ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for February 7, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on February 7, 2026.

Jonathan Cook: The criminal elite exposed in the Epstein files are burying the truth
Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – COMMENTARY: By Jonathan Cook If you struggle to cope with the endless pressure to communicate in an ever-more connected world, spare a thought for the late serial paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The flood of three million documents released by the US Department of Justice last weekend confirm

View from The Hill: Angus Taylor circles Ley, as Liberals watch polling and negotiations with Nats
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Sunday’s Newspoll is being keenly awaited by federal Liberals as leadership aspirant Angus Taylor contemplates the timing of a challenge to Sussan Ley. With talks to try to get the federal Coalition together looking near collapse, Taylor danced around the

Whooping cough cases are at their highest level in 35 years – so why the surge?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Archana Koirala, Paediatrician and Infectious Diseases Specialist; Clinical Researcher, University of Sydney LSO Photo/Getty Images Australia is battling its biggest rise in whooping cough cases in 35 years. During 2024 and 2025 Australia recorded 82,513 whooping cough cases – the highest number since monitoring began in 1991.

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/07/er-report-a-roundup-of-significant-articles-on-eveningreport-nz-for-february-7-2026/

Northland councils team up on local government reform

Source: Radio New Zealand

Far North Mayor Moko Tepania also chairs the Northland Maoyral Forum. Peter de Graaf/RNZ

Northland’s four councils are presenting a shared vision, following the proposal for local government reform.

Submissions on the Bills to replace the Resource Management Act close on Parliament’s website on 13 February. A consultation on the plan to replace regional councils with ‘combined territories boards’ is open until 20 February, through the Department of Internal Affairs website.

Consultation on whether the government should force them to cap rates increases to within a range of 2-4 percent a year will also end soon.

Local Democracy Reporting said the proposed changes could affect councils’ ability to increase rates above a defined threshold, local authorities’ planning remit, and the structure and function of all the regional councils.

Kaipara, Far North and Whangārei, along with the Northland Regional Council, are backing a ‘by Northland, for Northland’ approach.

They said the local government minister heard Northland councils were eager to engage early with the government and held a meeting with Simon Watts on Thursday, before Waitangi Day.

They aimed to demonstrate that, as local leaders, they could be trusted to deliver solutions that work on the ground.

“We support change, but we believe this must reflect Northland’s geography, our unique communities and iwi relationships,” Northland Mayoral Forum chair Moko Tepania said. “The focus must be on outcomes, rather than structure.”

Far North Mayor Tepania said Northland wanted to avoid a “one-size-fits-all” approach to local government reform.

“We are keen to start working with the government now on a collective response that works for our communities.”

Whangārei Mayor Ken Couper said Watts was encouraged by a united Northland.

“We believe that we have a moment in time now where, if we act with a common goal, we can make a real difference,” he said.

Watts said the meeting provided him with valuable insights and context on the challenges facing the region.

“I am encouraged by their recognition that we need to work differently to meet today’s challenges and their commitment to work together with the government on finding solutions that work.”

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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/2026/02/07/northland-councils-team-up-on-local-government-reform/

House Minority Leader Jefferies unleashes furious response to Trump ‘racist’ post

Source: Radio New Zealand

US House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images / AFP

US House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries has ripped into the US president, saying “f***k Donald Trump” in a social media clip, responding to a racist video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes that was shared on Trump’s Truth Social account.

Jeffries said the post, which sparked bipartisan outrage for its racist messaging, was intentional and launched a blistering personal attack on the president.

“This disgusting video posted by the so-called president was done intentionally,” Jeffries said. “F**k Donald Trump, and his vile, racist and malignant behaviour.

“This guy is an unhinged bottom feeder.”

The video Trump’s account shared late Thursday night – before it was removed hours later – briefly showed former president Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama with their faces superimposed on the bodies of apes, at the end of a longer clip promoting false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.

Jeffries praised the Obamas as “brilliant, caring and patriotic Americans”, and said they “represent the best of this country”.

He also called on senior Republicans to publicly break with Trump, naming Senate Republican leader John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson, and urging them to denounce what he described as Trump’s repeated racist conduct.

“It’s time for John Thune, Mike Johnson and Republicans to denounce this serial fraudster who’s sitting at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave pretending to be the president of the United States,” Jeffries said.

The White House initially defended the post, with press secretary Karoline Leavitt dismissing criticism as “fake outrage”, before later blaming a staffer for sharing the video and confirming it had been removed. Trump has not apologised.

The post prompted swift backlash from across the political spectrum. Republican Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina called the video racist and urged Trump to remove it.

At the same time, New York Republicans Mike Lawler and Nick LaLota also publicly condemned the post and called for an apology.

Jeffries’ outburst comes against the backdrop of previous incidents in which Trump or members of his administration shared racially offensive or digitally altered content targeting Democrats, including imagery of Jeffries himself wearing a fake moustache and sombrero, which Jeffries has previously described as racist.

While Trump has a long history of reposting conspiratorial or inflammatory material online, he really deletes a post or acknowledges responsibility for it.

The Obamas have not commented publicly on the video. CNN has contacted their office for comment.

– CNN/RNZ

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/house-minority-leader-jefferies-unleashes-furious-response-to-trump-racist-post/

Navy vessel Canterbury stops in Tokelau to mark centenary

Source: Radio New Zealand

HMNZS Canterbury. Chris Weissenborn

The navy vessel Canterbury will stop off in Tokelau to mark the centenary of New Zealand administration of the territory on 11 February.

The multi-role ship is currently on a fuel stop in Samoa, as it begins ‘Operation Calypso’, focused on illegal fishing in the southwest Pacific.

Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro, staff from various government agencies and an officer from the Tokelauan National Disaster Management Office are on board, and will visit the atolls of Atafu, Nukunonu and Fakaofo.

Weather agency MetService received a request from Tokelau government agencies for observer training and will conduct a needs assessment, as well as servicing the Automatic Weather Station on Nukunonu.

A New Zealand police officer on board will take the opportunity to meet with their Tokelau counterparts during the trip.

After visiting the atolls, HMNZS Canterbury will return to Apia, where some passengers will disembark.

It will then sail to Raoul Island, where Air Force NH90 helicopters and flight crew and army personnel will help MetService and Earth Sciences New Zealand staff with upgrade and maintenance work on critical weather, tsunami and volcano monitoring equipment and facilities.

“Tokelau and Raoul Island are two examples of hard-to-reach places in our region, where carrying out tasks can be very logistically challenging” said Commander Joint Forces New Zealand Major General Rob Krushk.

“We’re pleased to be able to support the visit of Her Excellency the Rt Hon Dame Cindy Kiro and New Zealand Government agencies to deliver services and equipment to these areas through one of our regular South West Pacific deployments.”

