PM Edition: Top 10 Energy Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

PM Edition: Here are the top 10 energy articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

Energy – Re-Energise 26 highlights opportunity for energy sector workforce to secure New Zealand’s energy future

March 25, 2026

Source: Energy Resources Aotearoa

Wellington, New Zealand – New modelling released today in Re-Energise 26 shows New Zealand should grow its energy workforce, and grow it quickly, to deliver electrification and build a secure, resilient energy system.

Produced jointly by Energy Resources Aotearoa and the Electricity Engineers’ Association (EEA), Re-Energise 26 is the first report to map workforce needs across the full energy sector. The comprehensive data set was built using top-down and bottom-up inputs from government and energy sector sources and covers a workforce of over 13,800 full-time equivalent energy sector employees and more than 4,000 contractors and consultants.

The modelling identifies pressure points in critical roles, with major bottlenecks in supervision, mentoring and assessment. It shows that without more skilled people, New Zealand will struggle to electrify, cut emissions and maintain a secure, resilient energy system.

It calls for coordinated action across the sector to lift career visibility, strengthen training pathways and build a more diverse and highly skilled workforce.

“Technology alone will not deliver New Zealand’s energy future,” says Energy Resources Aotearoa Chief Executive John Carnegie.

“Timing is critical for regions experiencing declining industries, where skilled workers are being displaced and risk being lost before new energy projects and opportunities come online.

It will take skilled people with the capacity to design, run and improve the system. If we want a more secure, lower-emissions energy future, our country needs to invest in the workforce that will make it happen.”

EEA Chief Executive Nicki Sutherland says energy security and reliability depend on experienced people and a strong pipeline of new talent.

“We need to think about investment in people as seriously as we do infrastructure to create the depth needed on our bench to achieve New Zealand’s secure energy future. And we need to be equipping our workforce with the right skills for a world that will be fundamentally different.”

Re-Energise 26 sets out an Industry Skills Action Plan built around four priorities: Attract, Develop, Collaborate and Retain.

To drive delivery, a Workforce Summit will be convened in May 2026, bringing energy sector organisations together to set priorities and assign delivery leads.

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/energy-re-energise-26-highlights-opportunity-for-energy-sector-workforce-to-secure-new-zealands-energy-future/

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Our interest in electric vehicles has grown due to oil price spikes. And it’s likely to remain

March 25, 2026

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tauel Harper, Associate Professor in Communications and Media, Murdoch University

The US military action in Iran may have an unintended secondary effect – ending the cultural dominance of the internal combustion engine and ushering in the age of electric vehicles.

Back in the 1970s, a sudden increase in the price of oil led to the public embracing smaller and more fuel efficient cars; similarly, the choking of the Strait of Hormuz, and the resultant high cost of oil, is driving a historic surge of interest in electric vehicles.

Google Trends data shows that almost three times as many Australians searched for “electric vehicles” on March 23 when compared to February 27, the day before the US started to bomb Iran and the cost of oil (and fuel) started to skyrocket. The increase in RSV (Relative Search Volume) represents a 278% increase in Australians searching for “electric vehicles”.

While research shows a number of factors influence Australians’ choice to own an electric vehicle, the price and availability of energy clearly plays a central role and the weight of public opinion is slowly shifting towards embracing EVs.

EV interest remains over time

Historically, the relationship between the cost of petrol and interest in electric vehicles (EVs) is even more telling. The graph below shows a clear pattern of higher petrol prices leading to more searches for EVs.

While the most notable feature of this data is the dramatic increase in searches for EVs since the US attacks on Iran began, it’s also interesting that while interest in EVs often drops as oil prices return to “normal”, it never drops back down to its previous level. Once sparked, our interest in EVs remains higher than before.

For instance, after the spike in oil prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, you can see a similar spike in searches for EVs. However, even after the oil price had dropped back down and stabilised, the Relative Search Volume (RSV) of Google searches for EVs remained at a higher level than before the invasion.

This suggests consumers retain some interest in EVs after the increase in oil prices has passed. Perhaps these global oil crises prompt the realisation that relying on energy imported from the other side of the world is more tenuous than relying on energy from your own rooftop.

A pragmatic interest in saving money

My colleagues and I recently explored Australia’s cultural attitudes to EVs. We argued increasing access to household solar energy was driving an enthusiasm for a new relationship with energy. But long-held anxieties around range, infrastructure, gender roles and national image, as well as traditionalist hold outs like enthusiast car culture and engine sounds, as factors that inhibit the take up of EVs in Australia.

However, the clear signal this trend data sends is that Australians are a pragmatic lot. If using an EV might save them money, then they are interested.

The data also presents a warning to car makers that have “bet against” the rise of the electric vehicle. Porsche, Lambourghini and Ferrari have all recently announced plans to reconsider or scale back their production of EVs. This is based on their assessment of shifts in the “political climate”, with security and trade taking precedence over “environmental concerns”.

While economic driving may not be a concern for many Ferrari drivers, Toyota has also made the decision to “not go all in” on electric. Instead, it offers only one full EV in Australia, amid a range of internal combustion and hybrid options. This bet against electric vehicles may look foolish if oil prices continue to rise.

Is this the ‘critical mass’ for EVs?

Google trends data is an enigmatic metric. It tells you how interest in things changes but not how much interest there is overall. According to sales data, there was a slump in EV sales in 2024, but EV sales in February 2026 were already 95% higher than they were in February 2025. The evidence of Google Trends suggests March’s results will show even more of an increase.

While technological change can be difficult to initiate, new technologies tend to reach a tipping point when they reach a “critical mass” of public adoption. Like the move from LPs to CDs to streaming services, what starts out as idiosyncratic can soon become a norm. Similarly, technology that once seemed here to stay can quickly become outdated.

With the cost of petrol rising once again, and Australians increasingly harnessing their solar electricity, we are rapidly normalising the benefits of electric vehicles.

I’d like to acknowledge the contribution to this article of my colleague, car enthusiast and academic Damian Fasolo, whose understanding of car culture contributed significantly.

ref. Our interest in electric vehicles has grown due to oil price spikes. And it’s likely to remain – https://theconversation.com/our-interest-in-electric-vehicles-has-grown-due-to-oil-price-spikes-and-its-likely-to-remain-278664

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/25/our-interest-in-electric-vehicles-has-grown-due-to-oil-price-spikes-and-its-likely-to-remain-278664/

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Is your ‘sustainable’ super funding fossil fuels or weapons? How to check the fine print

March 25, 2026

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jason Tian, Senior Lecturer, Finance School of Business, Law and Entrepreneurship, Swinburne University of Technology

Many Australians don’t realise their superannuation savings – worth A$4.5 trillion and growing – may be invested in fossil fuel companies, gambling, or even weapons manufacturers.

If you’ve switched how your super is invested to avoid any of those industries, you’re not alone.

The latest official superannuation statistics show most of Australia’s major super funds now offer investments designed to reduce exposure to everything from coal and oil to other industries like tobacco, weapons, gambling and alcohol.

But if you care about particular issues – from climate change to weapons of war – it’s worth reading the fine print to be sure where your money is going.


CC BY-NC

It’s easy to put off thinking about superannuation when retirement is years away. In this five-part series, we ask top experts to explain how to sort your super in a few simple steps, avoid greenwashing, and set goals for retirement.


What even counts as ‘sustainable’?

There’s no single definition of what makes a super option “sustainable” or “responsible”. So it’s not easy for consumers to compare different funds.

That’s why the federal government is currently consulting on clearer labelling rules for financial products marketed as “sustainable” (and a long list of similar terms) – including for superannuation.

For now, each fund sets its own criteria.

A few funds, such as Australian Ethical and Future Super, only offer sustainable options, with tighter investment restrictions than most super funds. Even so, the fine print matters.

For instance, in Australian Ethical’s case, weapons makers and tobacco producers are excluded outright. But a diversified company earning a small share of revenue from fossil fuels or alcohol may still be held, if its positives are judged to outweigh its negatives.

Among the biggest super funds, which most Australians have their super in, there’s a wide variety of “sustainable” options on offer.

Check what’s screened in or out

Most super sustainable options in Australia use some combination of “negative screening” (excluding sectors like fossil fuels, gambling or weapons) and “positive screening” (favouring companies with strong environmental, social and governance practices). But those thresholds vary widely.

A common approach is to set a revenue threshold, rather than an outright ban. This means a company can still be held as long as its income from a screened activity stays below a set percentage.

For example, HESTA’s “sustainable growth” option has a long list of exclusions, including companies with thermal coal, oil and gas reserves, tobacco and controversial weapons. Its thresholds vary for each category, from outright bans (such as on uranium miners) to restrictions on revenue (such as weapons).

Australia’s biggest super fund, AustralianSuper, has a “socially aware” option with some of the same exclusions. But its thresholds also vary. Last year, AustralianSuper attracted criticism for buying back into Whitehaven Coal for its wider, non-sustainable investment portfolio – a reversal of its 2020 sale of stocks in the coal miner.

The Australian Financial Review recently reported Australia’s third-largest pension fund Aware Super was lifting some restrictions on investments in carbon-heavy companies, under a new benchmark system to track which companies are doing most to cut emissions.

However, Aware Super told The Conversation that current fossil fuel screens in place for its “socially conscious” investment options “remain unchanged”.

Just last month, the Environmental Defenders Office lodged a complaint with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) about industry fund UniSuper. The complaint came after UniSuper halved the environmental revenue threshold for its “global environmental opportunities” product – from 40% to 20%.

