Anaplan Launches AWS Data Center in Singapore to Enhance Global Reach and Support Local Enterprises

Source: Media Outreach

New location expands company’s global infrastructure, while offering faster data processing, robust security measures and regulatory compliance

SINGAPORE – Media OutReach Newswire – 23 February 2026 – Anaplan, the global leader in AI‑driven scenario planning and analysis, today announced the launch of its new Amazon Web Services data center in Singapore. This strategic expansion is designed to accelerate digital transformation and empower businesses in Southeast Asia with advanced artificial intelligence capabilities for real-time planning and decision-making.

The new data center will significantly enhance Anaplan’s global infrastructure and offer faster data processing, improved security and regulatory compliance. These features are essential for protecting sensitive information and meeting local data sovereignty requirements, which is especially critical for industries such as public sector and financial services.

“The launch of Anaplan on AWS in Singapore represents a strategic milestone and reinforces our shared commitment to customers across Asia-Pacific,” said Carol Potts, general manager for North America ISV sales at AWS.

By leveraging the Anaplan platform, businesses in the region will gain access to leading AI and machine learning technologies, enabling them to:

  • Optimize planning processes: AI-driven insights will help businesses make more informed, data-driven decisions in real-time, streamlining operations and improving efficiency.
  • Enhance data security: The data center ensures that data remains within Singapore, adhering to local regulations.
  • Drive AI innovation: Backed by a reliable and secure infrastructure, companies can scale their operations by embedding cutting-edge AI technology directly into cross-functional planning processes and workflows, empowering teams to move faster, make smarter decisions, and stay ahead of the competition.

“We are delighted to bring the Anaplan platform, including our new suite of role-based AI agents, to Singapore and the broader Southeast Asia region,” said Amit Bagga, managing director, APAC, at Anaplan. “Data sovereignty is a stringent requirement for our clients, and our new location ensures that their data remains within Singapore, adhering to local regulations. Plus, with Anaplan Intelligence, businesses can harness the power of AI to optimize and unify their finance, workforce, sales, and supply chain planning processes, gain deeper insights and make strategic decisions with confidence.”

This regional addition marks another milestone in Anaplan’s $500 million innovation roadmap, aimed at expanding the company’s global reach and supporting local businesses with the latest AI-driven planning and analytics technology. The company has also made other data center expansions in the Asia-Pacific region, including in India, Indonesia, and Australia, further solidifying its commitment to the region.

Hashtag: #Anaplan

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

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/23/anaplan-launches-aws-data-center-in-singapore-to-enhance-global-reach-and-support-local-enterprises/

Trad To Tech: Craftsmanship Growing Inside the Most Beautiful Homes as MIFF Leads the Way

Source: Media Outreach

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA – Media OutReach Newswire – 23 February 2026 – At the Malaysian International Furniture Fair (MIFF), a master craftsperson brings a solid wood tabletop to fruition, overseeing finish, joinery and the quiet patience required to get it right. Just steps away, a sleek, minimalist booth hums softly, where beds adjust at the touch of a button, sofas glide into position, mechanisms hidden so precisely they seem to disappear. There is no divide between old and new here.

Craftsman at work

Instead, MIFF, taking place from 4 to 7 March this year across two major venues at the Malaysia International Trade & Exhibition Centre (MITEC) and World Trade Centre Kuala Lumpur (WTCKL), unfolds like a conversation across generations, where chisels and circuit boards share the same floor. Here, traditional woodwork brands stand confidently beside smart home piece creators. It is in this unexpected harmony that MIFF reveals its true character: a place where craftsmanship has not been replaced by technology but expanded by it.

In today’s most beautiful homes, craftsmanship no longer belongs exclusively to the past. It lives quietly alongside technology—coded, calibrated, and refined—shaping furniture that feels both deeply human and unmistakably contemporary. At this year’s edition,this evolution takes center stage, positioning the fair not just as a trade marketplace, but as a living narrative of how tradition and innovation now coexist.

Ms Kelie Lim, General Manager of MIFF 2026, says, “Craftsmanship isn’t being lost to technology. It’s evolving, with technology now working alongside the maker rather than replacing the hand. At MIFF, this evolution plays out in real time—positioning the fair not just as a trade marketplace, but as a living narrative of how tradition and innovation now coexist.”

Craftsmanship in the 21st Century

In modern homes, where space is fluid and functionality is paramount, this new craftsmanship answers contemporary needs without sacrificing beauty. The result is furniture that works harder, lasts longer and feels effortless, an evolution of craft shaped by modern life.

This shift is evident in the work of manufacturers like, among others, SMART TOP, where advanced engineering meets refined furniture-making. Craftsmanship is expressed through precision mechanisms, seamless movement and invisible intelligence built into everyday living pieces. Automation does not replace skill; it amplifies it. Human expertise guides design, ergonomics and material selection, while technology ensures consistency, durability and scale.

Cultural Identity as a Design Constant

Yet, as technology advances, identity remains essential. Across Southeast Asia, furniture traditions are inseparable from cultural expression. You see them woven into motifs, proportions and materials passed down through generations. Among other exhibitors at MIFF 2026 are brands like TANGGAM that demonstrate how cultural heritage can remain a constant, even as production methods evolve.

TANGGAM’s work reflects a deep respect for regional craftsmanship, translating traditional forms and philosophies into contemporary furniture suited for global interiors. Subtle references to vernacular architecture, local materials and artisanal detailing are preserved, not through nostalgia, but through thoughtful reinterpretation. Here, technology becomes a bridge rather than a break. Digital tools allow heritage aesthetics to be refined, repeated and shared across markets, ensuring that cultural identity is not diluted by scale, but protected by it.

Embracing Tech to Preserve the Past

Perhaps nowhere is this balance more intimate than in the realm of rest. Sleep, one of the most personal human experiences, has become a new frontier for craft and technology.

Luxury Sleep exemplifies how advanced systems can preserve traditional values of comfort, care, and well-being.By integrating smart sleep technology like its AI BedMatch system developed with scientists at the Sleep to Live® Institute with meticulous material selection and ergonomic design, Luxury Sleep elevates an age-old craft into a future-ready experience. Sensors, adaptive support systems and data-driven comfort do not remove the human element; they respond to it. The craft lies in understanding the body, just as artisans once understood wood or fabric. Only now, the tools are digital.

MIFF 2026: Where Trad Meets Tech

What unites these stories is MIFF itself. In 2026, the fair emerges as a stage where craftsmanship is neither romanticised nor mechanised, but redefined. Exhibitors reflect a shared understanding: the future of furniture lies in collaboration, between hand and machine, heritage and innovation, culture and commerce.

MIFF 2026 is not simply showcasing products. It is presenting a philosophy of making, one where technology safeguards tradition, and craftsmanship evolves to meet the demands of modern living. Inside the world’s most beautiful homes, this new craft is already at work. And at MIFF, its future is being shaped.

