Man charged with murder of woman in Clutha

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

A man has been charged with murder after the death of a woman in Clutha on 23 January.

Emergency services were called to Adams Flats Road in Crichton around 6.10pm.

A woman was found deceased, and a second person was critically injured.

Police said a man has been arrested and charged with the murder after a bedside hearing on Wednesday.

“We understand this is a distressing event for the small community,” detective senior sergeant Nik Leigh said.

“Police would like to reassure residents that officers are not searching for any other people in relation to the matter.”

Friends and co-workers named the murdered woman as Jillian Clark, who worked at Clutha Vets in Milton.

John Smart said he worked with Clark for about 30 years at different branches of the veterinarian practice. He said Clark had a keen interest in sheep health and production.

“She was a highly respected vet, it’s a hell of a shock,” he said.

The tight-knit Clutha Vets team would be heartbroken, as would farmers from Taieri to Milton, Smart said.

“I know the whole community down there will be absolutely in mourning for the tragedy of losing Jillian. She was just a great lady, a great community member, and supported the farmers in particular.”

A death notice described Clark as a much-loved family member who was tragically taken.

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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/2026/02/04/man-charged-with-murder-of-woman-in-clutha/

Climate News – Earth Sciences New Zealand Seasonal Climate Outlook February to April 2026

Source: Earth Sciences New Zealand

Earth Sciences New Zealand’s Seasonal Climate Outlook for February to April 2026 is attached.
Highlights:
  • Weak La Niña conditions persist in the tropical Pacific but are on a weakening trend.
  • The traditional Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) was on the La Niña side of neutral in January 2026.
  • The Equatorial SOI (measuring the difference in atmospheric pressure between the eastern Pacific and Indonesia between 5oN and 5oS) was in the neutral range in January 2026 and convection and trade wind anomalies continued to reflect weak La Niña conditions.
  • The Relative Oceanic Niño Index (RONI) continued to weaken in January 2026.
  • This weakening of La Niña conditions is expected to accelerate in the coming months, with about an 80% chance for ENSO-neutral (El Niño – Southern Oscillation) conditions to return by the end of the forecast period.
  • For the next three month period as a whole, the atmospheric circulation pattern over New Zealand is expected to see anomalous high pressure to the south of the country, and anomalous low pressure just to the north, leading to an easterly quarter flow anomaly overall.
  • Slow-moving high pressure systems early in February should bring periods of traditional summer conditions to many parts of the country, interrupted by some shorter unsettled spells.
  • From about mid-February, the risk of tropical incursions may increase again. Further settled conditions may occur in the remainder of March, but overall rainfall anomalies could be heavily skewed if a single significant event occurs. A dramatic pattern change is not anticipated in April, with rainfall events most likely to come from the north, contrasting with high pressure systems still bringing periods of settled conditions.

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/climate-news-earth-sciences-new-zealand-seasonal-climate-outlook-february-to-april-2026/

Tech – Avast Expands Scam Guardian Globally and Launches Deepfake Guard

Source: Botica Butler Raudon Partners for Avast

Avast Deepfake Guard runs on traditional lower and high-end Windows PCs, bringing advanced scam detection to millions of people across the globe

Auckland, Feb. 4, 2026 – Avast, a leader in digital security and privacy and part of Gen (NASDAQ: GEN), today announced the full international availability of Avast Scam Guardian and Scam Guardian Pro on mobile devices, alongside the launch of Avast Deepfake Guard on Windows PCs, a new AI-powered feature designed to proactively analyse and detect malicious audio in video content. Together, these launches mark a significant expansion of the Avast scam protection ecosystem – extending coverage across mobile and PC, helping protect people wherever scams appear, from text messages to calls and video platforms.

Avast Deepfake Guard is designed to run on Windows PCs*, delivering powerful protection on today’s devices while shining on the latest generation of AI PCs from Intel and Qualcomm. By bringing AI-driven deepfake scam detection to devices people already own, Avast is expanding access to advanced protection at a time when scam deepfakes are becoming more convincing and widespread.

“Deepfakes are a serious threat, but they’re a symptom of a larger problem: deception,” said Leena Elias, Chief Product Officer at Gen. “AI-generated content on its own isn’t inherently harmful. The risk comes when scammers use it to create urgency, apply pressure, and take advantage of trust. That’s what Avast Deepfake Guard is built for: helping people understand when something may be manipulated and make safer decisions in the moment. By expanding Avast Scam Guardian globally on mobile, we’re empowering people worldwide to identify and avoid scam calls, texts and emails with confidence.”

As video becomes the default way people learn, communicate, and make decisions, scammers have followed the audience. In Q4 2025, across devices where the new Gen video scam detection was active, Gen Threat Labs detected 159,378 instances of unique deepfake scamsthat combined manipulated media with clear scam intent, showing how frequently they are being used for fraud. In New Zealand, fake tutorial scams, such as YouTube tutorials and step-by-step guides on other sites that claim to offer free downloads or software, surged by 152% in 4Q.

YouTube accounts for the largest share of blocked deepfake-enabled scam videos on PCs, followed by Facebook and then X. Most deepfake scams also appear as part of normal viewing, not as downloads, attachments, or links, meaning they’re woven into everyday video consumption and hide in plain sight, making them harder to spot.

Avast Deepfake Guard works to detect these surreptitious scam deepfakes in real time, directly on the device for greater speed and privacy, and warns you before you fall victim.

Deepfake Guard is now included in Avast Premium Security and supports English language video analysis across major platforms including Facebook, DailyMotion, Instagram, TikTok, Twitch, Vimeo, X, and YouTube.

For more information, visit https://www.avast.com

*Deepfake Guard is an opt-in download with manual detection for lower specification PCs running Windows 11, 8GB of RAM and 4 CPU cores. Traditional high-end PCs must run Windows 11 and have a minimum of 16GB of RAM and 6+ CPU cores on their processors.

Disclaimer

Avast Deepfake Guard functionality may vary depending on device type and system capabilities. The feature supports AI PCs powered by Intel? Core™ Ultra processors, and Qualcomm Snapdragon? X series chips where automated detection is enabled. On traditional high-end PCs, Deepfake Guard is available with automated detection disabled by default, but people may choose to enable it, acknowledging a minimal potential impact on system performance. On lower-end traditional PCs, Deepfake Guard is not installed by default; people may opt to install the feature, however automated detection is not recommended on these devices due to potential performance impacts.