The Canterbury will then return to New Zealand.

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/2026/02/07/navy-vessel-canterbury-stops-in-tokelau-to-mark-centenary/

New Zealand Governor-General’s visit to Tokelau

Source: Government House

The Governor-General of New Zealand, Rt Hon Dame Cindy Kiro, and Dr Richard Davies will travel to Tokelau from Samoa aboard HMNZS Canterbury on 10 February 2026, to mark the centenary of New Zealand administration of Tokelau on 11 February 2026.
Their Excellencies will visit each of Tokelau’s three atolls – Fakaofo, Nukunonu, and Atafu – and their programme on each atoll will include a welcome ceremony, meetings with Taupulega (councils of elders) and Fatupaepae (women’s groups), as well as visits to major infrastructure projects, including schools, hospitals, and renewable energy sites.
The Governor-General’s visit seeks to reaffirm the special bonds between New Zealand and Tokelau – a non-self-governing territory within the Realm of New Zealand. Please note that this advisory is accurate as of 7 February and may be subject to change.

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/new-zealand-governor-generals-visit-to-tokelau/

Jonathan Cook: The criminal elite exposed in the Epstein files are burying the truth

Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific.

COMMENTARY: By Jonathan Cook

If you struggle to cope with the endless pressure to communicate in an ever-more connected world, spare a thought for the late serial paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

The flood of three million documents released by the US Department of Justice last weekend confirm that Epstein spent an inordinate amount of time corresponding with the huge network of powerful acquaintances he had developed.

Emailing alone looks to have been almost a full-time job for him — and in a real sense, it was.

The personal attention he devoted to billionaires, royalty, political leaders, statesmen, celebrities, academics and media elites was how he kept himself at the heart of this vast network of power.

His address book was a who’s who of those who shape our sense of how the world ought to be run. But it was also critical to how he drew some of these same powerful figures deeper into his orbit, and into a world of debauched and exploitative private parties in New York and on his Caribbean island.

Apparently there are another three million documents still being withheld. Their contents, we must presume, are even more damning to the global elite cultivated by Epstein.

The more documents that come to light, the more a picture emerges of how Epstein was shielded from the consequences of his own depravity by this network of allies who either indulged his crimes, or actively participated in them.

Epstein’s modus operandi looked suspiciously like that of a gangland boss, who requires initiates to take part in a hit before they become fully fledged members of the mob. Complicity is the safest way to guarantee a conspiracy of silence.

Network of power
It is not just that the late paedophile financier was for decades hiding in plain sight. His network of friends and acquaintances were hiding with him, all assuming they were untouchable.

His abuse of young women and girls was not just a personal crime. After all, for whom were he and his procurer-in-chief, Ghislaine Maxwell, doing all this sex trafficking?

This is precisely why so many of the millions of documents released have been carefully redacted — not chiefly to protect his victims, who are apparently too often identified, but to protect the predatory circles he serviced.

What is notable about the latest tranche of Epstein files is how suggestive they are of a worldview associated with “conspiracy theorists”. Epstein was at the centre of a global network of powerful figures from both sides of a supposed — but in reality, largely performative — political divide between the left and right.

The same elite that once prized Epstein as its ringmaster is now trying to draw our attention away from its complicity in his crimes

The glue that appears to have bound many of these figures together was their abusive treatment of vulnerable young women and girls.

Similarly, the photos of rich men with young women suggest that Epstein accumulated, either formally or informally, kompromat — incriminating evidence — that presumably served as potential leverage over them.

In true Masonic style, his circle of peers appear to have protected each other. Epstein himself certainly benefited from a “sweetheart deal” in Florida in 2008. He ended up being jailed on only two charges of soliciting prostitution — the least serious among a raft of sex trafficking charges — and served a short term, much of it on work release.

And the mystery of how Epstein, a glorified accountant, financed his fantastically lavish lifestyle — when his schedule seems to have been dominated by emailing chores and hosting sex parties — grows a little less mysterious with every fresh disclosure.

His cultivation of the super-wealthy and their hangers-on, and the invitations to come to his island to spend time with young women, all smack of the traditional honeytrap famously employed by spy agencies.

Most likely, Epstein wasn’t financing all of this himself.

Israel’s fingerprints
That should be no surprise. Once again, the fingerprints of intelligence services — particularly Israel’s — are to be found in the latest dump of files. But the clues were there long before.

There was, of course, his intimate, preternatural bond with Maxwell, whose media tycoon father was exposed after his death as an Israeli agent. And Epstein’s long-standing best buddy, Ehud Barak, a former head of Israeli military intelligence who later served as prime minister, should have been another red flag.

That partnership featured prominently in a flurry of stories published by Drop Site News last autumn, from an earlier release of the Epstein files. They showed Epstein helping Israel to broker security deals with countries such as Mongolia, Cote d’Ivoire and Russia.

An active Israeli military intelligence officer, Yoni Koren, was a repeated houseguest at Epstein’s Manhattan apartment between 2013 and 2015. An email also shows Barak asking Epstein to wire funds to Koren’s account.

But the latest release offers additional clues. A declassified FBI document quotes a confidential source as saying Epstein was “close” to Barak and “trained as a spy under him”.

In an email exchange between the pair in 2018, ahead of a meeting with a Qatari investment fund, Epstein asks Barak to allay potential concerns about their relationship: “you should make clear that i dont work for mossad (sic).”

And in newly released, undated audio, Epstein advises Barak to find out more about US data analysis firm Palantir and meet its founder, Peter Thiel. In 2024, Israel signed a deal with Palantir for AI services to help the Israeli military select targets in Gaza.

Predictably, these revelations are gaining almost no traction in the establishment media — the very same media whose billionaire owners and career-minded editors once courted Epstein.

Instead, the media seem much more engrossed by weaker leads that suggest Epstein might have also had connections with Russian security services.

Faustian pact
There is a reason why the demand for the Epstein files has been so clamorous that even US President Donald Trump had to give in, despite embarrassing revelations for him too. Much of what we see happening in our ever-more debased, corrupt politics appears to defy rational, let alone moral, explanation.

Western elites have spent two years actively colluding in mass slaughter in Gaza — widely identified by experts as a genocide — and then labelling any opposition to it as antisemitism or terrorism.

Those same elites twiddle their thumbs as the planet burns, refusing to give up their enriching addiction to fossil fuels, even as survey after survey shows global temperatures relentlessly climbing to the point where climate breakdown is inevitable.

A series of reckless, illegal Western wars of aggression in the Middle East, as well as Nato’s long-term goading of Russia into invading Ukraine, have not only destabilised the world, but risk provoking nuclear conflagration.

And despite expert warnings, artificial intelligence is being rushed out with apparently barely a thought given to the unpredictable and likely massive costs to our societies, from eviscerating much of the job market to upending our ability to assess truth.

