.

“And until the general consumer says ‘okay, I expect this level of security’, they’re not going to get it, basically.”

The latest health portal breach comes after a top-level review into the earlier Manage My Health hack was already underway.

Health Minister Simeon Brown, who called that breach unacceptable, commissioned the review and said there were lessons that needed to be learned.

The review started on 30 January and was expected to provide a final report on 30 April.

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Lyall Bay businesses excited at prospect of Wellington south coast beaches reopening

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lyall Bay beach and the rest of Wellington’s south coast has been off limits since the Moa Point treatment plant failed on 4 February. RNZ / Krystal Gibbens

Lyall Bay businesses are excited by the prospect that beaches along the south coast in Wellington could soon reopen after being off-limits since since the Moa Point treatment plant failed catastrophically pumping millions of litres of untreated sewage into the sea.

On Tuesday Wellington Mayor Andrew Little said the current blanket direction for people to stay off south coast beaches was not sustainable when water testing results showed little risk.

The impacts of the untreated sewage being discharged into the Cook Strait on south coast beaches has been monitored now for over two weeks, and Little has hinted a change in policy could be coming.

“What we are looking at being able to say to people is: ‘here are the results, this is what it shows, the risk is pretty low, you make your own decision about whether you want to go onto the beach and and have a swim in the sea’.”

The founder of Wonderland Chocolate in Lyall Bay Kate Necklen says they’ve seen less people since people have been told to stay off Wellington’s south coast. RNZ / Krystal Gibbens

A rāhui is in place on the southern coast from Ōwhiro Bay to Breaker Bay which covers anything the water touches or can touch with the high or low tides.

Anna Janiec owner of the Polish Sausage Company which is located in Lyall Bay Junction said businesses had really felt the impact of people not going to the beach in the past few weeks.

“We don’t see new people coming. There is no people wandering around. Obviously no one on the beach. People with dogs that come for walks are not here. So we can feel it.”

She said if the beaches were safe for people to return to, she would expect it to boost business.

Kate Necklen thinks plenty of surfers will want to return to the beach. RNZ / Krystal Gibbens

Kate Necklen founder of Wonderland Chocolate had also seen less people in the area.

“We’ve certainly seen less people come through our tasting room.”

“It would be awesome to see people back in the Bay and I know there’ll be plenty of surfers out there who want to get back in the water,” Necklen said.

Botanist general manager Kais Letfi said they had seen a 20-25 percent decrease in customers.

“I’ve had to cut hours, I’ve had to reduce wages,” he said.

He said they could not wait for the beaches to reopen.

“Hopefully it brings people back to Lyall Bay and we can start working again.”

Seaview Takeaways owner Vicky Shen. RNZ / Krystal Gibbens

Vicky Shen owner of Seaview Takeaways hoped that if the beaches reopened it would bring more people to Lyall Bay.

But would people even swim at the beaches if they reopened? Most of those RNZ spoke to wouldn’t be diving straight in.

“I think if I see others swimming, maybe. But I would have to be 100 percent sure that it is safe,” Janiec said.

“I’m not really a beach swimmer myself but my kids swim in the beach and they’d certainly go into the water once it reopened for sure,” Necklen said.

Shen was also willing to dip her toes back in the water, but also a little wary of getting a skin rash from bacteria in the water.

Letfi said he would put his trust in the council and swim once it was safe to do so.

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Fancy being a real estate agent in your 80s? Why salesforce has weathered market fall

Source: Radio New Zealand

There are 42 people registered with individual real estate license who are aged over 83. RNZ

If you picture a real estate salesperson, you probably don’t imagine someone living in a retirement village. But it might be more common than you think.

Ray White general manager and licensee agent Antonia Baker can remember having a meeting with a client in a retirement village at one point, talking about selling her portfolio.

“As I walked out of the lift, I spotted a someone that I know as a real estate agent in West Auckland. And I could tell from the conversation that she was having with the people around her that she was a resident, not visiting like I was. So she was still getting up on a Saturday morning and trotting out to open homes as a Ryman’s resident.”

Real Estate Authority data shows that Baker’s acquaintance is probably not the only real estate salesperson in that situation.

There are 42 people registered with individual real estate license who are aged over 83. Another 168 are aged between 78 and 82. More than 3560 are aged between 73 and 77.

“I have a feeling that’s going to be me one day … why wouldn’t you?” Baker said.

“Some of them are actually quite high volume … There are a couple of legends in the industry who are still quite happily trading and trading decent volumes.”

It isn’t just the older crowd proving stickability, either. Despite a soft housing market, the number of people working in it has stayed relatively constant in recent years.

At the end of October 2025, there were 15,980 active real estate licenses, compared to 15,540 the year before and 15,870 in 2023.

There were 23,078 new licenses issued in the year to June last year, up 22 percent from the same time the year before. There was a 18.4 percent jump in the number of branch manager licenses active, a 1.1 percent increase in salespeople and a 0.9 percent drop in the number of individual agents.

Baker said people who had made it through the pandemic years had probably figured out a way to keep going.

“You were resilient by that time. My assumption around that was that we had baked in sufficient resilience into the industry and into people’s roles and their businesses by that time, that the external factors didn’t have all that much of an effect.

“And if I think about our network, it has just done so much to help the agents that work within it to drive their businesses and to make them resilient so that it doesn’t matter what the trading environment is, we can still survive.”

Real Estate Authority chief executive Belinda Moffat. Supplied

Real Estate Authority chief executive Belinda Moffat said the number of real estate licenses was down from a peak of nearly 1700 in the post-Covid boom.

“We had that really hot market, and … that’s when we saw a really sharp increase in joiners, so June 2022, we had nearly 17,000 active licenses, and we were issuing about 2600 new licenses a year.

“We then had a bit of a drop over a little bit of a period of time, and we’ve now got about 15,914, and we’ve issued in the last year just over 2000, so there has been, it does shift and fluctuate with the markets, but at the moment, it’s sort of holding steady.”

She said it was noticeable that a lot of people stuck with the industry for a long time.

“I think there’s a number of reasons why people come to real estate of itself.

“I think obviously the economic environment there is … I think people are exploring different professions, but I’d say that the reason people have come to real estate or also why they may not have left real estate is because it offers flexibility.

“Some people find it’s a great profession where you’re working with people, you’re helping people to realise their aspirations of a home and a business or a farm. It’s a pretty busy and dynamic profession, but it is also one that does offer a bit of independence. Most of our licensees are contractors, but having said that, they do have to meet both the expectations of our regulatory system and they also have to meet the expectations of the agency that they work for.”

How much is earned?

Collectively, there was about $70.3 billion in residential real estate sales through salespeople last year, according to Cotality, which at a rate of 3 percent commission could have netted real estate salespeople $2.1b or about $130,000 each. But that amount is generally split between the salesperson who makes the sale and the agency they work for. Some earn significantly more and others much less.

There were about 80,000 sales.

In 2023, the $56b in sales would have made agents about $1.68b or $105,860 each.

Moffat said people should not expect the job to be easy money. Some people left after a couple of years, she said.