About Avast

Avast is a leader in digital security and privacy, and part of Gen (NASDAQ: GEN), a global company dedicated to powering Digital Freedom with a family of trusted consumer brands. Avast protects hundreds of millions of users from online threats, for Mobile, PC or Mac, and is top-ranked and certified by VB100, AV-Comparatives, AV-Test, SE Labs and others. Avast is a member of the Coalition Against Stalkerware, No More Ransom and Internet Watch Foundation. Learn more at Avast.com.

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/tech-avast-expands-scam-guardian-globally-and-launches-deepfake-guard/

Historic Ōpiki Bridge’s future under cloud with more repairs needed

Source: Radio New Zealand

The bridge’s cabling failed and sagged into the river after strong winds on New Year’s Eve. Supplied / Horizons Regional Council

When strong New Year’s Eve winds broke the cabling on an historic bridge, its future came under a cloud.

Sitting above the flat lands surrounding State Highway 56 in southern Manawatū, the former Ōpiki toll bridge will now dramatically change shape, as this week its decaying cables come down.

This will leave only the landmark’s pylons still standing.

Time has taken its toll on a bridge that for nearly 50 years cost some loose change to cross – saving motorists a lengthy trip.

For the second time in just over two years, the ageing structure has sagged into the water below.

And this week regional council officials announced the fix – removing the cabling, meaning the old bridge becomes less recognisable.

No one’s crossed since shortly after it closed in 1969 and its decking was removed, but thousands of people drive past what remains every week.

Toll days recalled

Spanning the view from Clive Akers’ living room window, the concrete towers and cabling of the Ōpiki bridge dominate the skyline – it’s a view that’s about to change.

Originally build for the family flax business in 1918, that industry’s collapse meant it instead became a private toll bridge over the Manawatū River until its closure in 1969, when the current highway bridge was built.

“Oh yes, there was a toll keeper,” Akers said.

The position was similar to a lighthouse keeper, in that the worker would live onsite and almost always be on call.

The toll bridge linked Manawatū to Horowhenua until its closure in 1969. Supplied / Collections of Te Manawa Museums Trust, Palmerston North

This and other parts of the bridge’s history are detailed in the book Suspended Access, written by Akers’ mother Molly two decades ago.

Akers recalled how one toll keeper was rescued by boat when the surrounding area flooded. The area still floods regularly today, which often closes the highway.

The busiest days of the week were Saturdays, when there was horse racing on.

“I remember as a teenager, when [the toll keeper] had his day off and would go to town, myself and one of my brothers or sisters would go up there and be toll keepers for half a day,” Akers said.

“We were warned of a car coming – one side there was an air pipe. When the car tyre ran over it it rang a bell in the house.”

From the other side the toll keeper would hear a car rattle the bridge’s loose boards – because a suspension bridge moves, the wooden planks couldn’t be nailed down.

In later years it cost 10 cents a trip for vehicles under three tonnes.

At night there was a barrier arm to keep vehicles out – although if a motorist was insistent on getting through, the toll keeper could charge them triple, Akers said.

While locals were happy enough to contribute to the bridge’s upkeep in exchange for quicker trips between Palmerston North and Foxton, not everyone was as impressed.

“During the 1930s the minister of public works was horrified when he came through Ōpiki and he was charged a toll to cross this bridge.

“He said, ‘Nowhere in New Zealand should there be a toll bridge.’ He told the toll keeper, ‘I’m going to have a public bridge here in the next five years.’ That never happened.”

Instead, the arrangement of a private bridge spanning the river, with public roads either side, continued for three more decades.

Akers said he was relaxed about the cabling’s removal.

“Of course, there’s not so many people now who have actually got memories of going over the bridge.

“It closed in 1969. That’s over 50 years ago.”

Clive Akers’ family built the bridge for their flax business over 100 years ago. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Tough breaks

One of the bridge’s cables, which are said to come from Waihi’s gold mines, failed in 2023 and fell into the river.

It was fixed the next year, paid for by Horizons Regional Council, which now owns the structure, but the same cable again broke on 31 December.

The bridge has a category 1 rating from Pouhere Taonga Heritage NZ and Historic Places Trust Manawatū Horowhenua chairwoman Cindy Lilburn said it was an icon.

It was significant as New Zealand’s first private toll bridge and, when built, the country’s longest suspension bridge – about 150 metres.

“It stands alone in what’s a very flat landscape and it has a certain sort of spookiness, which has been suggested for use in films, because it rises out of the mist in the morning.

“It is such a landmark.”

Lilburn said the trust had favoured a solution to ensure the bridge’s long-term survival.

“We’d like to at least have the opportunity to talk about a long-term plan.

“The reality is suspension bridges aren’t actually that difficult to build. It requires running cabling up and over, so there is the potential solution that you could put new cabling up and over and then clip the old cabling to that.”

But with the news this week that wouldn’t happen – at least any time soon – she said the trust was saddened.

This view has greeted State Highway 56 motorists for more than 55 years, but it will soon change. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

The cables had contributed visually to the bridge’s status as a landmark.

“There’s a certain degree of elegance we’ve now lost,” she said.

Council general manager catchment operations Dr Jon Roygard told RNZ last week that officials were working through options to fix the latest break, while also considering a long-term solution.

Until something was done, the broken cabling remained a hazard, he said.

“It’s a stretch of the river where people can use it for jet boating or that sort of thing. I don’t think it’s a highly used area.

“We have put signs up. We really recommend caution in that area. In fact, we’d rather people weren’t in there and operating around it.”

This week, Roygard confirmed that the cabling, which was in poor condition, was coming down.

“The other cable, while it has not fallen, is in similar condition to the one currently in the river. We will remove this cable at the same time to avoid the possibility of it also falling,” he said.

“Removing both cables at the same time also helps to bring the cost of the works down.

“Doing one cable now and the other at a later date is significantly more expensive than removing both at the same time.”

He acknowledged the bridge’s history, but said the regional council also had obligations for navigational safety in the Manawatū River and for the use of public money.

Sections of the cabling would be gifted to the Historic Places Trust and the Akers family, Roygard 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/2026/02/04/historic-opiki-bridges-future-under-cloud-with-more-repairs-needed/

Emergency set net fishing ban to protect threatened hoiho lawful, court rules

Source: Radio New Zealand

The hoiho / yellow-eyed penguin. Supplied / Craig McKenzie

The High Court has dismissed an environmental charity’s claim that an emergency ban on set net fishing around Otago Peninsula didn’t go far enough to protect hoiho.

