Mariameno Kapa-Kingi unsure if future lies with Te Pāti Māori or as independent

Source: Radio New Zealand

Te Tai Tokerau MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi says she is still waiting to learn what her reinstatement to Te Pāti Māori will look like in practice, and there are still questions over whether the party can be trusted by her rohe.

On Tuesday, Kapa-Kingi was officially reinstated to Te Pāti Māori after the High Court ruled her suspension and subsequent expulsion was unlawful.

Speaking to media for the first time since her reinstatement, Kapa-Kingi said the court’s decision was an important first step, but it would not heal the hurt carried by her people.

“This moment is not about personal vindication, it is about mokopuna. Mokopuna in the sense that every decision I make is measured by whether our mokopuna will inherit a better situation than the one we have today.”

Te Tai Tonga MP Tākuta Ferris, who was also expelled but haD not been reinstated, said Te Pāti Māori had a “huge job” to repair its reputational damage.

Kapa-Kingi said her legal challenge was to ensure the voices of the people who elected her were shown respect.

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

“Te Pāti Māori’s kawa exists for a reason. They ensure respect for the authority and mana motuhake of our individual electorates – that respect was not afforded to the thousands of whānau in Te Tai Tokerau who entrusted me with the responsibility to represent them.

“The question remains whether Te Pāti Māori can be trusted by my rohe, while no changes have been made in the capability of the party beyond this term is debated amongst te iwi Māori,” she said.

Kapa-Kingi said there was no evidence she had misused funds or brought the party into disrepute.

“Utu pursued with ill intent can only attach where ill intent exists.”

She was determined to stand again in Te Tai Tokerau, and said running as an independent was possible despite her reinstatement.

“There is a world that has that potential possibility in it, yes.”

Asked whether she had rejoined the party, she said she was “in the early stages of what the detail of that actually looks like”.

Te Tai Tonga MP Tākuta Ferris also attended the press conference. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

In his judgement, Justice Paul Radich said the process had breached the party’s “kawa” – rules, requirements and protocols.

“To convene a meeting which would play a fundamental part in determining Kapa-Kingi’s future with the pāti without involving her, without giving any indication that a resolution to suspend her was on the table, without allowing her an opportunity for a substantive response, and in the absence of the members of her electorate council, could not on any view be seen, for example, as elevating and enhancing relationships, as working together with respect, as promoting whanaungatanga, as working for unity, as developing an environment that nourishes wairua or that reflects the attributes of rangatira,” Radich wrote.

Kapa-Kingi had also sought to challenge the re-appointment of John Tamihere as the party’s president, but Justice Radich did not uphold that, saying there was “no invalidity” in the process of Tamihere’s re-election.

She said she had received contact to “get together” with Tamihere and have a discussion, but she had not had a chance as she was focused on nephew Peeni Henare’s valedictory.

After Justice Radich had released his decision, Kapa-Kingi posted on social media that he had “brought justice” to Te Tai Tokerau voters.

“Pursuing a legal pathway in the courts was never my first choice. My intention in bringing this case throughout was not to incite division, but seek clarity and ensure that the processes we hold ourselves to – particularly those grounded in tikanga, are honoured,” she wrote.

Following Kapa-Kingi’s reinstatement, Te Pāti Māori co-leader Rawiri Waititi said the party was looking forward to “repatriating” Kapa-Kingi back in.

Te Tai Tonga MP Tākuta Ferris, who was also expelled from Te Pāti Māori, has not been reinstated as he did not challenge the party’s decision. He will remain an independent MP for the rest of the term, and intends to stand again in the seat as an independent.

Speaking after Kapa-Kingi, Ferris said the court had “put the truth out there” and iwi Māori would be waiting to see how the party responded.

“The truth is on display for everyone to see. The kaupapa of Te Pāti Māori is a people movement, and it’s here to ensure that the Māori view and Māori rights are looked after and respected well in this House, and that’s the thing that draws me to here.”

Ferris did not see a need to pursue legal action, as Te Tai Tonga was happy with what he had done and supported him.

“Te Tai Tonga invited Te Pāti Māori to a hui, it wasn’t taken up, so the kaumatua of Te Tai Tonga are clear about how Te Tai Tonga will move.”

He said trust and confidence had been “eroded” and the party’s reputational damage had been “sustained, and it is going to be a huge job to rebuild it.”

Ferris believed Tamihere had too much control over the party, however, and suggested more distribution of power across a broader base of rohe representation.

Asked whether he wanted to be back in the party, Ferris said the ball was “firmly in the court” of Te Pāti Māori, and nobody wanted to be stuck in a to-and-fro forever.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/12/mariameno-kapa-kingi-unsure-if-future-lies-with-te-pati-maori-or-as-independent/

Ban on harvesting marine life from rockpools goes into force

Source: Radio New Zealand

[xh ]Ban on harvesting marine life from rockpools comes into force

People harvesting sea life at Army Bay. Protect Whangaparoa Rockpools

A ban on taking marine life from rockpools and coastal waters in part of north Auckland comes into force today.

The decision came after local iwi, the Ngāti Manuhiri Settlement Trust, applied for the two-year ban along the Whangaparāoa Peninsula, and further north at Kawau Bay and Ōmaha Bay. The application was granted by Fisheries Minister, Shane Jones, in February.

It is now illegal for anyone to take seaweed, shellfish, or other rockpool sea life, including sponges, starfish, sea anemones, and sea cucumbers, from those areas.

In a statement, Fisheries Minister Shane Jones said that anyone who broke the rules could be fined between $5000 and $100,000. Items used in the offending could also be seized, including vehicles for more serious offences.

“Fishery Officers will be at key locations to provide information to members of the public about the closure,” he said.

Minister Jones said Ngāti Manuhiri would also place a traditional rāhui over the closed areas and the same species.

The new rules are available on the free NZ Fishing Rules App and the Ministry for Primary Industry’s website.

Kina (sea urchin) are excluded from the closure and can still be taken within the current recreational fishing limits. Restrictions on taking spiny rock lobster and scallops have already been in place.

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Statement on behalf of the Leman family

Source: New Zealand Police

Today’s verdict brings justice for Richard.

Nothing will ever undo what was done to him, and nothing will ever bring him back to the people who loved him. Richard was not just a name in a courtroom or a case in a trial. He was a son, a father, a brother, an uncle, and a man who was deeply loved by those closest to him.

For weeks we have had to sit through the most confronting and painful evidence imaginable. We have been forced to hear and see the devastating reality of how Richard’s life was taken. No family should ever have to endure that.

Today, the jury has recognised the truth of what happened. Someone has been held accountable for Richard’s death.

While this verdict cannot heal the grief we carry, it does acknowledge that Richard’s life mattered and that what happened to him cannot simply be ignored.

We would like to acknowledge and thank the Police who worked tirelessly to investigate Richard’s death and ensure the truth was brought before the court. We also extend our sincere gratitude to the Crown for presenting the evidence and to the Judge for overseeing this difficult process.

We would also like to acknowledge Victim Support, who were with us throughout the trial process and supported us during this incredibly difficult time.

Today we remember Richard not only as a victim in this case, but as the son, father, brother and uncle he was to those who loved him.

He mattered. His life mattered. And today, justice has recognised that.

At this time, we will not be making any further comments to the media as we continue navigating this incredibly difficult journey together as a family.