The 32nd edition of the Malaysian International Furniture Fair (MIFF) 2026 will be held from 4 to 7 March 2026, in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, across two venues: the Malaysia International Trade & Exhibition Centre (MITEC) and the World Trade Centre Kuala Lumpur (WTCKL). Be part of Southeast Asia’s largest furniture trade show from 9:30am to 6:00pm (March 4-6) and 9:30 am – 5:00 pm (March 7). For more information, please visit www.miff.com.my

For images, please click here.

http://www.miff.com.my/

Hashtag: #MIFF2026

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

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/23/trad-to-tech-craftsmanship-growing-inside-the-most-beautiful-homes-as-miff-leads-the-way/

Keeper Security Expands Relationship With Ingram Micro to Broaden Availability of Privileged Access Management in Singapore

Source: Media Outreach

Expansion strengthens cybersecurity resilience by delivering a modern, scalable privileged access solution

SINGAPORE – Media OutReach Newswire – 23 February 2026 – Keeper Security, the leading zero-trust and zero-knowledge Privileged Access Management (PAM) platform, is expanding its relationship with Ingram Micro to increase the availability of KeeperPAM® in Singapore. Through Ingram Micro’s extensive distribution network, Managed Service Providers (MSPs), resellers and enterprises across the country can now more easily adopt Keeper’s unified, cloud-based PAM platform to strengthen access controls, support regulatory compliance and defend against advanced cyber threats.

The expansion aligns with Singapore’s national focus on strengthening cyber resilience and digital trust, supporting organisations operating under frameworks such as the Cybersecurity Act and the Cyber Essentials and Cyber Trust marks. With increasing emphasis on compliance, governance and operational resilience across sectors including finance, manufacturing and critical infrastructure, modern, scalable PAM solutions help manage privileged access more securely while reducing cybersecurity risk.

Through this relationship, Ingram Micro will make KeeperPAM widely available to its Singapore-based network of resellers, system integrators and MSPs. Leveraging Ingram Micro’s scale and expertise in cloud and cybersecurity distribution, the collaboration enables organisations across industries to deploy Keeper’s modern PAM platform quickly and effectively, while reducing complexity and administrative overhead.

As a unified, cloud-native solution, powered by AI, KeeperPAM integrates password, secrets and session management with zero-trust network access and remote browser isolation. Designed to simplify privileged access security while improving enterprise-wide visibility, the platform enables organisations of all sizes to enforce least-privilege policies, secure third-party access and maintain oversight of privileged accounts and activity. KeeperPAM meets globally recognised compliance standards, including SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001, 27017 and 27018.

“As identity-based attacks continue to escalate, organisations need privileged access security that is both powerful and easy to deploy,” said Scott Unger, Director of Global Channel Account Management, Keeper Security. “By expanding our partnership with Ingram Micro in Singapore, we’re empowering the local partner ecosystem to deliver enterprise-grade PAM at scale, helping customers strengthen security, improve visibility and support compliance across their environments.”

“As businesses accelerate cloud adoption, managing privileged access securely and efficiently has become a top priority,” said Eunice Lau, Executive Managing Director, Ingram Micro. “Keeper’s zero-trust PAM platform aligns well with this need, enabling our partners to help customers reduce complexity, strengthen access controls and gain real-time visibility across their environments.”

Built on a zero-trust and zero-knowledge security model, KeeperPAM secures, manages and audits privileged accounts using advanced capabilities such as Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) and Just-In-Time (JIT) access. Real-time monitoring, session recording and detailed audit trails provide transparency into privileged activity, helping organisations detect anomalies quickly and maintain compliance.

KeeperPAM addresses the full spectrum of privileged access use cases, including:

Password management – Securely store, manage and rotate passwords, passkeys and confidential files

Secrets management – Protect API keys, CI/CD pipelines and developer credentials while eliminating secrets sprawl

Session management – Enable passwordless, audited remote access to infrastructure through a standard web browser

Database access – Control privileged database access across on-premises and cloud environments using UI, CLI or tunneling tools

Remote browser isolation – Secure access to internal web applications and admin portals while preventing data exfiltration

SSH key management – Protect SSH keys with encrypted storage, automated rotation and privileged session controls

AI threat detection – Automatically analyse user activity and terminate sessions when suspicious activity is detected

Admin console – Centralise user management, policy enforcement, identity provider integration and activity monitoring

Control plane – Orchestrate privileged access workflows, session activity and enforcement policies across the environment

Ingram Micro’s security expertise and Xvantage digital experience platform further support the deployment of KeeperPAM, enabling MSPs and IT teams to integrate privileged access controls into existing environments with minimal disruption.

This expanded relationship underscores Keeper’s continued investment in the APAC region and its commitment to making enterprise-grade, zero-trust privileged access security accessible to organisations of all sizes.

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

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/23/keeper-security-expands-relationship-with-ingram-micro-to-broaden-availability-of-privileged-access-management-in-singapore/

Mounjaro now available for weight loss – but it comes with hefty price tag

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mounjaro is now available by prescription in some New Zealand pharmacies. Christoph Reichwein / dpa Picture-Alliance via AFP

A newly approved weight loss drug could improve competition but will still be costly for patients, an obesity doctor says.

Mounjaro is a self-administered injection which received regulatory approval for the treatment of type 2 diabetes and chronic weight management in December last year.

It is now available by prescription in some New Zealand pharmacies.

Obesity doctor Dr Chaey Leem told Morning Report the drug targeted two hormones when Wegovy, a weight-loss medication already on the market, only targeted one.

“You can kind of think of the medication unlocking two doors instead of one in your body’s metabolism,” he said.

Leem said that increased the drug efficacy.

“At the maximum doses of Mounjaro, patients on average have lost 22 percent of the initial weight in the trail, compared to 15 percent on the maximum dose of Wegovy.”

The cost of the drug was a barrier for some patients, he said.

Mounjaro is pricier than Wegovy, ranging from $430 to nearly $900 a month.

“Competition will hopefully help improve the situation for many patients, however, in fact there still might be a long way to go,” Leem said.

“The drugs are very expensive, and I do feel for the patients who need it the most but aren’t able to afford a really great option that’s available.”

Leem said there was a lot of stigma against obesity, which he hoped could be reduced through treatment.

“Once we have the tools to fight them and treat patients, hopefully the stigma towards obesity goes down, and in turn we can look into other options like bariatric surgery, which is usually much more cost effective from a public health perspective,” he said.

Leem had patients he believed would benefit from the new medication, if price weren’t a factor.