The Environmental Law Initiative (ELI) filed proceedings against Fisheries Minister Shane Jones last year, claiming the ban failed to protect hoiho from the risk of extinction.

It said the closure should have encompassed the entire northern hoiho range, including North Otago, the Catlins, Stewart Island/Rakiura and Foveaux Strait.

While the court recognised the severe risk facing northern hoiho, it found the temporary emergency closure lawful, as section 16 of the Fisheries Act gave the Minister significant discretion in establishing the parameters of an emergency closure.

Hoiho, yellow-eyed penguins, are critically endangered. The northern hoiho population, which is found in and around Canterbury, Otago and Southland, has been in sharp decline in recent years.

The court said hoiho were “priceless” and a taonga, and emphasised that their protection was essential, with the the minister required to take whatever measures are necessary to ensure the survival of the nothern hoiho population.

ELI senior legal advisor Megan Cornforth-Camden said it was important to challenge the decision, given hoiho numbers were declining and little had been done to protect hoiho at sea.

“The judgement contains some of the strongest statements written by the courts about the sustainability provisions in the Fisheries Act and how they apply to threatened species, so although ELI were not successful on the grounds of the judicial review we were very pleased with the outcome.”

Hoiho numbers have fallen by around 80 percent since 2008, with fewer than 150 breeding pairs remaining. Several factors are responsible for this collapse, one of which is commercial set net fishing. Every year the birds become entangled in fishing nets while foraging for food.

Jones initially closed the set net fishery around Otago Peninsula in September for three months, before announcing in December it had been extended for a further nine months, to September 2026, with the public to be consulted during the closure on long term protections.

Justice David Boldt said the decision to implement an emergency ban was a precursor to a set of longer-term measures that would be far more important to the long-term future of the northern hoiho.

“It is difficult to escape the conclusion that ELI, in its haste to do whatever it can to protect the penguins, has challenged the wrong decision.”

However, the court found potential economic detriment to commercial fishers could never be a justification for allowing the decline of the population to continue.

“There is no dispute that the [Fisheries] Act’s sustainability imperative extends to the need to take whatever steps are necessary to ensure the survival of the northern hoiho population.

“In practical terms, that means that if commercial fishing cannot occur in an environmentally sustainable manner – which in this context means in a way which ensures it poses no material risk to the survival of the northern hoiho – it cannot occur at all.”

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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/2026/02/04/emergency-set-net-fishing-ban-to-protect-threatened-hoiho-lawful-court-rules/

Child dies after being hit by car in Canterbury’s Springston

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

A child has died after being hit by a car in Springston in Canterbury.

The police say the child was walking when they were hit at about 3.30pm.

Emergency services responded but they died at the scene.

A large portion of the rural part of Leeston Road is closed while the Serious Crash Union investigates.

Leeston Road was closed and diversions were in place at the Goulds Road and Leeston Road intersection and at the Bethels Road and Leeston Road intersection.

Motorists were advised to avoid the area and expect delays.

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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/2026/02/04/child-dies-after-being-hit-by-car-in-canterburys-springston/

Cries of ‘shame on you’ as Clutha councillors vote on looking into vehicle-free zones on beaches

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Clutha District Council ranger talks to a motorist seen driving within metres of resting sea lions. The current rules state vehicles should stay 50m away from wildlife. RNZ/Peter de Graaf

Cries of “shame on you” rang out from the public gallery as Clutha councillors voted to drop an investigation into vehicle-free zones on beaches in the district on Wednesday afternoon.

The council is instead investigating beach speed limits as a means to protect the coastline and its wildlife, following complaints about drivers harassing seals and sea lions.

The review of the Vehicles on Beaches bylaw started a year ago after a group allegedly harassed a sea lion at Tautuku Beach in the Catlins.

In 2024, three sea lions were found dead with gunshot or stab wounds

Councillors opted to defer any decision-making until after October’s local elections. Then, at a workshop in December, the new council moved to cancel the beach ‘safe zone’ review.

That was formalised by a vote at Wednesday’s council meeting, where just one councillor was opposed.

Councillor Simon McAtamney said he was part of the previous council and he was still open to looking into the safe zone review.

Councillor Bruce Graham argued vehicle bans would be hard to enforce and there would always be “dickheads that are going to break those rules”.

“I can’t see any advantage of changing what we have here except for a speed limit changes… I can’t see any advantages of closing beaches or making safe zones,” he said.

Council staff said work was underway on a speed limit review covering the district’s beaches and it would be complete by October.

During the meeting, a group of residents could be seen in the back of the chamber holding a sign that read ‘Honour Your Word’.

When the council voted in favour of scrapping the review, the protesters called out “shame on you” and filed out of the council chambers.

Earlier, during public deputations, Papatowai Beach resident Keith Olsen argued the beach needed stronger protections to make it safe for all users – human and “non-human”.

The beach was home to ground-nesting birds such as oystercatchers and had a regular visiting elephant seal, he said.

Signage was not enough to prevent the dangerous use of vehicles on the beach, Olsen said.

“Just saying don’t be a dickhead doesn’t cut the mustard with the sort of people who are likely to be dickheads,” he said.

Papatowai resident Diana Noonan said some councillors had made important promises relating to the environment.

“I appeal to you today… that you remember your promises from the past and that you do not dishonour them,” she 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/2026/02/04/cries-of-shame-on-you-as-clutha-councillors-vote-on-looking-into-vehicle-free-zones-on-beaches/

Breakers stars miss training as injury concerns grow

Source: Radio New Zealand

Breakers stars Parker Jackson-Cartwright and Karim Lopez did not take part in training on Wednesday. Photosport

The depleted NZ Breakers are short on time and fit players.

The end of the ANBL season is quickly approaching – with four regular season games to play – and after the club’s sole training session of the week on the eve of Thursday’s home game against South East Melbourne Phoenix, coach Petteri Koponen had resorted to relying on hope.

He had just held a session without star import guard Parker Jackson-Cartwright who was not at the club’s headquarters due to illness, as blossoming Next Star Karim Lopez sat out with a strapped lower right leg, back up point guard Alex McNaught took a blow to his hand late in the scrimmage and Sam Mennenga, Rob Baker and Izayah Le’Afa were only at the practice court as observers after their own season-ending injuries.