ENDS

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/12/statement-on-behalf-of-the-leman-family/

Whangārei man charged after woman shot in foot

Source: Radio New Zealand

123RF

A Whangārei man has appeared in court on Thursday for allegedly shooting a woman in the foot.

Detective Senior Sergeant Shane Pilmer, of the Whangārei CIB, said the woman needed surgery for a serious injury after the incident at a Morningside property on 3 March.

He said the alleged shooting was reported the following day, leading officers to search a car and seize the gun.

A week-long search for the suspect paid off on Wednesday afternoon when a 30-year-old man was arrested at a Raumanga address.

Pilmer said he had been charged with unlawful possession of a firearm, reckless discharge of a firearm, and driving while disqualified.

“It’s a great outcome for the community that the man is now in custody and the firearm is also out of circulation,” he said.

A second man, aged 35, was also before the courts for allegedly possessing a firearm and being an accessory after the fact.

Pilmer described the shooting as “an isolated incident”.

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The Blues halfback who thought his career was over at 20

Source: Radio New Zealand

Funaki performing a Randy Orton style celebration after scoring a try. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Taufa Funaki’s rugby career was almost over before it started.

Six years ago, when he was a highly-touted young halfback on the cusp of his first Super Rugby season, Funaki suffered a concussion so severe he believed it would force him from the game.

“I had a pretty bad head-knock a few years ago [2020]. It took me a long time to get back and for a while I didn’t think I was returning to rugby, but I was pretty lucky with the support I got.”

The electric halfback said he battled serious symptoms which left him unable to do basic tasks.

“They were big headaches that got to a point where I had to learn how to read and write, it got that deep. I couldn’t be in, or see light and stuff. It just really irritated me. I think overall it took about five, six months for me to get back to training. So yeah, it just showed me how important it was for me to be grateful for what I had, because just like that, it felt like everything was gone.”

Funaki just 20-years-old and not long out of Sacred Hart College when he got concussed in an NPC game for Auckland.

Funaki was co-captain of the Sacred Hart First XV. Photosport

“Being that young, I had just debuted for Auckland, done a pre-season for the Blues, so there’s that big mental doubt because I’d never faced anything that big before, adversity in terms of my career,” he said.

“I think I grew a lot out of it. It matured me quite early and I now want to make the most of this opportunity I have to be a rugby player. There was that mental battle, but I think if anything, it made me stronger.”

However, Funaki said he is fully fit and no longer impacted.

“There’s no worrying getting into a game. I’m back and I’m ready to go.”

Funaki has long been locked in a three way fight for the Blues number nine jersey since his debut in 2021.

He has often sat on the bench as backup to Sam Nock or Finlay Christie.

Despite the competition, Finaki said the trio share a close bond.

“We’ve got a really tight group of nines. Offering advice, always finding ways to help me out, especially in my early years. We’re just there for each other whether or not we’re playing.”

Funaki has again been named on the bench for the Blues home clash against newest rivals Moana Pasifika on Sunday afternoon.

“We’ve obviously got a lot of friends in there that we’ve come up with through the grades. We know that they’re big boys and we have got to front up or they’ll punch you right in the face. They’re no easy task.”

Funaki scores a try against the Highlanders. Photosport

Funaki admitted there was a unique rivalry with Moana, being the only sides that share a region in Super.

“I see some funny stuff over the media and all that, but yeah, I guess so. It’s a little bit of a rivalry.”

A proud Blues man, Funaki never envisioned himself playing for any other franchise.

“I grew up here in Auckland. So Blues and Auckland rugby player through and through. I grew up watching the likes of Joe Rocks (Rokocoko) George Moala , all guys like that who’ve just been Blues men. I found my spot here and this is something that really means a lot to me.”

However, there is interest from overseas to secure his signature.

“There has been a bit of interest elsewhere. If it was an ideal situation, I’d be in the Blues forever. But obviously other things come up and as you get older, I feel like as I’m growing up a bit, there’s a few other decisions that need to be made as well and other things taken into account. But, right now I’m a Blues player and I hold a tonne of pride putting this jersey on.”

Funaki is eligible to represent both New Zealand and Tonga. Photosport

Of Pasifika heritage, Funaki will be eligible to represent both New Zealand and Tonga.

“If it came to it. The possibility of playing for Tonga is definitely there for me. I’d be just as proud of being there and representing my family and heritage. But yeah, whether it’s a black jersey, a red jersey or a blue one, I just want to do the jersey justice wherever I get the opportunity.”

Funaki has endeared himself to fans through his love of pro wrestling, even performing a Randy Orton style celebration after scoring a try.

“I found a lot of fun in that growing up and I think now a few of us in the team, we sort of play around with that stuff, it taps into us being kids again. I managed to pull out that Randy Orton a couple years ago, but that’s just me being like the kid again, just doing rugby at its purest form and me just expressing myself.”

So, does he have more wrestling inspired celebrations up his sleeve?

“We’ll see. I just need to get over that white line first and we’ll see what comes out.”

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Michael Scott Rodger found guilty of murdering and dismembering Canterbury father Richard Leman

Source: Radio New Zealand

Michael Scott Rodger. RNZ / Nathan Mckinnon

A 46-year-old man accused of murdering and dismembering a Canterbury father of three has been found guilty.

Michael Scott Rodger has been on trial for four weeks in the High Court at Christchurch for the murder of Richard Leman in April 2023.

Leman was missing for almost a week before his torso was found in the boot of his own car at an abandoned house in Rangiora.

The jury delivered its unanimous verdict to the High Court Thursday afternoon after retiring for deliberations on Tuesday.

More to come…

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/12/michael-scott-rodger-found-guilty-of-murdering-and-dismembering-canterbury-father-richard-leman/

Renewable energy generation hits new high, gas at 46-year low

Source: Radio New Zealand

Abundant rainfall at hydro lakes has led to record levels of renewable energy generation. RNZ/Carol Stiles

Abundant rainfall at the country’s hydro lakes has led to record levels of renewable energy generation.

The quarterly energy report from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), showed a record-high 96.4 percent of electricity generation coming from renewable sources from October to December 2025.

“Hydro inflows were strong, which supported an 8 percent increase in hydro generation compared with the same quarter in 2024,” MBIE domains manager Amapola Generosa said.

“We also saw continued growth from new grid‑scale solar farms connecting, which lifted solar generation by more than 70 percent year‑on‑year.”

Natural gas generation fell to its lowest quarterly level since 1980, with output down 52 percent from a year earlier.

“Contributing to this was planned maintenance at gas generation plants during the quarter,” Generosa said.

MBIE said emissions from electricity generation fell to their lowest quarterly level since records began in 1990. Electricity demand also increased in the period.

“National consumption rose 6.5 percent to 10,045 GWh, with agricultural demand rising 14.2 percent due to irrigation loads,” Generosa said.

“Industrial consumption increased 12.2 percent, in part due to comparatively low usage in the December 2024 quarter.”

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Cricket Players Association boss Heath Mills to step down after 25 years

Source: Radio New Zealand

Heath Mills speaking to media at a press conference. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

New Zealand Cricket Players Association chief executive Heath Mills is stepping down after more than two decades in the role.

The NZCPA said Mills had played a huge role in shaping the modern landscape for professional cricketers in New Zealand and internationally, as well as being a strong advocate for the growth and professionalisation of the women’s game.

Mills, who has led the NZCPA since 2001, will remain in the job until June.