“There’s risks and benefits to everything, but for the many, many patients, the benefits greatly outweigh the risks that the medications can impose.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/23/mounjaro-now-available-for-weight-loss-but-it-comes-with-hefty-price-tag/

‘War orphans’ express gratitude to Chinese foster parents

Source: Media Outreach

BEIJING, CHINA – Media OutReach Newswire – 21 February 2026 – Organized by the Japanese Repatriates and Japan-China Friendship Association, a delegation of 90 Japanese “war orphans,” along with their descendants and family members, visited Harbin in northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province on September 11, 2025, for a cultural performance. The event served as an opportunity for participants to convey heartfelt gratitude to their Chinese foster parents who raised them, while also promoting messages of peace and historical reflection through their artistic expressions.

The association is dedicated to fostering mutual understanding and friendship between Japan and China. Its mission includes supporting the social welfare of Japanese “war orphans” left behind in China—individuals who endured significant hardship during the post-war turmoil and are still facing various challenges today. The organization also seeks to preserve and transmit the memories of these experiences to younger generations and to deepen bilateral exchanges.

Following Japan’s surrender in 1945, more than 4,000 Japanese children were left behind in China and raised by Chinese families. Now advanced in age, the group has decided to undertake what they call their final “gratitude tour,” which coincides with the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the World Anti-Fascist War. Since 2009, these orphans have been traveling to China every few years to acknowledge the kindness of their Chinese foster parents and other benefactors who supported them.

Sumie Ikeda, 81, head of the association of friendship of repatriates from China, is herself one of the Japanese orphans left behind in China. In an exclusive interview with CNS, she spoke in the fluent northeastern Chinese dialect of her childhood, reminiscing about her upbringing in Heilongjiang. “How could I be Japanese?” she reflected, her early identity obscured by the war’s aftermath. Separated from her biological family as an infant, she was raised in Mudanjiang, Heilongjiang Province. “My foster mother was truly an exceptional Chinese woman,” Ikeda said, noting that memories of her foster mother’s strength continue to sustain her.

A pivotal moment occurred when she was eight and local Chinese authorities identified her Japanese heritage. The words of her foster mother, who insisted “This child is mine,” left an indelible mark on Ikeda. As an adult, her search for biological roots in 1980s Japan ended in hardship and betrayal, leaving her destitute and suicidal until rescued by the Chinese consulate.

“My first life was given by my birth parents; my second by my adoptive parents,” she recounted. “In the most difficult times, it was always the Chinese people who reached out to us.”

Ikeda’s story reflects a broader historical experience. Official Japanese records recognize 2,818 such “war orphans.” Their lives, Ikeda stresses, are a living indictment of the catastrophes caused by war.

Yet, despite their hardships, their enduring sentiment is one of profound gratitude towards China. “Though Japanese by birth, we would not have survived without Chinese people,” Ikeda said.

Their collective narrative delivers a dual message of profound gratitude and solemn warning. It pays tribute to the extraordinary compassion of ordinary Chinese people—a love that chose nurture over vengeance. “We must never let war happen again. Situations like ours must never be repeated,” Ikeda urged.

“We are a group with the dual identity of both perpetrators and victims,” she reflected, a statement that embodies the complex legacy of history, humanity, and a plea for lasting peace.

Hashtag: #ChinaNewsService

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

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/22/war-orphans-express-gratitude-to-chinese-foster-parents/

Transforming Knee Surgery: Columbia Asia Combines Expertise and Robotics for Better Outcomes

Source: Media Outreach

Columbia Asia Hospital Tebrau is dedicated to serving the healthcare needs of the Johor community with compassion, professionalism, and clinical excellence. Equipped with advanced medical technology—including a Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory, Mammography services, a 128-slice CT Scan, and a 1.5 Tesla MRI—the hospital delivers comprehensive diagnostic and treatment capabilities to support timely and accurate clinical decision-making.

The hospital offers a broad range of medical specialties, including Cardiology, Nephrology, Internal Medicine, Maternal Fetal Medicine, Ear, Nose & Throat (ENT), General Surgery, Obstetrics & Gynecology (O&G), Respiratory Medicine, Orthopaedics, and Dermatology. A fully operational 24/7 Emergency Room, supported by on-call Emergency Physicians, ensures that patients receive immediate and appropriate care at any time of the day.

At the core of Columbia Asia Hospital Tebrau’s philosophy is a strong commitment to personalized, patient-centred care—ensuring that every individual feels heard, supported, and well cared for throughout their healthcare journey.

Looking ahead over the next five years, Columbia Asia Hospital Tebrau will align its strategic direction with Rancangan Malaysia Ke-13 (RMK-13), with a focused emphasis on addressing Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs). In particular, the hospital will strengthen its efforts in obesity management through integrated, multidisciplinary care models encompassing prevention, early intervention, medical management, surgical intervention and long-term follow-up. This reflects a proactive approach to tackling one of the most pressing public health challenges affecting the Johor community.

In parallel, the hospital has advanced its surgical capabilities through the adoption of robotic-assisted surgery. This investment is aimed at enhancing surgical precision, improving clinical outcomes, reducing recovery times, and elevating overall patient experience, in line with global best practices.

To meet the growing healthcare demands of Johor, Columbia Asia Hospital Tebrau is also planning for future expansion, including the addition of more inpatient beds. This expansion will enable the hospital to better serve the increasing needs of the community while maintaining high standards of safety, quality, and accessibility in care delivery.

Through strategic alignment, technological advancement, and capacity expansion, Columbia Asia Hospital Tebrau remains committed to supporting the long-term health and well-being of the Johorean population.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/transforming-knee-surgery-columbia-asia-combines-expertise-and-robotics-for-better-outcomes/

Queensland fruit fly operation in Mount Roskill ends

Source: Radio New Zealand

Biosecurity New Zealand commissioner north Mike Inglis. RNZ / Maia Ingoe

Controls on the movement of fruit and vegetables in Auckland’s Mount Roskill have been lifted after Biosecurity New Zealand announced no further evidence of Queensland fruit fly in the area.

The announcement comes after a six week intensive fruit fly trapping operation, and the inspection of more than 230kg of fruit.

Biosecurity New Zealand commissioner north Mike Inglis thanked the local community for their support during the operation, and said all restrictions could now be lifted.

“It wouldn’t have been possible to get to this point without the support of the local community. Every person who has kept an eye out for fruit flies, complied with movement controls, and safely disposed of their fruit waste, has played an important role in protecting our horticultural sector.

“We are satisfied that with no further detections, the Controlled Area Notice restrictions can be lifted, and response operations closed.”

The biosecurity wheelie bins in the area will also be removed.

While the operation has ended in Mount Roskill, Biosecurity New Zealand’s routine nationwide surveillance continues, with a system of nearly 8000 fruit fly traps spread across the country. More than 4600 of these are in the Auckland area.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/queensland-fruit-fly-operation-in-mount-roskill-ends/

Builder who bought former Wellington mayoral desk happy to give it back

Source: Radio New Zealand

The desk was bought at a tip shop. Raymond Morgan

A builder who bought Wellington’s most embarrassing historical desk says he would be happy to gift it back to the city if it goes into a museum.