“Being a real estate licensee is not an easy job. There is a lot that’s expected of our profession, they have to be over 18, got to have the qualifications, they have to be fit and proper, they have to undertake ongoing CPD or education every year, and then they have to meet the standards of our Code of Conduct that’s overseen by REA, and they can face complaints and disciplinary processes if they don’t, so they have to know a huge amount in order to be successful, and those first couple of years can be pretty tough.

“You’ve got to have some good financial backing, because you’ll look for your listings, then you might get your first couple of listings through people that you know in your networks, but then you’ve got to really be able to just make sure you maintain a pipeline, so it does require a lot of hard work, it’s like starting your own business, you’ve got to really be prepared for getting yourself through the slower months, as well as working hard when you do have a couple of listings on the go, so it’s a profession that does require some really concentrated work, and it’s not surprising because you’re always dealing with people who are perhaps engaging in the most significant transaction they will ever engage in, and it’s full of emotion and risk and financial obligations.”

Some people were working more than one job when the market was tougher, she said.

“That’s something we’ve seen in the cooler market, and as I said, the flexibility of the role can add to that, but at the same time, where they do have a listing, then they are having to work really hard to deliver the best service they can to their customers and clients and meet all the demands that go with being part of a profession that does have quite a few requirements for people to meet.”

Simplicity chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub. Supplied

Simplicity chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub said people would “live and die” by their sales.

“It’s a very high risk gamble in good markets it works but the way it works is the offices tend to have quite a lot of base income from the advertising and those bits and pieces. So they can sustain a group of people and then there is the whole bunch of people who are at risk.

“If you’re at the top and you’ve been around for a long time … you’ve had some spectacular years. I’m not surprised people are not leaving. My understanding is the more senior you are the less turnover there is. You’re less likely to be out there doing the putting up the signs and those kinds of things and in more of a leadership role. Those positions are still quite lucrative and they’ve been through many cycles so they know how to manage that.”

Lincoln University professor of property studies Graham Squires said people sometimes teamed up to share commission, which also helped.

“If you get say 4 percent on an $800,000 house you could be getting $32,000, so there’s probably enough in the market for people to say well as long as I break even or get a few sales, enough to keep me going, that will keep me in the industry.

“You could argue estate agents have a mindset where they’re optimistic that the market will improve. We see a lot of professional institutions talking up the market a lot even when it might not need to be talked up.”

Change coming?

Moffat said there was change happening. Salespeople were being given guidance in the use of AI.

Baker said salespeople were being offered training on how to “beat the bot”.

“I think fundamentally it is what everyone laughingly refers to as a belly-to-belly transaction. There’s no getting around the requirement for a human. And in fact, it’s the human that tips it over the line, not the bot. And it will always be like that, always.”

Lincoln University professor of property studies Graham Squires. Supplied

Squires said flat-fee competitors had not been able to get as much of a foothold in the industry as might have been expected, given consternation sometimes expressed about the level of real estate commission.

“I think the franchises probably have value to add and have some power and weight in the market in terms of reach and marketing and those sorts of things.

“I suppose they have education and marketing and training that’s allied with being part of the franchise that you contribute to when you make the sales.

“There’s a few big players … some of the larger organisations do buyouts and things like that so it sort of evolves in a larger space.”

Eaqub said it was a difficult industry to change. “It’s your biggest purchase or sale and tradition and brand awareness and trust and all those things matter a great deal. It’s not a price driven thing for a lot of people, if you’re spending millions of dollars or hundreds of thousands of dollars one percentage point here or there is like in the margin of error in terms of house prices going up and down.”

Baker said when the economy was difficult, people tended to move towards brands they knew.

“Then they tend to go back to the old, big, tried and tested providers. And I think that is the same in our industry. When the economy gets a bit scary, people go back to the big brands that they trust that have been around for 125 years and that they know.”

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Immigration officers to get increased powers to ask suspected overstayers for identification

Source: Radio New Zealand

Immigration Minister Erica Stanford. Nick Monro

Immigration officers will soon have the power to ask suspected overstayers for identification in homes and workplaces.

The government said it was closing a compliance gap in the deportation system, while critics argued it was a step towards the immigration conditions that had allowed the Immigration and Customs Enforcement [ICE] raids seen in the United States.

In September last year, the New Zealand government announced a suite of immigration settings changes aimed at strengthening deportation levers.

Among them was giving immigration officers the power to ask for identity-based information from individuals they suspected were in breach of their visa conditions.

“Often they’re in a situation where they are looking for a particular person, they find that particular person, and then at that residence or workplace, there are other people who are either fleeing or acting suspiciously,” Immigration Minister Erica Stanford told RNZ.

“At this point in time they cannot act on that. We want to give them the ability to be able to act on that.”

Stanford said the law change was “narrow and designed to close a specific compliance gap” – giving immigration officers the tools they needed to do their job.

“We have a big overstayer problem, tens of thousands more than we suspected, and we have to arm [immigration officers] with the tools to be able to request information from people when they have a reasonable suspicion that they are in breach of their visa conditions.”

‘This is a solution looking for a problem’ – lawyer

Immigration lawyer Alastair McClymont. RNZ / Lynda Chanwai-Earle

Immigration lawyer Alastair McClymont said undocumented migrants or those in breach of their visa conditions was a very small problem in the immigration system.

He argued legislation had previously given “almost unfettered discrection” to immigration officers and the devil would be in how this law change was drafted.

“There is the risk, not necessarily that this current government is going to do something immediately, but in the future, what if we have a government that decides that enforcement on immigration is something which is really good for their particular politicking, I’m referring to dog whistle xenophobic politics.

“Then they decide that they want to start making an example of particular migrant groups by using the legislation to be enforced in a very harsh way, which is basically what has happened now in the United States, where they’ve used the framework of immigration law to target particular ethnic communities.”

McClymont said overstayers were actually a pretty small problem in New Zealand and if the government did not clearly define the “reasonable basis” on which an immigration officer could ask someone for ID, it could lead a situation where New Zealand citizens going about their business at home or work could be asked to prove who they were.

US President Donald Trump has overseen aggressive and sometimes deadly immigration operations in his second term in office – conducting weeks of sweeping raids and arrests in what the administration claims are targeted missions against criminals.

The Green Party’s immigration spokesperson Ricardo Menéndez March. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The Green Party’s immigration spokesperson Ricardo Menéndez March said these ICE raids did not happen overnight.

“They were enabled by American politicians slowly allowing their immigration officials to have more powers to search, to detain and to target migrant communities.

“Every time that we allow this to happen without adequate justification we create the conditions to have in New Zealand what we’ve seen overseas.”

Stanford said the proposed change was narrow in scope and “very different” from powers available to US immigration officers.

She was clear it would not give New Zealand officers general stopping powers – or allow them to stop people at random in the street.

“Of course we never want to get to a situation where they’re … patrolling the streets, that’s not a situation we’re going to be able to get into.