He said the decision to step down had been a difficult one, but that the time felt right for both himself and the organisation.

“The NZCPA has been a huge part of my life for more than 25 years, and the experiences, opportunities, challenges and relationships along the way have shaped me profoundly,” Mills said.

“I’ve been incredibly fortunate that the game’s best players have trusted me to serve them in this role. I’m deeply grateful to everyone who has allowed me to represent and support them, and I hope I’ve been able to contribute in a way that justifies that trust.”

A bid by a consortium of high profile cricket figures, pulled together by Mills, to launch a T20 competition became a flashpoint late last year.

It culminated in the resignation of NZ Cricket chief executive Scott Weenink days before Christmas.

The NZCPA and all six Major Associations strongly supported the bid, which is still being considered, while Weenink was accused of undermining the proposal in favour of alternative options.

Former NZ Cricket CEO Scott Weenink. © Photosport Ltd 2024 www.photosport.nz

Mills will continue to work closely within the global cricket landscape through his position as Executive Chairman of the World Cricketers’ Association.

He will also remain involved with the NZCPA in a project management capacity over the next 18 months, helping oversee negotiations for the next Master Agreement with New Zealand Cricket and the six Major Associations.

NZCPA chairperson Ross Verry paid tribute to Mills’ leadership and influence on the organisation and the wider game.

“Heath has been one of the most knowledgeable, progressive and influential leaders in New Zealand sport over the past two decades, and his impact has been felt across the global game,” Verry said.

“More importantly, he has always been absolutely committed to the members of the NZCPA. Heath has consistently had the players’ backs – past and present – and has represented them with loyalty, integrity and a deep sense of purpose.”

Verry said Mills had led significant innovation within the players’ association movement while navigating a constantly evolving cricket landscape.

“Under Heath’s leadership the NZCPA has become an organisation that players around the world look to as a benchmark. Initiatives like the Personal Development Programme, the Retirement Fund, the Cricketers’ Hardship Trust and the Cricket Players’ Property Trust have created opportunities and security for players long after their playing careers end.

“He has also been a passionate supporter of the women’s game and played a key role in the progress that has enabled more women to pursue cricket as a profession in New Zealand.”

The NZCPA board would begin a process to appoint Mills’ successor in the coming weeks.

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Heinz Wattie’s restructure will have ripple effect, Employers and Manufacturers Association says

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Wattie’s factory in Christchurch. Nathan McKinnon / RNZ

A Wattie’s factory employee facing redundancy fears for her and her colleagues’ futures, saying it has been decades since some of them have had to interview for a job.

And the Employers and Manufacturers Association (EMA) believes there will be a ripple effect right across the country if Heinz Wattie’s goes ahead with its major shake-up.

The company wants to shut its plants in Auckland, Christchurch and Dunedin and stop the production of a number of products, including frozen vegetables.

Kathy Perrin, a forklift driver and E tū union delegate in Christchurch, told Midday Report they were expecting a few redundancies, but not the closure of the entire plant.

“We could see we were a bit heavy on the staff, how many members we had, staff members we had, not just junior members. We could see we were a bit top-heavy and we thought there’d be redundancy, not a plant closure. This is just – it’s traumatising.”

She said many staff had young families and mortgages, while others expected to work for Wattie’s until they reached retirement.

“Even members that are 45, I was talking to one last night and he was saying that, you know, ‘I’d settled in and I was feeling that this was [my job] until I was retirement age.’”

Another said their last job interview was in 1979.

“Everybody needs to come together – the government, the union and the company all need to get together and go, ‘Okay, what assistance are you going to need after the doors are closed?’ … if it’s help with rents, accommodation, mortgages for young families, those things, all those needs… we leave nobody behind, because we can’t be left behind.”

She blamed the proposed closures on the company’s offshore owners, and said they were now facing a future of minimum-wage work.

“The union have been great, they are helping us, they are being fantastic. And local management are being fantastic. This doesn’t come from Christchurch, this doesn’t come from within New Zealand. This is done outside of it.”

Employers and Manufacturers Association head of advocacy Alan McDonald. RNZ / Dan Cook

‘People will probably miss it’

EMA head of advocacy Alan McDonald was surprised by the news.

“The growers, they’ve got pretty extensive distribution networks, so they will be impacted in some way or form and that’ll ripple out through those communities as well.

“And it’s been a long-standing brand in New Zealand, so people will probably miss it.”

McDonald said the news would be soul-destroying for some whānau.

“In some of those manufacturing businesses and things like the meatworks and stuff and dairy factories, you get multi-generational people working in those areas and those businesses, so it’s pretty tough on a lot of families.”

McDonald said he hoped that some of the 350 staff at risk could be redeployed into the company to lessen the impact, especially on regional communities.

Heinz Wattie’s said further redeployment opportunities would be investigated throughout the course of the year in line with the phased site closures.

It said it would continue to invest in operations, marketing and research and development, to strengthen its resilience and secure long-term growth.

Redundancy packages, career transition and outplacement services, counselling and wellbeing support would be offered to employees.

The Wattie’s factory in Christchurch. Nathan McKinnon / RNZ

Concerns over NZ’s food security

A group representing commercial vegetable growers said food security could become a problem if Heinz Wattie’s goes ahead with a proposal to shut down three factories.

Process Vegetables chair David Hadfield told Morning Report the ripple effect of the closure would hit about 220 Canterbury farmers who produced around 36,000 tonnes of peas every year for the company.

“New Zealand has one of the highest yielding areas for peas and it’s an excellent product. But the problem is, New Zealanders aren’t eating enough vegetables.”

Hadfield said while shocked by the proposal, he was not surprised. He said local production costs were high and it was cheaper to import products.

He warned, however, that if food was not grown locally the country was more vulnerable to things like disrupted shipping routes, such as is happening at the moment because of the conflict in the Middle East.

Hadfield said red tape was also partly to blame for the potential closures, and felt regulations in recent years had become burdensome.

Selwyn Mayor Lydia Gliddon. Supplied/ Facebook

Selwyn Mayor Lydia Gliddon wanted clarity on how Canterbury growers would be affected by the proposal. She said the news came as a surprise and she had more questions than answers.

She said it was unclear whether local growers would lose their contracts entirely.

Gliddon said it did not make financial sense to ship produce to the remaining factory in Hastings for processing.

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Joe Rogan keeps highlighting Trump’s biggest liabilities

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Aaron Blake, CNN

Podcaster Joe Rogan Mark J. Rebilas / USA Today Sports / Reuters via CNN Newsource

Analysis – If there’s one figure who epitomized President Donald Trump’s ability to cobble together a winning coalition in 2024, it might have been Joe Rogan – the influential podcaster who made big news by endorsing Trump on the eve of the election after interviewing him.

(On the flipside, much ink has been spilled about the Kamala Harris campaign not booking a date with Rogan’s podcast and the detrimental effect that might have had on her bid to become president.)

Sixteen months later, Rogan epitomizes Trump’s problems in holding that coalition together.

Rogan has broken with Trump on several major issues since mid-2025. And polling shows the issues he’s picked happen to be some of Trump’s biggest political liabilities – including the war with Iran, the Jeffrey Epstein files and immigration enforcement.

Iran

The big, new one is the war with Iran. Rogan said Tuesday that Trump’s ongoing assault on the country broke his promises to his voters.