“I just hope we’ve got some of the guys ready to go and they will be there… I’d be much happier if [the injured players] were with the group,” Koponen said about what could be an under-manned roster for the upcoming two games in three days.

“It’s a difficult moment but we have to have that next man up mentality and no excuses.”

Koponen often put a positive spin on the situations the Breakers found themselves in during the season but it was obvious things out his control were playing on his mind.

Travel and double-header weekends had limited the Breakers’ opportunities to spend time on the practice court in the last few weeks.

After winning at home last Friday against Melbourne United, a trip to Tasmania ended in a potentially season-defining two-point loss to the JackJumpers on Sunday.

Needing to get on winning streak to have any outside chance of making an appearance in the post-season, Koponen was wary of the team being under-prepared.

Koponen said the JackJumpers game was an example of what could happen when training opportunities were stymied by the schedule.

“We couldn’t prepare and some of the things in the game looked exactly like that.

“I told the group ‘when you are not perfect and you’re not feeling great how do you respond’ and Rob Loe with his 27 minutes on Friday and 27 minutes on Sunday he showed if he can do it everybody else can.

“I think especially for our younger players it’s a great learning experience because maybe they haven’t been there too much yet in their careers but when you are tired you have to do the little things with even more focus and also mentally get your mind ready and your body ready to fight.”

Koponen characterised the performance against the JackJumpers as “flat” – something he wanted the players to avoid with a game against the Illawarra Hawks coming less than 48 hours after the game against the Phoenix on the North Shore is over.

Import shooting guard Izaiah Brockington said the game against the JackJumpers would not be moved on from easily.

“That loss definitely hurt because of the play-off implications so we definitely felt it but we’re at the point in the season where it didn’t completely derail our chances so we’re on to the next one,” Brockington said.

The next challenge was against a Phoenix side that had won nine of their last 12 games and beaten the Breakers three times this season.

Brockington did not think the Phoenix would show them anything they had not seen before but he had heard Koponen’s message about being “mentally sharp”.

“Our biggest challenge is just going to be on the defensive end. They’ve been scoring really well for the past few games so our main thing is just figuring out how we get stops and turn those stops into points.

“We feel like they pressure a lot but we saw a few openings last game where they were over helping or they were a little wild but we’ve just got to stop them from getting threes, getting offensive rebounds, getting whatever they want on that end.”

Brockington might be one of the few Breakers players feeling fit and healthy at the back end of a season that started in September but he still saw the benefit of his hobbled team mates, Baker, Mennenga and Le’Afa, offering their insights.

“Those guys watch the game on TV so we get to hear what they saw and their perspectives of each game so it’s definitely been good having them around.”

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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/2026/02/04/breakers-stars-miss-training-as-injury-concerns-grow/

Man charged in homicide investigation, Clutha

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute the following to Detective Senior Sergeant Nik Leigh:  

Police investigating a homicide in Crichton, Clutha, have arrested one person following the death of a woman on Friday 23 January.

Emergency services were called to Adams Flats Road around 6.10pm where a woman found deceased, and a second person was critically injured.

A man has now been charged with murder following a bedside hearing today.

We understand this is a distressing event for the small community. Police would like to reassure residents that officers are not searching for any other people in relation to the matter.

ENDS 

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/man-charged-in-homicide-investigation-clutha/

Auckland homeowners not advised of rule change affecting flood buyouts, advocate says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Henderson Valley, west Auckland on 27 January 2023. Supplied

An advocate for Aucklanders affected by the 2023 storms says a group of homeowners should have been advised of a move to avoid writing-off their properties.

Auckland Council will amend the buyout terms to increase funding for 13 homes at risk of future flooding or landslides to build retaining walls, move or lift the homes, to make them safe.

It means the homes can be lived in and the council will not have to pay up to $14 million buying out the properties – the homeowners have not yet been advised.

West Auckland is Flooding spokesperson Lyall Carter said some of them likely would have preferred a buyout.

“The people that are advocating on behalf of storm-impacted people, we don’t know who these people are and as far as we’re aware, these people don’t know who they are.”

He said they did not know what situations these homeowners were in.

“How far are they through this process, are they near the end of the process, do they expect to be bought out through this process? I mean, can understand why from a fiscal point of view they’re making this decision but you don’t change the rules halfway through the game.”

Carter said the homeowners should have been notified of the change before it went to councillors to vote on, on Tuesday.

“While I can understand on one hand the need to be good financial stewards, this is not the way in which you in my view that you work with victims of a weather disaster.”

As part of the buyout scheme, the council can now fund grants up to 40 percent of the property’s capital value (CV), an increase from 25 percent.

If building work exceeded that 25 percent limit, a variation could be sought to increase it or the homeowner could opt to be bought out.

Council’s recovery office said it would be contacting the homeowners with the details once the buyout terms are changed.

There are 75 Auckland properties in the early stages of having building works costed that would make them safe to live in.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/auckland-homeowners-not-advised-of-rule-change-affecting-flood-buyouts-advocate-says/

70 million litres of raw sewage flowing into Wellington sea

Source: Radio New Zealand

The head of Wellington Water says about 70 million litres of raw sewage is now flowing into the sea each day.

Untreated water is leaking onto the capital’s south coast beaches due to the Moa Point Treatment Plant flooding and being turned off from early this morning.

The water company said it could take months to fully repair the sewage infrastructure.

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The Department of Conservation said given the location of the sewage spill, mussels, kina, pāua, sponges, fish, and penguins could be at risk.

How long the discharge continues, the volume of effluent, and ocean current, swell and wind would determine if other species would also be at risk.

And there may be environmental impacts like algal blooms and deoxygenated water as a result of the spill, as well as bacteria, viruses, and parasites.

It said it doesn’t intend to visit the site at this time because of the risk to human health.

Wellington Water chief executive Pat Dougherty told Checkpoint the critical question will be why the Moa Point’s outfall pipe backed up this morning.

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

“We need to get a camera down there to understand why that didn’t perform.”

Dougherty said Wellington Water was alerted to the issue two hours later than it should have.

“That’s one of the things I will be asking about but at the moment I don’t want that team distracted from things getting fixed.”

He guessed it would be two months before the plant was fully operational.

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Dougherty confirmed an average of around 70 million litres of raw sewage was now flowing into Wellington’s South Coast.

At 4:42pm on Wednesday, RNZ saw just over a dozen people out at the South Coast.