“But a reasonable person would expect, where there is [reasonable] suspicion when they’re executing their normal duties, that they’d be able to [do so in] people’s houses.”

The legislation would be introduced to Parliament next month, with the aim of passing it into law before the end of this term.

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Youth facing more psychological distress, finding it harder to get specialist help – report

Source: Radio New Zealand

The report revealed that 23 percent of people aged 15 to 25 had experienced high or very high psychological distress in the four weeks leading up to the survey – up from 8 percent 10 years ago. RNZ/Michelle Tiang

Young people are facing more psychological distress and finding it harder to get specialist help, a new report says.

The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission has released a snapshot of mental health and addiction services in the year to June 2025, using data from the NZ health survey.

It revealed 23 percent of people aged 15 to 25 had experienced high or very high psychological distress in the four weeks leading up to the survey – up from 8 percent 10 years ago.

The commission’s chief executive, Karen Orsborn, said more work was being done to find out exactly why.

“We know that for young people, they live in a very rapidly changing world. They experience challenges due to what they see around climate change and financial challenges and the world at large. Online safety fits into there as well,” she said.

Young people were also struggling to access specialist care – like psychologists, psychiatrists and other mental health professionals, with almost 400 fewer getting help than the previous year.

That was bucking one of the positive trends in the report which found, across all ages, about 6500 more people were able to use specialist services than the previous year – at total of 164,555.

Orsborn wanted to see the system really focus on reaching young people.

“The earlier somebody can have access to services when they need it… they do have better outcomes in the longer term. So getting that early access is really important,” she said.

“There’s a lot of really positive initiatives underway. So we have seen some great things happening and it’s really just keeping that focus, keeping that leadership and the actions to really make a difference for change.”

Across all ages, the report showed a mixed bag.

The number of people being turned away when they were referred to specialist services had increased.

However, waiting times had decreased, likely because there were 557 more specialist mental health workers than in March 2023, the report found.

There was still a 20 percent vacancy rate for psychiatrists.

Orsborn said the commission was carrying out its own detailed study to try to find out more about what is behind the statistics.

Where to get help:

  • Need to Talk? Free call or text 1737 any time to speak to a trained counsellor, for any reason
  • Lifeline: 0800 543 354 or text HELP to 4357
  • Suicide Crisis Helpline: 0508 828 865 / 0508 TAUTOKO. This is a service for people who may be thinking about suicide, or those who are concerned about family or friends
  • Depression Helpline: 0800 111 757 or text 4202
  • Samaritans: 0800 726 666
  • Youthline: 0800 376 633 or text 234 or email talk@youthline.co.nz
  • What’s Up: 0800 WHATSUP / 0800 9428 787. This is free counselling for 5 to 19-year-olds
  • Asian Family Services: 0800 862 342 or text 832. Languages spoken: Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean, Vietnamese, Thai, Japanese, Hindi, and English.
  • Rural Support Trust Helpline: 0800 787 254
  • Healthline: 0800 611 116
  • Rainbow Youth: (09) 376 4155
  • OUTLine: 0800 688 5463
  • Aoake te Rā bereaved by suicide service: or call 0800 000 053

If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.

Sexual Violence

Family Violence

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Power concerns: Lines companies urged to consider ‘non-network’ solutions

Source: Radio New Zealand

One of the most significant options was shifting electricity use away from peak times, the agencies wrote. File photo. RNZ / Russell Palmer

The agencies governing energy use in New Zealand are urging lines companies are being urged to consider flexible pricing and other ‘non-network’ solutions instead of building more powerlines and poles.

In an open letter published today, the Commerce Commission, the Electricity Authority and the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (EECA) said doing so could reduce the cost for consumers and improve the performance of the electricity system.

The letter, sent to electricity distributors across the country, warned the country’s electricity system was “changing rapidly”.

“Renewable generation is growing, bringing greater variability and intermittency,” the agencies wrote.

“At the same time, overall demand is projected to rise as gas supply declines, transport electrifies, and more industrial and commercial processes transition to electric technologies.”

New Zealand’s electricity demands will grow by 35-82 percent by 2050, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment estimated last year.

Investment in distribution infrastructure needed long lead times and was “slow and costly to change once initiated”, the letter said.

“Non‑network solutions offer significant, quantifiable potential to reduce costs and defer network upgrades.”

They could also buy more time before distributors committed to major upgrades, and allow network owners to improve their forecasting of demand and usage.

One of the most significant options was shifting electricity use away from peak times, the agencies wrote.

At the moment, New Zealand’s electricity network is built to handle peak demand, which only occurs a few times a day for short intervals.

A recent report published by EECA found that nearly 2 gigawatts of power being used at peak hours could be shifted off-peak, saving the country up to $3 billion in infrastructure costs.

The technology to do was was increasingly available, the letter said.

“New distributed energy resources (DER), including solar, batteries and smart, controllable devices, are becoming more affordable and more widely deployed.”

Some progress, but not enough

Electricity Authority networks general manager Tim Sparks said the three regulators wanted to give lines companies “a nudge” to think beyond more poles and wires.

“We’re concerned that the distributors are not consistently considering non-network solutions, even though we all know these options can improve efficiency and reduce long-term costs for consumers.”

There was “real untapped potential” but limited progress to date, Spark said.

“Some distributors have begun to move into this area, and they have experimented with trying non-network solutions, but they’re not doing it consistently, and not all of them are doing it.”

Non-network solutions included anything that took pressure off the network by either using less electricity, or shifting use to different times to spread the load more evenly, he said.

“It could include things like smart devices in homes and businesses, like EV chargers, rooftop solar and batteries, controlled hot water cylinders.”

Price flexibility was a “critical” part of the solution, the letter said.

Sparks said some distributors already offered lower off-peak pricing, or an ‘hour of power’-style deal, but that could go even further.

“You can also get controlled load pricing, for example, where consumers can sign up to get a lower price for allowing some of their key demand to be controlled remotely.

“The consumer may not even notice it, but the hot water cylinder can be used to shift demand and reduce pressure on the system.”

Ripple control, which was already used in some locations for electric hot water cylinders, was one type of controlled load shifting, he said.

EECA chief executive Marcos Pelenur said there was other technology available that was “not even new” and went a step further.

“There are a number of technologies like home energy management systems that are two-way, they’re a bit more dynamic, and they can help manage not just a hot water cylinder.”

Pelenur said there were “some great examples” of work happening already, but it was patchy.

“There’s lots of interesting, good work to point to, but we would like to see it at-scale across the whole country,” he said.

“I would like to see all the distributors start their planning meetings by looking at these non-network solutions as the first thing they do for their plans around managing the networks.”

The letter also mentioned rooftop solar installations as a form of distributed energy that could reduce peak demand, and feed back into electricity networks.

Widespread subsidies have seen rooftop solar and battery installations skyrocket in Australia over the last 20 years.

No subsidies are available in New Zealand. Labour and the Greens campaigned on generous subsidies at the last election but the current government has not moved to implement anything similar.

Neither Sparks nor Pelenur would be drawn on whether a subsidy programme would help to drive uptake in New Zealand, saying it was outside their agencies’ scope.