“But it just seems so insane based on what he ran on,” Rogan said. “I mean, this is why a lot of people feel betrayed, right? He ran on no more wars and these stupid senseless wars, and then we have one that we can’t even really clearly define why we did it.”

Rogan had also been skeptical of Trump’s plans to target Venezuela before the ouster of Nicolas Maduro back in January. But he said that operation was at least “clean.” The military engagement to bring in Maduro lasted only a few hours, as opposed to the war with Iran, which is nearly two weeks old with no clear end in sight.

“It just doesn’t make any sense to me – unless we’re acting on someone else’s interests, like particularly Israel’s interests,” Rogan added. “It just didn’t make any sense to me.”

Nearly every poll shows the war with Iran is unpopular, with a majority opposing it and independents opposing it around 2-to-1. In fact, it might be the most unpopular new military conflict in a very long time.

Epstein

Rogan has for months expressed incredulity about the Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein files.

Similar to Iran, he’s cast it as a betrayal of Trump’s supporters, even suggesting that their belief Trump would make Epstein materials public if he won the election was a part of why they backed him.

“There’s a lot of stuff about, you know, when we thought Trump was going to come in and a lot of things are going to be resolved. We’re going to drain the swamp. We’re going to figure everything out,” Rogan said in July. “And when you have this one hardcore line in the sand that everybody’s been talking about forever, and then they’re trying to gaslight you on that?”

Last month, he called the FBI’s claim that there is no evidence Epstein had clients “the gaslightiest gaslighting sh*t I’ve ever heard in my life.”

Two days later, on February 12, he took aim at the Justice Department’s strange and inconsistent redactions practices.

“Like, what is this? This is not good. None of this is good for this administration,” Rogan said. “It looks f**king terrible. It looks terrible.”

Jeffrey Epstein pictured with Donald Trump. Getty / Davidoff Studios Photography

Rogan criticized Trump in particular for referring to the matter as a “hoax,” and even entertained the idea that Trump knew what Epstein had been doing.

“It looks terrible for Trump when he was saying that none of this was real, this is all a hoax. This is not a hoax,” Rogan added. “Like, did you not know? Maybe he didn’t know, if you want to be charitable. But this is definitely not a hoax.”

A January CNN poll found just 6% of Americans said they were satisfied with what the federal government had released of the Epstein files to that point.

A more recent Reuters-Ipsos poll from last month showed 65% of Americans said the federal government was “probably” or “definitely” hiding information about Epstein’s death, which was ruled a suicide, and 75% said it was “probably” or “definitely” hiding information about his supposed clients.

Immigration

Rogan has also amassed a growing volume of comments critical of Trump’s immigration crackdown.

It really kicked off in April, when he called the Trump administration’s sending undocumented migrants to a brutal El Salvador prison “horrific.”

By July, he called the administration’s targeting of immigrants without criminal records “insane.”

“Not cartel members, not gang members, not drug dealers, just construction workers showing up in construction sites and raiding them,” Rogan said. “Gardeners. Like, really?”

Later that month, Rogan decried how US citizens were getting caught up in the raids, and how Trump was trying to deport pro-Palestinian activists with legal status.

“A bunch of people that are totally innocent are going to get caught up. They already have been,” Rogan said. “You know, they have been.”

In mid-October, he said people were right to be concerned about out-of-control border-crossings in recent years. But he added that, “The military in the street, I think, is a dangerous precedent.”

He also criticized the administration for “ripping parents out of their communities,” adding: “I did not ever anticipate seeing that on TV on a regular basis.”

“I really thought they were just going to go after the criminals,” he said.

Rogan has called the administration’s targeting of immigrants without criminal records “insane”. OCTAVIO JONES / AFP

Rogan went on to criticize the administration for the killings of both Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis in January.

“It just seemed all kinds of wrong to me,” he said of Good’s death, adding that it “just looked horrific to me.”

And he even invoked the Gestapo, the secret police in Nazi Germany.

“And then I can also see the point of view of the people who say, ‘Yeah, but you don’t want militarized people in the streets just roaming around snatching people up, many of which turn out to actually be US citizens,’” he said. “They just don’t have their papers on them. Are we really going to be the Gestapo? ‘Where’s your papers?’ Is that what we’ve come to?”

Trump’s approval numbers on immigration have gone from about 10 points positive a year ago to about 10 points negative today – in large part because the American people also see his administration’s enforcement operations going too far.

The killings of Good and Pretti, in particular, have resulted in the administration signaling a change of course in an election year.

Tariffs

This has been one of Trump’s most unpopular issues for a long time. And while Rogan hasn’t spoken about it as much or as forcefully, he has called Trump’s strategy into question.

When Trump launched his tariffs against Canada a year ago, Rogan called the move “stupid.”

“We got to become friends with Canada again. This is so ridiculous,” Rogan said. “I can’t believe there is anti-American, anti-Canadian sentiment going on. It’s the dumbest f**king feud.”

He added the next month: “I’m scared of this tariff stuff because it’s radical change.”

Tariffs have been one of Trump’s most unpopular issues for a long time Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images via CNN Newsource

Uncharacteristically, Trump hasn’t hit back at Rogan.

Asked about Rogan’s criticisms last month by NBC News, Trump said they had spoken recently.

“I think he’s a great guy, and I think he likes me, too,” Trump said.

He added: “And, you know, liking me isn’t important. What happens is that – I think we do a phenomenal job, but I don’t think we’re good at public relations.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/12/joe-rogan-keeps-highlighting-trumps-biggest-liabilities/

Watch live: MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi speaks after being reinstated to Te Pāti Māori

Source: Radio New Zealand

The press conference will be livestreamed at the top of this page from about 12.30pm. This story will be updated.

MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi says the court has “brought justice to Te Tai Tokerau voters” when he ruled her expulsion from Te Pāti Māori “unlawful”.

Kapa-Kingi was this week officially been reinstated to Te Pāti Māori, after a High Court decision that ruled her suspension and subsequent expulsion was “unlawful”.

She’ll be speaking to reporters shortly from Parliament.

The MP took to social media earlier this week to celebrate the verdict, saying her intention in bringing the case was not to incite division, but “seek clarity and ensure the processes we hold ourselves to – particularly those grounded in tikanga, are honoured”.

The press conference will be livestreamed at the top of this page from about 12.30pm. This story will be updated.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/12/watch-live-mp-mariameno-kapa-kingi-speaks-after-being-reinstated-to-te-pati-maori/

‘I felt like a fraud’: Inside ‘double life’ of a steroid kingpin turned drug manufacturer

Source: Radio New Zealand

Joshua Townshend. Supplied

Nearly 10 years after he made headlines when he was jailed for running a large national steroid ring, Joshua Townshend has been sentenced to home detention this time for his part in a drug manufacturing ring and laundering nearly $700,000. National Crime Correspondent Sam Sherwood reports.

Joshua Townshend was in bed when he heard something like the burst of a siren coming from outside his newly-built Governor’s Bay home followed by a heavy knock on the door.

It was December 20, 2022.

Townshend walked to the front door, opened it and saw a “flurry of police activity”.

“I was just speechless for a long period of time, and I should have seen it coming…”

The raid signalled the end of Townshend’s criminal enterprise that involved importing and manufacturing drugs. An enterprise he’d thought about while in prison serving a sentence for his role as the kingpin of a steroid ring that spanned the country.