The Epstein files proffer an answer. What feels like a conspiracy, they suggest, is indeed a conspiracy — one driven by greed.

What was always staring us in the face might actually be correct: there is a steep entry price for being accepted into the West’s tiny power elite, and it involves putting to one side any sense of morality. It requires discarding empathy for anyone outside the in-group.

Maybe a soulless, flesh-eating elite in charge of our societies is less of a caricature than it appears. Maybe the Epstein files have such purchase on our imaginations because they teach us a lesson we already knew, confirming a cautionary tale that predates even the West’s literary canon.

More than 400 years ago, English writer Christopher Marlowe — a contemporary of William Shakespeare — drew on German folk stories to write his play Doctor Faustus, about a scholar who, through the intermediary Mephistopheles, agrees to sell his soul to the devil in return for magical powers.

Thus was born the Faustian pact, mediated by the Epstein-like figure of Mephistopheles. The great German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe would revisit this tale 200 years later in his two-part masterwork Faust.

Degenerate logic
Perhaps not surprisingly, however, the media noise over the Epstein files is serving chiefly to drown out a more truthful story struggling to emerge.

The same elite that once prized Epstein as its ringmaster is now trying to draw our attention away from its complicity in his crimes, to direct it to a few select individuals — notably in the UK, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Peter Mandelson.

The pair hardly count as sacrificial lambs. Nonetheless, they serve the same purpose: to satiate the growing public appetite for retribution.

Meanwhile, the rest of his circle either deny the well-established evidence of their friendships with Epstein or, if cornered, hastily apologise for a brief lapse in judgment — before scurrying for cover.

Seen in this larger frame, what does it matter if children suffer, either in Gaza or in the mansions of a billionaire?

This is a false reckoning. The Epstein files don’t just show us the dark choices of a few powerful individuals. More significantly, they highlight the degenerate logic of the power structures behind these individuals.

The powerful figures who took Epstein’s Lolita Express to his island; who got “massages” from young, trafficked women and girls; and who casually joked about the abuse these youngsters suffered, are the very same people who quietly helped Israel commit mass slaughter in Gaza — and in some cases, noisily defended its right to do so.

Are we surprised that those who raised not a whisper of opposition to the murder and maiming of tens of thousands of Palestinian children, and the starvation of hundreds of thousands more, were also those who connived in rituals of abuse against children — or condoned such rituals — far closer to home?

These are the people who required anyone hoping to raise their voice in defence of Gaza’s children to spend their time instead condemning Hamas. These are the people who sought at every turn to discredit the mounting death toll of children by attributing it to Gaza’s “Hamas-run Health Ministry”.

These are the people who denied Israel’s targeting of hospitals needed to treat Gaza’s wounded and sick children — and ignored Israel’s mass starvation of the entire population. And these are the people now pretending that Israel’s continuing murder and torture of Gaza’s children amounts to a “peace plan”.

Neoliberalism and Zionism
Set aside his paedophilia for a moment. Epstein was the ultimate personification of the twin corrupting ideologies of neoliberalism and Zionism, which dominate Western societies. That is reason enough why he excelled for so long in their upper reaches.

The ultimate destinations of those ideologies were always going to lead to a genocide in Gaza, and in the years or decades ahead — unless stopped — to a planet-wide nuclear holocaust or climate collapse.

Ordinary men, women and children must be left on the sinking ship, while the billionaires requisition the lifeboats

Epstein could serve as a salutary warning of what is so deeply amiss with the West’s political and financial culture. But the wake-up call he represents is now being smothered in his absence as much as it was in his lifetime.

Neoliberalism is the pursuit of money and power for its own sake, divorced from any higher purpose or social good. Over the last half century, Western societies have been encouraged to venerate the billionaire — soon to be trillionaire — class as the ultimate signifier of economic growth and progress, rather than the ultimate marker of a system that has rotted from within.

Predictably, the super-rich and their hangers-on have been drawn to the advocates of “longtermism”, a movement that justifies the world’s current gross inequalities and injustices — and is resigned to a coming climate and environmental apocalypse as the world’s resources are used up.

Longtermism argues that humanity’s salvation lies not with reorganising our societies politically and economically in the here and now, but with intensifying those inequalities to achieve longer-term success via a class of Nietzschean Ubermensch, or superior beings.

A tiny financial elite needs absolute freedom to amass more wealth in search of the solutions — via tech innovations, of course — to overcome the difficulties of surviving on our fragile planet. The rest of us are an impediment to the super-rich’s ability to steer a course to safety.

Ordinary men, women and children must be left on the sinking ship, while the billionaires requisition the lifeboats. In the words of one of longtermism’s gurus, Nick Bostrom, an Oxford University philosopher, what lies ahead is “a giant massacre for man, a small misstep for mankind”.

To borrow a term from video-gaming, members of the neoliberal elite view the rest of us as non-player characters, or NPCs — the filler characters generated in a game to serve as the background for the actual players. Seen in this larger frame, what does it matter if children suffer, either in Gaza or in the mansions of a billionaire?

No moral outlier
If this sounds a lot like traditional, “white man’s burden” colonialism, updated for a supposedly post-colonial era, that’s because it is. This helps to explain why neoliberalism pairs so comfortably with another depraved colonial ideology, Zionism.

Zionism gained ever-more legitimacy in the aftermath of the Second World War, even as it brashly preserved through the postwar era the depraved logic of the very European ethnic nationalisms that had earlier culminated in Nazism.

Israel, Zionism’s bastard child, not only mirrored Aryan supremacy, but made its own version — Jewish supremacy — respectable. Zionism, like other ugly ethnic nationalisms, demands tribal unity against the Other, values militarism above all else, and constantly seeks territorial expansion, or Lebensraum.

Is it any surprise that it was Israel that, over many decades, reversed the advances of an international legal system set up precisely to prevent a return to the horrors of the Second World War?

Is it any surprise that it was Israel that carried out a genocide in full view of the world — and that the West not only failed to stop it, but actively colluded in the mass slaughter?

Is it any surprise that, as Israel has found it harder to conceal the criminal nature of its enterprise, the West has grown more repressive, more authoritarian in crushing opposition to its project?

Is it any surprise that the weapons systems, surveillance innovations and population-control mechanisms that Israel developed and refined for use against Palestinians make it such a prized ally for a Western billionaire class looking to use the same technological innovations at home?

That is why the Home Secretary of a UK government that threw its weight behind the genocide in Gaza, and defined opposition to it as terrorism, now wants to revive the 18th-century idea of the Panopticon prison, an all-seeing form of incarceration, but in an AI version.

In Shabana Mahmood’s words, her Panopticon would ensure that “the eyes of the state can be on you at all times”.