However, Sparks said the Authority had made recent changes to reward rooftop solar owners who fed energy back into the network at peak times with negative charges or rebates.

“We’re [also] proposing to increase the amount they’re allowed to export. And that will allow the people with rooftop solar and batteries to contribute to the system, and also, of course, sell more electricity into the system and be rewarded for that.”

The Authority was still consulting on that proposal, he said.

Pelenur said the open letter invited feedback from distributors, which the agencies would consider and also present to the Ministry for Business, Information and Employment.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/power-concerns-lines-companies-urged-to-consider-non-network-solutions/

‘If I’m guilty, I’m guilty’: What a father who admitted killing his son told a journalist

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mukzameel Mukhzar Ali pictured holding his baby Mustafa Mahir Ali, whom he admitted killing in their Te Kūiti home. SUPPLIED

Nearly two years before Mukzameel Ali pleaded guilty to killing his son, he spoke to RNZ national crime correspondent Sam Sherwood on several occasions, with his explanation about what happened.

“If I’m guilty, I’m guilty…”

It was 12 June 2024, four days after Mukzameel Ali’s nine and a half month old son had died from what police had called non-accidental blunt-force trauma.

Then working at Stuff, I had spoken to Ali on two occasions since his son’s death. He had strongly denied being responsible.

In my first conversation he told me: “I didn’t do anything wrong, because I was trying to save my son. He was my son, I loved him so much. I was trying my best.”

It was during my third call that he told me his efforts to give his son CPR may have caused injuries that led to his death, but said it “wasn’t intentional”.

He said he was “worried” about what might happen to him and was “angry” about what he did.

“Because I didn’t do that on purpose, but if that would’ve resulted in that then – I feel very bad.”

Two days later Ali was charged with murdering his son, and on Monday he pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter.

It was revealed the little boy died as a result of blunt force trauma resulting in a crushing injury to the abdomen.

Possible causes included a punch, kick or stomp and the nature of the injury was such that he would’ve been crying and in obvious discomfort until ultimately losing consciousness. He would not have survived longer than 30 to 60 minutes after the blow.

With his guilty plea, I look back at my interviews with Ali, his explanations and what actually happened that day.

‘I didn’t do anything wrong’

Two days after Mustafa Ali’s death, I was on the phone to his father Mukzameel Ali.

It was 10 June, and I was covering the baby’s death for Stuff.

A day earlier Detective Inspector Graham Pikethley had issued a media release about the death of a 10-month-old in Te Kuiti. The little boy had been brought unconscious to Te Kuiti Hospital, where staff alerted police.

“Tragically, despite the best efforts of medical personnel, he was unable to be resuscitated,” Pikethley said.

“An initial examination showed the baby boy suffered violent, blunt-force trauma. We believe these injuries were not accidental.”

A homicide investigation was under way and police had been speaking to family members including the boy’s parents.

“They are working with us as we establish what occurred in this young child’s life and how he came to be so badly injured.”

After hearing of the case, I began searching on social media and saw a post on Facebook naming the victim as Mustafa Ali. I then found his family and messaged his parents.

I did some further investigating and spoke to one of Mukzameel Ali’s colleagues. The colleague said Ali was staying with him and I could call back.

Items laid out during Mustafa Ali’s funeral. Stuff / Mark Taylor

About an hour later I was on the phone to Ali, then aged 21.

At the beginning of the interview, he told me that he had recently been in Fiji and when he got home he noticed his son had been unwell. He said they took him to the doctors and he was given some antibiotics.

He told me that on the day of Mustafa’s death, he was home alone with his son as his wife was out at a birthday party.

While Mustafa was in his care, he said he still was not feeling well. He gave him some Weetbix, but he did not eat much.

“Then after that, I gave him the bottle of milk that was left over to finish up and he was sitting down in the ballpit. I put him down there and he was watching TV, but he was still looking dizzy and sad,” he told me.

He said he continued doing chores around the house.

“I came (in) and he (Mustafa) was almost like sleepy. He was sitting down but his head was going down so I made him another bottle of milk and tried to feed him.

“Maybe he drank almost half a bottle and then he vomited all of it out suddenly.”

He said he began taking his son’s clothes off due to the vomit.

“He was not good. His eyes became very big and he was like choking up or something. He wouldn’t breathe and I got shocked, and I got nervous, I was scared.

“I don’t know what to do because I was alone, home by myself and that’s my first time having an encounter that… nothing came up in my mind, my mind was all empty. “

He told me he began “tapping” on his son’s bum and back to see if he could get a reaction from his son.

“I tried to give him CPR… still didn’t respond and I just lifted him up and ran straight to the hospital. And lucky that’s when my wife arrived, so I gave Mustafa to her. I told her ‘he choked, something’s blocking, he cannot breathe, let’s just hurry up and take him the hospital’.”

He told me that staff at the hospital gave him oxygen when they arrived, but they were unable to save him.

During the interview I asked him what police had told him so far. He claimed police said Mustafa died from internal bleeding from his liver. I said police had stated he died from blunt force trauma, but Ali said he did not know how that had been caused, and suggested someone else may have done something to him earlier.

I also asked Ali if his son had previously been injured. He told me there had been an incident where while holding Mustafa he had fallen down some stairs. He said Mustafa suffered a collarbone fracture, fractured ribs as well as bleeding on his head.

Mukzameel Ali pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the High Court at Hamilton on Monday. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

He said Oranga Tamariki were involved and Mustafa stayed with his grandparents for several months before coming back to live with his parents.

I asked Ali if he was worried he could be charged in relation to his son’s death.

“Maybe because I am the only one who was there at the moment and I am maybe the one who caused him like to suffer all that. Maybe because I did it in the wrong way,” he told Stuff.

“I don’t feel good. I feel scared because nothing came up in my mind.”

During the interview he denied being responsible for his son’s death.

“I didn’t do anything wrong, because I was trying to save my son. He was my son, I loved him so much. I was trying my best.”

The following day police held a press conference. During the conference police were asked about Ali’s comments to me.

Police said they were aware of the comments, but that there were some “inconsistencies” from people associated with Mustafa and what police believed caused the injuries.

I wanted to clarify the inconsistencies so I called Ali again.

I brought up with him what police had said and asked for his response. He told me he had not told the police the full story, and that he had “missed some of the things”.

“I was not feeling good, like nothing was coming in my mind,” he said.

“I was not thinking right straight away because just after what happened they took us to give our statement, so I was not in the right stage to give statement so that’s why some of the part has missed out.”

I was confused as to what he was referring to, and asked further questions but he would not go into specifics but said he wanted to speak to police “straight away”.

‘If I’m guilty, I’m guilty’

On 12 June, I called Ali for a third time.

I asked him about the blunt force trauma police said had been inflicted on his son on the day of his death.

“The only thing I was doing like I was trying my best to save my son. That’s all I can say. If that could’ve happened from me, from doing it, but that wasn’t on purpose. Like I was trying to save his life.”