More than three years on Townshend, and two of his co-defendants, were sentenced in the Christchurch District Court. Townshend earlier pleaded guilty to representative charges of importing a Class C controlled drug analogue, manufacturing a Class C controlled drug, money laundering. The 39-year-old also admitted charges of possessing a Class A controlled drug (LSD), and possessing a Class B controlled drug (ecstasy).

Before he was sentenced to 12 months home detention he spoke to RNZ about his latest criminal offending, how it unravelled, and how his “dishonesty and deceit” filtered into every aspect of his life.

The steroid ring

In May 2017, Townshend was sentenced to two years imprisonment after pleading guilty to 129 charges under the Medicines Act and two charges of driving while disqualified.

Court documents say Townshend operated a “large national steroid ring” importing raw ingredients and manufacturing products for use as performance and image enhancers. He then sold the drugs through a website and a Facebook page.

“The business was lucrative, recording annual sales of around $350,000 with typical profit margins for this type of enterprise of 2000-5000%.”

Townshend had been warned by Medsafe of the illegality of his business, in March 2013 and April 2014. In February 2014 he pleaded guilty to two earlier charges of importing Class C drugs and was sentenced to nine months home detention and 200 hours community work. He committed part of his offending while on the sentence.

Townshend later appealed his sentence in the High Court at Christchurch. Justice Gendall dismissed his appeal and said the “scale and persistency” of Townshend’s offending must be recognised.

“Mr Townshend ran his illegal steroid business as a very large scale and lucrative operation and, in particular, for a substantial period of time while he was subject to an earlier sentence of home detention for illegally importing Class C controlled drugs.

“Mr Townshend’s conduct involved a high degree of pre-meditation. It was a cynical and deliberate, prolifically advertised, very large scale, operation run for high profit.”

Prior to being jailed Townshend was an associate of Raymond Moreton, who is the owner and operator of R&M Trailers Limited, with Townshend receiving payments through Moreton’s business account.

According to the summary of facts for Townshend’s latest offending while he was in custody he was in regular contact with Moreton, calling him 61 times.

Townshend told RNZ that when he went into prison he was “still very financially motivated”, and while he was in prison he was thinking about how his next enterprise would be possible.

“Once I got to prison, I met numerous people … who had huge amounts of money ready to go.”

He says that in prison he was exposed to people with criminal networks and backgrounds that he was not used to. He says high level drug offending was “kind of glamorised” in prison.

“Men in there wanted to appear to be more dominant and all that kind of thing. And so steroids, obviously can achieve that.

“But then the financial element as well, people asking me what I did, and it was very quickly that it kind of like presented itself as more opportunities to offend over time.”

He says people would say to him: “if you can get this for me, or you can do that for me, then I could have that for you that day”.

“The financial drive I had to make money that way was almost kind of like enabled or supported by that. There was new avenues for me to offend in ways that I hadn’t had before.”

On May 8, 2018, Townshend was released from prison and he began receiving payments from Moreton.

“When I got out of prison, I’d almost given myself permission to re-offend,” Townshend says.

Joshua Townshend. Supplied

“That was the problem. I was still very financially motivated. And so my goal, I guess, was getting back on my feet. And in hindsight, that getting back on my feet was probably just financially driven to a standard that I think was unrealistic… it started almost immediately.

“What I’d got used to was having options, you know, having the ability to live a lifestyle that I hadn’t encountered before… the money really made me feel like I could succeed in some form.

He says making honest money would’ve taken genuine employment and going through avenues such as studying which he didn’t feel capable of.

“I didn’t feel that with my criminal history that getting stable employment was even possible to the same level of financial potential that I had with this… there was numerous times prior to going to prison where I tried, attempted to start legitimate businesses, and it was very hard for me to put down the illicit trade, because the illicit trade was so much more lucrative,”

“It was almost impossible, it felt impossible, for me to look elsewhere when I was willing to take, at the time those high risks for high rewards.”

In 2020, Townshend incorporated a company, Enfuse Limited, which operated as a juice business.

After hiring a warehouse space in Ferrymead he met Stuart Chadwick, the director and shareholder of Commercial Property Management Limited. Chadwick later incorporated CPM Health Ltd, which took over the juice business from Enfuse Limited.

In September 2021, Chadwick and Townshend moved their businesses to a larger warehouse space in Hillsborough.

The drugs

Between May 30, 2018 and August 23, 2022 Townshend and Moreton regularly imported consignments containing 4-methylpropiophenone which were delivered to Moreton’s address.

The summary of facts says synthetic cathinones are often sold as MDMA, also known as Ecstasy. Mephedrone is commonly sold in New Zealand under the false pretence of being true MDMA and has a street value of about $200 per gram.

Only three of the consignments were intercepted, each of which contained 4-methylpropiophenone. There were 39 consignments that were addressed to RM Engineering, Raymond Moreton, Joshua Townshend, Eukora Health, Enfuse or variations of those names.

“These imports were from similar addresses in China and consistently labelled as ‘Synthetic/Organic Pigment’, ‘Silicone/Silicone sample’ or something similar, and described as having ‘no commercial value’.”

Throughout this period $285,000 in cash was deposited into Townshend’s account. He also used a further $69,000 in cash to buy six vehicles. The cash was the proceeds of selling Mephedrone.

Police were unable to determine the exact amount of mephedrone manufactured, but were able to make an estimate based on the amount of money that was made.

“Using this range, the laundered money suggests that Mr Moreton and Mr Townshend manufactured between 4.8 and 21 kilograms of mephedrone.”

Townshend says he did a lot of research into the “chemistry elements” of the operation.

“There’s a degree of basic chemistry knowledge that I think anyone needs to know to do this kind of thing, which I didn’t have.

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

“I was learning backwards. So instead of understanding it from a from a fundamental kind of like ground up perspective, I was trying to understand it from the top down, which was quite complex and very high risk and frustrating at times. I felt like it was a problem to be solved, I think, at the time, and I wasn’t really considering the harm that was coming from it.”

Once he had successfully manufactured it he tested the products on himself and got addicted to “quite a serious degree” where he says he was up for days at a time using them.

Over time he had people “lined up that were willing to purchase”.

“Demand just stayed pretty current from there.”

He says the group the drugs were supplied to was “one or two individuals at a time”.

“It was just people who had the money available. I guess my methodology at the time was to try and minimise how many people I dealt with, and I did my best to avoid any kind of like association with gangs and things, although at points it was unavoidable.”

The painting

In May 2019, Customs staff visited Moreton after finding 4-methylpropiophenone in one of his imports. He told them it was for waterproofing, which they accepted.

Then, three years later, in September 2022, Customs intercepted and seized a 29kg fibreboard drum that had been imported by Townshend and Moreton. The drum, from Shanghai Doing Industry Limited in China, had been declared as “silicon with no commercial value”.

However, inside the drum was a separate 25 litre blue plastic container containing about 25kgs of 4-methylpropiophenone.

Customs seized the shipment due to it being falsely declared and containing a precursor for illegal drug manufacture.

Townshend recalls a letter coming in the mail to say it had been seized and that they had identified what the chemical was.

“That was my first kind of like warning that they understood at the very least what the chemical was and I know that there’s only a handful of things that can be used for, so I guess that was my first clue that something was being done about it. But there was a degree of complacency in me, and because I was still so financially driven at that time, my priority, I guess, was still maintaining that lifestyle and flow of money.”