A furniture historian said it was “outrageous” the desk, that four mayors had used, was got rid of by the city council in the first place.

But the city council disputed it had any historical value.

It does, however, have a lot of stories to tell: The large rimu desk made perhaps 120 years ago had graced the mayoral chambers through four incumbents from the 1980s, then the Happy Valley tip’s secondhand shop in 2025, and now sits beside a boat on Breaker Bay Road exposed to Wellington’s sewage-laced wind.

“I’d happily give [it] back to the council if they were to keep it forever in posterity,” Raymond Morgan told RNZ on Friday, as he popped out to take photos of the desk sitting by a neighbour’s runabout.

He bought it for $200 last year then found over 200 documents in it, dated between 1988 and 2004, in a locked side cupboard – “obvious and poking out”, he said.

They turned out to be what the city council called “sensitive and confidential historic documents”; it quickly sent out a public alert in September, apologising over how it had disposed of furniture from the old Town Hall via the tip shop.

It got the documents back, and this week also got back a damning report from an inquiry into the farce that it had ordered up from consultants Grant Thornton.

Morgan said he is going to use the desktop as part of his whiskey cabinet. Raymond Morgan

But Morgan said he had not been contacted at any stage, even for the inquiry.

“I think if they come to me and make an offer, I mean, I wouldn’t charge the city for it… they never contacted me,” he said.

The desk was of national significance, made about 120 years ago for the council and, unusually, with its full history known, said art historian Dr William Cottrell.

“Clearly it was just somebody just taking truckloads down there [to the tip shop],” said Cottrell.

“This is an outrageous example of where somebody’s just taken it upon themselves in ignorance and lost this furniture, which is furniture that belongs to the citizens of Wellington.”

But the city council rejected that.

“We disagree with the claim it has any great significance – otherwise it would likely already be in a museum,” a spokesperson said on Friday, adding they would see if anyone had any use for the desk.

It would likely be brought up at a committee meeting next week.

The council disputed that it was obvious the documents were in the side cupboard – though Morgan said someone had been in touch who had seen them at the tip shop, sticking out, and tried to pull them out.

The Grant Thornton report said three lots of checks by council staff on the desk had failed to find them. They should have been destroyed, it said.

Earlier this week, before the idea of gifting it back was raised with him, Morgan said he had other plans for it.

“I”m going to use the desktop as part of my whiskey cabinet.”

As it was, the desk was proving a “showpiece” for people walking past. “People that live in Wellington who do the Eastern Walkway stop and admire it and they recognise straight away what it is.”

It seemed to him the desk had been renovated in some way a few decades ago.

But it was still a “damn good idea” to save and display it, Morgan said.

“Because there’s a story to it and it raised a few eyebrows and I think it’s always interesting to have an interesting story around Wellington city… [It was] not necessarily an embarrassment. I think it adds to the flavour of it.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/builder-who-bought-former-wellington-mayoral-desk-happy-to-give-it-back/

What you need to know ahead of sixth NZ A-League derby

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington Phoenix captain Alex Rufer and Auckland FC’s Lachlan Brook scored for their sides the last time they met in the A-League in December. Photosport

Wellington Phoenix vs Auckland FC

Kick-off: 5pm Saturday February 21

Sky Stadium, Wellington

Live blog updates on RNZ

A one-sided rivalry is still a rivalry.

That is the opinion of the Auckland FC players and coach ahead of the sixth New Zealand A-League derby between the Wellington Phoenix and Auckland.

Auckland have won all five previous derby matches, including the two games this season.

In December Auckland won 3-1 at home and a month earlier Auckland had won 2-1 in Wellington.

Across all derbies there is an average of 3.8 goals a game and only one clean sheet in the first game played back in November 2024.

Injuries and unavailability have hit both teams and prevented two of the competition’s leading goal-scorers going head-to-head on Saturday.

One of the Phoenix’s key signings Sarpreet Singh will not play in his first derby after his return to the A-League club was cut short after picking up a long-term injury in his first game back in seven years.

Despite Singh’s absence there are still All Whites in both sides hoping to get on the plane to the Football World Cup in June and to use the match-ups against their national team team mates to impress All Whites coach Darren Bazeley.

Form

Auckland are sitting in second on the A-League ladder coming off a 1-all draw to Sydney FC on Tuesday night.

The Black Knights are trying to move on from a start to the calendar year which included three losses, two draws and a win in January.

The Phoenix are 10th following a 2-all draw with Central Coast Mariners in the last round.

Last month Wellington had two wins, two draws and a loss.

By the numbers

Across the season the Phoenix have lost more times than they have won at home this season – three wins, four losses.

Whereas Auckland have won more times on the road than they have lost – four wins, two losses.

In derby games, the Phoenix have scored four goals compared to Auckland’s 15.

This season Phoenix have had 11 different goal-scorers, while Auckland have had six different players find the back of the net.

The Phoenix are ranked the most accurate team in the league when it comes to shooting, with 91 of 160 shots on target. Auckland sit in fourth in this statistic with 97 of 210 shots on target.

Auckland can be vulnerable at set pieces with five goals conceded including three from corners. Wellington have conceded three goals from set pieces.

Squads

Sam Cosgrove will miss the derby. photosport

Auckland FC will be without striker Sam Cosgrove who picked up his fifth yellow card of the season, which requires him to miss a match.

Marlee Francois has bone bruising following Tuesday’s game and is in doubt to play.

Auckland FC squad: Michael Woud, Hiroki Sakai, Jake Girdwood-Reich, Nando Pijnaker, Louis Verstraete, Cam Howieson, Felipe Gallegos, Sam Cosgrove, Guillermo May, Marlee Francois, Jimmy Hilton, Francis De Vries, Callan Elliot, Jesse Randall, Jake Brimmer, Dan Hall, Logan Rogerson, Jonty Bidois, Lachlan Brook, Bailey Ferguson

Sarpreet Singh will miss the derby after getting injured in his first appearance for the Phoenix in seven years. www.photosport.nz

All Whites attacking midfielder Singh will be sidelined for up eight weeks after getting a medial collateral ligament (MCL) injury in his left knee in the last round. Fullback Tim Payne has also been ruled out of the derby with a hamstring injury.

Wellington Phoenix squad: Joshua Oluwayemi, Alby Kelly-Heald, Eamonn McCarron, Lukas Kelly-Heald, Isaac Hughes, Matthew Sheridan, Bill Tuiloma, Manjrekar James, Jayden Smith, Dan Edwards, Tim Payne, Tze-Xuan Loke, Alex Rufer, Paulo Retre, Anaru Cassidy, Fin Roa Conchie, Kazuki Nagasawa, Carlo Armiento, Sarpreet Singh, Sander Kartum, Luke Brooke-Smith, Ramy Najjarine, Nathan Walker, Nikola Mileusnic, Gabriel Sloane-Rodrigues, Ifeanyi Eze, Corban Piper, Luke Supyk

What they said

Nando Pijnaker. Photosport

All Whites defender Nando Pijnaker said Auckland’s dominance put a bit of a burden the players.