I pressed him further, asking what happened that day. He repeated that Mustafa was choking and could not breathe, so he tried to make him breathe and was giving him CPR.

I put to Ali that he now knew it was him who caused the injuries to his son.

He said yes, but then corrected himself and said he was not saying it was him but what happened “wasn’t intentional”.

He said he was “worried” about what could happen to him

“If I’m guilty, I’m guilty.”

He later brought up that it might have been someone “behind my back” who caused injuries earlier.

“So when I was giving him the CPR so that would’ve caused that injury to become more big and cause his death,” he said.

I asked him how he felt about what happened, and he replied: “I feel angry what I did”.

“Because I didn’t do that on purpose, but if that would’ve resulted in that then – I feel very bad.”

The interview ended shortly after.

Two days later Ali was charged with murdering his son.

Police would later interview me about my conversations with Ali. I told them that in my third interview with him I felt Ali was admitting to being responsible for the injuries his son suffered that day, but that it was not intentional.

The guilty plea

Nearly two years after my third interview with Ali, he appeared in the High Court at Hamilton and pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter, as well as charges of assault with intent to injure between 1 February 2023, and 31 May 2023, and assaulting a person in a family relationship between June 2023 and June 2024.

The agreed summary of facts, obtained by RNZ, talks about Ali moving to New Zealand from Fiji in July 2022. In September 2022 he met Tauvalea Law at their Te Kuiti workplace.

They began a relationship shortly after and Law became pregnant in January 2023. Ali “immediately expressed concern” about the prospect of having a child before he was settled in New Zealand, the summary says, and encouraged Law to terminate the pregnancy.

Law wanted to keep the baby, and initially misled Ali to believe she had miscarried. The relationship continued, and Ali became aware she was still pregnant months later when he found a pregnancy scan she had hidden from him.

An argument ensued.

“The defendant was angry and slapped Ms Law about the face repeatedly. Ms Law was lying on her back on the bed and the defendant was sitting on her thighs. She tried to get him off and scratched his face. He pushed her down, placing his hands on her upper chest and around her neck before jumping on top of her with his knees on her abdomen.”

Law didn’t require medical attention and there was no harm to her pregnancy.

In mid-July 2023 the couple married, shortly before Mustafa was born.

“At times, the relationship between the defendant and Ms Law was volatile. On several occasions when angry with Ms Law, the defendant pushed and/or punched her.”

After Mustafa was born the family lived at a Te Kuiti property. Two extended family members related to Ali also lived at the address.

On 8 June 2024, Law woke up Mustafa crying about 6am. She settled him in bed between her and Ali and went back to sleep.

About 8am Law got up as her son and husband slept. She left home about 10.50am having asked Ali to give Mustafa a bath and feed him in advance of family celebrations to be held later that day.

Ali and Mustafa were home alone.

The summary says that Mustafa had been unwell with a high temperature and was displaying signs of being unsettled in the days prior.

As Ali told me at the time, sometime after Law left he fed Mustafa a bottle and some Weetbix. The baby vomited and was unsettled.

“The defendant tried later in the morning to feed him again, unsuccessfully. Frustrated, the defendant attempted to force-feed Mustafa the bottle causing prominent bruises to his chin. Unable to feed or settle the baby, the defendant became stressed and angry.

“During this time, the defendant caused a fatal injury to Mustafa through a violent blow directed to his abdomen.”

Law arrived home about 2.15pm, and was met at the front door by Ali holding Mustafa in his arms.

The baby was “floppy and cold to the touch”.

“The seriousness of Mustafa’s condition was immediately apparent to Ms Law who ran outside with Mustafa in search of assistance. The couple then drove direct to Te Kuiti Hospital.

“Mustafa was pronounced deceased shortly after arrival at the hospital.”

Mustafa died as a result of blunt force trauma resulting in a crushing injury to the abdomen.

“The impact of the injury lacerated his liver, and the wall of the large bowel in two locations. There was also bruising to the diaphragm, small bowel mesentery, and back of the abdominal wall. The lacerations caused bleeding into the abdominal cavity, and ultimately death.

“The relatively close location of all of the internal injuries to each other supports a suggestion the trauma was due to one impact of significant force. Possible causes of the trauma could include a punch, kick, or stomp.”

The injury to Mustafa’s liver was so severe the bleeding into the abdomen commenced immediately after the injury was inflicted and continued uninterrupted until he died.

“The nature of the injury is such it can be expected Mustafa was crying and in obvious discomfort until a decrease in blood pressure will have led to him becoming increasingly drowsy and ultimately losing consciousness.

“The extent of the internal injury was such that Mustafa will not have survived longer than 30 to 60 minutes after the blow was inflicted and it is quite possible death occurred more quickly than that.”

The summary of facts says that when Ali initially spoke to police he said Mustafa began to choke while feeding and, as he told me, the injury was likely caused by his subsequent attempt to perform CPR.

He described carrying out chest compressions which included using two hands on Mustafa’s chest and, effectively, punching him in the stomach.

A postmortem revealed Mustafa had abscesses caused by ulceration around either side of his larynx, which would have caused “significant discomfort” when ingesting food such as Weetbix.

There was also bruising behind each of Mustafa’s ears and a large bruise on the top of his head which were not visible externally. The pathologist said the bruises could have been caused up to 18 hours before Mustafa’s death.

“The bruising behind the ears may be consistent with an attempt to force feed the baby while holding his head, however the defendant has not provided an explanation that could account for the bruise to the top of his head.

“The pathologist cannot comment on the force used to inflict the bruise other than to say it was not sufficient to cause any kind of skull fracture or brain bleed.”

The pathologist also found fractures to Mustafa’s left ribs, but said they could have been the result of resuscitation attempts.

As for the CPR explanation, the pathologist ruled the force required to cause Mustafa’s internal injury “is not consistent with any CPR procedures”.

While Ali has admitted responsibility for the fatal blow, the exact manner in which it was delivered remains unknown.

RNZ asked police for comment on Monday about the investigation into the incident where Ali said he fell down the stairs with Mustafa.

A police spokesperson said police and the Crown had reviewed the circumstances surrounding the case.

“No charges have been laid in relation to the earlier incident, as there was insufficient evidence to do so.

“As the matter remains before the court for sentencing, we’re unable to provide further comment at this time.”

An Oranga Tamariki spokesperson told RNZ that in 2024 they completed a Rapid Practice Assessment into their involvement with the case.

“As a result of this assessment, recommendations from the report were commissioned regionally and nationally to support process and practice.

“As this matter is still before the courts, Oranga Tamariki is unable to comment further.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/if-im-guilty-im-guilty-what-a-father-who-admitted-killing-his-son-told-a-journalist/

Primary school teachers’ pay talks resume after government’s last offer rejected

Source: Radio New Zealand

Primary school teachers picket in Whangarei in October. RNZ/Peter de Graaf

Primary school teachers’ pay talks resume on Wednesday, two-and-a-half months after union members rejected a government offer.

Educational Institute Te Riu Roa (NZEI) negotiator Liam Rutherford said the Employment Relations Authority would mediate the negotiations.