On November 25, 2022 police obtained a surveillance device warrant targeting Townshend, Moreton and Chadwick.

During a conversation Townshend advised Moreton that he was planning on doing some “painting” before Christmas and New Year’s but would do a test first to make sure the “paint” they imported works.

Townshend said if he can get a couple of things “painted up” before New Year’s, they could move it, he could keep a couple of people happy, and they could both benefit from it.

The summary of facts said painting was a reference to manufacturing drugs, and moving is a common reference to supplying drugs.

On December 9, 2022 Townshend called Moreton and told him had everything ready to go, including the blue drum, but he still needed ethyl acetate (an extraction solvent that can be used in the manufacture of various drugs). They discussed a supplier and Moreton agreed to obtain some for Townshend.

Townshend said he still had to do a test paint to see if it dried properly. He said if it was OK, they should make it happen as “we’ve got everything here”.

Court documents say Townshend operated a “large national steroid ring” importing raw ingredients and manufacturing products for use as performance and image enhancers. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The raids

On December 20, 2022 search warrants were carried out at Townshend’s home, Moreton’s address, and the warehouse used by Townshend and Chadwick.

Townshend was in bed when the police arrived.

“It felt very embarrassing to have such a huge police presence in a place that I’d just moved into, I was like a bit of a deer in the headlights, to be honest.”

Inside Townshend’s bedroom was 18 tabs of LSD, and nine tablets of MDMA.

He also had some cash, syringes and 50 vials of various liquids and substances and some snap-lock bags with quantities of white powder.

Townshend says that while on his way to the police station a police officer said to him “you’re in a bit of a downward spiral aren’t you?”.

“I said ‘yeah’, I kind of acknowledged at that point that my life was finally kind of falling apart.”

At the warehouse were various items used in the manufacture of mephedrone.

The summary of facts said Townshend engaged in a total of $669,000 of money laundering. This excluded an unknown sum he used to fund the purchase of land in Governors Bay as well as plan and build the house. Townshend and Chadwick built a high-spec house on the section which sold in November 2022 for $1.2 million.

Moreton engaged in $689,000 in money laundering transactions.

When spoken to by police Townshend declined to comment.

Moreton denied any involvement in criminal activity and claimed the imports were all for legitimate purposes. He claimed ammunition found at his home was mistakenly purchased on TradeMe. He admitted MDMA was his but claimed mephedrone was Viagra.

Chadwick declined to comment.

Townshend says in the months prior to his arrest he was beginning to feel “quite sick internally”.

“When you’re making huge amounts of money illegally, as much as you have these options, it’s very hollow.

“I couldn’t really enjoy myself as much as I wanted to be. You know, when you’re paying for hotels in cash and things like that, you just really do feel like you’re kind of existing outside of society.”

He also struggled with living a double-life.

“When you are meeting people socially, and you may present as someone successful, and they ask you, what do you do? And I have to make something up, that’s incredibly hard. I couldn’t be proud of what I did. I couldn’t be honest about what I did, so the dishonesty and deceit ended up filtering into every aspect of my life… I felt like a fraud.

“If I met, you know, a new girl and I met her parents, you know, I had to, I had to lie if I met people out and about with friends, I had to lie if I was even talking to my own family.”

He recalls a conversation with his mother who was concerned about how he was making money.

“She asked me, ‘what’s going on?’ And I had to reassure her that everything was fine when it was absolutely not fine.

“And that kind of double life, looking over your shoulder all the time, you know, worrying about potentially being raided at any point. You know, driving past a police car and thinking, are they going to turn around? All that kind of stuff is just, it’s the pits. It makes this kind of lifestyle incredibly hard as it should.”

He was also in the grips of addiction to multiple substances.

Townshend was in the cells for the night after his arrest. The following morning he was released on bail, which he calls “an incredible gift”.

“From that point, I had to kind of reassess my life and work out what direction I was going and kind of what had happened.”

He says he was still “very financially motivated”, but started to rule out “illicit ways of making money”.

“I was like, I can’t continue to do this. I’m looking at prison time now. What am I going to do?”

He says he did a coaching diploma and psychology diploma through polytech. Halfway through the year he was diagnosed with ADHD and started taking medication. He says being medicated helped him with his studies and he turned his psychology diploma into a degree which he finished last year.

He also did a short rehabilitative programme and engaged in peer support work. He has recently started a master’s degree in health psychology through Massey University.

Sentencing

RNZ spoke with Townshend in the hours before his sentencing.

He said he was feeling “much calmer than I thought I would”.

“I’ve come to a place of real acceptance with this. It’s been a while that it’s been going through courts and so I think if I compare it back to the last time I was facing this kind of thing, last time, I didn’t really have much purpose outside of what I had been doing.

“And the difference that I feel now is, I think over the last three years, I’ve discovered myself a lot more, and I’ve, I guess, learned a lot more about the harm that my offending was causing, and so I’m just accepting of what the court process needs to do, and I know that regardless of the outcome, I’ve got a better future ahead of me.”

At sentencing, Crown prosecutor Will Taffs told the court the offending was a “reasonably sophisticated drug operation on a large scale”.

He said the “magic figure” when looking at the offending was the $1.2m that was laundered.

A number of methods were used to launder money including construction of a house, salary payments and buying vehicles.

He said Townshend had since his arrest “really put his best foot forward”.

However, he said the offending was “almost a continuation of previous offending”.

“He was released on release conditions and immediately engaged in the same type of operation but on a much larger scale.”

Townshend’s lawyer, Olivia Jarvis says the man standing before the Judge today was a different one to the one who committed the offending and referred to the steps he had taken.

“It’s difficult to see what else he could’ve done since the offending.”

She submitted an appropriate sentence was home detention.

She referenced his ADHD diagnosis and said it “helps to understand why he offended and that impulsive desire…”

Jarvis said Townshend’s Master’s degree was also a significant factor. She said if Townshend was jailed drug treatment would be unlikely to be considered appropriate given the steps he had already taken to address his addictions. He would also likely lose the opportunity to continue his Master’s degree.

She said Townshend had shown “extraordinary remorse”.

Jarvis submitted to the court her client’s rehabilitation had been nothing short of remarkable, and Judge Raoul Neave said he was inclined to agree.

“Mr Townshend has taken remarkable steps to educate and rehabilitate himself,” Neave said.

“The individual who stands before the court today is a completely different one to the individual who committed the offending.”

“Mr Townshend has completely reinvented himself in a way that is incredibly impressive,” Judge Neave said.

Judge Neave said the criminal enterprise was substantial.

“It’s clearly a commercial enterprise on a significant scale.

“This was a sophisticated and determined operation involving a significant number of sales and a high level of proceeds.”

Despite the large sum of money Townshend had obtained through manufacturing and supplying the drugs, “it’s unlikely he will ever see a penny of it”, Judge Neave said.

He sentenced Townshend to 12 months home detention and 250 hours community work.

Moreton, 57, earlier pleaded guilty to representative charges of importing a Class C controlled drug analogue, manufacturing a Class C controlled drug and money laundering. He also admitted unlawful possession of ammunition and possessing a Class B controlled drug. He was sentenced to 12 months home detention and 300 hours community work.

Chadwick, 62, pleaded guilty to a representative charge of engaging in a money laundering transaction.

Judge Neave said Chadwick was reckless rather than sinister and he was not directly involved in producing or supplying drugs. However, he was “no mere dupe nor hapless”, Judge Neave said.