“I’ve never really been a part of something like this where we’ve won so many times in a row so it’s interesting. Every game that goes by that we win I guess puts a little bit more pressure on you because you want to keep winning and you want to make this the normality which I don’t think it is, but we’re really confident.”

Auckland FC coach Steve Corica said despite winning five out of five it was still a rivalry with the Phoenix.

“We don’t want to get carried away with that, we want to continue winning obviously we want to make it six from six in the first two years but we know it’s going to be a tough game. I think they’re playing some good football we’re going to have to be on our game definitely need to perform well, we need three points as badly as they do.”

Bill Tuiloma and Paulo Retre of Wellington Phoenix. www.photosport.nz

Wellington Phoenix coach Giancarlo Italiano said he felt good heading into the derby despite the record.

“I must have smashed a couple of mirrors somewhere because the amount of bad luck we’ve had over the last couple of seasons, especially in the derbies, we haven’t had things go for us but I feel like we’re due for one.”

Another All Whites defender Bill Tuiloma will play in his first New Zealand derby after joining the Phoenix at the start of the year and said there was a “determination” to get the first win over Auckland.

“I’m just fired up and I’m excited… you could see it that I’m playing against my home team from where I’m from but I’m very excited, the whole team’s pumped for it.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/what-you-need-to-know-ahead-of-sixth-nz-a-league-derby/

Firefighters tackle blaze at Auckland’s Northcote College

Source: Radio New Zealand

Facebook / Northcote College

Firefighters are tackling a blaze at Auckland’s Northcote College.

Fire and Emergency NZ said they were called to the school about 12.15pm on Friday.

A crew from Silverdale is in attendance and more crews are on their way to the scene.

Smoke can be seen from the Harbour Bridge.

On social media, a school spokesperson said: “There is an active fire at Northcote College in the sports pavilion. The fire service is here.

“All students have been evacuated to the other end of the school and are safe.

“We are waiting for further direction from the fire service and will update you as we can.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/firefighters-tackle-blaze-at-aucklands-northcote-college/

Construction begin on ‘rapid-build’ ward for Nelson Hospital

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nelson Hospital. RNZ / Samantha Gee

Construction has begun on a temporary 28-bed inpatient ward at Nelson Hospital.

Health Minister Simeon Brown said the ward would ease pressure on beds and improve patient flow while Nelson’s permanent inpatient building is completed.

The Nelson ward is one of five rapid‑build wards being built nationwide through the government’s accelerated hospital wards programme.

Brown previously told RNZ the temporary wards had a life span of 50 years and could be transported for use at other hospitals in the future.

“These rapid‑build wards can be delivered more quickly and at lower cost than traditional builds, enabling us to expand hospital capacity where demand is greatest. Off‑site construction allows faster delivery, better cost control, reduced disruption for hospitals, and earlier benefits for patients and staff,” he said.

A major redevelopment of the hospital announced last year will cost $500 million and take four years to complete.

The project includes a new five-storey inpatient unit with 128 beds, adding 41 beds to the hospital’s current numbers. The hospital’s existing buildings will be refurbished and seismically upgraded.

Brown said the new ward would strengthen services across Nelson Marlborough to help people access care close to home.

“Investing in modern, purpose‑built infrastructure is about supporting better care and ensuring patients remain at the centre of every decision,” he said.

The temporary ward will allow services to be relocated while the major redevelopment of the hospital gets underway.

The unit will be built off site and is expected to open later this year.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/construction-begin-on-rapid-build-ward-for-nelson-hospital/

WorkSafe launches investigation into deadly Mt Maunganui landslide

Source: Radio New Zealand

Six people died in the Mount Maunganui landslide. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

A third investigation has been announced into the Mount Maunganui landslide, with WorkSafe launching an official investigation into work health and safety at Mount Maunganui Beachside Holiday Park in the lead up to the landslide on 22 January.

The health and safety investigation was independent from both the government inquiry and the Tauranga City Council’s external review.

Retired High Court judgePaul Davison, KC, was leading an external review for Tauranga City Council into the deadly landslip.

The Prime Minister had also appointed National Party Minister Chris Penk to advise Cabinet on the possible scope of an inquiry into the fatal disaster.

WorkSafe’s central regional manager Nigel Formosa said the agency had taken time to be clear about what sat within their remit.

“Our investigation will focus on work‑related matters prior to the landslide,” he said.

WorkSafe would establish whether there had been a breach of the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 by businesses and organisations related to the operation of the holiday park. This would include technical expertise and gathering information from a range of sources.

“Our team is focused on understanding the decisions and circumstances that shaped the work environment at the holiday park before the landslide. We’re committed to carrying out a careful, methodical investigation that stays grounded in evidence and the requirements of the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015, for the victims and their whānau. This will take time, but it’s important we complete a thorough investigation,” Formosa said.

WorkSafe said it had already started to engage with Tauranga City Council as the operator of the holiday park. The roles of other parties would also be considered in the coming months.

WorkSafe investigations could take up to 12 months from the date of an incident. Given the amount of information and technical expertise involved, the agency said it expected the investigation to take a full year.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/worksafe-launches-investigation-into-deadly-mt-maunganui-landslide/

The llamas keeping sheep safe at Auckland’s Ambury farm

Source: Radio New Zealand

On a sunny weekday at lunchtime, Ken, Drick, and Lamar are working hard.

Grazing on grass, and occasionally lifting their heads to check the surroundings.

But don’t be fooled by their languid behaviour – they’re actually top notch security guards.

Park ranger Millie Law has been looking after the llamas.

Ke-Xin Li

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/the-llamas-keeping-sheep-safe-at-aucklands-ambury-farm/

Northern Brave duo set to debut for White Ferns

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nensi Patel of the Northern Brave. www.photosport.nz

There are two new players in the White Ferns squad named to take on Zimbabwe later this month.

Northern Brave duo Nensi Patel and Kayley Knight have been included for the series, which will be the first between the two nations and includes three T20I’s and three ODI’s.

Off-spinning all-rounder Patel returns to the group after being centrally contracted for the 2022-23 season.

She was the Brave’s top run-scorer in the Super Smash this summer and second-equal wicket-taker alongside Knight.

Knight, a former New Zealand under-19 representative, is available for just the T20 series, with Molly Penfold to replace her in the ODI squad.

“We’ve prioritised players that could make the T20 World Cup squad in June, whilst also providing international exposure to high-potential talent whose skillsets align with long-term White Ferns planning,” said coach Ben Sawyer.