UniSuper has said those changes were made “to expand the investible universe while maintaining the option’s environmental theme”.

Watch out for greenwashing

Australia’s corporate regulators are responding to more greenwashing allegations – with some resulting in fines.

ASIC has had several wins against major funds for misleading sustainability claims.

In a landmark first Federal Court greenwashing case in 2024, Mercer Super was fined $11.3 million after admitting it made misleading statements about its “sustainable plus” options.

Vanguard was then hit with a record $12.9 million penalty, after it was found to have misled investors about its $1 billion ethical bond fund.

And last year, Active Super was ordered to pay $10.5 million in a third greenwashing case. The court found Active Super’s marketing claimed it had eliminated investments in areas like gambling, coal mining and oil tar sands – when it hadn’t.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has again made greenwashing one of its enforcement priorities for the next year. The watchdog predicts misleading environmental claims will “continue, if not increase” as Australia transitions toward “net zero” emissions.

It pays to ask questions

None of this means sustainable investing is a bad idea.

In fact, research suggests companies investing in sustainable and socially responsible activities tend to be better governed – and that this is more often than not good for shareholders too.

But the labels and screening methods matter enormously.

If you’ve chosen a “sustainable” or “socially responsible” option because you care about particular issues, it’s worth checking if the fine print in your fund meets your expectations.

If you think your fund’s claims don’t stack up, try contacting your fund. If that doesn’t work, you can report concerns to ASIC or the ACCC.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information only and is not intended as financial advice.

ref. Is your ‘sustainable’ super funding fossil fuels or weapons? How to check the fine print – https://theconversation.com/is-your-sustainable-super-funding-fossil-fuels-or-weapons-how-to-check-the-fine-print-276879

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/25/is-your-sustainable-super-funding-fossil-fuels-or-weapons-how-to-check-the-fine-print-276879/

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Workforce planning key to meeting New Zealand’s energy needs

March 25, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

A report released today shows coordinated action is needed to build New Zealand’s energy workforce and meet growing demand across the energy sector, Social Development and Employment Minister Louise Upston says.

“The Re‑Energise 26 report shows that without the right people, in the right roles, at the right time, we risk slowing growth and missing opportunities across the energy sector”, Louise Upston says. 

Re-Energise 26 maps workforce needs across the full energy sector and identifies key challenges including sectoral uncertainty, uncoordinated workforce initiatives, training pipeline issues, pressure to fill critical roles, and bottlenecks in supervision, mentoring and assessment.

“This report is clear about the challenges facing the sector, but it also points to real opportunities. It is now more important than ever that we support talent development across the energy sector. 

“A more unified approach could help get New Zealanders into work, strengthen pathways into energy sector careers, and ensure employers can access the skills they need.”

Government, industry and training providers all have a role to play in strengthening the energy workforce, including improving career visibility and building clearer pathways into energy sector jobs.

“Our Government is focused on fixing the basics and building the future and we need a strong pipeline of talent, better connections between job seekers and employers, and training that gives people the skills they need for sustainable careers.”

The report also highlights the importance of timing, particularly in regions experiencing declining industries, where skilled workers risk being lost before new energy opportunities are available.

“The Government welcomes the clarity and evidence this report provides, and looks forward to working with industry, educators, regions and communities to turn these insights into action,” Louise Upston says.

Re-Energise 26 was produced by Energy Resources Aotearoa and the Electricity Engineers’ Association, with data and analytical insights provided by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

The report is available at: https://eea.co.nz/what-we-do/projects/re-energise-2026/

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/25/workforce-planning-key-to-meeting-new-zealands-energy-needs/

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Prospecting application targets frontier acreage

March 25, 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

A new prospecting permit application in the offshore Canterbury Basin signals renewed sector confidence in pursuing opportunities in New Zealand’s search for oil and gas, Resources Minister Shane Jones says.

New Zealand Petroleum & Minerals (NZP&M) has today opened a three-month competitive process for an application submitted by CBX Energy Limited. The proposal outlines a programme of technical and economic studies, including work on a comprehensive Canterbury Basin development strategy.

“The Canterbury Basin, off the east coast of the South Island, is one of New Zealand’s 18 sedimentary basins with known or potential hydrocarbons. It has long been viewed as a promising but largely untapped opportunity,” Mr Jones says.

“The basin remains far less explored than comparable regions overseas, highlighting how much potential is still to be tested.

“Further prospecting and exploration in the Canterbury Basin could unlock new domestic energy resources, strengthening New Zealand’s long‑term energy resilience and creating valuable economic opportunities.”

NZP&M will accept competing applications until 5pm, 24 June. Applications will be prioritised in accordance with the criteria set out in the Minerals Programme for Petroleum 2025. A permit may be awarded in response to the best application that also meets requirements of the Crown Minerals Act 1991. A petroleum prospecting permit is an early‑stage, low‑impact permit that allows a company to search for evidence of petroleum/oil and gas.

Since the removal of the petroleum exploration ban in late 2025, two exploration permit applications have already progressed through the competitive process and are now under assessment, with decisions expected later this year.

For more information see: Applications under the open market competitive process – New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/24/prospecting-application-targets-frontier-acreage/

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Transporting New Zealand calls for payload increases to mitigate diesel price hikes

March 25, 2026

Source: Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand

Road freight association Transporting New Zealand says transport regulations should be urgently amended to allow certain trucks to carry higher payloads, as diesel prices continue to hit record highs.
Transporting New Zealand Chief Executive Dom Kalasih says increasing payload capacity for approved operators within the existing heavy vehicle permitting system could improve fuel efficiency across the freight task and reduce diesel cost pressures.
Heavy vehicle permitting regulations currently allow approved freight operators to run High Productivity Motor Vehicles (HPMVs) on state highways and local roads suitable for vehicles operating above the standard 44-tonne weight limit.
“I have written to New Zealand Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA), asking the agency to consider how the heavy vehicle permitting regulations could be urgently amended to move more freight in fewer trips,” Kalasih says.
“Increasing allowable payloads on 50MAX vehicles and other HPMVs could reduce the diesel required to move freight, while maintaining a safe and well-regulated system. That will put downward pressure on freight costs at a time when businesses and consumers are doing it really tough.”
“HPMVs are already delivering fuel savings compared to standard 44-tonne trucks. For example, 50MAX trucks increase freight capacity by approximately 20% while only increasing diesel use by 10%, with their additional axle ensuring no additional wear on roads per tonne of freight.”
“Improving freight efficiency also has benefits for safety and emissions, as fewer trips are required to move the same volume of goods.”
“Now more than ever we need a regulator that is responsive and agile in getting freight moved the best way possible. We’re looking forward to working constructively with NZTA to maximise the savings that the permitting system can offer.”

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/transporting-new-zealand-calls-for-payload-increases-to-mitigate-diesel-price-hikes/

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EV owners complain of ’50 percent’ power price increases

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Meridian said some customer plans were changing.

Some Meridian customers have complained of increases in the cost of the power they use for their electric vehicles – but interest in electric cars overall is booming.

A number of EV owners have taken to social media to question increases in the power company’s Electric Vehicle Power Plan.

One was told that when his plan renewed on 1 May he would be put on a new fixed rate plan, which would mean more than 50 percent increases on the day and night rates, and a 30 percent increase on the daily fixed charge.

Another said the increase could add hundreds to his monthly power bill.

Meridian said some customer plans were changing.

“Our EV plan offers a fixed rate for two years and we recently communicated with some customers whose term is coming to an end about their new offer. As you know, beyond our own costs there have also been substantial increases from lines and distribution networks over the last couple of years and this is another flow-on effect of that.”

Mike Casey, chief executive of Rewiring Aotearoa, said he had been contacted by people about the changes, too.

“What is driving these increasing costs is probably not actually Meridian themselves, but the cost to transport the electrons or the power from the power plants all the way to your home, and that’s namely the poles and wires.

“What we’ve seen very recently is the Commerce Commission allowing for much higher expenditure and much higher charging of customers for the maintenance and the growth of our poles and wire network in New Zealand.”

He said it would have been nice if the power company had “read the room a little bit” in the context of fuel prices increasing quickly.

“We have a really big opportunity here to convert a lot of drivers over to electric, and the news that energy into electric vehicles is also going up isn’t really what we want to be hearing right now.

“We want to be trying to encourage as many drivers into electric vehicles as possible because they will save a lot of money.

“The key thing here is even with the prices going up, the savings potential is absolutely huge. All this increase in Meridian’s prices are absolutely dwarfed by what’s going on the fossil fuel market at the moment, so I hope that New Zealanders, even though they see price rises on both options, that they realise how small one price rise is compared to the other price rise at the moment.”

He said charging an electric vehicle off the normal grid would cost the equivalent of about $1.50 a litre. “If you charge an electric vehicle off your rooftop with your solar, you’re probably paying close to $1.15 a litre … compared to what $3.30, $3.50 a litre, whatever it might be at the moment, you can see there’s still incredible savings by going electric.”

Westpac New Zealand managing director of institutional and business banking Reuben Tucker said demand for electric vehicles through the bank’s greater choices home loan top up and other loans for electric vehicles had soared.

“In the last two weeks the number of applications for EVs through these products has roughly doubled,” he said.

“We’re the only bank to offer interest-free lending on EVs and chargers, which is a key way we can help customers manage higher living costs not just now but in case of future events.”

Trade Me said people were also motivated to look for ways to become independent with their homes.

Searches for “off-grid” properties were up 68 percent year-on-year in the last month.