No one was in the water other than a dog or two and there was no smell or obvious change in water colour.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/70-million-litres-of-raw-sewage-flowing-into-wellington-sea/

SailGP: Black Foils on track to compete at home regatta on Waitematā Harbour

Source: Radio New Zealand

Black Foils skipper Peter Burling is supremely confident his boat will be back on the water for SailGP Auckland next week, after suffering significant damage at the league’s season-opening regatta at Perth last month.

New Zealand and Switzerland collided in the opening race at Fremantle, shearing the transom at the back of Amokura and sidelining the Kiwis for the rest of the weekend.

Adding insult to injury, the race umpire adjudged the Foils at fault and docked them seven race points, which became academic, when they weren’t able to take the water again.

They arrive at their home event at the foot of the league table and a slight question mark over the seaworthiness of their boat.

“We’ve always been very confident we’d be on the water here,” Burling insisted. “SailGP Technologies and the whole tech team have done an amazing job keeping all the boats in one piece and back together.

“That confident is growing as well. We’ve seen the boat arrive and get shipped out to C-Tech, where they’ll put the new piece on. The stern is already here – that arrived a couple of days ago.

“It’s cool to see it all happening. There’s some complication around getting the physical parts to New Zealand in time, so that part’s all gone well and I’m sure the team will do an awesome job finishing it off now.”

Amokura is unloaded for repairs at C-Tech in Avondale. Supplied/Black Foils

Under the SailGP agreement, all replacement parts are produced by the organisers and shipped from their innovation centre at Southampton. Amokura has been transported to Avondale, where the new piece will be fitted.

The hardest part of that equation has already been achieved.

“It’s been pretty impressive to see them build the whole thing from scratch and turn it around in a 10-day period, then shipped down to New Zealand to meet the boat,” Burling said.

With no practice scheduled until Friday next week, the Kiwis are under no pressure to take to the water until then, with racing on the Waitematā Harbour beginning the next day.

Peter Burling is still not happy with the penalty handed to his Black Foils team. Christopher Pike for SailGP / Supplied

“We won’t get any additional hours and I don’t think we should need any additional hours,” Burling said. “There’s nothing from an electronics/hydraulics point of view, where you normally need time commissioning.

“There’s not a massive amount attached to the back of the boat. There will definitely be a fair bit of checks going on in the shed and we’ll go through a process on that first day to load it up reasonably slowly, but that’s about all we can do.”

While all teams have been idle since the Perth stopover, the damage hasn’t inconvenienced the Kiwis unduly since.

“The biggest thing was we missed two days of racing in Perth, which is never ideal,” Burling said. “You learn a lot during the race weekends, and every weekend you go into with parts you want to practice, parts you want to improve.

“SailGP is very much about evolving, while you’re racing, so there’s definitely a cost to the team for missing that racing. We were in really great shape going into that weekend and it was tough getting taken out in the first race, but that’s part of sport.”

Amokura awaits assistance after its collision with Switzerland at Perth. James Gourley/SailGP

Burling still doesn’t agree with the penalty slapped on his team, but is resigned to the outcome.

“I’ve definitely seen [the incident] a few more times – it seems to pop up everywhere. We still don’t really agree with the call, but we have to live by what the umpires say.

“Tough break in that regard, but also we’re hoping the league can learn from the incident, in terms of how we can keep the boats apart… we hope there’s some good change in that regard.”

New Zealand are now on the backfoot, as they pursue an elusive SailGP crown. They have contested the last three finals, topping the table in 2024, but have managed just second and two thirds.

With 12 more events on the calendar, the Kiwis still have plenty of time to chase down their rivals, but Auckland did not prove a happy hunting ground for them 12 months ago, when they failed to make the final.

Australia triumph at SailGP Auckland 2025. Bob Martin for SailGP

“Last year, we had a lot of gremlins with the boat, with the electronics, and hopefully we’ve managed to get them behind us,” Burling said. “Everyone has a few waves, where they have things go wrong with the boat and they struggle to get to the bottom of quickly at times.

“Hopefully, we’re clean on that part of the boat and we can put on an awesome show.

“It’s a little too far out for long-range forecast, but we’re really excited with the preparation we’ve done and the consistent line-up we’ve managed to keep.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/sailgp-black-foils-on-track-to-compete-at-home-regatta-on-waitemata-harbour/

Man arrested after jumping into Hutt River to evade police

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hutt River. File photo. RNZ / Emma Hatton

A man will appear in Hutt Valley District Court in Wellington after attempting to evade police officers by jumping into the Hutt River today.

A witness took to social media to the describe seeing the man on a bicycle being pursued by police on the eastern side of the river near Ewen Bridge.

They said the man dumped the bicycle – ran into the water – and attempted to cross the river which was running swiftly at the time.

A police spokesperson confirmed officers were called to a store in High Street at 1.33pm and they arrested a 36-year-old man shortly after.

They said the man would appear charged with the burglary of items under $500 on Thursday.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/man-arrested-after-jumping-into-hutt-river-to-evade-police/

Fatal crash, Leeston Road, Springston

Source: New Zealand Police

One person has sadly died following a serious crash on Leeston Road, Springston, this afternoon.

Police were notified of the crash, which involved a car and a pedestrian, around 3.30pm today [Wednesday 4 February].

Police can confirm that the pedestrian was a child, who, despite best efforts of emergency services, sadly died at the scene.

Leeston Road remains closed between Goulds Road and Bethels Road, while the Serious Crash Unit conducted a scene examination.

Enquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

ENDS 

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/fatal-crash-leeston-road-springston/

New Zealand holds out hope for halted PNG electrification aid project

By Johnny Blades, RNZ Pacific bulletin editor

The New Zealand government says it hopes an electrification aid project that was halted in Papua New Guinea can still be completed if security improves.

Work on the Enga Electrification Project in PNG’s Enga province has stopped due to ongoing violence around the project area in Tsak Valley.

New Zealand spent NZ$6.7 million over the last six years on the project which aimed to connect at least 4000 households to electricity.

It was part of combined efforts with the US, Australia and Japan to help 70 percent of PNG homes get connected by 2030, as agreed to in 208 when PNG hosted the APEC Leaders Summit.

However, contractors had to be withdrawn from the area after a surge in tribal fighting in August last year, according to a spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

“Ending New Zealand’s involvement is a disappointing outcome, particularly given New Zealand’s longstanding and extensive efforts to deliver energy infrastructure in Enga Province,” the spokesperson said.