Nearly two decades ago, it became clear that Jeffrey Epstein was a predator. In recent years, it has become impossible to maintain the idea that he was a moral outlier. He distilled and channelled — through depraved forms of sexual gratification — a wider corrupt culture that believes rules don’t apply to special people, to the chosen, to the Ubermensch.

A handful of his most disposable allies will now be sacrificed to satisfy our hunger for accountability. But don’t be fooled: the Epstein culture is still going strong.

Jonathan Cook is a writer, journalist and self-appointed media critic and author of many books about Palestine. Winner of the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. Republished from the Middle East Eye with the author’s permission.

This article was first published on Café Pacific.

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/07/jonathan-cook-the-criminal-elite-exposed-in-the-epstein-files-are-burying-the-truth/

Questions raised over communication delay during Black Cat ferry grounding

Source: Radio New Zealand

The wrecked catamaran after the incident. Environment Canterbury

Questions are being raised over delays in communication to passengers, after a tourist ferry ran aground in Akaroa Harbour last weekend.

More than 40 people were rescued from the Black Cat Cruises catamaran, when it ran into difficulty at Nikau Palm Valley Bay.

Passenger Chris Friedman wondered why little information was given to passengers immediately after the catamaran struck the seabed.

“Once the crew knew that there was an issue, when the boat started to lift and smoke was coming into the galley, and water was coming in as well, that’s when we put on our life preservers and they did handle it properly,” Freidman said.

“Other than being a little shaken and an adrenaline rush, nobody was injured and, thankfully so, everybody was able to safely evacuate.”

Friedman said he has been told standard maritime practice was to limit communication until the situation was clear to avoid causing panic.

After the incident, passengers were taken to the main wharf at Akaroa.

The Canterbury Regional Council said the wrecked catamaran has split, with its hulls on the seabed and the superstructure on the beach.

The catamaran was also carrying 2240 litres of marine diesel fuel, and about 120 litres of other oils in sealed containers and engines combined when it ran aground.

Friedman said he received a full refund for last week’s trip on Wednesday – which was reasonable.

Meanwhile, Black Cat Cruises announced its tours had resumed normal schedules.

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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/2026/02/07/questions-raised-over-communication-delay-during-black-cat-ferry-grounding/

Lanes blocked, Northern motorway

Source: New Zealand Police


District:

Waitematā

The Northern motorway, near Moir Hill Road, is blocked due to a vehicle being on fire.

One northbound lane remains open as emergency services respond.

Motorists are asked to take alternative routes.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/lanes-blocked-northern-motorway/

Defence News – Royal New Zealand Navy’s HMNZS Canterbury departs for mission to Tokelau

Source: Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN)

Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) multi-role vessel HMNZS Canterbury will arrive into Samoa this weekend for a fuel stop as the ship begins its first South West Pacific maritime operation for 2026, Operation Calypso.

The deployment includes a visit to Tokelau, a realm nation which was last visited by an RNZN ship in 2020.

Making the journey on Canterbury to the atolls of Atafu, Nukunonu and Fakaofo will be the Governor-General of New Zealand Dame Cindy Kiro and her husband Dr Richard Davies, reaffirming the special bonds between the two nations as they mark the centenary of New Zealand administration of Tokelau on 11 February.

Also travelling to Tokelau will be personnel from various New Zealand Government agencies.

Weather agency MetService received a request from Tokelau government agencies for observer training and will be conducting a needs assessment as well as servicing the Automatic Weather Station on Nukunonu.

One New Zealand Police officer will take the opportunity to meet with the Tokelau Chief of Police and other officials, and an officer from the Tokelauan National Disaster Management Office will also be on Canterbury to transit between the atolls.

Once the mission in Tokelau has concluded, Canterbury will return to Apia to disembark some passengers before returning to New Zealand via Raoul Island.

On Raoul Island, Royal New Zealand Air Force NH90 helicopters and flight crew who are on board Canterbury, along with New Zealand Army personnel and the ship’s company, will assist MetService and Earth Sciences New Zealand personnel to carry out upgrade and maintenance tasks of critical weather, tsunami and volcano monitoring equipment and facilities.

Commander Joint Forces New Zealand, Major General Rob Krushka, says the Pacific mission Operation Calypso highlights the capability of the New Zealand Defence Force’s people and platforms.

“Tokelau and Raoul Island are two examples of hard to reach places in our region, where carrying out tasks can be very logistically challenging.

“We’re pleased to be able to support the visit of Her Excellency the Rt Hon Dame Cindy Kiro and New Zealand government agencies to deliver services and equipment to these areas through one of our regular South West Pacific deployments.”

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/06/defence-news-royal-new-zealand-navys-hmnzs-canterbury-departs-for-mission-to-tokelau/

Pet bonds pass 1700 mark in first months of new system

Source: Radio New Zealand

Minister host a pet picnic at Parliament to mark the beginning of new ‘pet bond’ rules for renters, 1 December. RNZ/Craig McCulloch

More than 1700 pet bonds have been lodged with Tenancy Services since a new system allowing landlords to charge an additional bond for pets came into force late last year.

Housing Minister Chris Bishop and Associate Housing Minister Tama Potaka said 1708 pet bonds had been lodged since the changes took effect on 1 December, describing it as an early sign the policy was working.

“It’s great to see such a pawsitive (sic) response,” Bishop said. “It’s a reform that is working as intended, without any ruff (sic) edges.”

The pet bond system allows landlords to charge tenants up to two weeks’ rent as a separate bond, when they agree to a tenant keeping a pet, on top of the standard tenancy bond.

The bonds are lodged, managed and refunded through Tenancy Services in the same way as general bonds.

The changes marked a significant shift in tenancy rules, with landlords now unable to refuse a tenant’s request to keep a pet, unless they have reasonable grounds. Before the reforms, Bishop said many landlords were unwilling to consider tenants with animals at all.

“The reality at the moment is it’s a hard ‘no’ for almost everyone and what we’re doing is shifting that to ‘yes’, unless there are good reasons not to,” he said, when the rules were launched in December.

What constitutes “reasonable grounds” for refusing a pet will ultimately be determined by the Tenancy Tribunal, with tenants still liable for any pet-related damage beyond fair wear and tear.

Potaka said the milestone showed the changes struck the right balance between tenants and landlords.

“This is about giving renters a fair shot at keeping a pet, while making sure landlords have a clear and reliable process,” he said.

The reforms were marked with a pet-themed event at Parliament on the day the rules were launched.

ACT leader David Seymour said the changes were backed by groups such as Pet Refuge, which had highlighted cases where people delayed leaving dangerous situations, because they feared leaving pets behind.

“It’s worth it for that, if nothing else,” Seymour said at the time.

Tenancy Services has updated its guidance and forms to reflect the changes, and allows pet bonds to be lodged, topped up and refunded, alongside general tenancy bonds.