He was sentenced to four months home detention.

‘Anyone’s capable of change’

Townshend says he’s “incredibly embarrassed about the way I’ve conducted myself throughout my life”.

“I can see through working with people who have been in active addiction and have come from very dysfunctional upbringings and things, how much harm drugs do in society, especially addictive stimulants, like the ones that I was providing, I acknowledge that harm and take full responsibility for it, and I am committed to make some changes.”

Asked what his message would be to those who say he’ll never change, Townshend says “anyone’s capable of change”.

Asked if it was all worth it, Townshend replied: “absolutely not”.

“I wouldn’t want to not have the lessons that I’ve learned now, and I wouldn’t want to change who I am. But if I could take back the drug offending and all of it for any level of money made, I would take it back without a doubt.”

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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/2026/03/12/i-felt-like-a-fraud-inside-double-life-of-a-steroid-kingpin-turned-drug-manufacturer/

Government will publicly release findings of inquiry into Moa Point wastewater plant

Source: Radio New Zealand

Some beaches have been off limits for swimming since the Moa Point treatment plant failed on 4 February. Kate Pereyra/RNZ

The government will publicly release the findings of an independent inquiry into the Moa Point wastewater treatment plant “as soon as possible”.

Millions of litres of raw sewage continued to enter the Cook Strait each day following the plant’s catastrophic failure at the start of February.

A rāhui was put in place on the stretch of southern coast from Ōwhiro Bay to Breaker Bay, and was lifted a few weeks later.

Minister for Local Government Simon Watts confirmed on Thursay the Crown Review team would be led by the chairperson of the water services authority, Taumata Arowai, Raveen Jaduram.

Raveen Jaduram would lead the Crown Review team. (File photo) RNZ / Dan Cook

He said an infrastructure engineer and two lawyers would assist the investigation.

“Wellingtonians deserve clear answers about what led to the catastrophic failure at Moa Point and the assurance that it will not happen again.

“The review team’s work will provide that certainty by investigating what led to the failure and what must change to prevent it from happening again,” Watts said.

He said the review would target both Wellington City Council and Wellington Water in a parallel process, with an interim report expected to be delivered before July 1 – and the plant’s transfer to new water entity Tiaki Wai.

“My intention is to publicly release the findings as soon as possible while managing any risk of prejudicing the investigation or any enforcement action by Greater Wellington Regional Council or any commercial or legal action or claims,” Watts said.

Recommendations from the final report would be reported to Cabinet.

Wellington mayor Andrew Little informed his council colleagues of the update during Thursday’s council meeting.

He said the government had appointed a “high powered team”.

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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/2026/03/12/government-will-publicly-release-findings-of-inquiry-into-moa-point-wastewater-plant/

19 Air New Zealand flights cancelled due to Whakaari/White Island ash cloud

Source: Radio New Zealand

Air NZ has cancelled 19 flights because of ash. RNZ / Tracy Neal

Air New Zealand has cancelled 19 flights due to an ash cloud coming from Whakaari/White Island in the Bay of Plenty.

GeoNet’s volcanic alert says there is moderate to heightened volcanic unrest on the island.

It’s the second time in four months flight have been cancelled in an out of Tauranga because of ash.

Air NZ’s chief safety and risk officer Nathan McGraw says they’ll reassess conditions this afternoon.

He says affected customers will be rebooked on the next available flight.

More to come…

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/12/19-air-new-zealand-flights-cancelled-due-to-whakaari-white-island-ash-cloud/

Visible police presence expected in Rotorua and Ōpōtiki as gang tangi travels through

Source: Radio New Zealand

Reports of illegal activity will be followed up by police RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A visible police presence can be expected across Rotorua on Friday and Saturday as a gang tangi travels to Ōpotiki.

A large number of gang members and associates are expected to be in town for the tangi, from many parts of the country, police warn.

Additional police resources will be available to provide support and provide a respectful and safe space for whānau and friends to grieve peacefully, Eastern Bay of Plenty Area Commender Nicky Cooney said in a statement.

Police have conveyed their “lawful expectations” to local gang leaders – including around the waring or displaying of gang insignia in public.

Cooney said the police focus is on the safety of everyone, adding that behaviour which aims to threaten or intimidate will not be tolerated, and officers will be working to reduce disruption to the public.

Reports of illegal activity will be followed up by police

Anyone who witnesses illegal behaviour is urged to call 111, or provide information anonymously through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/12/visible-police-presence-expected-in-rotorua-and-opotiki-as-gang-tangi-travels-through/

Building the future of coastal shipping resilience

Source: New Zealand Government

The Government is committed to building the resilience of New Zealand’s coastal shipping network, through six critical investments to deliver a more productive economy and ensure essential supplies can reach communities in times of crisis.

Associate Transport Minister James Meager has confirmed $400,000 towards a national digital platform to improve supply chain efficiency and coordination across ports, in partnership with PortConnect.

“Historically, the siloed nature of New Zealand’s port operations has resulted in limited ability to anticipate, respond and adapt to disruptive events. This funding will address the fragmented coordination of berthing windows and vessel visits,” Mr Meager says.

“Recent weather events have reinforced the value of clear, shared information when under pressure. Our ports are an economic lifeline to the outside world. If we are to grow productivity, we need greater resilience to external impacts on the way we trade.”

This is the final investment from the Government’s $30 million Coastal Shipping Resilience Fund, which also includes:

Container-handling equipment in Gisborne to support rapid freight movement
Modifications to the Rangitata coastal vessel to improve self-sufficiency in cargo handling
Reconstruction and return to service of the Greymouth wharf
Training berths on domestic vessels to give maritime students the sea time required to qualify as mariners
A cost-effective dredging capability, built in Northland, to support smaller regional ports

“Coastal shipping is a critical piece of our freight network, moving large and heavy cargo such as containers, cement and aggregate efficiently and safely. It is also a low-emissions mode of transport and has repeatedly proven its value following natural disasters,” Mr Meager says.

“After Cyclone Gabrielle, coastal shipping delivered essential supplies to Tairāwhiti when land routes were severely constrained. These six investments build on that experience and help ensure we are better prepared for future events in practical, tangible ways.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/12/building-the-future-of-coastal-shipping-resilience/

New appointment to the TEC Board

Source: New Zealand Government

Minister for Vocational Education, Penny Simmonds, has announced the appointment of Scott Haines JP to a vacancy on the Board of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC). 

“I am pleased to confirm the appointment of Mr Haines to this role. He brings significant school leadership experience, which is important for the Board of the TEC to have,” Ms Simmonds says.

“Mr Haines’ appointment follows the resignation of Yvonne Browning MNZM at the end of 2025 for personal reasons. I would like thank Mrs Browning for her valuable contribution.”

Mr Haines is Principal of Burnside High School in Christchurch, one of New Zealand’s largest secondary schools. He has also been principal of Motueka High School and Waimea College in the Tasman region.

Mr Haines has made significant contributions at a national level as Vice-President of the Secondary Principals’ Association of New Zealand (SPANZ) and as member of the Professional Advisory Group for NCEA, a Ministerial Forum on Raising Student Achievement and NZQA advisory panels.

“The TEC has a statutory role to facilitate and strengthen connections between schools, employers and tertiary education organisations. Mr Haines’ expertise in this area will be valuable to its Board,” Ms Simmonds says. 