The collective agreement had been under negotiation for seven months, he said.

Members last year rejected the government’s most recent offer of a 2.5 percent pay rise from the end of January with a further 2.1 percent a year later.

Secondary teachers accepted a similar deal and secondary principals and primary principals also settled their agreements.

Rutherford said the union had been speaking with its members since schools opened for the year.

“What we’ve heard loud and clear from them is they’re not going to be accepting an offer that doesn’t meet their needs and that is around pay that is going to attract and retain teachers in the country but also some of those really important learning support parts,” he said.

Rutherford said the most recent offer to primary teachers was not exactly the same as that accepted by secondary teachers.

He said primary teachers did not have full pay parity with secondary, particularly in terms of allowances for extra duties.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/primary-school-teachers-pay-talks-resume-after-governments-last-offer-rejected/

NZ Post notifies exporters of 10 percent flat-rate US tariff on global imports

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Supreme Court last week blocked many of President Donald Trump’s earlier sweeping import taxes. AFP / Brendan Smialowski

New Zealand exporters have been notified by NZ Post of a new 10 percent flat-rate US tariff on global imports.

The new 10 percent levy came into effect late Tuesday evening after the Supreme Court last week blocked many of President Donald Trump’s earlier sweeping import taxes.

The administration is applying the 10 percent levy to all imports, including those coming from New Zealand.

However, Trump – angered by the Supreme Court ruling – has threatened to raise the tariff to 15 percent but has not yet issued an official directive.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/nz-post-notifies-exporters-of-10-percent-flat-rate-us-tariff-on-global-imports/

Health and Employment – Allied Health workers ratify new collective agreement – PSA

Source: PSA

More than 12,300 Allied Health workers who are members of the PSA have voted overwhelmingly to ratify a new collective agreement with Te Whatu Ora Health NZ, in a result that underlines the power of workers standing together.
“This collective agreement was reached as a result of PSA Allied Health workers who showed up, stood strong and held the line in the face of unrealistic initial pay offers,” said Fleur Fitzsimons, National Secretary for the Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi.
“We didn’t get everything we wanted with the settlement but members have ratified these agreements after the Allied Health bargaining team recommended that they support it on the basis that it is the best offer the union is able to achieve at this time.
“These workers went on strike during the Mega Strike on 23 October 2025 as well as a further strike late last year and their actions have made a difference. This outcome after seven months of bargaining shows what workers can achieve when they stand together.”
The Allied, Public Health, Scientific and Technical collective covers a wide range of health professionals, including physiotherapists, occupational therapists, social workers, Māori health specialists, anaesthetic technicians, and scientists.
Workers will receive a pay increase of 2.5 per cent in year one from December 2025 and a further 2 per cent from December 2026. The agreement also includes a $500 lump sum payment for staff, a new pay scale for Sterile Sciences Technicians, commitments to improve safe staffing, a contractual commitment to advertise vacancies, and a $400,000 national professional development fund.
“Allied Health workers deliver essential care to New Zealanders every day. This settlement is recognition of that contribution and a reminder that in a health system under significant strain, the workers who keep it running need fair terms and conditions.”
Voting is now underway on a union-supported settlement for two other collectives that cover more than 4,000 other PSA members, including mental health and public health nurses, policy, advisory, knowledge and specialist workers. The PSA represents more than 26,000 workers employed by Health NZ.
“This ratification result is a positive step forward but there are major problems in our health system caused by the Government imposing job losses on Health NZ and failing to fund our health system properly.
“All political parties must commit to a properly funded public health system that ensures safe staffing levels, and delivers quality care for all New Zealanders, as well as pay equity for under-valued health workers.
“We can’t afford to keep going backwards as we have done under the cuts imposed by this government.”
The Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi is Aotearoa New Zealand’s largest trade union, representing and supporting more than 95,000 workers across central government, state-owned enterprises, local councils, health boards and community groups.

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/24/health-and-employment-allied-health-workers-ratify-new-collective-agreement-psa/

The Palestine Chronicle: Roger Fowler’s legacy – a Palestinian tribute

The Palestine Chronicle

New Zealand activist Roger Fowler, a longtime Gaza solidarity organiser and Palestine Chronicle contributor, who died last Saturday, leaves a legacy of principled resistance.

Roger Fowler was a beloved figure in the global solidarity movement and a steadfast advocate for justice in Palestine. He leaves behind a legacy defined by courage, compassion, and an unwavering commitment to a cause greater than himself.

Born in New Zealand, Roger dedicated much of his life to amplifying the voices of the oppressed and building bridges of solidarity across continents.

As coordinator of Kia Ora Gaza (Aotearoa New Zealand), he played a central role in grassroots efforts to challenge the inhumane blockade of Gaza and to bring aid and hope to its people.

Under his leadership, Kia Ora Gaza organised and supported international aid convoys and solidarity flotillas aimed at breaking the siege and delivering humanitarian assistance to besieged communities.

The most significant international moment connected to those efforts was 2010, during the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, which sought to break Israel’s blockade of Gaza.

Solidarity networks across the world — including activists in Aotearoa New Zealand — mobilised politically, financially, and logistically around that initiative and subsequent flotilla attempts in the following years.

Inspired countless others
His determination and moral clarity inspired countless others to act with purpose and humanity in the face of injustice.

Roger’s voice was both passionate and principled. Even as his health declined, he remained a familiar presence at solidarity rallies across New Zealand, uplifting crowds with his words and his spirit.

To his friends and fellow activists, he was not only a colleague but a guiding light, a man of “great integrity and character with passion for justice”.

Beyond activism in the streets, Roger was also a thoughtful and committed writer. Through his contributions to The Palestine Chronicle, he brought stories of international solidarity to wider audiences.

His work illuminated both the daily struggles of Palestinians and the global networks of activism that stand with them.

In these difficult times, Roger’s work will continue to live on in the movements and projects he helped build. His life stands as a testament to the enduring power of solidarity, conviction, and the belief that ordinary people can make extraordinary differences.

The Palestine Chronicle family joins his loved ones, friends, and comrades in mourning this profound loss, and in honoring a life devoted to justice, dignity, and the freedom of Palestine.

This article was first published by The Palestine Chronicle under the title “Remembering Roger Fowler: A life devoted to justice and Palestinian freedom” on 23 February 2026.

Roger Fowler’s life is being celebrated today at Ngā Tapuwae Community Centre, 255 Buckland Road, Mangere, 10-2pm, Wednesday, February 25.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/the-palestine-chronicle-roger-fowlers-legacy-a-palestinian-tribute/

Statistical area 2 and 3 population projections: 2023(base)–2053 – (second instalment) – Stats NZ information release

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/statistical-area-2-and-3-population-projections-2023base-2053-second-instalment-stats-nz-information-release/

Scott Robertson named Barbarians coach in first role since All Blacks axing

Source: Radio New Zealand

Scott Robertson. ©INPHO/Ken Sutton

Scott Robertson will get his shot at redemption against the Springboks.

However, it won’t come as All Blacks coach.