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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/2026/02/07/pet-bonds-pass-1700-mark-in-first-months-of-new-system/

Wellington Phoenix rue lapses in loss to Melbourne Victory

Source: Radio New Zealand

Carlo Armiento of the Wellington Phoenix in action against Melbourne Victory. www.photosport.nz

Wellington Phoenix coach Giancarlo Italiano says some mistakes were “inexcusable” from his Wellington Phoenix in the 3-2 loss to Melbourne Victory.

The Phoenix remain 10th on the standings and four points outside the top six with 10 matches remaining, after gifting the visitors too many good chances in front of a vocal home crowd at Sky Stadium.

Italiano was happy with most of his team’s performance, but felt they defended poorly.

“There were some really inexcusable moments that I’m really annoyed at that were easily preventable,” Italiano said. “We made some silly errors tonight… the second and third goals are terrible to concede.

“I don’t mind if we concede goals where we’re open and expansive, but not when it’s down to simple box defending principles we work on all the time.

“This is not the only game we’ve been in control and we’re just conceding at the wrong time.”

Wellington Phoenix coach Giancarlo Italiano. www.photosport.nz

Wellington also had a late penalty overturned following intervention from the video assistant referee.

Referee Jack Morgan initially deemed first-half goalscorer Carlo Armiento was fouled in the box, but changed his decision, after watching numerous replays, to the chagrin of Italiano.

Victory took the lead in the 10th minute, when centre-back Sebastian Esposito flicked home a near post corner.

Armiento found an equaliser in the 39th minute, but Victory reclaimed the halftime lead with their second shot on target, when Nishan Velupillay took advantage of a favourable deflection.

The visitors went two goals clear with 13 minutes remaining, with substitutes Keegan Jelacic and Louis D’Arrigo combining effectively.

The Phoenix earned a lifeline three minutes later, when Victory turned a right-wing corner into their own net.

Wellington travel to Sydney for Friday’s next match against Western Sydney Wanderers, with re-signed All Whites midfielder Sarpreet Singh is poised to play.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/wellington-phoenix-rue-lapses-in-loss-to-melbourne-victory/

Ally Wollaston sprints to emotional New Zealand road race title

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ally Wollaston represents the FDJ United-Suez team. FDJ-Suez

World Tour professional Ally Wollaston has continued her exceptional start to the year by clinching the New Zealand women’s road race title near Cambridge.

Wollaston used her sprint prowess to kick clear of a group of seven that had broken clear early in the 130km race, comprising 13 laps of a circuit.

Representing her FDJ United-Suez team, she saw off Mikayla Harvey by three seconds, followed by UCI World Esport champion Kate McCarthy in third.

Wollaston made her move on the final climb.

“Taking the jersey back with me to Europe was a really big goal for me,” said an emotional Wollaston.

“It was a tightknit group and no-one was skipping turns. Kudos to the girls who all threw the kitchen sink at it today and I was blown away that I was there for the final two laps.

“I love this loop. It feels like my backyard and I have trained here so much in my career.

“It was such a great environment out racing today.”

The win was Wollaston’s fourth in the last month.

She won the first two stages of the World Tour’s Tour Down Under near Adelaide and followed that up with victory at the one-day Great Ocean Race near Melbourne.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/ally-wollaston-sprints-to-emotional-new-zealand-road-race-title/

Tails wagging as over 1,700 pet bonds lodged

Source: New Zealand Government

More than 1,700 pet bonds have now been lodged with Tenancy Services since the pet bond system started on 1 December 2025, Housing Minister Chris Bishop and Associate Housing Minister Tama Potaka say.

“Pets are part of the family for many Kiwi households, so it’s great to see such a pawsitive response, with 1,708 pet bonds now lodged,” Mr Bishop says.

“The pet bond system is a practical way to make it easier for renters with pets to find a home, while giving landlords confidence there are clear protections in place. It’s a reform that is working as intended, without any ruff edges.”

Mr Potaka says the milestone shows the changes are striking the right balance.

“This is about giving renters a fair shot at keeping a pet, while making sure landlords have a clear and reliable process. It’s encouraging to see the system landing well and getting tails wagging,” Mr Potaka says.

Pet bonds can be lodged and managed through Tenancy Services, alongside the general bond, and are available where a landlord agrees to a tenant keeping a pet.

The pet bond rules include:

  • Tenants must have the landlord’s consent to keep a pet, but landlords can only withhold consent on reasonable grounds.
  • Landlords may require a pet bond of up to two weeks’ rent, in addition to the existing general tenancy bond.
  • Tenants are liable for all pet‑related damage to properties beyond fair wear and tear.
  • Tenancy Services enables lodgment, top‑ups and refunds of pet bonds and provides updated guidance and forms.

“Our Government is focused on a rental market that works for everyone -young renters, whanau, and the people providing homes,” Mr Potaka says.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/tails-wagging-as-over-1700-pet-bonds-lodged/

One year on, Fast-track is building NZ’s future

Source: New Zealand Government

One year on from the Coalition Government’s Fast-track approvals system opening for business, New Zealand is already benefiting from faster approvals, lower costs, and real infrastructure getting underway, RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop and Regional Development Minister Shane Jones say.

“Fast-track was set up to fix a problem New Zealanders know all too well. Important projects were stuck for years in delay, buried in bureaucracy, with costs spiralling and communities missing out,” Mr Bishop says.

“Twelve months on, the results speak for themselves. Fast-track is fixing the basics of how we approve infrastructure, and building the foundations for New Zealand’s future growth.

“The first project approved under Fast-track, the Ports of Auckland wharf extension, took just 111 days from when the application was assessed as complete and in-scope by officials, to approval. Without fast-track, the same project was expected to take around five years for a decision.

“That difference is not bureaucratic trivia. It means jobs are created sooner, economic growth is unlocked earlier, and infrastructure is delivered when it is actually needed.

“Fast-track combines multiple approval processes into a single, integrated pathway, while maintaining environmental safeguards through independent expert panels and robust approval conditions.

“Fast-track is not a rubber stamp. It is about applying the same environmental rigour more efficiently, so good projects can get on with delivering.

“One year in, it’s clear to see that Fast-track is already building serious momentum.

“Nine projects have been approved so far, with another nine expected to receive decisions before the end of March.

“The nine approved projects include a new wharf and cruise ship terminal in Auckland, four housing developments across the country, three mining and quarrying projects, and one renewable energy project.

“Over their lifetimes, the projects approved so far are expected to deliver nearly 2,000 new homes, produce more than 260 million tonnes of aggregate, support thousands of jobs, and contribute billions to the economy.”

“Coming down the pipeline we have another 17 projects currently before expert panels, with their decisions expected in the coming months.