“New Zealand is working on a transition plan with partners in Papua New Guinea. It is hoped this will allow for the successful completion of the project if security improves.”

Northern lines installed
The ministry said 13.5 KM of distribution lines in the North of the project area were largely installed but were yet to be commissioned or connected to houses.

It said 12km of distribution lines in the south of the project area remained at various stages of construction.

Meanwhile, PNG’s Foreign Minster Justin Tkatchenko told local media that New Zealand would hand over equipment from the project to PNG Power Limited, a state-owned entity.

This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

PNG Power office, Southern Highlands, Papua New Guinea. Image: Johnny Blades/RNZ

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/04/new-zealand-holds-out-hope-for-halted-png-electrification-aid-project/

Victoria’s mountain ash forests naturally thin their trees. So why do it with machines?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Elle Bowd, Research Fellow, Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University

David Clode/Unsplash, CC BY-ND

There has been much global discussion about the best ways to manage Earth’s forests in an era of climate change and more frequent bushfires.

Some foresters and forest managers support and recommend large-scale industrial thinning of forests, where a proportion of the trees are removed (thinned) with machines to increase the size of the remaining trees. Thinning is commonly used in timber plantations, as it accelerates the development of timber trees.

In its new forest plan, the Victorian government has funded a “healthy forests” program. This will likely entail reducing the number of trees in the forest and increasing the space between trees. This plan could lead to extensive mechanical thinning in the state’s forests. Large-scale mechanical thinning has already been used in native forests in western Victoria.

Plans for mechanical thinning of forests raises important questions: what effect will this have? Could it be harmful? And is it necessary for forest health?

In our new study, we describe how mountain ash forests naturally change over time, from young, dense and uniform forests 15 years after wildfire, to forests with lower densities of large trees (and smaller trees) in older age. Our work suggests human intervention is not needed to reduce the density of trees or create a diversity of tree sizes needed for wildlife.

What we know about thinning

Some research suggests thinning can increase reduce the risk of severe wildfires in some forests (such as some pine forests in the United States). But in other types of forests, including in some of Australia’s eucalypt forests, thinning either has no effect on fire or can even make fires worse. Indeed, Australian forestry management manuals clearly warn of increased fire risks from thinning.

Thinning has also been shown to increase water yield and drought resilience in some forests (including tall eucalypt forest), but these benefits are short-lived as plants quickly regenerate in the new gaps formed by thinning.

Last October, the Victorian government released its Future of State Forests report. It describes a “healthy forests” program in which widespread mechanical thinning is very likely to be employed. Large-scale mechanical thinning has already been used in native forests in western Victoria, such as the Wombat State Forest, to reduce trunk density and increase space between trees. Current government policy will likely see it applied in the state’s Central Highlands and East Gippsland.

Using mechanical thinning can be counterproductive. For example, thinning with large machines can compact soils, increase the risk of bushfire, degrade habitat for wildlife, and produce carbon emissions. It’s also expensive (in the US, it costs about $US1270 ($A1830) per hectare, with the costs likely to significantly outweigh the short-term benefits.

What many people might not realise is forest trees naturally reduce and “thin” over time. This reduction happens as the size of the remaining trunks increase, a process of natural “self thinning”. In fact, natural self-thinning is a key ecological principle that shapes almost all forests and woodlands globally.

What we found in Victorian forests

In our new study, we describe the process of natural self-thinning in Victorian forests of mountain ash, the tallest flowering plants in the world.

Our work quantifies how these forests naturally reduce the numbers of trees by 50 to 60%, from young forests regenerating from fires in 2009, through to old growth forests (greater than 120 years). This natural self-thinning occurs because less competitive trees lose the race for light and other resources and die.

As mountain ash forests matured, the number of trees declined naturally and markedly. In young forests (15 years old) tree densities were high (7000 trees per hectare), but in old forests (120 years old) tree densities were much lower (1450 trees per hectare). Not all tree species reduced at the same magnitude as others. For example, young forests were dominated by thousands of wattles and eucalypts per hectare. This profile changed significantly in old growth forests to less than 100 eucalypt trees and about 20 wattle trees per hectare on average.

In a mountain ash forest, the number of trees on a given site also varied if it was on a steep slope or flat area, and at different elevations. This variation is likely to be the result of light, moisture and soil properties.

Importantly, as the number of trees in mountain ash forests reduce naturally over time, trees become larger and more varied in size. This is because older forests contain trees of different ages, some shorter and smaller, and others larger and taller. Other studies have shown forests with a diversity of tree sizes are important for animals such as arboreal marsupials and birds.

What forests look like without intervention

Our new study of natural self-thinning is significant for many reasons. First, it sets the benchmark for how large trees will grow in mountain ash forests over time, and what these forests look like without human intervention. This can be used to guide restoration practices. Second, it demonstrates mechanical thinning is not needed to help these forests to develop into older stages.

Getting forest management right is critical — under the current climate, forests face a hotter and more uncertain future. Evidence-based ecological management is essential in forests and we must aim to avoid risky management, such as the use of widespread mechanical thinning in these forests.

Instead, the limited funding available for forest management should be employed to support other restoration activities with a higher chance of success. These could include targeting areas of forest where restoration has failed after past logging operations. Logging has devastated Victoria’s native forests, and new research shows 20% has failed to grow back.

Forest managers and policymakers need to understand mountain ash forests naturally self-thin and interventions like mechanical thinning are not needed. At best, large-scale mechanical thinning operations are essentially a waste of money. At worst, they degrade forests, making them more flammable, eroding habitat, compromising water security and compacting soils.

Elle Bowd receives funding from the Australian government, the NSW government, and the ACT government.

David Lindenmayer receives funding from the Australian government, the Victorian government, and the Australian research Council. He is a councillor with the Biodiversity Council, and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science, the American Academy of Science, the Ecological Society of America and the Royal Zoological Society of NSW. He is a member of Birdlife Australia.

ref. Victoria’s mountain ash forests naturally thin their trees. So why do it with machines? – https://theconversation.com/victorias-mountain-ash-forests-naturally-thin-their-trees-so-why-do-it-with-machines-268201

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/04/victorias-mountain-ash-forests-naturally-thin-their-trees-so-why-do-it-with-machines-268201/

Prime Minister rejects opposition claim that government is anti-Treaty

Source: Radio New Zealand

Labour leader Chris Hipkins says the government is anti-Treaty and therefore anti-Māori, but the Prime Minister argues iwi leaders have worked to find “common ground”.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon rejects Hipkins’ claims, calling the Iwi Chairs Forum on Wednesday a positive engagement and the best forum he has participated in.