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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/2026/03/25/ev-owners-complain-of-50-percent-power-price-increases/

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‘Staggering’: Diesel prices changing several times a week, always up – grape farmer

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

JTC Viticulture machinery in operation. Supplied

The rural sector says it is being challenged by soaring diesel prices, the likes of which one operator says it has never seen before.

JTC Viticulture in Marlborough is partway through a busy grape harvest, with 14 harvesting machines and 28 tractors running 24 hours a day.

“We have about 90 people to run that operation,” managing director Jason Tripe said. “Our diesel price has increased sort of 90 percent over the last two-and-a-half weeks, pretty much.”

Tripe said the company was used to fluctuating fuel prices, but nothing like this.

“Fuel is a large part of our cost, and the biggest challenge about this has been the short nature, it’s happened so quickly.

“And we’ve quoted or priced work based on a known number and fuel has been part of that, we’ve been seriously impacted by that because of the speed it’s gone up.”

Tripe said the immediate impact had been “incredible”.

JTC Viticulture machinery in operation. Supplied

“So it’s been pretty difficult to manage that, our clients have been very open to discussions about it but they’re under pressure as well because our industry is facing a few headwinds at the moment and our returns are down, so this is just another hit to us basically.”

He said clients were being asked to consider paying more, but it was a double-edged sword given the challenges they were facing themselves.

“But our clients for the main part have been understanding, and we’ve sort of soaked up what we can and we’ve sort of met in the middle.”

Asked if he had seen anything like the surge in diesel pricing before, Tripe said “nothing even comes close” in the time the company had been operating.

“It’s staggering, really.”

Tripe said every load of diesel being delivered was a different price and going up several times a week.

The sooner harvesting was complete the better, he said, and added his supplier had already said diesel supplies were getting tight.

“We’re dealing with the increased costs, but in the background is concern about supply. We’re using large volumes daily, and if we can’t get that fuel delivered then machines will come to a halt.

“We’re just hoping we get the harvest completed before things really start to bite from a supply issue, not to mention the cost.”

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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/2026/03/25/staggering-diesel-prices-changing-several-times-a-week-always-up-grape-farmer/

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Higher diesel, shipping costs pile pressure on logging industry

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The logging industry is warning some companies could be on the brink as the conflict in Iran pushes up the cost of diesel.

Logging operators say it’s increasingly difficult to get logs to port and if the situation drags on, export-reliant regions like South Canterbury and the west coast of the North Island could face shutdowns.

“The costs of shipping have risen dramatically, with rates going from roughly 33 US dollars per cubic metre into China for March, through to about 45 US dollars in April. It’s a perfect storm just right now.”

Forest Management group director Glenn Moir said that would put some companies on the brink.

“I can see that if it does continue we’re going to face some real pressure in the higher cost forests, so the ones that are further away from the market and have steeper country, just to make it economic.”

There had been some huge cost pressures going through the chain. The industry was diesel dependent, and it took 12 litres of diesel to produce one tonne of logs.

Higher diesel prices meant a 25 percent increase in costs across their operations for logging contractors.

“The industry can’t sustain that.”

Talks were continuing with everyone involved, including forest owners, to try and get some agreement on what could be done in the short-term.

The costs of shipping were also rising dramatically, Moir said.

“It’s a perfect storm right now.”

Moir said until the war in Iran started, 2026 had been looking like a fantastic year for the forestry industry, with export prices rising and domestic demand growing.

“All that turned on its head three weeks ago, and we’re struggling a little bit now with these rising costs.”

The government’s latest Situation and Outlook for Primary Industries report showed forestry exports were forecast to rise 2 percent this year.

The industry employs 42,000 people around the country and is the sixth-largest export owner.

While the Chinese market was declining, there was growing demand for New Zealand logs from India, Moir said.

“… and the FTA towards the end of last year really helped that.”

The forestry industry were a resilient bunch.

“We’ll work together and get through this. It is going to be pretty tough, especially if we move to Level 2 under the National Fuel Plan.”

Impact on older New Zealanders

The head of Age Concern Auckland said soaring petrol prices were making the basics of life even more difficult for already vulnerable elderly people.

The government announced yesterday around 143,000 people would receive up to $50 per week through the in-work tax credit to help with fuel costs.

But beneficiaries and superannuitants would not qualify.

Age Concern Auckland chief executive Kevin Lamb said increases in superannuation, in response to the high cost of living, were not agile enough to meet the sudden rise in petrol prices.

Superannuitants would miss out as trips to the doctor or medication started to eat into basic budgets for food and essentials, he said.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/higher-diesel-shipping-costs-pile-pressure-on-logging-industry/

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Easy ways to avoid oil discharges

March 25, 2026

Source: Maritime New Zealand

Vessels can discharge oily water that causes harm to the oceans and rivers we depend on for our livelihoods and wellbeing.

New Zealand’s latest state of the environment report – Our environment 2025 – outlines how our marine and freshwater environments are being affected by pollution, climate change, and resource depletion. So, please take responsibility for minimising pollution from your vessels.

Even clean bilges can contain oily water mixtures. By taking simple steps, we can protect our precious marine and freshwater environments by minimising any oil being discharged overboard:

  • maintain your engine to minimise leaks, and have a drip pan to catch any drips
  • use sorbent pads in your bilge to protect the environment by ensuring any surface oil is ‘mopped up’ (when no longer usable, take sorbents ashore to be disposed of responsibly)
  • install a float switch in a position where it can automatically stop discharge before any floating oil can be sucked up by a bilge pump.

It doesn’t take much to help keep our waters clean.

Find out more about the state of our marine and freshwater environments

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/24/easy-ways-to-avoid-oil-discharges/

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PM Edition: Top 10 Business Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

PM Edition: Here are the top 10 business articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

Banking – Banking Ombudsman urges extreme caution over use of crypto ATMs

March 25, 2026

Source: Banking Ombudsman Scheme

25 March 2026
People should be highly suspicious of anyone telling them to withdraw cash and deposit it in cryptocurrency ATMs, says the Banking Ombudsman after investigating several scam cases in which people have lost large sums of money using such ATMs.
Crypto ATMs allow people to deposit cash and buy cryptocurrency, which is sent to a digital wallet. Transactions usually happen very quickly and cannot easily be stopped or reversed once completed.
Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said this speed and lack of traceability made crypto ATMs particularly risky when used under pressure or at someone else’s direction.
“We are seeing cases where customers are told to withdraw cash and deposit it in a crypto ATM, often as part of a so-called job offer or investment opportunity.
“Legitimate organisations, such as banks, or potential employers will never ask anyone to make payments in this way.”
In one recent case  investigated by the scheme, a customer responded to what appeared to be a genuine online job advertisement. Following instructions, she withdrew $31,500 from her bank account, telling the bank it was to buy a car, but then deposited the cash in a crypto ATM. The funds were transferred to the scammer’s digital wallet and could not be recovered.
In another case , a customer was targeted over a six-month period after being drawn into what appeared to be a job offer. He withdrew and deposited nearly $65,000 in cash through crypto ATMs, thinking he was investing his money.
“In both cases, the victims believed they were following legitimate instructions,” Ms Sladden said. “That’s why it is so important that people are aware of the risks of using crypto ATMs, and also that they are skeptical about anyone urging them to use these machines.”
Consumer advocates and authorities around the world have expressed concern about the risks of using such machines, given the strong links to scammers and others involved in financial crime, and the Government in New Zealand looking at restricting or banning their use.
Ms Sladden said obvious red flags included requests to keep payments secret or give false information to a bank.
“People should independently verify who they are dealing with, and talk to someone they trust before making large or unusual payments.
“It’s important to stop and ask questions before taking any steps that might result in the loss of money.”
Related links: 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/25/banking-banking-ombudsman-urges-extreme-caution-over-use-of-crypto-atms/

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Bullying allegations against senior Corrections staffer raised more than a month ago

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Corrections’ Commissioner of Custodial Services Leigh Marsh. Supplied / Corrections

Allegations of bullying against one of the most senior staff at Corrections were raised more than a month ago.

RNZ earlier revealed Corrections commissioner of custodial services Leigh Marsh was facing an employment investigation in relation to allegations of bullying.

On Wednesday, Corrections chief executive Jeremy Lightfoot confirmed the concerns were raised on February 15.

“No other formal concerns have been raised about this individual, and they have not previously been subject to an employment investigation.”

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

After receiving the concerns, advice was sought from the human resources team and support was put in place for the staff member who raised the concerns, Lightfoot said.

“The decision was then taken to undertake a formal employment investigation.”

Lightfoot said it was important staff felt confident raising any concerns.

“And as an employer I have a duty of care to ensure the ongoing privacy and wellbeing of those involved.

“For these reasons, it would not be appropriate for us to provide further details about this employment matter at this time. I acknowledge the public interest in the conduct of our senior leaders and Corrections is committed to being transparent about the findings of this investigation at the appropriate time and in line with our obligations under the Official Information Act and Privacy Act.”

In response to questions about the inquiry into Marsh earlier this week Lightfoot told RNZ he expected “high standards of all our staff and take any allegations raised about their conduct extremely seriously”.

“Corrections can confirm that concerns have been raised about one senior leader that will be investigated by an external independent investigator.

“The concerns raised relate to alleged conduct around management processes and bullying within the employment relationship.”

The staff member who raised the concerns with Lightfoot was “being supported while this employment matter is ongoing”.

He also confirmed three operational deputy chief executives, including Marsh, would be undertaking six-month secondments into different DCE roles within Corrections.