Robertson has been named as one of four coaches to lead the Barbarians in their clash against the world champions in June.

It will be ‘Razor’s’ first assignment since he was sensationally axed as All Blacks coach in January.

Robertson is no stranger to the Barbarians environment, having coached the side on four previous occasions – against New Zealand and Tonga in 2017, an All Blacks XV in 2022, and Wales in 2023.

“The Barbarians brings the rugby world together, so it’s special to be a part of it and to honour the jersey,” Robertson said.

The side has assembled a quality coaching quartet featuring Robertson, Los Pumas head coach Felipe Contepomi, Racing 92 head coach Patrice Collazo and Argentina assistant coach Kenny Lynn.

The Barbarians have faced South Africa nine times since their first meeting in 1952, and Springbok head coach Rassie Erasmus welcomed the return of the famous invitational side.

“It’s always exciting to face the BaaBaas, and we are looking forward to hosting them in South Africa. This is a new season with two new exciting competitions, so the sooner we get into a test match mindset, the better.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/scott-robertson-named-barbarians-coach-in-first-role-since-all-blacks-axing/

West Papuan filmmakers expose Merauke rainforest destruction in ‘siege’ doco

Pacific Media Watch

A world premiere of a new documentary revealing the devastation of rainforest in the southeastern part of West Papua is one of two films being screened in Auckland next month.

Billed as “Sinéma Merdeka: Stories from West Papua”, the programme is showing the heart of a hidden Pacific conflict and will be presented live by celebrated Papuan journalist and Jubi News founder Victor Mambor.

The two films are “Pesta Babi — Colonialism in Our Time” and “Sa Punya Nama Pengungsi” (My name is Pengungsi).

“Pesta Babi” (The Pig Party), directed by Cypri Dale and Dandhy Laksono, is being premiered at the Academy Cinema, Auckland CBD, at 6pm on Saturday, March 7.

Filmed under siege and a draconian media ban, the filmmakers offer a rare and
urgent glimpse into indigenous life in Merauke, where Indonesian bulldozers have been systematically destroying their pristine rainforest home.

This film is co-produced by Jubi, Ekspedisi Indonesia Baru, Greenpeace, Yayasan Pusaka, and Watchdoc Documentary.

The second film, “Sa Punya Nama Pengungsi”, directed by Yuliana Lantipo is set against the backdrop of escalating government violence and the displacement of an estimated 100,000 Indigenous Melanesian people from their lands.

“My name is Pengungsi” is centred on the story of two Papuan children born in the midst of the conflict. Both are named “Pengungsi”, which in English means “Refugee”.

Films talanoa
The films will be followed by a Q&A/Talanoa with Mambor and fellow Australian-based West Papuan journalist Ronny Kareni and hosted by Dr David Robie, editor of Asia Pacific Report and deputy director of the Asia Pacific Media Network (APMN).

The twin-film festival is part of a weekend West Papua Solidarity Forum programme at the Auckland University Old Choral Hall, 7 Symonds Street, on Saturday, March 7, and on Sunday, March 8.

There will also be a public media seminar at the Whanau Community Centre and Hub featuring journalist and filmmaker Victor Mambor at 6pm, Monday, March 9, at the Taro Patch, Papatoetoe.

Organisers of the film screenings are West Papua Action Tāmaki Makaurau West Papua is the western half of New Guinea island and has been occupied by Indonesia since 1963. The independent state of Papua New Guinea is the eastern half.

Organisers of the film screenings are West Papua Action Tāmaki Makaurau. The group notes that more than 500,000 civilians have been killed in a slow genocide against the indigenous population, according to human rights agencies.

Basic human rights such as freedom of speech are denied and Papuans live in a constant state of fear and intimidation.

Foreign journalists have generally been barred entrance.

Traditional ways of life are under threat as huge tracts of rainforest are cut down to make
way for Indonesian palm oil and food estates, the world’s largest gold mine and ever-increasing transmigration from Indonesia, making Indigenous Papuans a minority in their own land.

“Sinéma Merdeka: Stories from West Papua” . . . the screening poster. Image: APR

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/west-papuan-filmmakers-expose-merauke-rainforest-destruction-in-siege-doco/

Science knows of 21,000 bee species. There are likely thousands more

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By James B. Dorey, Lecturer in Biological Sciences, University of Wollongong

It’s a question that has sparked the curiosity of scholars and bee lovers for decades: how many species of bees are there in the world?

This might, at first, seem like a silly question. But it is a topic of genuine importance – especially if we want to protect our pollinators.

Now, in a new paper published in Nature Communications, we provide the first statistically derived estimate of bee species richness around the world. But this work isn’t just about bees. It provides the tools needed for scientists to estimate the number of all species on Earth.

Why do bees matter?

Bees are the most important animal pollinators, so it’s crucial to know how many species there are in the world.

Globally, and corrected for inflation, pollination of crops is worth roughly A$745 billion per year. Pollination is also crucial for our diet and wellbeing with 75% of food crop diversity and 35% of total food production benefiting from animal pollination.

However, that’s far from the complete story.

Bees are what’s called a “keystone” group. That is, just like the keystone in a stone arch, removing that group would result in cascading ecological impacts – and potentially, as implied by the analogy, collapse.

Recent estimates have suggested that 90% of flowering plants (roughly 307,000 species) are pollinated by animals. Plants produce our oxygen and sequester carbon, moderate temperatures, prevent erosion, protect coastlines, form the foundation of food webs, and so much more.

Bees are also of immense cultural value. Humans have been working with honey bee products for at least 9,000 years and quite possibly longer for stingless bees.

Our current estimates

The European honey bee and bumblebee species are the best known bees in the world. But there are many more.

In his 2007 book, Bees of the World, US entomologist Charles Michener estimated there were more than 18,000 known bee species – and over 20,000 in total.

But we already have surpassed this number with roughly 21,000 named bee species globally.

Those are global estimates. But what about a more specific one?

Australia is a relatively well-understood region with at least four estimates of as high as 2,000.

But, these are all guesses without statistical backing.

How do we estimate undiscovered species?

Bee datasets around the world are growing thanks to both career and citizen scientists.

For our new study, we used more than 8.3 million bee records (where they’ve been found), a country-level checklist of bee species, and a species (taxonomy) list of roughly 21,000 species names.

We then used statistical modelling to estimate the “lower bound” of the possible number of species globally, by continent, and by country.

More simply, we look at how well we have sampled species to estimate the minimum number of new species that are still to be found.

Imagine that you go and sample two forests for bees. In the first, you find eight species, all in similarly high abundance. In the second, you also catch eight species – but while some are in high abundance, you also find some only a handful of times.

You might expect that you have discovered most of the species in the first forest because you are getting the same ones over and over again. In the second forest you’re finding many rarely occurring species, which hints that more diversity may be discovered if sampling continues.

Now expand this process to the level of countries, continents, and the globe.

The conceptual framework of our statistical estimates shown in two example forests of eight species each, but in differing proporations. James Dorey Photography, silhouettes from https://www.phylopic.org

So, how many bee species are there?