“Nensi and Kayley have both been solid performers over the last 12-18 months, so it’s really pleasing for them to get this opportunity.”

The squad will be captained by Melie Kerr in her first assignment as New Zealand’s permanent captain.

Suzie Bates (quadricep) and Eden Carson (elbow) were not considered for selection due to their respective injuries, and Lea Tahuhu was not considered for the T20I squad due to physical preparation planning for the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in June.

Sophie Devine, who is on a casual contract with NZC, was not available for this series.

Northern Brave Women’s Kayley Knight bowls. DJ Mills / PHOTOSPORT

WHITE FERNS Squad v Zimbabwe

Flora Devonshire Central Hinds

Izzy Gaze Auckland Hearts

Maddy Green Auckland Hearts

Brooke Halliday Auckland Hearts

Bree Illing Auckland Hearts

Polly Inglis Sparks (T20I only)

Jess Kerr Wellington Blaze

Melie Kerr Wellington Blaze

Kayley Knight* Northern Brave (T20I only)

Emma McLeod Central Hinds (ODI only)

Rosemary Mair Central Hinds

Nensi Patel* Northern Brave

Molly Penfold Auckland Hearts (ODI only)

Georgia Plimmer Wellington Blaze

Izzy Sharp** Canterbury Magicians

Series against Zimbabwe

Wed 25 Feb: 1st T20, 7:15pm, Hamilton

Fri 27 Feb: 2nd T20, 7:15pm, Hamilton

Sun 1 March: 3rd T20, 1:15pm, Hamilton

Thurs 5 March: 1st ODI, 11am, Dunedin

Sun 8 March: 2nd ODI, 11am, Dunedin

Wed 11 March, 3rd ODI, 11am, Dunedin

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/northern-brave-duo-set-to-debut-for-white-ferns/

As it happened: Former prince Andrew arrested by UK police over Epstein ties

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow updates with RNZ’s live blog above.

Britain’s former prince Andrew has been arrested overnight over allegations he sent confidential government documents to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

King Charles’ younger brother – now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor after he wasstripped by his older brother of his titles and honours last October – was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office on Thursday, his 66th birthday.

The second son of the late Queen Elizabeth is now in police custody. He has always denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein, and said he regrets their friendship.

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is seen after leaving police custody, following his arrest on February 19, 2026 in Sandringham, Norfolk. Getty Images / Peter Nicholls

Follow updates with RNZ’s live blog at the top of this page.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/as-it-happened-former-prince-andrew-arrested-by-uk-police-over-epstein-ties/

Wellington resident horrified after raw sewage ‘exploded’ from his toilet

Source: Radio New Zealand

The resident lives near Moa Point in Wellington. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

This story contains photos of the sewage-affected bathroom which may upset some readers.

A Wellington resident living near Moa Point says sewage “exploded” out of his toilet on Thursday morning.

Ed, a Miramar resident who doesn’t want his surname used, told RNZ it happened while Wellington Water staff were working on his street.

If you’ve also been affected contact Kaya.Selby@rnz.co.nz

“I’d heard some gurgling in the pipe system, and as I opened the door to the bathroom, a little fountain of raw sewage was exploding out of our toilet, so much so it was reaching the ceiling,” he said.

“It’s covered every surface in our bathroom, just particles of raw sewage everywhere.”

He said it had rendered the bathroom unusable, and the smell made it difficult to be in his home.

“Particles of poop everywhere… it’s soaked into the towels, it’s on everything on the walls, our toilet itself is in a state.”

The Mirarmar bathroom soon after the sewage incident. Supplied

“I feel disgusting, because the house stinks of poop. It’s given me a bit of a headache.”

Ed said that he immediately rang his neighbour and heard that the same thing had happened to them.

He said they encountered the workers on their street and saw that several other residents had been out to speak with them as well.

The workers gave Ed a phone number and a reference for a cleaning job, but he said neither number worked.

His attempts to contact the council also didn’t seem successful.

However, cleaners came to fix his place up last night.

Cleaners came in to help clean up the bathroom on Thursday evening. Supplied

Ed’s home is roughly two kilometres away from the Moa Point Wastewater Treatment Plant.

Wellington Water and Wellington City Council have been contacted for a response.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/wellington-resident-horrified-after-raw-sewage-exploded-from-his-toilet/

Old pressures to blame for number of companies going broke

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

  • Insolvencies rise in fourth quarter, annual rate highest in 10 years
  • Failures reflect companies weakened some time ago
  • Signs of economic improvement too late for some companies
  • Construction biggest insolvency group, broad hospitality second

The number of companies going broke has surged to its highest level in 10 years as past economic and commercial problems catch up with a growing number of firms, despite signs of economic recovery.

The latest report from BWA Insolvency for the December quarter showed a 31.5 percent rise in the number of insolvencies to 933 on the previous quarter, and 11 percent higher than the same period in 2024.

BWA Insolvency principal Bryan Williams said the number of insolvencies reflected old pressures coming to the surface.

“The insolvencies we are seeing today are rooted in earlier events. Old debt, thin margins and stalled projects are what ultimately undermine a company’s viability.”

“The improvements we are seeing now in interest rates, building activity and export returns arrive too late for those already in deep financial trouble,” Williams said.

There was a total of 3132 insolvencies last year, involving more liquidations, a slight rise in voluntary administration, but a fall in receiverships. It was the highest annual tally since 2015 following the global financial crisis.

Williams said the figures showed by the end of 2025 more firms had reached “terminal distress” where there was little or nothing left to save and they had accepted the inevitable.

The high level of insolvencies in the past year has been put down, in part, to a more aggressive approach by Inland Revenue in collecting unpaid tax and other payments.

Better economy won’t save the weak

Williams said there was still a reasonable number of companies to fail even as economic conditions improved.

“A bit of extra revenue can provide temporary relief, but it is rarely enough to overcome the weight of historic debt. The cost of those past problems is often greater than the benefit of any new earnings.”

Construction had the most insolvencies, but the rate of failure was slowing. There were now also substantial increases coming through in food and beverage, repair and maintenance, personal services, retail trade, transport and delivery, and manufacturing.

Williams said the high level of insolvencies should not affect the broader economic rebound currently underway, and there were some positives to be taken.

“Employees from these companies can be absorbed into sectors that are strengthening. Moving these workers into growing industries is a helpful result from what is otherwise a tough situation.”

He said directors of struggling companies should seek advice and not hope that improving sentiment will save them.

“It is natural to hope that better times will solve current problems but continuing to fight a battle that cannot be won without new capital is exhausting and often futile.”