“I had already been considering moving the operational DCEs into each other’s areas later this year. This is because I believe these secondments will allow each operational DCE to deepen their understanding of each other’s respective areas so we can continue building a coherent, cohesive organisation. Their employment agreements were developed to allow such secondments to take place.

“The decision to do this now was brought forward to ensure that a thorough and fair employment process for both parties in relation to the above complaint can be carried out.”

The secondment sees Marsh move to DCE of Pae Ora.

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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/2026/03/25/bullying-allegations-against-senior-corrections-staffer-raised-more-than-a-month-ago/

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New Zealand is expensive, Reserve Bank economist says – here’s what we can do about it

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Quin Tauetau

New Zealand is an expensive country, Reserve Bank chief economist Paul Conway says, with many products priced well above the OECD average.

And some things – such as construction services, household utilities and some food items – are among the most expensive in the OECD.

Conway spoke to the National Financial Advisers Conference in Auckland on Wednesday.

He said inflation had been one of the most obvious economic disruptions over the past few years, particularly over the pandemic, when demand combined with a lack of supply sent inflation soaring at the sharpest rate in decades.

He said people were still asking why everything felt so expensive, even though inflation was much nearer the Reserve Bank’s targets than it had been.

Conway said, since the start of the pandemic, overall prices had risen by 26 percent and the price of some essentials had increased much more.

Reserve Bank chief economist Paul Conway Supplied

Wages rose 32 percent but that increase was probably not evenly felt – people who moved jobs were more likely to have received larger wage increases.

Conway said that for the past five years, one or more of a range of everyday household essentials that were hard to avoid had been increasing strongly in price at almost every point. “That included prices for council rates, construction services, some foods – including meat and butter, and insurance.

“Because households cannot easily avoid some of these costs, this has no doubt added to the sense of a ‘cost-of-living crisis’.”

RNZ / Unsplash

Rates, insurance and gas had jumped particularly in recent years.

Tobacco products were among the most expensive in the OECD and milk, cheese, eggs and fruit prices were well above the average. Seafood, clothing, and meat were slightly below average.

“For services, the price of construction in New Zealand is the highest in the OECD and more than double the average. This is undoubtedly a handbrake on housing and infrastructure development here. In fact, the price of ‘capital formation’ – which covers machinery, equipment and construction – is 70 percent above average in New Zealand and also the highest in the OECD. The price of housing services and utilities in New Zealand is also assessed as being the most expensive in the OECD.”

He said low and stable inflation mattered for the cost of living but it was not the whole story.

The price of construction in New Zealand is the highest in the OECD and more than double the average. Supplied/ Unsplash – Josh Olalde

Monetary policy – such as the official cash rate set by the Reserve Bank – could help to anchor prices but not make New Zealand affordable on its own. He acknowledged that inflation ended 2025 just above the Reserve Bank’s 1 percent to 3 percent target band and was likely to be more elevated because of the Middle East conflict.

He said what mattered for households was their purchasing power.

Before 2020, the purchasing power of wages in New Zealand was growing faster than the OECD average on the back of strong employment growth and favourable terms of trade.

“Today, while wage purchasing power is around average across all 38 OECD members countries, it is about 20 percent below the average of the more advanced OECD economies that we typically compare ourselves to.”

Productivity the key

For there to be continued sustained improvements in purchasing power, there would have to be more productivity, he said.

Real per capita income in New Zealand was below the OECD average, he noted. It had been about 80 percent of the average until the mid-2000s then increased to more than 95 percent by 2020.

“Since 2020, real income in New Zealand has fallen back to around 90 percent of the OECD average and the income gap vis-à-vis Australia has widened. Purchasing power, as measured by real income, has not kept pace with the rest of the OECD nor Australia since the beginning of the pandemic.”

Wages had declined less compared to the OECD average and were at best average, he said.

“Importantly, this is compared to all 38 current OECD member countries, which includes several emerging economies. Compared to the 30 OECD member countries in 2010, average incomes in New Zealand sit around 20 percent below the average.”

He said productivity growth would be the single most powerful determinant of higher real incomes and better purchasing power over the long run.

“New Zealand’s productivity performance leaves much to be desired and has lagged other OECD economies. Further, productivity growth in the New Zealand economy fell significantly following the global financial crisis and has been negative in the wake of the pandemic.

“While low and stable inflation is a key ingredient in lifting productivity and improving purchasing power, it is insufficient on its own. By anchoring prices, monetary policy creates the conditions for growth. But sustained gains in purchasing power require structural improvements in the economy.”

The conflict in the Middle East is a timely reminder of how quickly geopolitics can disrupt the global economy, Reserve Bank chief economist Paul Conway says. AFP / Atta Kenare

Measures to improve resilience

He said a more fragmented and unpredictable global economy would raise the stakes for ensuring New Zealand’s structural policies were resilient, adaptive and fit for purpose.

“We are in a new era of heightened geopolitical risk and persistent uncertainty, with the conflict in the Middle East a timely reminder of how quickly geopolitics can disrupt the global economy. At the same time, cross-country flows of trade, capital, and people are shifting, governments are becoming more interventionist, and the rules-based order that once underpinned global integration has weakened considerably.

“This is not a temporary shock that we can simply wait out. It’s a durable shift that makes the global economy more difficult and dangerous for small economies like New Zealand. We are more exposed to external shocks, fragile global supply chains, and shifts in global rules and norms over which we have little control.”

He said sustaining living standards would depend on structural policy settings that built resilience into the structure of the economy by encouraging flexibility, investment and adaption.

“A more resilient and flexible economy would mean monetary policy does not have to work as hard, or be as aggressive, to stabilise inflation as shocks wash through the economy.

“While monetary policy plays a critical role in responding to shocks, it cannot solve New Zealand’s ‘cost-of-living crisis’. Low and stable inflation underpins economic stability and is critical for sustained gains in purchasing power. But monetary policy does not create prosperity directly. It creates the conditions in which prosperity can endure.

“Improving the purchasing power of New Zealand households requires improved productivity. Productivity gains support stronger real wage growth, while competitive markets help keep price increases in check… stronger productivity raises the economy’s speed limit – allowing faster growth without inflation. A more resilient and flexible economy also means monetary policy doesn’t need to be as aggressive to keep inflation stable when shocks hit.”

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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/2026/03/25/new-zealand-is-expensive-reserve-bank-economist-says-heres-what-we-can-do-about-it/

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The price of meth has been plunging in NZ. Are Mexican cartels driving the drop?

March 25, 2026

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Chris Wilkins, Professor of Policy and Health, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University

Methamphetamine has become dramatically cheaper over the past seven years, even as authorities report record seizures, according to the latest New Zealand Drug Trends Survey.

The annual online survey of over 8,800 people who use drugs shows wholesale prices of the illegal and harmful substance (per gram sold to dealers) have fallen by 41%, while street-level “point” prices (0.1 gram retail deals) have dropped by 27%.

Once adjusted for inflation, the declines are closer to 50%. A gram of meth that cost an average of $563 in 2017 now sells for about $253 in inflation-adjusted terms in 2025.

This trend is striking because retail prices of illegal drugs often remain unchanged for years. For example, a cannabis “tinny” (about 1–1.5 grams) has typically cost $20–25 in New Zealand for more than two decades, reflecting the need for quick and simple transactions.

The sustained price falls therefore point to deeper changes in how the methamphetamine market is operating. Australia has recently observed a similar pattern.

Importantly, the shift can’t be attributed to any changes in drug purity. Recent testing suggests average purity levels often exceed 70%, approaching the theoretical maximum of about 80% for the hydrochloride salt form.

In other words, methamphetamine is not only cheaper, but often highly potent.

Already, the drug is estimated to cause hundreds of millions of dollars in harm to New Zealand communities, through impacts to hospital emergency departments, mental health and drug treatment systems and social services – and to users themselves in terms of lives derailed and family relationships fractured.

All of this raises critical questions: what is driving these price drops, how long will they continue and what might they ultimately mean for meth’s social toll?

Competition, enforcement or demand?

We can point to several factors that might be contributing to the falling prices.

Illegal drug markets are often assumed to be controlled by organised crime groups who are able to keep prices high. But the widespread price declines across New Zealand – including in regions with the strongest gang presence – suggest the market remains competitive.

Could the price drops reflect sellers feeling they face less risk of arrest? Given New Zealand Police and Customs have been reporting record seizures every year since 2019, that doesn’t seem plausible.

In 2019, the law was changed to direct police not to arrest people found with small amounts of drugs unless it was in the public interest. While this may have reduced enforcement risk for users, it was not intended to change the situation for dealers selling grams.

If anything, the policy partly aimed to free up resources to focus on suppliers.

We might also assume that meth has simply become cheaper to make. With multiple ways to synthesise methamphetamine using different precursor chemicals, manufacturers may have found lower-cost methods over time.

But production costs can make up only a fraction of the final street price, with large mark-ups added along the distribution chain. That means even big savings in production may have little effect on retail prices.

Might the trend signal fewer buyers? Methamphetamine might well be reaching the end of its “product cycle” as cocaine gains popularity. Yet wastewater data show meth consumption doubled in late 2024 – hardly an indication of falling demand.

Are cartels the culprit?

The most convincing explanation lies away from New Zealand’s shores, in new global sources of methamphetamine supply.

New Zealand and Australia have traditionally sourced methamphetamine from lawless regions of Asia known as the Golden Triangle. More recently, however, growing seizures have been linked to Mexican drug cartels, often transiting through Canada.

Australian authorities say these cartels can supply methamphetamine at less than one-third the price of Asian producers and that about 70% of seized meth now originates from North America.