He said the six different sub-regions had their say, and put questions to him and Finance Minister Nicola Willis.

Ngāti Wai Chair Aperahama Edwards said the meeting with the government was “beneficial”, but there was still a lot of pain among Māori compared to the last time Luxon was present in 2024.

“Our people are hurting, and we’re mindful of that, but there’s also a calm here as well, and an optimism at the thought of what sort of change might be coming,” Edwards said.

Luxon was in Waitangi with a contingent of government ministers ahead of the political pōwhiri taking place on Thursday, which he will attend.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. RNZ

Māori-Crown Relations Minister Tama Potaka said the Iwi Chairs meeting was “robust” and “interrogative”, and an “exchange”.

“There needs to be an exchange of ideas, an exchange of investigative queries, but also a sense of optimism and progress, and that’s what we’ve seen today.”

Luxon said the meeting was not combative or contentious, but “direct”.

“We’re direct too,” he said.

He said they discussed the work to lift outcomes for Māori in the context of health, law and order, the economy, infrastructure development and investment and education.

“And lo and behold, iwi want to do exactly the same thing to advance their people as well. So there’s really good alignment.”

Earlier, Hipkins had called the government “anti-Treaty”, referring to the Treaty Principles Bill.

Asked for more examples Hipkins said the pledge to remove Treaty references from some legislation, the removal of Te Reo Māori from school and the deprioritising of the Māori language on street signs and government departments.

“They’re having passports redesigned just so that they can reorder the words. All of these things are just a big step backwards for New Zealand.”

When asked if Labour would reverse changes to the Marine and Coastal Area Act and the removal of Section 7AA from the Oranga Tamariki Act, which have been criticised by Māori, Hipkins said the party had not made any final decisions.

He said he wanted to move the country forward in a way that “brings people with us”.

“Where any government moves too quickly and doesn’t bring people with them, you run the risk of the pendulum swinging back further in the other direction, on the next political cycle.

“And I don’t want to see that continue, so we will be focused on sustainable change that brings people along.”

Hipkins said his discussions with the Forum had been “constructive” but acknowledged the iwi leaders would work with whoever the government was.

When asked whether the government was “anti-Māori” Luxon accepted “ACT’s Treaty Principles Bill was incredibly challenging”.

But he had spoken openly to iwi leaders through that period and afterward, and he pointed to the meeting on Wednesday, saying “what we’ve got to find is the common ground”.

“Let’s focus on the common ground, the 70 percent that we can agree on, that we can actually move and advance forward … let’s do that.”

Willis said the most practical way the Crown upholds the Treaty of Waitangi was through progressing Treaty Settlements, which she said the government had made “good progress on”.

Asked whether Māori could have confidence Luxon would not agree to the likes of the Treaty Principles Bill again, Luxon said that was “absolutely ruled out”.

He said despite tensions through challenges like the Treaty Principles Bill, the government had continued the conversation with iwi leaders at the same time.

“The conversation that we had today is no different from the nature of the conversations that I’ve been having over the last two years.”

Iwi leader Tukoroirangi Morgan echoed that sentiment, calling the meeting “productive” and saying iwi leaders were in a position where “we need to get stuff done”.

Despite being election year, work needed to continue, he said.

“And the government needs to be conscious that actually working in a much more strategic way to complete action plans, business plans, all of the stuff that we’ve been talking to them for a long, long time should get done.”

Morgan said Luxon was “very committed” to the Treaty relationship.

“We have to try and find creative ways of working with the government in the face of tough economic times, there are still opportunities, and we need to take those opportunities.”

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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/2026/02/04/prime-minister-rejects-opposition-claim-that-government-is-anti-treaty/

Lane blocked, SH 2, Ngauranga, Wellington

Source: New Zealand Police

One Southbound lane on State Highway 2, Ngauranga, Wellington, is blocked following a crash this afternoon.

Police were called to the two-vehicle crash, just before the Ngauranga exit, around 4.40pm.

No injuries were reported, however one southbound lane is blocked due to a fuel leak from one of the vehicles.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area where possible and expect delays.

ENDS

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/lane-blocked-sh-2-ngauranga-wellington/

Trio’s getaway dashed

Source: New Zealand Police

Three alleged offenders had getaway plans foiled after an aggravated robbery in Manurewa this morning.

The Counties Manukau Major Crime Team have charged three teenagers after the incident which first occurred at around 7.15am.

Detective Senior Sergeant Dave Paea says three offenders entered the superette on Mahia Road.

“One of these offenders was allegedly carrying a hammer and threatened a worker at the store,” he says.

“After stealing the till and other products, the offenders fled in a stolen vehicle and dumped it in a nearby street.”

From there, the young people were allegedly seen getting into another vehicle.

Detective Senior Sergeant Paea says the public quickly provided information to Police about the new vehicle.

“Police camera operators tracked this vehicle’s movements onto Alfriston Road,” he says.

“From there a combined effort between the Eagle helicopter and ground units directed our focus to Ellen Street in Manurewa.

“The vehicle was found outside a property, and inside three males were arrested and a till, along with other property was recovered.”

Two males, aged 17, have been charged with aggravated robbery and will appear in the Manukau Youth Court today.

A 16-year-old male has also been charged with aggravated robbery and assaulting a blunt instrument. He is also expected in the same court today.

“I’d like to acknowledge all the staff involved in this morning’s response, which has resulted in these quick apprehensions.”

ENDS

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/trios-getaway-dashed/

‘Journalism is not a crime’ – US journalists arrested for covering anti-ICE protest in church

Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific.

AMY GOODMAN: We begin today’s show looking at the arrests of two American journalists for covering a protest at the Cities Church [in the Minnesota Twin City of] St Paul, where a top ICE official serves as pastor.

Former CNN anchor Don Lemon and independent journalist Georgia Fort from the Twin Cities were released last Friday after initial court hearings.

A federal grand jury in Minnesota indicted Lemon and Fort for violating two laws, an 1871 law originally designed to combat the Ku Klux Klan and the FACE Act, the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, which was written to protect abortion clinics.

The indictment names a total of nine people, including the two journalists. US Attorney General Pam Bondi took personal credit for the arrests of Fort and Lemon and two others on Friday, posting on X that the arrests occurred at her direction.