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/old-pressures-to-blame-for-number-of-companies-going-broke/

Owner of half-finished Auckland apartment project faces removal from Companies Register

Source: Radio New Zealand

An unfinished apartment block on Manukau Rd in Auckland’s Epsom. MELANIE EARLEY / RNZ

The company behind a half-finished apartment block in Auckland’s Epsom is in the process of being removed from the Companies Register – while a neighbour is still waiting to be paid $30,000.

Work on the Epsom Central Apartments Project halted six years ago, after Auckland Council found it had not complied with building consent.

The original partnership, Epsom Central Apartments LP, was put into receivership in 2022, and purchased by Xiao Liu – the director at the time of a company named Reeheng Limited – in September 2023.

In September 2024, RNZ spoke to community members and business owners who described the building as a “blight on the Epsom landscape“, which at one point attracted rats and squatters.

Forest Tan owns Just Laptops next door and was awarded $30,000 by the Disputes Tribunal after ageing concrete collapsed and blocked his driveway. But he’s worried he may never see this money if the company is removed.

According to the Companies Register, Reeheng Ltd was overdue in filing an annual return and the Registrar of Companies had initiated action to remove it.

Anyone who wanted to reject the removal was given a deadline of February 18 to do so – which had now passed.

Tan said he worried once the company was removed from the register, the money owing to him would become unenforceable.

“I haven’t received compensation from Reeheng Ltd despite the tribunal order. It’s deeply concerning to me to see this.”

Tan said he had been in touch with debt collection agency Baycorp, who indicated to him if the company was removed from the register there wouldn’t be much that could be done.

In the last few months Tan demolished his business which sat directly beside the apartment block and had plans to rebuild.

If Reeheng Ltd ceased to exist he worried what the future of the building would be and how much longer it would stay in its current state.

According to the Treasury website, a property would go to the Crown if a company was removed from the register.

If someone wanted to deal with the property the company could be restored or an application could be made to the High Court for an order giving the property to an applicant.

MBIE’s acting national manager of business registries Vanessa Cook said if a company was removed from the register it effectively ceased to legally exist.

It did not however, extinguish any debts or obligations owed by the company.

She said a creditor could apply to have the company restored on the register and if it had been, enforcement could continue. This was the main pathway for any money owed.

Not filing annual returns was the most common ground for removal, she said.

“The registrar cannot comment on whether companies purposefully seek to remove themselves from the register to avoid obligations. However, failing to meet company obligations is an offence, and removal is not a mechanism to avoid paying debts.”

In Tan’s case, Cook said if a tribunal order had not been complied with the next steps for enforcement sat with the Ministry of Justice.

Tan had submitted an objection to the removal of the company from the register.

Reeheng Ltd were approached by RNZ for comment. The company’s lawyers said they had not received instructions from the company for several months.

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/owner-of-half-finished-auckland-apartment-project-faces-removal-from-companies-register/

What dog control laws say about fatal attacks – and what people want to change

Source: Radio New Zealand

Explainer – A Northland woman was killed by a dog this week, the latest in a series of fatalities. What exactly are the laws around animal control?

Here’s where dangerous dog regulations stand in New Zealand, and what people are saying needs changing.

Mihiata Te Rore, 62, was killed by dogs while visiting a home in the Northland town of Kaihu this week.

There had been multiple complaints about the dogs in this week’s attack, Kaipara District Council said, and staff had visited the property at least four times.

“For far too long we have been warning regulators that New Zealand’s current approach to dog control is not fit for purpose,” the SPCA’s chief scientific officer Dr Arnja Dale said. “Our thoughts are with the woman’s whānau and the wider community during this incredibly heartbreaking time.”

The 1996 Dog Control Act lays out the rules for dog owners, but many advocacy groups have said it’s long overdue for a revamp.

It includes provisions for registration, leash laws, and what owners must do to control and care for their pets.

  • Read the full Dog Control Act 1996 here
  • The act sets out how dogs can be classified as menacing or dangerous, seized and impounded, and infringement offences and fees. People can also be disqualified from owning dogs for certain offences.

    However, local councils and authorities are responsible for actually enforcing many of these laws.

    “Dog owners are responsible for their dogs – they have a legal responsibility to look after and control their animals – but we also acknowledge that council’s animal control plays an important role in managing risks in the community,” the Kaipara District Council said in a statement after this week’s fatal attack.

    “We really need an urgent, substantive and evidence-based review of the Dog Control Act, which is 30 years old and hopelessly out of date,” SPCA senior science officer Alison Vaughan told RNZ’s Morning Report.

    The Auckland Council has also called for major changes to the act, saying the dog problem is out of control in many areas.

    “We’ve got children being attacked, people being attacked, animals being attacked,” Auckland Council animal management manager Elly Waitoa told RNZ last year. “Children can’t go to school, because they’re being terrorised by aggressive dogs.”

    Local Government Minister Simon Watts has said he is looking how the central government can respond, but no reforms to the Dog Control Act have yet been announced.

    “This is a serious issue, and I agree that action is needed,” he told RNZ this week.

    “As Minister of Local Government, I am responsible for the Dog Control Act. I have sought advice on all available options, in addition to the work that is already being completed.”

    What exactly is a dangerous dog?

    Dangerous dogs are classified if they’re a “threat to the safety of any person, stock, poultry, domestic animal or protected wildlife,” according to the act, or if their owners are convicted of an offence involving the dog attacking.

    If a dog is classified as dangerous, they must be kept in a secure fenced area, cannot be in public without being muzzled and controlled on a leash, and they must be neutered. You’ll also pay higher registration fees for owning a dangerous dog.

    Menacing dogs are considered to be dogs that may pose a particular threat. Certain breeds of dogs, such as American pit bulls, are automatically considered menacing and are banned or heavily restricted from being allowed in New Zealand.

    Abel Wira was found guilty of manslaughter over a fatal dog attack. NZ Herald

    What are the penalties for dog attacks?

    The owner of a dog that causes serious injury is liable on conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding three years or a fine not exceeding $20,000. The court will also order the dog destroyed upon the owner’s conviction unless there are exceptional circumstances.

    For less serious attacks, the Dog Control Act also lays out fines not exceeding $3000 and liability for damage.

    Dog owners have been held accountable for attacks.

    This week, The Post reported that an Auckland woman whose leashed dog pulled away from her teenage son and attacked a 70-year-old woman was convicted for owning a dog that caused serious injury. She was sentenced to 70 hours of community work and to pay $500 emotional harm reparation to the victim.

    And last year, a Northland man was jailed for manslaughter after his dogs killed Neville Thomson in 2022 – a New Zealand first.

    Abel Jaye Wira was found guilty by a jury and sentenced to three years and six months in jail. Wira’s dogs were described as aggressive, uncontrollable and dangerous.

    Wira was first charged with being the owner of a dog that caused injury or death, and then several months later the charge was upgraded to manslaughter, the first such case in New Zealand’s history.

    “The community cannot underestimate what can arise when dog owners majorly depart from their responsibilities,” Judge Andrew Becroft said during sentencing.