It may also explain the rising supply of cocaine in New Zealand, with Mexican cartels deeply involved in global cocaine trafficking. Methamphetamine trafficked from Mexico is also often routed through Pacific Island countries such as Fiji, Tonga and Samoa, which have strong trade, transport and cultural links with New Zealand.

On top of this, digital drug markets – including darknets and social media sales – may be lowering the cost of finding alternative sellers and better deals, increasing competition and pushing prices down.

This may also explain why methamphetamine is not the only drug to experience price declines in recent years.

We have also tracked substantial falls in the price of MDMA (ecstasy), a drug increasingly purchased via social media. Digital drug markets may also reduce the need for multiple layers of local distribution, lowering costs.

While we believe Mexican cartel supply is the most likely driver of methamphetamine price declines, the other explanations cannot be ruled out.

More research is needed to better understand the supply-and-demand implications and effects of changes in enforcement intensity, risk of violence and victimisation, production costs, price formation and modern digital drug markets.

Untangling these forces will be the focus of our future work, helping policymakers to respond more effectively to what remains one of New Zealand’s most damaging illegal drug.

ref. The price of meth has been plunging in NZ. Are Mexican cartels driving the drop? – https://theconversation.com/the-price-of-meth-has-been-plunging-in-nz-are-mexican-cartels-driving-the-drop-277490

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/25/the-price-of-meth-has-been-plunging-in-nz-are-mexican-cartels-driving-the-drop-277490/

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Comprehensive Support for International Students to Bolster Hong Kong’s Talent Attraction and Retention

March 25, 2026

Source: Media Outreach

ManpowerGroup Greater China and Beacon Group Partner with FGA Trust and Payment Asia to Launch “Talent in HK” Program

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 25 March 2026 – ManpowerGroup Greater China Limited (Stock Code: 2180.HK), a leading global workforce solutions provider, and Beacon Group (parent company BExcellent Group Holdings Limited, listed on the Main Board of the HKEX, Stock Code: 1775.HK), a renowned Hong Kong educational institution, today announced the joint launch of the “Talent in HK” Youth and Family Life Service Security Program.

From left to right: Ms. Lancy Chui, Senior Vice President of ManpowerGroup Greater China; Ms. June Leung, Founder of Beacon Group; Ms. Helen Chen, Chief Strategy Officer of FGA Trust

This forward-looking initiative is supported by Payment Asia, a leading payment platform in Hong Kong, providing streamlined payment channels. FGA Trust will serve as the third-party custodian. The program aims to establish an institutionalized, transparent, and collaborative ecosystem, providing end-to-end protection from education and academic support to life services and career consultancy, while injecting long-term momentum into Hong Kong’s strategy to attract and retain international talent.

As Hong Kong continues to attract top-tier students globally, many non-local students face challenges adapting to a new cultural environment upon arrival. Recently, there has been a rising trend in crimes targeting this demographic, including scams involving impersonation of government or academic institutions, as well as telecommunications and online fraud. These incidents pose substantial threats to talents’ personal and financial security, causing significant concern for their families.

In response to these social concerns and to reinforce the comprehensive security net for international students, ManpowerGroup, Beacon Group, and FGA Trust have initiated this program to provide stable, orderly support and ensure the long-term residency of talent in Hong Kong.

Holistic Talent Services: Strengthening Hong Kong’s Foundation as an International Hub

The “Talent in HK” program offers comprehensive life services for students and their families. Beacon Group will provide a long-term study plan spanning three to five years, including customized education, admissions services, profile enhancement, and application support. Simultaneously, ManpowerGroup will facilitate internships, visa arrangements, and long-term career development services.

Once a student receives an admission offer, parents can inject tuition and living expenses through Payment Asia’s official channels into a dedicated project account monitored by FGA Trust. This ensures financial security and the precise disbursement of funds. The entire process will be followed by an audit report, ensuring a smooth transition from campus to the workplace. The program’s website is expected to go live around mid-April this year, with official applications opening in May.

In an era of intensifying global competition for higher education and talent, Hong Kong remains a pivotal international financial and educational hub. Non-local students are not only a vital component of the education system but also a driving force for cross-cultural exchange and future professional talent. They are estimated to contribute over HK$10 billion in tuition fees annually, serving as a significant pillar of the local economy.

Multi-Party Collaboration: A New Paradigm for Talent Services

The core strength of the program lies in its innovative collaborative model, bringing together industry leaders:

  • ManpowerGroup Greater China (2180.HK): As the exclusive career development partner of the project, ManpowerGroup will leverage its extensive network and expertise to provide career planning, internship matching, and employment guidance, bridging the gap between graduation and professional life, and help students to have a smooth transition from academies to careers.
  • Beacon Group (parent company BExcellent Group Holdings Limited 1775.HK): As one of the initiators of the project with 37 years of experience in the education sector, Beacon Group will provide personalized academic consulting and profile enhancement, provide better guidance and adaptation for candidates to pursuit their study in Hong Kong. Its deep roots in the education sector help families navigate educational choices and avoid scams or unnecessary hurdles.
  • FGA Trust (TCSP license: TC008341): As the structural architect and asset trustee, FGA Trust will establish a specialized trust framework with individual sub-accounts for each student. This ensures funds for tuition, housing, and living expenses are managed with clear traceability, mitigating risks of fraud or improper spending.
  • Payment Asia: As the primary channel partner, Payment Asia provides secure and compliant collection channels, ensuring the seamless transfer of funds into the program’s dedicated accounts.

Long-Term Vision: Supporting Urban Competitiveness

Studying abroad is the starting point for talent development in Hong Kong. Proactive financial arrangements reduce uncertainty during status transitions and life settlement, increasing the willingness of talent to remain in the city long-term. Data suggests that initiatives like the Top Talent Pass Scheme (TTPS) continue to drive local consumption, with rents for small-to-medium residential units expected to rise by 5% this year.

Ms. Lancy Chui, Senior Vice President of ManpowerGroup Greater China, stated: “We understand the strong desire of non-local graduates to work in Hong Kong. By providing proactive career planning and internship arrangements, we can reduce uncertainty during their transition into the local workforce, helping them settle and contribute to Hong Kong’s market.”

Ms. June Leung, Founder of Beacon Group, noted: “Talent cultivation requires long-term education. We are delighted to initiate this program, integrating academic support with life security and career development to provide a comprehensive, forward-looking environment for talent growth.”

Ms. Helen Chen, Chief Strategy Officer of FGA Trust, added: “Protecting the financial security and well-being of international students is both a social responsibility and a key to consolidating Hong Kong’s status as an international education hub. This program ensures a seamless transition from study to employment, transforming international talent into a long-term driver for Hong Kong’s development.”

The launch of “Talent in HK” marks a significant step from fragmented support to a comprehensive ecosystem. Through institutional innovation and cross-sector collaboration, the program aims to provide a safe harbor for international students and their families, contributing to Hong Kong’s goal of becoming a global talent hub.

https://www.linkedin.com/company/fga-trust/

Hashtag: #FGA #Trust #Talent #Career

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/2026/03/25/comprehensive-support-for-international-students-to-bolster-hong-kongs-talent-attraction-and-retention/

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Tens of thousands lost to crypto ATM scams, ombudsman says

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Several scams involved people depositing money through cryptocurrency ATMs. RNZ / Paris Ibell

A woman who withdrew $31,500 from her bank account and gave it to a scammer is one of two recent cases that have sparked a warning from the Banking Ombudsman about cryptocurrency ATMs.

Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said she had investigated several scam cases where people had deposited money through the ATMs.

Crypto ATMs allow people to deposit cash and buy cryptocurrency, which is sent to a digital wallet. Transactions usually happen quickly and cannot easily be stopped or reversed once completed.

Sladden said it made them risky when used under pressure or at someone else’s direction.

She highlighted two cases, in which she said people believed they were following legitimate instructions but lost large amounts of money.

In April last year, a woman responded to a job ad online and, following instructions, went to her bank and withdrew $31,500, telling the teller it was for a car.

She put the money into a cryptocurrency wallet via a crypto ATM but later realised she had been scammed and asked the bank to reimburse her. She said it should have noticed her anxious and unusual behaviour.

The ombudsman scheme said it had to decide whether there was anything that should have caused the bank to suspect a scam.

“A bank must follow a customer’s transaction instructions unless it detects – or should have detected – warning signs of a possible scam. If it detects such warning signs, it must make inquiries about the transaction and, if warranted, warn the customer about the possibility of a scam before processing the transaction.”

It said there was nothing about what the customer told the bank that should have indicated a problem.

In another case, a man lost $65,000. He authorised payments to cryptocurrency merchants and withdrew cash from ATMs that he deposited in a crypto ATM.

The bank refused to reimburse him, saying he had authorised the payments.

Sladden said obvious red flags included requests to keep payments secret or give false information to a bank.

“People should independently verify who they are dealing with, and talk to someone they trust before making large or unusual payments.

“It’s important to stop and ask questions before taking any steps that might result in the loss of money.”

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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/2026/03/25/tens-of-thousands-lost-to-crypto-atm-scams-ombudsman-says/

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Investments – Upcoming Minimum Wage and KiwiSaver Changes – Effective 1 April 2026

March 25, 2026

Source: Peninsula New Zealand

Auckland, 25 March 2026: New minimum wage rates and KiwiSaver contribution changes will take effect across New Zealand from 1 April 2026, impacting employers, employees, and payroll processes nationwide.