“In total, there are 76 projects currently progressing through the Fast-track process, including referral applications being considered, or have been referred by the Ministers, and substantive applications having their application assessed for completeness, or being considered by an expert panel.”

Mr Jones says the successful implementation of the legislation shows criticism was unfounded, the obstacles thrown up by opponents overcome, and the guardrails put in place worked.

“I am proud that this Coalition Government has created a process that is the envy of countries around the world. Those companies that have successfully gone through it have noted the time and money they have saved as a result. That’s time and money better spent on growing our economy and creating jobs.”

Fast-track by the numbers:

  • 9 projects approved by expert panels.
  • 17 projects before panels for consideration.
  • 149 projects are listed in Schedule 2 of the Fast-track Approvals Act, meaning they can apply for Fast-track approval.
  • 76 projects are currently progressing through the Fast-track process.
  • 26 projects have been referred to Fast-track by Ministers so far. Six of these have lodged applications and are in the substantive process. The remaining four now have two years to apply for the substantive Fast-track approvals stage.
  • On average, it has taken 128 days for decisions on substantive applications from when officials determine an application is complete and in-scope.

Fast-track projects approved by expert panels:

  • Bledisloe North Wharf and Fergusson North Berth Extension [Infrastructure]
  • Drury Metropolitan Centre – Consolidated Stages 1 and 2 [Housing]
  • Drury Quarry Expansion – Sutton Block [Mining/Quarrying]
  • Kings Quarry Expansion – Stages 2 and 3 [Mining/Quarrying]
  • Maitahi Village [Housing]
  • Milldale – Stages 4C and 10 to 13 [Housing]
  • Rangitoopuni [Housing]
  • Tekapo Power Scheme – Applications for Replacement Resource Consents [Renewable energy]
  • Waihi North [Mining/Quarrying]

 

Projects currently before expert panels:

  • Arataki project
  • Ashbourne
  • Ayrburn Screen Hub
  • Green Steel
  • Haldon Solar Farm
  • Homestead Bay
  • Kaimai Hydro-Electric Power Scheme
  • Pound Road Industrial Development
  • Ryans Road Industrial Development
  • Southland Wind Farm Project
  • Sunfield Masterplanned Community
  • Takitimu North Link – Stage 2
  • Taranaki VTM Project
  • The Point Solar Farm
  • Waitaha Hydro
  • Waitākere District Court – New Courthouse Project
  • Wellington International Airport Southern Seawall Renewal

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/one-year-on-fast-track-is-building-nzs-future/

Country Life: Good vibes in the greenhouse

Source: Radio New Zealand

Dr Rachael Horner of the Bioeconomy Science Institute was tasked with counting the tiny whitefly eggs Craig Robertson / Bioeconomy Science Institute

In orchards and glasshouses around the motu growers make use of integrated pest management – a series of tools to minimise the impact of pest insects.

These can include bio warfare, growing pest-resistant crops and using chemical sprays.

But might there be more new tools to add?

Many pest insects communicate using vibrations and the study of this communication is called biotremology.

Researchers from the Bioeconomy Science Institute are investigating whether they can apply what they know about biotremology to use vibrations to disrupt pest insects in New Zealand.

Our Changing World‘s Claire Concannon went along to the tomato growing greenhouse where the tools had been tested.

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Pete Mundy has allowed scientists to use his tomato-growing operation as a research trial site. Claire Concannon

Greenhouse whitefly is a pest with a preference for tomato plants. Craig Robertson / Bioeconomy Science Institute

Dr Lloyd Stringer, entomologist at the Bioeconomy Science Institute, is leading the research. Craig Robertson / Bioeconomy Science Institute

The trial’s finished now and they didn’t find a big difference between the control and treatment areas, although there was a trend towards lower egg laying in the plots being treated.

In the next trial they plan to play the vibration signal more frequently to see if that makes a difference.

Claire Concannon dives deeper into biotremology on the latest episode of Our Changing World.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/country-life-good-vibes-in-the-greenhouse/

Country Life: A Bit of Route 66 on State Highway 8

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kirsty Burrows winning pose for “Miss Pin Up” Kirsty Burrows/Kris Gallagher

For as long as I’ve been around, the township of Burkes Pass has had a prominent place in my life.

With a population of less than 100, it is the gateway to the Southern Lakes and Mackenzie Country.

It is not as grand as the Lindis, Haast, Lewis or Arthur’s Passes but tens of thousands of tourists have passed through there.

The pass, on SH8 and named after Irish bullock driver Michael Burke, rises to 709 metres and opens up the whole of the Mackenzie Basin.

My father Dave Leishman grew up there as his parents were publicans at the Burkes Pass Hotel.

The original hotel at Burkes Pass South Canterbury. Dave Taylor

When his father died tragically, in 1932, in a drowning accident on Lake Alexandrina, Dave was shuffled off to boarding school in Timaru. He was nine years old.

His mother, Myrtle, was 29 when she became sole publican of the hotel for the next thirty years.

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I remember hearing stories about grandmother Myrtle being quite a force.

The pub was a very popular place for the local young farmers to come in after a hard day on the land.

Apparently she would always insist there was a designated driver, who’d be on free raspberry-and-lemonade all night, so all his mates could drink while that one guy remained sober.

She’d keep an eye on him and make sure he was fit to drive his mates home – forward thinking for the 1950s.

The hotel is no longer there at Burkes Pass. It burned down in the mid ’90s and the owner at the time, Dave Taylor, still lives on the property having built a house on the site using part of the hotel ruins.

The remains of the Burkes Pass Hotel fire of 1994. Dave Taylor

Taylor decided if he couldn’t rebuild the hotel he would build a mini village instead.

He has done just that and named it Three Creeks, the original European name for Burkes Pass. The village area is at the confluence of Burgess Creek, the source of the Opihi River and Paddy’s Market Creek.

“I started to rebuild it, and yeah, [it] ended up turning into a shop instead,” he said.

“The original accommodation wing is our accommodation now, so we just added on to that and carried on.”

As you drive towards the southern lakes of Tekapo and Pukaki, you can’t miss Three Creeks at Burkes Pass.

It’s part museum, part store with a coffee cart perfectly positioned with the weary traveller in mind.

The replica 1950s petrol station at Three Creeks, Burkes Pass, South Canterbury. Mark Leishman

Three Creeks village has a 1950s Americana theme. It’s very eye catching and has become a rest stop for tourists and locals alike on the road to the southern lakes.

It feels like a section of the United States’ famous Route 66 has been transported here to South Canterbury.

Taylor confesses he has always been a hoarder.

“I had a museum when I was a kid. I was 10 years old and had a tree hut, and it was full of all the old stuff.

“I used to find everybody would give me stuff and so I’ve been collecting old stuff since then.”