    The Kaihu death this week remains under investigation.

    Auckland Council is calling for changes to national dog control guidelines. Nick Monro

    So what’s not working?

    Local governments lack consistency in how they respond to dog attacks and central government needs to take a stronger hand, the SPCA’s Vaughan said.

    “What we really need right now is leadership from central government so we can get standardised national guidelines, so we can get more funding to address desexing of menacing and roaming dogs, because right now this population is continuing to grow.”

    She said Dog Control Act reform needs to look at measures such as increased desexing and subsidies for those who can’t afford the costs, addressing irresponsible breeding and more public education.

    The SPCA also seeks standardised national guidelines for councils on actions to take following a dog bite incident.

    Auckland Council has also pressured the government to give councils more power to deal with dog attacks.

    It’s calling for measures such as mandatory reporting of dog attacks from hospitals and medical clinics, introducing fencing requirements, allowing councils to set their own desexing policies, and improving councils’ abilities to detain dogs following an attack. 

    “The changes we are proposing make good common sense and would greatly improve our ability to protect Aucklanders from dog-related harm,” Auckland Council general manager of licensing and compliance Robert Irvine said in launching the campaign last year. “They would not affect the majority of dog owners who we know are responsible.”

    Auckland’s council said last July that within the past year it received 16,739 reports of roaming dogs, 1341 reports of dog attacks on people and 1523 reports of attacks on other animals.

    In Northland, where dog problems are chronic, statistics from the Kaipara District Council showed the number of dogs impounded by the council more than doubled over the four years from 2021 to 2025.

    In the period from July 2022 to July 2025, there were 174 call-outs for dog attacks, but only one person was prosecuted in the same period.

    “We cannot afford to wait for another tragedy before meaningful reform is undertaken,” the SPCA’s Dale said.

    Local Government Minister Simon Watts. RNZ/Mark Papalii

    What’s the government doing about it?

    In an interview with RNZ’s Checkpoint earlier this month before the latest fatal attack, Watts said he understood frustration over uncontrolled dogs.

    “Roaming dogs without doubt is a growing concern for many communities and I share their frustration …. communities deserve to feel safe in their own neighbourhoods.”

    On the current legislation, Watts said, “It is an old act and a lot of the feedback coming back from councils is that they are wanting to see amendments and changes.

    “We’re a busy government and we’ve got a significant amount of work underway in the Local Government portfolio … overhauling the Dog Control Act is not something that we have capacity for this term but we are working through right now.”

    Watts said with the time left before November’s election, “passing laws in that timeline is unlikely”.

    “To date my focus has been on non-legislative options that can assist councils more quickly, and that work will continue,” Watts told RNZ this week.

    Watts said that among those interventions were improving the quality and consistency of national dog-related data, working with the local government sector to refresh and improve dog control enforcement guidelines and creating updated guidelines, which are expected to be issued by the beginning of the third quarter of 2026.

    Northland MP and cabinet minister Shane Jones. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    What are other politicians saying?

    NZ First leader Winston Peters told NZME that dog attacks like the Kaihu incident were “facilitating murder” and manslaughter charges should be considered, while Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has called Te Rore’s death “unacceptable”.

    In an interview with Morning Report earlier this week, Northland MP and cabinet minister Shane Jones called for “severe” punishment.

    “Not only is the law not fit for purpose, we’re not being honest that there are packs of homicidal dogs and feral owners scattered around Northland. I think it’s time we had a very severe level of punishment.

    “When I grew up in Awanui if there were wild and dangerous dogs around, my father’s generation just shot them. That was the end of that problem.”

    However, the SPCA’s Vaughan said culling wild dogs would not stop the bigger issue.

    “We do know from overseas examples that indiscriminate culling of roaming dogs doesn’t find a sustainable solution, so it may reduce numbers temporarily, but if we don’t address the irresponsible breeding and roaming, we will see population quickly rebound.”

    Officials at the scene of a fatal dog attack in Kaihu, Northland this week. RNZ

    Just how worried are people about dog attacks?

    This week’s fatal attack unleashed a stream of testimonials to RNZ from other people who are complaining about wild dogs.

    “We have been complaining for years about these wandering frigging dogs,” one person wrote about the Kaipara District attack.

    There have been several accounts of people afraid to go for walks without weapons.

    “I now go for walks with a brick in my hand and will not hesitate to kill one,” one person wrote on Reddit after claiming an unleashed dog killed their cat.

    Another RNZ reader wrote in to say they have complained to their local council numerous times and “have seen dogs and people attacked and injured, provided video and photographic evidence, witnesses, you name it… and we’re still waiting for action”.

    “All we get are lame, pro-forma excuses, while the local emergency vets tell us these sort of incidents are happening on a weekly basis.”

    One local at the scene of the fatal attack in Kaihu this week told an RNZ reporter that Mihiata Te Rore’s death should never have happened.

    “There were so many warnings before that happened and nothing had been done,” he said.

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

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/what-dog-control-laws-say-about-fatal-attacks-and-what-people-want-to-change/

    Winter Olympics: Kiwi Mischa Thomas qualifies for halfpipe final as rival stretchered off

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Canada’s Cassie Sharpe receives medical assistance after crashing during the women’s freestyle skiing halfpipe at the Winter Olympics. 2026. KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP

    Auckland freeskier Mischa Thomas has qualified for the final of the halfpipe at the Winter Olympics.

    The 17 year old landed a score of 77.00 in her first run and followed that up with a slightly improved 77.50 in her second.

    With the best score from the two runs counting, Thomas qualified tenth.

    The field had to contend with falling snow during the competition and Thomas said it provided some challenges.

    “It was a run I was pretty comfortable doing, I’ve done quite a few times,” she told Sky Sport.

    “The pipe was still fast and it is kind of scary to see what it is going to be like when it’s not snowing. It was a little bumpy so just had to manage that, but you get given what you’re given and you just have to deal with it.”

    Zoe Atkin of Great Britain topped the qualifying with a best score of 91.50, while defending champion Eileen Gu of China qualified fifth with a score of 86.50.

    The competition was paused for 15 minutes when Canadian Cassie Sharpe, who won halfpipe gold in 2018 and silver in 2022, fell and appeared to knock her head. She received medical attention but still qualified third.

    The final is on Sunday morning.

    New Zealand freeskier Mischa Thomas competes in the halfpipe at the Winter Olympics, 2026. KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP

    Heavy snow again forced organisers to change the schedule with qualifying for the men’s freeski halfpipe pushed back a day.

    It means Fin Melville Ives, Luke Harold, Gustav Legnavsky and Ben Harrington will start their qualifying on Friday night with the final scheduled for Saturday morning.

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

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/20/winter-olympics-kiwi-mischa-thomas-qualifies-for-halfpipe-final-as-rival-stretchered-off/