Minimum Wage Increases

From 1 April, the Government has confirmed the following rates:

Adult Minimum Wage: $23.95 per hour
Starting‑Out Wage: $19.16 per hour
Training Wage: $19.16 per hour

These apply to all employees aged 16+, including part‑time, casual, fixed‑term, and remote workers. Minimum wage rules also extend to workers’ earning commissions or piece rates.

Training wage eligibility: Employees aged 20+ completing 60 credits annually toward an approved industry qualification.
Starting‑out eligibility: Workers aged 16 – 19 who meet criteria such as being new to employment or undertaking relevant training.

KiwiSaver Changes

Also from 1 April:

Default contribution rate increases from 3% to 3.5% (first stage of a phased rise to 4% in 2028).
Employees may opt down to 3%, but contributions reset to the default after 12 months.
16‑ and 17‑year‑olds who opt for KiwiSaver will now receive compulsory employer contributions.

Ashlea Maley, Associate Director – Operations, Peninsula New Zealand, said: “The current economic climate is placing significant pressure on small businesses, with many facing rising payroll obligations at a time when operating conditions are already tough. We’re seeing a noticeable increase in employers seeking guidance, as the cost of getting things wrong – particularly around unfair dismissal and wage compliance – continues to rise.

“As wage theft has become a criminal offence, unintentional underpayments have much more dire consequences for small businesses now. We urge business owners to take this opportunity and review their internal systems and processes. With new regulations coming into effect, employers need to act cautiously, stay informed, and make sure every part of their operation is compliant.”

What Employers Need to Do

Employers are encouraged to:

  • Update payroll systems for new wage and KiwiSaver settings
  • Review employment agreements
  • Communicate changes to staff, particularly young workers and trainees
  • Ensure minimum wage increases are applied from the first full pay period after 1 April.

Non‑compliance may lead to arrears, penalties, or disputes.

Ashlea added that the pressure is intensifying as the end of the financial year approaches: “This EOFY period is proving to be one of the toughest we’ve seen in recent years. Businesses are making hard calls – letting staff go, restructuring, or in some cases closing their doors altogether. We’re supporting a growing number of employers navigating redundancies brought on by uncertainty and escalating costs.

“The message to business owners is clear: in this climate, compliance isn’t optional. It’s essential to protect your people, your operations, and the long‑term viability of your business.”

About Peninsula Australia
Peninsula is New Zealand and Australia’s leading workplace advisory firm for SMEs, advising more than 30,500 clients in New Zealand and Australia on workplace relations and workplace health & safety issues. Its advice line allows businesses to speak with its team of workplace relations specialists, and through onsite visits to their business.  

LiveNews: https://enz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/investments-upcoming-minimum-wage-and-kiwisaver-changes-effective-1-april-2026/

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Emergency services at scene of crash in Wellington

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

A police car seen behind a cordon as officers attend an incident. RNZ

Emergency services are at the scene of a crash in Mākara, a rural Wellington suburb near Karori.

The police say they were called just after 8am on Wednesday.

They can’t yet say how many vehicles were involved or if people are injured.

Wellington Free Ambulance says it’s responded, but it’s referred inquiries to police due to the nature of the incident.

Makara Village cattery owner Cody Stephens says he saw police cars and a fire engine fly past his property this morning, heading towards the beach.

Google Maps

More to come…

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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/2026/03/25/emergency-services-at-scene-of-crash-in-wellington/

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Economy – 1970s-style stagflation could hit global economy: deVere CEO

March 25, 2026

Source: deVere Group

March 25 2026 – Households, businesses and investors should prepare for 1970’s-style global stagflation, warns the CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory organisations.

Nigel Green of deVere Group is speaking out after private sector output in the euro zone sank to a 10-month low in March, amid mounting evidence of the impact the Iran conflict is having on the global economy.

He says: “The figures show the severe impact the Iran war is already having on the euro zone economy.

“But, like in the 1970s, stagflation could become a widespread global phenomenon characterised by high inflation, low growth, and high unemployment, heavily driven by oil price shocks.

“Back then it hit most developed economies, including the US, Canada, Western Europe, and Japan, largely ending the post-war economic expansion, and it looks like a spectre that may be looming once again.”

Recent flash PMI data underscores the shift. Euro zone business activity has slowed sharply, with the headline index hovering just above the contraction threshold at 50.5, down from 51.9 the previous month.

Cost pressures are accelerating at the fastest pace in more than three years as energy prices surge and supply chains tighten.

“Oil and gas prices are feeding directly into production costs, transport, and ultimately consumer prices. At the same time, demand is weakening.

“This combination is toxic. Growth is fading just as inflation is being reignited. Central banks have very limited room to respond effectively,” explains the deVere CEO.

Energy markets have tightened rapidly since the escalation of tensions involving Iran, with crude prices pushing higher and shipping disruptions adding further strain.

“Europe and Asia remain particularly exposed due to its reliance on imported energy, leaving businesses vulnerable to sustained price volatility.”

He continues: “Investors need to recognise that traditional assumptions are breaking down. Bonds may not offer the same protection if inflation remains elevated. Equities face margin pressure as input costs rise and consumers pull back.

“Cash loses value in real terms in an inflationary environment. Standing still is not a strategy.”

The European Central Bank has already signalled weaker growth expectations for 2026, projecting sub-1% expansion, while inflation forecasts risk drifting higher if energy prices remain elevated.

Surveys indicate declining business confidence and softer hiring intentions, reinforcing concerns that the slowdown is gaining traction.

“Preparation is essential. Portfolios must be structured for resilience, not optimism. Investors should be increasing exposure to assets that historically perform in inflationary periods, including commodities, energy producers, and selective real assets.

“In terms of equities, the focus must shift to sectors with pricing power and strong balance sheets. Companies able to pass on higher costs without destroying demand will outperform.”

Currency markets are also likely to reflect the divergence in economic performance and policy responses.

Risk-sensitive currencies could come under pressure, while volatility across foreign exchange markets is expected to increase.

Nigel Green comments: “Diversification across currencies, geographies, asset classes and sectors becomes more important in this environment. Overconcentration in any single one increases vulnerability.”

Geopolitical risk now sits at the centre of the economic outlook. Prolonged conflict in the Middle East would sustain pressure on energy markets, while any escalation could trigger further supply disruptions.

Duration matters. A short-lived shock is manageable. A prolonged period of elevated energy prices changes the entire economic trajectory.

Policy makers are already facing difficult trade-offs. Raising rates to control inflation risks deepening the slowdown. Cutting rates to support growth risks fuelling further inflation. “Clearly, neither path is straightforward,” notes the CEO.

Nigel Green concludes: “Complacency is the biggest risk. Stagflation is not a theoretical scenario; the early signals are already visible in the data.

“Investors who act decisively, diversify intelligently, and prioritise real returns over nominal gains will be best positioned to protect and grow wealth in the period ahead.”

deVere Group is one of the world’s largest independent advisors of specialist global financial solutions to international, local mass affluent, and high-net-worth clients.  It has a network of offices around the world, more than 80,000 clients, and $14bn under advisement.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/25/economy-1970s-style-stagflation-could-hit-global-economy-devere-ceo/

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Employee confidence rises but pessimists still outweigh optimists index shows

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Regional confidence was led by Gisborne/Hawke’s Bay, Canterbury and Southland. 123rf

Employment confidence has risen to a two-year high as people’s perceptions about job availability improved.

The Westpac-McDermott Miller Employment Confidence Index rose 1.8 points to 95.6 in the March quarter. However, a reading below 100 means pessimists still outweigh optimists.

Westpac senior economist Michael Gordon said perceptions about job availability – a measure closely related to the unemployment rate – continued to improve this quarter.

“The survey results, taken on their own, would be consistent with the unemployment rate having reached its peak, and perhaps even begun falling, in the early part of this year,” Gordon said.

He said recent evidence also pointed to a pick-up in businesses’ hiring intentions as the economy started to get back on its feet.

However, the survey found households were still cautious about current and future pay rises, and about job security over the year ahead.

Confidence was highest among private-sector employees, rising 7.5 points to 103.5, according to Imogen Rendall, Market Research Director at McDermott Miller.

“In contrast, public sector employees’ confidence dipped slightly by 1.2 points to 95.6,” Rendall said.

Regional confidence was led by Gisborne/Hawke’s Bay, Canterbury and Southland.

Confidence in Auckland and Wellington remained subdued, although the capital posted a sharp rise from 80.5 to 90.8.

Gordon cautioned that the survey period – 1 to 12 March – was during the early days of the Iran conflict, when households and employers may not yet have been aware of its full economic consequences.

“As such, it’s unclear whether this confidence will be maintained in the months ahead, in what is an uncertain and rapidly evolving situation,” he said.

The survey was carried out in early March with a sample size of 1550, and had a margin of error of 2.5 percent.

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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/2026/03/25/employee-confidence-rises-but-pessimists-still-outweigh-optimists-index-shows/

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PM Edition: Top 10 Law and Security Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

PM Edition: Here are the top 10 law and security articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

Jevon McSkimming complainant allegedly sent 87 emails to wife of officer overseeing investigation into her

March 25, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

A woman who accused former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming of sexual offending allegedly sent 87 abusive emails to the wife of an officer who was overseeing an investigation into her.

Police claim the emails were “threatening and highly disparaging” of the woman and made reference to her children, including “suggesting they should be sexually abused”.

A damning report released in November by the Independent Police Conduct Authority (IPCA) found serious misconduct at the highest levels, including former Commissioner Andrew Coster, over how police responded to the woman’s allegations.