“Scott’s experience and skills will ensure the TEC’s investment in and steering of the tertiary education and training system, and its provision of careers services, are directly informed by expertise from the schooling sector. 

“The Government’s new Tertiary Education Strategy, which the TEC is responsible for giving effect to, has a strong focus on access, participation and achievement to ensure all learners gain the skills needed to achieve strong careers. Mr Haines’ knowledge will help the TEC deliver the workforces New Zealand needs to succeed.”

Mr Haines’ appointment is for a three-year term, beginning 1 July 2026. This reflects his availability for Board meetings in the coming months, including SPANZ commitments. 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/12/new-appointment-to-the-tec-board-2/

A GENERATION OF SYRIAN CHILDREN LOST TO WAR, CONFLICT AND DISPLACEMENT – World Vision

Source: World Vision

Fifteen years since civil war erupted in Syria (March 15, 2011), and more than a year since the fall of the Assad regime, Syrian children are once again trapped in a crisis of conflict and displacement.
In the past month as conflict across the Middle East has erupted, more than 70,000 Syrians have fled Lebanon to return to their home country.
World Vision Country Programme Manager Ritam Bhattarai says many of those fleeing Lebanon have already experienced years of war, displacement, hunger, and insecurity.
“Children and families had found some semblance of safety in Lebanon, but renewed airstrikes, missile and rocket fire, and hostilities mean children are at risk and desperate families are on the move again.
“Many of these children have only ever known life as a refugee and to be faced with yet another round of violence and displacement is actually unbearable,” she says.
  Families fleeing Lebanon to return to Syria may be escaping violence, but they will face yet more challenges upon the return to Syria.
More than half the country’s population is in need of humanitarian assistance, including 7.5 million Syrian children.
  Bhattarai says children and families are in desperate need of emergency food supplies, clean water, healthcare, and psychological support.
“One of the most devastating impacts of the prolonged war is the impact on children’s mental health. Many Syrian children are only just surviving, and they carry deep emotional and psychological wounds. Without urgent intervention, we risk losing an entire generation to the long-term effects of trauma and despair,” she says.
Bhattarai says children living with complex post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental health conditions in Syria have little to no access to specialised mental health and psychosocial support.
Furthermore, she says many children are missing out on the benefits of education for learning, development, and future opportunities. Around two million Syrian children do not attend school. 
Bhattarai says World Vision New Zealand is calling on the New Zealand government to better support Syria by investing in expanded food assistance and resilience programmes and helping to fund long-term recovery and reconstruction, not simply support with emergency aid.
World Vision has been working in Syria since 2011 and with its partners has supported millions of children with emergency food, clean water, education support, and mental health and psychosocial care.
New Zealanders wanting to support children in Syria, can give herehttps://www.worldvision.org.nz/give-now/childhood-rescue/syria/

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/a-generation-of-syrian-children-lost-to-war-conflict-and-displacement-world-vision/

Appointments – WILLIAMSON TO CHAIR GUARDIANS FOR A FURTHER TWO YEARS

Source: The Guardians of New Zealand Superannuation

John Williamson will Chair The Guardians of New Zealand Superannuation for a further two years to October 2028, Finance Minister Nicola Willis announced today.

Ms Willis said Mr Williamson’s reappointment reflected his strong leadership and would maintain stability and continuity at the Guardians, manager of the $90 billion New Zealand Superannuation Fund.  

Mr Williamson said the Guardians had implemented some significant organisational changes in the past couple of years, following the adoption of a revised strategic framework in April 2024.

“Our focus continues to be on ensuring we have the right structure and processes to achieve our purpose: Sustainable investment delivering strong returns for all New Zealanders,” Mr Williamson said.

“I’m pleased to have the opportunity to contribute to this important work.”

Mr Williamson joined the Guardians Board in 2016 and was appointed Chair on 1 March 2024.

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/appointments-williamson-to-chair-guardians-for-a-further-two-years/

‘We’re just meant to say thank you’: Government u-turns on disability funding

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied

Disabled people and their carers are welcoming a government back-track on funding for support services, but say the past two years have been deeply traumatic and won’t be forgotten.

The Government has wound back controversial cuts to disability support services it made in 2024.

Two years ago Whaikaha Ministry of Disabled People – which at the time was in charge of the disability budget – abruptly introduced new purchasing guidelines which severely restricted what disabled people and their carers could use their allocated budgets for.

Following a review into the funding system, and a commitment the system is now “stabilised” the Government has confirmed as of 1 April the restrictions will be lifted.

Most recently people were told that as of 1 April their new budgets would reflect what they had spent between June 2023 and June 2025 – which for many had not been their full budget due to the restrictions on purchasing.

The Minister Louise Upston has now promised budgets won’t be cut to match the limited spending.

Carer Katy Thomas told Nine to Noon the trauma caused to families when the cuts were abruptly made, will not be easily overcome.

“I’m only aware of like one of my friends whose children are still in school there was just like a mass exodus of autistic children from mainstream schools.

“They just couldn’t cope without the supports.”

“Obviously it’s wonderful that it’s going to be reversed but I’m just going to hold my breath and wait and see because what I have seen is that they give with one hand and take with another.”

Emily Writes, the former director of Awhi Nga Matua – a charity supporting parents of disabled and medically fragile kids – told Nine to Noon she did not want to see the news turned around as a good news story.

“When we have literally thousands and thousands of families left utterly traumatised and having really long repercussions from the decisions that were made.”

“We had more than 10,000 people in just one week sign a petition begging for acknowledgment and an apology over the removal of supports. That was not even acknowledged by the Minister.

“And now we’re just meant to say thank you?”

Kristy Kewene is a Northland mother who carers for her adult son. She said it was shocking how quickly the supports were able to be taken away.

“It was scary that without consulting could just decide that they’re taking something quite significant from our lives and how we cope with our lives.

“We relied on that respite.”

Disability Support Service Tranformation general manager Alastair Hill said the community had been listened to, and he could assure certainty for them going forward.

“We heard a lot from carers through the community consultation… and they’re saying, for me, I’m best placed to know about what respite or what looking after myself looks like.

“And so they’ll be able to make those choices again.

He said the reintroduction of flexible funding was possible due the changes that had been made over the past two years.

“There is more money … our annual operating funding is around $500 million more than what it was two years ago.

He said under the previous system there was no way to forecast cost pressures and where the growth may come from, which lead to budget overruns almost every year, but now there was “commercial rigour” in place.

“We have a predictable growth track, we understand more and more the funding that we’re going to require.”

He acknowledged the past two years had been really difficult for people.

“It was a real privilegde to bge able to meet with people face to face around the country last year and to hear from them directly to hear their experiences, but also to hear what would make the biggest difference.

“We’ve worked really hard to rebuild the trust. It’s not for me to say whether that job is done.”

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Disability Issues Minister Louise Upston said the changes reflected feedback from the disability community last year, and the recommendations of the 2024 Independent Review.

“The steps we have taken since 2024 to stabilise the disability support system have been successful. Because of this, we can now confirm two things: the current purchasing rules will be removed in April, and people’s flexible funding allocations will stay exactly the same as they are now.

“This means we no longer need to look at what people spent in previous years to set new budgets.

“People will also get more support, guidance or coaching to manage their flexible funding – in a way that reflects their situation.”

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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/2026/03/12/were-just-meant-to-say-thank-you-government-u-turns-on-disability-funding/