Don Lemon, who was arrested late Thursday night by the FBI in Los Angeles, had been reporting on the church protest in St Paul in January as an independent journalist.

His attorney, Abbe Lowell, described the arrest as an “unprecedented attack on the First Amendment and transparent attempt to distract attention from the many crises facing this administration.”

On Friday afternoon, Don Lemon vowed to continue reporting after appearing court in Los Angeles.

AMY GOODMAN: Don Lemon attended the Grammys on Sunday night.

Also arrested Friday was Georgia Fort, an independent journalist from the Twin Cities. She posted a video to Facebook just as federal agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration were about to arrest her and take her to the Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis.

AMY GOODMAN: For more, we’re joined now from Minneapolis by that longtime independent journalist Georgia Fort, whose reporting has been recognised with three Midwest Emmys.

[embedded content]
‘Journalism Is Not A Crime’                Video: Democracy Now!

GEORGIA FORT: Good morning, Amy.My home was surrounded by about two dozen federal agents, including agents from DEA and HSI. I asked to see the warrant. My mother was here. My mother asked to see the warrant. They did show us an arrest warrant, which was then sent to my attorney, who verified its legitimacy.

Since it was an arrest warrant, we decided that it would be safest for me to exit through the garage, so that we could lock the door to our home behind me.

And so, I surrendered. I walked out of my garage with my hands up. And I asked the agents who were there to arrest me if they knew that I was a member of the press. They said they did know that I was a member of the press. I informed them that this was a violation of my constitutional right, of the First Amendment.

And they told me, you know, “We’re just here to do our job.” And I said, “I was just doing my job, and now I’m being arrested for it.” And so, by about 6:30 a.m., they had me in cuffs in the back of the vehicle. We were headed to Whipple.

What I later learned, after I was released, is that these agents stayed outside of my home for more than two hours. And when my 17-year-old daughter felt, you know, threatened, felt scared that these agents weren’t leaving, she decided that it would be safer for her to drive to a relative’s home.

And so she loaded up her sisters, who are 7 and 8, and they went to leave, somewhere where they could go and feel safe. And these agents stopped my children on their way trying to leave because they were scared that these agents were not leaving even after two hours of me being apprehended.

My husband also. He was trailing them. He drove out at the same time that they drove out. They stopped him, questioning him, asking them if they were taking my belongings away, when they were simply trying to leave, because no one could understand, if I was arrested at 6.30 in the morning, why were all of these agents still just sitting outside of my home at 8:30, 9 am.

AMY GOODMAN: And so, how long were you held? And if you could respond to the charges that were brought against you — ironically, violating an 1871 law originally designed to take on the Ku Klux Klan and the FACE Act, the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, which is supposed to protect abortion clinics and people going into them for healthcare?

GEORGIA FORT: Well, Amy, to answer your first question, I was detained at Whipple for several hours. Then I was transferred to the US Marshals prison, which is connected to the federal courthouse.

So, I was at Whipple for maybe two or three hours and then transferred to this other facility. I had to be booked into both of them. They collected my DNA. They collected my fingerprints at both of those facilities.

And then, by 1.30, I was able to go before a judge, who did approve my release under normal conditions until this case continues to play out in court. And so, I ended up being released by the afternoon, I think about maybe by about 3.00 the same day.

Now, in terms of the charges that I am facing, I think it’s really absurd to weaponise a law that was meant to protect Black people, and weaponise it against Black people, specifically members of the press. We are at a critical time in this country when you have members of the press, award-winning journalists, who are simply showing up in their capacity to cover the news, being arrested for doing their jobs.

I think I’m not — I wouldn’t be the first person to say this, but we’re having a constitutional crisis. If our First Amendment rights, if our constitutional rights cannot be withheld in this moment, then what does it say about the merit of our Constitution?

And that was the question that I asked right after I was released. Do we have a Constitution? If there are no consequences for the violation of our Constitution, what strength does it really have? What does it say about the state and the health of our democracy?

AMY GOODMAN: Two judges said that you, the journalists, and specifically dealing with Don Lemon, should not be arrested. And yet, ultimately, Pam Bondi took this to a grand jury.

GEORGIA FORT: It goes back to the merit of our Constitution. Who has power in this moment? And I think what we’re seeing here in Minnesota is the people are continuing to stand. They are continuing to demand that our Constitution be upheld.

I believe that journalism is not a crime. And it’s not just my belief; it’s my constitutional right as an American. And so, I’m hopeful that I have a extremely great legal team, and so we’ll continue to go through this.

But, you know, I’d ask the question — I think you played the clip earlier: What message does this send to journalists across the country who are simply doing their jobs documenting what is happening? But the reality is, when you’re out documenting what’s happening, you are creating a record that can either incriminate or exonerate someone, and so what we do has so much power, especially in these times.

And so, I believe that is why journalism is under attack, media is under attack.

This would not be the first time in the last 12 months where we have seen a tremendous force come against people who are speaking truth to power on their platforms. Jimmy Kimmel was pulled off air. The nation was outraged about it. There was a segment that was supposed to air on 60 Minutes that was pulled. This isn’t the first time, I mean, and we can even historically go back. There have . . .

AMY GOODMAN: Though that, too, ultimately, was played, after enormous outcry, only recently.

GEORGIA FORT: Absolutely, absolutely. And I was going to say, you know, we could even go back further and look at the recent exodus of Black women in mainstream media: Joy Reid, Tiffany Cross, Melissa Harris-Perry, April Ryan.

So, there has been — this is not new in terms of the attack on media and journalism, the attack on Black women who are documenting what’s happening.

And so, I will say I am extremely grateful that the National Association of Black Journalists issued a statement on behalf of myself and Don Lemon, which was signed by dozens of other journalism agencies and institutions.

I am the vice-president of my local chapter. We saw the International Women’s Alliance of Media issue a statement. We saw our local media outlets here, Star Tribune, NPR, Minnesota Reformer, Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder and Sahan Journal, so many media and journalism institutions standing up and speaking out against this attack on the free press and the violation of our constitutional right.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, Georgia, I want to thank you so much for being with us, and we will continue to follow your case. Independent journalist Georgia Fort, speaking to us from Minneapolis. She and former CNN host Don Lemon were arrested last week for covering a protest inside a St Paul church where a top ICE official serves as a pastor.

This article was first published on Café Pacific.

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/04/journalism-is-not-a-crime-us-journalists-arrested-for-covering-anti-ice-protest-in-church/