The woman, who had name suppression but was referred to as ‘Ms Z’ in the IPCA’s report, was charged in May last year with causing harm by posting digital communication in relation to over 300 emails sent to McSkimming’s work email address between December 2023 and April 2024.

  • Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz
  • The charge against the woman was withdrawn in the Wellington District Court in September because McSkimming did not wish to give evidence. But the woman remained before the court on two charges of causing harm by posting a digital communication in relation to another police officer and his wife.

    On Wednesday, the case was called in the Wellington District Court before Judge Andy Nicholls.

    At the hearing, Judge Nicholls granted RNZ access to a court document that detailed the police allegations against Ms Z. The police officer and his wife had name suppression. Ms Z pleaded not guilty to the charges.

    Wellington District Court. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

    The document said Ms Z was in contact with the officer in charge of the prosecution into the initial charges she faced. However, due to the volume and nature of emails, phone calls and text messages that she sent to him a bail condition was added, preventing her from contacting him except through her counsel.

    The court document said this “frustrated” Ms Z who “went about trying to circumvent this ban on contact”.

    Police said Ms Z went online and discovered the identity of the officer’s wife and found out they had young children. She also found the wife’s contact details, including her employer, job title, work email address and home address.

    “She accessed social media to locate material about her locating a photograph of [the wife] at a social event many years earlier holding a beer bong. This required a lot of effort as it was not on [the wife’s] own Facebook page.

    “The defendant decided that this photograph was embarrassing for [the wife].”

    She was accused of creating a fake email address and sending 87 emails to the wife’s work email address between 26 June and 3 July 2025. She copied senior police officers, the Lower Hutt mayor and a journalist into some of the emails.

    “The emails were threatening and highly disparaging of [the wife]. They also contained highly offensive language. The content of the emails worsened over time. The emails also made reference to [the wife’s] young children.

    “This included highly offensive sexual references about the children and suggesting they should be sexually abused.”

    The court document said some of the emails were sent in quick succession. Ten were sent in the space of 51 minutes on 29 June, nine in the space of 32 minutes, and 56 were sent on the same day.

    The document said Ms Z referred to the couple’s home address in her emails.

    “The reference to their home address in combination with the derogatory and offensive content of the emails caused serious emotional distress, embarrassment and anxiety to both [the wife] and her husband. This impacted both their personal and professional lives.”

    On 3 July, Ms Z was arrested and charged in relation to the emails. Bail conditions were imposed to prevent her from contacting the wife.

    It was alleged she then began messaging the chief executive of the company where the wife worked, sending 10 emails to the CEO in one day in August from the same fake email account. A senior police officer was copied into some of the emails.

    “The emails were threatening, and contained offensive language and derogatory comments about [the wife]. The defendant also made sexual references in relation to [the wife’s] young children.”

    The wife was advised of the emails. The court document said the email “caused further serious emotional distress, embarrassment and anxiety to [the wife] and her husband”.

    Ms Z’s lawyer earlier filed an application to dismiss the charges she faced on the grounds that the continued prosecution was “an abuse of process”.

    On Wednesday, the application was discussed again. Ms Z’s lawyer, Steven Lack, said his client’s position was that the initial prosecution against her was “an abuse of process by the police because it was designed to silence her”.

    “And then the second prosecution is effectively fruit of the poisoned tree in that regard.”

    In response, barrister Ian Murray – acting for police – said there were “multiple ways this abuse of process could be sliced”.

    “It could be that the original prosecution was in bad faith to prevent her from airing allegations about McSkimming, that’s probably the most understandable ground.

    “In my submission there are then some breaks in the chain that would make even that argument difficult to sustain in relation to her behaviour, in relation to a completely unrelated person not connected with the investigation.”

    He said he did not understand how a suggestion that there was a deliberate not charging of McSkimming could make prosecution of her in relation to her alleged conduct an abuse of process.

    A pre-trial callover has been set for 9 June. Judge Nicholls continued suppression orders for Ms Z and the police officer and his wife.

    Police Commissioner Richard Chambers. Calvin Samuel / RNZ

    RNZ earlier approached police asking if they had any comment on charges she still faced and whether police would now drop them.

    In response, Police Commissioner Richard Chambers said the matter was before the court and police had instructed a senior criminal barrister in the proceeding.

    “It would be inappropriate for me to comment about the merits, including public interest, of any case that is before the court.

    “However, what I have done and what I can say is that I have assured myself that proper process has been followed in bringing this case.”

    Assistant Commissioner Mike Johnson said Ms Z was the defendant in a prosecution in the district court.

    “In these circumstances it is not appropriate to comment publicly on the merits of the prosecution, including the public interest.”

    In an earlier statement to RNZ, Lack said police “failed my client”.

    “Over a period of years, she attempted to report allegations of serious physical, psychological and sexual offending by McSkimming, then one of the most senior Police Officers in the country. Instead of being heard, she was dismissed and ultimately prosecuted for speaking out and raising her concerns.

    “At every stage, the police had the opportunity to engage with her, to properly assess what she was saying, and to investigate her allegations. They could have viewed her as a traumatised victim.

    “They chose not to. They accepted McSkimming’s denials without meaningful inquiry and placed the full weight of the criminal justice system on my client for more than a year until the charge against her was withdrawn. Understandably this has had a devastating impact on her.

    “The way her complaints were handled should alarm all New Zealanders. It suggests that the police were more focused on protecting McSkimming’s career and advancement than on properly assessing serious allegations of offending against him.”

    Lack said the police were an organisation “entrusted by the community to protect and serve”.

    “In my client’s case, they did neither.”

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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/2026/03/25/jevon-mcskimming-complainant-allegedly-sent-87-emails-to-wife-of-officer-overseeing-investigation-into-her/

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    Pike River Mine victims’ families fear proposed health and safety law changes risk another tragedy

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Sonya Rockhouse (left) and Anna Osborne outside Parliament in 2025. RNZ / Anneke Smith

    Families of those killed in the Pike River Mine disaster fear the government’s proposed health and safety law changes will remove worker protections and risk another tragedy.

    Sonya Rockhouse, who lost her 21-year-old son Ben, and Anna Osborne, who lost her husband Milt, told the Education and Workforce Select Committee on Wednesday they wanted health and safety laws strengthened.

    A methane-fuelled explosion ripped through the Pike River coal mine in the rugged Paparoa Range on the South Island’s West Coast on 19 November 2010, killing 29 workers.

    The Health and Safety at Work Amendment Bill was introduced to Parliament last month and the government said it was intended to reduce death and injury rates while also cutting compliance costs by focusing on the most serious critical risks and reducing confusion.

    But critics said the changes could weaken worker protections and result in more workplace injuries.

    Osborne said her husband’s death was preventable, it was not bad luck or an act of God.

    “He was killed by a company that put its profit ahead of his life and the lives of 28 others, and that was allowed to happen by years of people, sitting in the same seats you are now, weakening the health and safety laws and regulations again and again,” she told the committee.

    “This should never have happened and the travesty of justice that followed is a blight on New Zealand’s soul.”

    ‘This bill takes that away’

    Workplace health and safety laws were strengthened in 2014 after the mining disaster, which had kept workplace deaths and injury rates at bay despite the population of the country growing larger, she said.

    “People could be confident in speaking up and employers began to feel they needed to listen,” she said, of the 2014 changes.

    But that was still not enough and Osborne and Rockhouse wanted to a corporate manslaughter charge introduced in New Zealand law.

    “Milt always looked out for his people – he was a volunteer fireman, a local councillor – I have always thought that among all the bad that came from Pike he would have taken some heart in the fact his death helped keep others safe even just by a little bit,” Osborne said.

    “This bill takes that away. It takes it away from every person at work in New Zealand and it takes it from the memory and the legacy of Milt and all the men he is lying with in that shithole of a mine.”

    The pair made the submission on behalf of Stand With Pike outlining their concerns with the proposals in the Health and Safety at Work Amendment Bill.

    Rockhouse said Ben was a intelligent, articulate, gentle boy who believed people were good.

    “I don’t know what he would have made of how hard we’ve had to fight for truth that should have been ours by right. We should never have had to fight, protest and campaign for justice, accountability or truth,” she said.

    “I don’t even know what to think of this right now, of the fact that we are having to come here again to tell people yet again about the consequences of taking people’s rights to health and safety from them.”

    Osborne and Rockhouse met with Workplace Safety Minister Brooke van Velden at Parliament last November on the 15th anniversary of the disaster.

    The minister, who admitted she had not read the Royal Commission’s report on the Pike River Coal Mine Tragedy, and did not support the introduction of a corporate manslaughter charge, instead preferred to focus on “upfront guidance” for businesses.

    Rockhouse said everyone had the right to go to work in the morning and come home safely.

    “It feels like the authors of this Bill have failed to learn from history, they have wilfully ignored it and it makes me sick and angry”, Rockhouse said.

    “To wind back health and safety despite the price our men and us – their families – have paid, despite the fact that all of New Zealand has seen that cost? Shameful does not even begin to describe it.”

    ‘Absolute conflict of interest’

    Green Party MP Ricardo Menéndez March asked the pair about their concerns with the law change.

    Rockhouse said both her sons – Dan was one of just two survivors from the disaster – told her if they tried to raise issues around health and safety, no matter how big or small, they were told to “just shut the F up and get on with your job, basically that was the mentality”.

    Several miners told her they had been worried about an explosion at the mine and the chief executive had said, “if you don’t like it there’s the door, leave, you’re not in Australia now”, she said.