Globally, we estimated there are at least 24,705 to 26,164 bee species in the world (an 18–25% increase on previous estimates).

At current rates of description (roughly 117 species per year), it would take between 32 and 45 years to describe all of the world’s bee species. However, we may take much longer as our estimate is conservative, and we are likely to discover new species more slowly as fewer remain to be found.

Importantly, most new bee species are expected to be found in Asia and Africa.

Perhaps this is not surprising, as bee research in Asia has many challenges and data from Africa are very limited with some countries having zero usable bee data points.

Some species diversity is most easily detected using genetic techniques. This can easily go unnoticed — and means we shouldn’t be surprised if our estimates are surpassed in the future. Even in wealthy nations, such as Australia, we saw that not using genetic techniques might lead to lower estimates of species richness.

Twelve species of Fijian bee. Much of Fiji’s bee species richness went unrecognised prior to the inclusion of genetic techniques because the species were difficult to tell apart (cryptic). James Dorey Photography

Highly valuable data

We have shown that it’s possible to estimate the total number of bee species, and indeed any species, on a country level using existing data.

These data are highly valuable in several respects.

A detailed cost-benefit analysis of investment in discovering and documenting new species in Australia found that every $1 invested in discovering all remaining Australian species will bring up to $35 of economic benefits to the nation.

These data can also be used to prioritise our discovery and taxonomic efforts, as well as prioritising conservation efforts to conserve our most important species.

Through the application of these methods we can, at long last, start to answer the question “how many species are there in the world?”.

ref. Science knows of 21,000 bee species. There are likely thousands more – https://theconversation.com/science-knows-of-21-000-bee-species-there-are-likely-thousands-more-268195

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/science-knows-of-21-000-bee-species-there-are-likely-thousands-more-268195/

EtonHouse Rolls Out Enterprise AI Workspace with OpenAI, Aligning Education with Singapore’s National AI Push

Source: Media Outreach

SINGAPORE – Media OutReach Newswire – 24 February 2026 – In the wake of Budget 2026 and Prime Minister Lawrence Wong’s announcement of a National AI Council to accelerate mission-driven artificial intelligence deployment, EtonHouse International Education Group has collaborated with OpenAI to roll out ChatGPT Edu across its global education network, establishing a secure, enterprise-grade AI workspace designed to strengthen governance, operational excellence and institutional capability.

Students of EtonHouse using a computer

The implementation spans the Group’s schools and education brands, including EBridge Pre-School, an Anchor Operator, extending AI integration beyond classroom experimentation into enterprise-wide infrastructure supporting operations, marketing and admissions, finance, human resources, school administration and technology development.

While education was not named among the initial priority sectors identified under Singapore’s national AI strategy, EtonHouse views schools as foundational to building long-term AI capability and literacy across society.

Governance-led AI deployment

The rollout has been structured around enterprise governance principles. Access is managed through role-based access controls, single sign-on authentication and automated provisioning, ensuring that AI tools and information remain aligned to defined job responsibilities and permission boundaries.

ChatGPT Edu operates within a centrally managed internal workspace governed by consistent policies across the Group. External sharing and third-party integrations are enabled only where explicitly approved and aligned with business requirements, reinforcing a secure and compliant AI environment.

This governance-first approach reflects a deliberate shift from isolated experimentation to structured, scalable adoption.

From classroom innovation to enterprise infrastructure

EtonHouse previously developed Lumina, its proprietary AI-powered lesson planning platform. The deployment of ChatGPT Edu represents the next phase of integration, extending advanced artificial intelligence capabilities into enterprise functions.

Within the secure workspace, teams can upload documents for structured analysis, generate comparative reports, conduct scenario modelling and retrieve institutional knowledge more efficiently. Technology teams are also leveraging Codex, OpenAI’s agentic coding tool, to enhance development workflows, supporting code drafting, review and testing while maintaining human oversight and established engineering standards.

The Group is concurrently developing internal AI assistants and structured workflows within defined governance parameters to streamline routine processes and standardise how knowledge is accessed and applied across departments.

Augmentation, not replacement

EtonHouse emphasises that artificial intelligence is being implemented as an augmentation layer rather than a substitute for professional judgement.

“Artificial intelligence is not a shortcut or a replacement technology. It is a learning infrastructure,” said Mr Ng Yi-Xian, Group CEO of EtonHouse International Education Group. “We are developing tools that help students learn more confidently, support teachers to plan and differentiate more effectively, and equip HQ teams to serve schools faster and with higher quality. AI should amplify good practice, not replace it, so we are building the governance and capability to deploy it responsibly at scale.”

The rollout will be supported by structured staff training alongside OpenAI experts clear usage guidelines and ongoing oversight to ensure transparency, responsible usage and alignment with internal policies and regulatory obligations.

“As Singapore advances its national AI ambitions, many institutions are working to bridge the gap between rapidly advancing AI technologies and their ability to deploy them effectively and responsibly. EtonHouse’s rollout of ChatGPT Edu shows how forward-thinking education organisations can translate AI into practical, trusted enterprise-wide systems that empower teams today, while building confidence for the long-term.” added Oliver Jay, Managing Director, International at OpenAI.

Education’s role in Singapore’s AI future

Budget 2026 outlined the formation of a National AI Council to guide coordinated deployment across priority sectors including advanced manufacturing, connectivity, finance and healthcare.

EtonHouse’s implementation reflects how education institutions can apply similar principles of governance, security and enterprise readiness, positioning schools not only as adopters of technology but as contributors to Singapore’s broader AI capability building.

With this move, EtonHouse signals a transition from exploratory AI usage to secure, scalable integration across its global network, reinforcing its commitment to innovation anchored in institutional discipline and responsible deployment.

Hashtag: #ArtificialIntelligence #EnterpriseAI #AIGovernance #AIDeployment #EdTech

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/24/etonhouse-rolls-out-enterprise-ai-workspace-with-openai-aligning-education-with-singapores-national-ai-push/

Australian police charge New Zealand man after finding extremist videos on his phone

Source: Radio New Zealand

Australian police have charged a New Zealand man over alleged violent extremist material. Supplied

Australian police say they have charged a New Zealand man found with videos of violent extremist material on his phone.

They say the 24-year-old was stopped for a baggage examination at Perth Airport on Monday after he arrived on a flight from overseas.

Police said his phone contained videos of a number of terrorist attacks, including violent killings overseas linked to varying ideologies, and videos showing manufacturing of home-made explosives.

The Western Australia Joint Counter Terrorism Team executed a search warrant at a Perth property and seized a computer.

The man has been charged with possessing or controlling violent extremist material.

Australian Federal Police Commander Nick Read said police worked closely with security partners to prevent the spread of violent extremist material, which undermined Australia’s social cohesion.

“There is no place in Australian society for violent or extremist content, which terrorist organisations use as a tool to radicalise members of the community, particularly young or vulnerable people,” he said.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/24/australian-police-charge-new-zealand-man-after-finding-extremist-videos-on-his-phone/