RNZ Country Life producer Mark Leishman with Three Creeks owner Dave Taylor at Burkes Pass. Jo Raymond

He has also been making wooden outdoor furniture there for 20 years.

“We mill our own macrocarpa and make all our own furniture. It’s good, heavy stuff that doesn’t blow away in the wind.”

He has a workshop on site, with five workers creating outdoor furniture, tiny houses and traditional shepherd’s huts on wheels, complete with kitchenettes, bathrooms and solar power.

Arguably Three Creeks’ most glamourous personage is Taylor’s partner, Kirsty Burrows, who has immersed herself in the world of vintage dress.

Burrows is a vision of colour, with flaming orange hair and vibrant dresses and, like her partner, she has been an inveterate collector of all things vintage from a young age.

Kirsty Burrows at Three Creeks Burkes Pass, South Canterbury. Kirsty Burrows/Kris Gallagher

“I did rock and roll dancing and swing dancing for years, and grew up with my grandparents, so the vintage culture was always there, and the music.”

Her artful dressing and posing in front of the replica Texaco gas station at Three Creeks recently won her an international pin-up title.

“It’s sort of like that classic era that is kind of timeless, when you think of post World War Two, Betty Grable and Betty Boop.

“The fashion is really quite, quite timeless, we think, anyway, so you could wear it till you’re 80. Doesn’t matter what your age or body shape is.”

Burrows says there is quite a market for the dresses and it gets quite addictive.

“I’ve probably got 70 dresses, but then you’ve got your hats, your gloves, your handbags, your jewellery, make-up for Africa, it’s a lot of fun,” she told Country Life.

“We all just like playing dress up, and have never really grown out of it.

“My hair usually gets the most attention, but people just just like it and say you’ve brightened up my day with your colour and and they love it.”

For Burrows, being immersed in a bygone age with others means collective self esteem.

“These women really empower each other, and they lift each other up.

“They go out there full of confidence, especially the young girls, and learn that you don’t have to be a size eight to be beautiful.

“And these girls go out there and they shake their stuff and they just look amazing, and they own it, and that’s what it’s all about.”

West of Burkes Pass you’ll find the bullock wagon trail heading up the pass, and the cemetery.

Burkes Pass cemetery. Cosmo Kentish-Barnes

It is rich in history, too, and graves include those of CWF Hamilton, the local farmer who invented the jet boat.

Many of the gravestones are made out of local boulders and mark the burial sites of international climbers who died on our mountains.

“The mountains are here calling and I must go,” one plaque reads.

Another grave belongs to Kenneth Payne, an Australian geologist who loved the New Zealand mountains, and who tragically died in 1986 trying to arrest his companion’s fall on Mount Cook.

His gravestone includes a brass-mounted ice pick, some rope and rosary beads.

“He came to New Zealand for the love of the mountains, and he will remain here forever,” his plaque reads.

The gravestone of a fallen climber. Mark Leishman

And on a personal note, my dear grandfather who I never met, is buried there.

David Mowat McGregor Leishman, the local publican, died in 1932, aged 41.

He had a heart attack while fishing one day at Lake Alexandrina and fell in the very, very cold waters of the lake and drowned.

He has been resting in the Burkes Pass cemetery ever since and our extended family all love to pay him a visit whenever we are passing this beautiful part of the world.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/country-life-a-bit-of-route-66-on-state-highway-8/

Stanley Waipouri’s murderer Ashley Arnopp remains behind bars after parole hearing

Source: Radio New Zealand

Stanley Waipouri was beaten to death in a probable homophobic attack at his Rangitīkei Street flat on 23 December 2006. SUPPLIED

  • Teen murderer remains behind bars after parole hearing
  • Ashley Arnopp said to be struggling with his attitude and relationships with others
  • Parole Board says questions about grisly 2006 murder remain.

Warning: This story contains details some readers may find upsetting.

A man who has spent almost two decades in prison for a gruesome murder that was likely a homophobic attack is struggling with a poor attitude behind bars.

Ashley Arnopp, along with Andre Gilling, beat Stanley Waipouri to death in his Palmerston North flat in December 2006.

Arnopp was 19 at the time and Gilling 17.

Arnopp was released from prison in June 2023, but was back behind bars six months later.

“His relationship with Corrections fell apart and he used drugs,” said a Parole Board progress report, released to RNZ.

Arnopp last appeared before the board in November, but he did not apply for release.

He was on the waiting list for a prison programme – exact details of this were withheld from the report – and his prison security classification was low.

However, the board was told he was no longer in Whanganui Prison’s inner self-care unit and he continued to have “issues in his relationship with others”.

When board members discussed this with Arnopp he admitted to, in the past, being sensitive to criticism.

“He said that this had led to him getting upset, angry and yelling,” the report said.

“He knows what physical signs to look out for when this is building up. He said inner self care became a high-risk situation for him.”

The week before the parole hearing Arnopp had an altercation with another prisoner, which Arnopp said was a miscommunication involving banter.

“He said that the banter related to comments made about the other prisoner’s eating habits, which may have upset him.

“The other prisoner claims to have been intimidated…

“[Arnopp] accepted that his attitude has been poor lately, and that is something he wants to work on.”

Arnopp had a history of poor behaviour in prison. In 2011, he was convicted of assaulting a fellow inmate.

The board also discussed Waipouri’s murder.

“There do seem to be still elements of that offending that nobody seems to understand,” the board report said.

“This may be something that Mr Arnopp still needs to work on with a psychologist.”

Despite being told psychological work with Arnopp was considered finished, the board thought more would be useful, especially given he was considered high risk of reoffending.

After the November hearing it was likely Arnopp would apply to transfer prisons so he could be close to the property he would be released to if granted parole. A transfer would allow him to have guided releases in the meantime.

Arnopp would next meet with the Parole Board in November.

Gilling was released on parole in 2024 and last year was making good progress, according to a report from a progress hearing with the board.

He was working, where he was well regarded, was taking driving lessons, and was enjoying outdoor activities such as tramping.

But, he had faced challenges. In January last year he drank alcohol, in breach of his release conditions.

Gilling told the board it was his first drink in 17 years, but he was again committed to stay away from alcohol.

On 23 December 2006, Gilling and Arnopp were found at the blood-spattered scene of Waipouri’s murder. They had drugs and alcohol in their systems.

Waipouri suffered head, neck and chest injuries, having been beaten for more than an hour in an attack likely motivated by homophobia.

The tip of his penis was missing, an ear was mutilated and there were bite marks on his nipples, although in court the question of cannibalism remained unresolved.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/stanley-waipouris-murderer-ashley-arnopp-remains-behind-bars-after-parole-hearing/

Preventable explosion highlights risk of overlooking simple fixes

Source: Worksafe New Zealand

A gas explosion that burned a forklift driver offers a stark lesson for businesses across all industries, WorkSafe New Zealand says, following a court decision in the case.

The forklift caught fire in March 2024, igniting LPG that was being released from condemned cylinders at Tank Test in Papatoetoe. Several 9kg gas bottles exploded, fuelling a significant fire. The driver was hospitalised with burns and spent nine weeks off work.

The scene at Tank Test in Papatoetoe in March 2024.

In sentencing Tank Test, Judge Gus Andrée Wiltens described the hazard as “clear and obvious”. He noted the company could have eliminated the risk at no cost by ensuring forklift and degassing operations never happened at the same time.

“This case isn’t just about flammable gases. It’s about a pattern we see across industries,” says WorkSafe principal inspector, David Worsfold.

“Businesses may identify risks but can fail to follow through with proper controls. They have procedures but don’t ensure they’re working in practice.”

Every business, regardless of industry, can learn from what went wrong at Tank Test:

  • Don’t mistake having a procedure for having safety. Tank Test had procedures. But procedures that aren’t monitored and enforced are just paper.
  • Simple solutions often work best. The company could have prevented this explosion by changing when certain tasks happened. No complex engineering. No massive investment. Just better planning and discipline.
  • If you can see the risk, eliminate it. Tank Test identified the hazard but didn’t act decisively enough. The Court heard that after WorkSafe intervened, the company bought a flame-proof forklift. That same decision, made earlier, would have prevented the explosion.
  • Certification isn’t supervision. Tank Test had obtained a Location Compliance Certificate less than two months before the incident. Compliance with standards doesn’t replace day-to-day management of safety.

“The lesson here transcends any single industry,” says David Worsfold.

“Whether you’re working with flammable gases, operating machinery, managing heights, or dealing with any workplace hazard, the principle is the same: identify the risk, implement controls that actually work, and make sure people follow them.”

“This worker ended up in hospital because his employer didn’t take simple steps to eliminate an obvious risk. Every business leader should ask themselves: where are we making the same mistake?”

The case highlights a critical gap WorkSafe sees repeatedly: the space between knowing what should be done and actually doing it.

“The question every business needs to answer is ‘are our safety procedures actually keeping our workers safe?’ If you can’t honestly say yes, it’s time to close that gap.”

WorkSafe’s role is to influence businesses and workers to meet their responsibilities to keep people healthy and safe. Manufacturing is a priority sector for WorkSafe, as injury rates in manufacturing have remained stubbornly high over the past decade.

Try WorkSafe’s improvement toolkit for businesses, SafePlus

Background

  • Tank Test Laboratories 2017 Limited was sentenced in a reserved decision of the Manukau District Court.
  • Judge Gus Andrée Wiltens imposed a fine of $300,000 and reparations of $5,000
  • Tank Test was charged under sections 36(1)(a) and 48(1) and (2)(c) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015
    • Being a PCBU, having a duty to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health and safety of workers who work for the PCBU (including the victim), while the workers are at work in the business or undertaking, failed to comply with that duty, and that failure exposed any individual to a risk of death or serious injury.

Media contact details

For more information you can contact our Media Team using our media request form. Alternatively:

Email: media@worksafe.govt.nz

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/preventable-explosion-highlights-risk-of-overlooking-simple-fixes/

Marty Supreme is sociopathic in his pursuit of glory. Why do we want him to win?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Marty Supreme is a frenetic tale inspired by Marty Reisman, the charismatic American table tennis champion of the 1950s.

Charged by Timothée Chalamet’s electric lead performance – alongside a stellar supporting cast (including Gwyneth Paltrow), and director Josh Safdie’s signature, anxiety-inducing aesthetic – the film captures a young man’s all-or-nothing quest for greatness.

Marty Mauser is a morally ambiguous protagonist with a sociopathic, self-obsessed pursuit of glory. But Safdie invites the audience to champion his quest. In this, Marty emerges as a particularly compelling entry into Hollywood’s longstanding tradition of unlikable heroes.

Timothée Chalamet in Marty Supreme.

A24

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/07/marty-supreme-is-sociopathic-in-his-pursuit-of-glory-why-do-we-want-him-to-win/

Country Life: Tuapeka Mouth Ferry celebrates 130 years

Source: Radio New Zealand

Punt operator Tom Jones and dog Yoda. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

Near where the muddy green of the Tuapeka meets the turquoise blue of the Clutha River there once stood a “bustling settlement”.

Back in the early days of Otago’s gold rush, Tuapeka Mouth – about 30 kilometres north-west of Balclutha – had houses on either side and at least two, maybe even three pubs, according to Tom Jones.

With no bridge, those looking to cross from one side of the river to the other had only one option – the Tuapeka Mouth Ferry.

“There used to be a lot of these crossings back in the day, gold mining days, early days of discovery.

“Between the sea and Roxburgh, there was 15 of them, so before bridges you’d float your way across,” Jones told Country Life.

“This is the last one in the southern hemisphere.”

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Jones has operated the ferry crossing for the past six years, taking people – and cars – from one side of the river to the other.

Though this is not the 1896 original, not much has changed in terms of how it functions, he explained.

“We’ve got two boats with wooden platform on the top.

“It harnesses the energy in the river in the same way that a yacht harnesses the wind in a sail, so you’ve got to turn on an angle to get any push forward or sideways as in the case of this.

“There’s a main cable upstream to stop it from being pushed downstream, and, as I say, it turns on an angle and the energy hits one side of the bow and pushes it, shimmies basically sideways.”

This is the southern hemisphere’s only still operational river ferry. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

The Tuapeka Mouth Ferry has been running for 130 years. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

The vessel requires conditions to be just right to operate though. Too much wind, the river being too high or too low means it can’t run.

When Country Life paid a visit the Clutha River was high and flowing fast – too fast to safely operate the punt – after a few days of rain.

New Zealand’s largest river in terms of volume, it normally operates with a flow of about 500 cubic metres per second but that day the flow had more than doubled.

Tom Jones has been operating the punt for six years. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

Conditions have to be just right to cross – the river can’t be too high or too low, and the wind can’t be too strong. Gianina Schwanecke / Country Life

The ferry is still used by locals but has also increasingly become popular with tourists in the post-Covid era, capturing a unique part of New Zealand’s history.

“There’s very little else here in Tuapeka Mouth itself.

“It’s in the middle of nowhere, but it’s something really worth discovering,” Jones said.

He estimates he does about 60 to 70 crossings each week in optimum conditions.

As a “public utility”, the ferry ride is free and it operates from 10am until 2pm most days – except for Christmas Day, Good Friday and Anzac morning.

Learn more:

  • Find out more about the Tuapeka Mouth Ferry here

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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/2026/02/07/country-life-tuapeka-mouth-ferry-celebrates-130-years/