    “It’s very hard in that context to think the CEO would have identified the appropriate critical risks under the financial pressure they were under.”

    Osborne said methane levels in the mine peaked over 19 times in the two weeks before the explosion.

    “Those 19 times the men should have been out of the mine and, until that mine re-ventilated, they should not have been allowed to work but [Peter] Whittle and the managers there wanted production to happen,” she said.

    “It was almost like they were playing a game of Russian roulette – production over safety.”

    Stand With Pike advisor Rob Egan said the Bill assumed the workplace health and safety regulator could police and provide guidance and consultation to employers.

    “That’s exactly what happened at Pike River … it is an absolute conflict of interest,” he said.

    Earlier this year police said they were nearing the final stages of the criminal investigation into the disaster.

    Detective superintendent Darryl Sweeney said the investigation was legally complex and police had been working with the Wellington crown solicitor for more than 18 months.

    Further investigation was still needed and an update was likely to be several months away, he said.

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

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/pike-river-mine-victims-families-fear-proposed-health-and-safety-law-changes-risk-another-tragedy/

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    Man faces court after fleeing Police

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Please attribute to Inspector Grant Tetzlaff, Acting Auckland City District Commander:

    A 30-year-old man is facing serious charges after he fled from Police and drove dangerously before crashing in northern Waikato.

    At around 11.40pm on Tuesday, a vehicle of interest was seen on Dominion Road, Sandringham.

    This vehicle had been reported stolen at gun point earlier in the day from the south Auckland area.

    Eagle located the vehicle as it entered the Southern Motorway at Newmarket and monitored it as it travelled towards East Tāmaki.

    As the vehicle exited the motorway onto East Tāmaki Road officers attempted to perform a traffic stop, however the vehicle took off at speed.

    The driver was seen driving in a dangerous manner through south Auckland, turning off its lights and reaching high speeds on residential streets.

    The vehicle re-entered the motorway at SH20 and continued south towards Te Kauwhata.

    Police units were able to spike the vehicle, and it continued for a short distance before losing control and crashing into wire median dividers.

    As officers approached the vehicle, the sole occupant had barricaded himself inside.

    Officers observed live ammunition on his lap.

    Police deployed a taser, before being able to extract the man from the vehicle.

    He was taken into custody and transported to Waikato Hospital in a moderate condition after receiving injuries from a dog bite during his arrest.

    A search of the vehicle located two handguns and a large amount of live ammunition.

    It is pleasing that these firearms are now out of circulation in our community.

    The 30-year-old man will face failing to stop, reckless driving, receiving, possession of firearms and resisting arrest.

    Police are continuing to make enquires into the initial stolen vehicle report, and we cannot rule out further charges in that matter.

    As standard procedure, the Independent Police Conduct Authority will be notified of the incident.

    ENDS.

    Amanda Wieneke/NZ Police

    MIL OSI

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/25/man-faces-court-after-fleeing-police/

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    Update: Common Room bar fight, Hastings

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Attribute to Detective Sergeant Heath Jones, Hastings Criminal Investigation Branch:

    Hasting Police have arrested and charged a person in relation to a fight at the Common Room bar earlier this month.

    Police responded to the fight around 1.45am on Sunday 8 March, where several people were injured – some seriously, with one requiring hospital treatment.

    Police arrested one man today in relation to the incident. The 32-year-old is due in Hastings District Court tomorrow, charged with five counts of assault with intent to injure, three counts of injuring with intent to injure, injuring with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and assault.

    Police are not ruling out any further arrests and would like to speak with the five people pictured, as we believe they may be able to assist in our enquiries.

    If this is you, or you know who these people are, please get in touch through 105 – either online or over the phone – and reference file number 260308/6292.

    Alternatively, information can be provided through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/25/update-common-room-bar-fight-hastings/

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    Arrest in Operation Aurora

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Please attribute the following to Detective Senior Sergeant Colin Baillie:

    Police executing search warrants have arrested one person from a religious organisation that has a presence in New Zealand, Australia, Samoa and Fiji.

    A 45-year-old man will appear in the Christchurch District Court today charged with unlawful sexual connection, indecent assault, strangulation and rape.

    Today’s arrest follows a number of allegations, and partner agencies are supporting those that have come forward.

    It is possible there may be other allegations that we are not yet aware of, and I strongly encourage any survivor to speak with us, should they wish to. Your voice matters, and you will be treated with respect.

    Our staff who work in this space are specially trained, and any reports will be made in confidence, and we will provide wrap-around support.

    Please make a report by calling Police on 105 or using our online service. Click ‘Make a report’.

    Please reference Operation Aurora or use file number 260319/8197.

    Police will not be making further comment as the matter is before the Court.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/24/arrest-in-operation-aurora/

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    Nailed it: Police clean up following tip off

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police in Counties Manukau have been busy cleaning up and returning a pile of stolen goods following a tip off from a member of the public.

    On Friday afternoon, Police patrolling the Counties Manukau West area were alerted to an address of interest in Mangere Bridge by a member of the public who reported he’d had several items taken from his vehicle in Pakuranga.

    Counties Manukau West Area Commander, Inspector Dave Christoffersen, says one of the items belonging to the victim had a GPS, which lead to a property in Tima Lane.

    “Units were in the area at the time and met with the victim, who had observed his items inside the address.

    “A search of the property located multiple tools and other items, one of which was a GPS linked stolen nail gun.

    “This lead to one person at the address being arrested and charged for receiving.”

    Inspector Christoffersen says Police recovered the alleged stolen goods and have managed to return several to their rightful owner.

    “This is a great example of members of the public reporting incidents when they happen, then following up with any helpful information that comes to hand.

    “This allows the opportunity for Police to act and, as in this case, recover stolen property.

    “I would like to acknowledge the community for their vigilance and reporting suspicious activity promptly to Police.”

    A 37-year-old man was remanded in custody and will appear in Manukau District Court today charged with receives property.

    ENDS.

    Holly McKay/NZ Police

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/23/nailed-it-police-clean-up-following-tip-off/

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    Fiji’s human rights watchdog raises concerns over new Israeli embassy plans

    March 25, 2026

    RNZ Pacific

    Fiji’s human rights watchdog has warned that the country’s pro-Israel foreign policy and diplomatic engagement works against its international obligations and could be enabling “genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity” in Gaza.

    The Fiji Human Rights and Anti-Discrimination Commission (FHRADC) released a statement on Tuesday in response to the Fiji government announcing plans to establish a resident embassy for Israel in Suva.

    The FHRADC said that the announcement “raises important questions” and is calling on the government to uphold its human rights obligations “in all aspects” of its diplomacy.

    As a state party to the Genocide Convention, Fiji is bound by international human rights law and international humanitarian law, the FHRADC said.

    It added under the Convention of the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, the country “is obligated to support international efforts to prevent genocide” and ensure those responsible for such crimes are held responsible.

    “This includes ensuring that Fiji’s foreign policy and diplomatic relations do not assist, enable, or legitimise conduct by parties or states involved in serious violations of international law.”

    The International Court of Justice (ICJ) in 2024 said that claims are “plausible” that the rights of Palestinians in Gaza under the Genocide Convention are being “violated . . .  by Israel’s large-scale military operation in Gaza” a position firmly rejected by Israel, which has maintained its actions are necessary for self defence against Hamas.

    “The duty to prevent genocide is a jus cogens obligation, a non-derogable principle of international law,” FHRADC commissioner Alefina Vuki said.

    Legal responsibility
    She said according to international law every state had “the legal responsibility to intervene and prevent the intentional or deliberate destruction of a group of people”, suggesting Fiji had failed to do this.

    “No government can ever justify or excuse its failure to carry out this responsibility. States must ensure diplomatic relations that uphold, rather than undermine the duty to prevent genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity,” she said.

    Fiji opened its permanent diplomatic post in Jerusalem in September last year.

    Fiji Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka said at the time that the opening of Fiji’s embassy in Jerusalem “reflects our desire to build bridges — not walls — between nations, cultures, and peoples”.

    Fiji’s UN AMbassador Filipo Tarakinikini presents his credentials as the new Fiji non-resident Ambassador to Israel to Israeli President Isaac Herzog in April 2025. Image: FB/Fiji Govt

    Fiji is one of a handful of countries to open a diplomatic mission in Jerusalem rather than Tel Aviv, which is controversial.

    Diplomatic actions
    According to FHRADC, the Fiji government has the “sovereign prerogative to determine bilateral relations”.

    However, Vuki said Fiji must ensure that its “diplomatic actions do not violate international norms relating to occupation, self-determination, and the protection of civilian populations”.

    “Any strengthening of bilateral relations must be carefully balanced against Fiji’s responsibilities as a member of the international community,” she said.

    The FHRADC has offered to provide “independent and technical advice” to support the Fijian government with its foreign policy to keep it aligned to its international human rights commitments.

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

    Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

    Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/25/fijis-human-rights-watchdog-raises-concerns-over-new-israeli-embassy-plans/

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    Fears for NZ children in ‘harsh’ immigration crackdown

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Axing humanitarian appeal rights for temporary visa holders will potentially harm children caught in the crosshairs, legal experts say. RNZ

    Alarm bells are sounding about harsh reductions in appeal rights for migrants which could lead to families being separated by deportation.

    Overseas right-wing sentiment, reporting of ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) crackdowns in the US and fears about domestic migration could be factors driving policy change, says a top immigration and refugee lawyer.

    Legal experts say strict rules already exist for migrants seeking to overturn deportations, and they fear that axing humanitarian appeal rights for temporary visa holders will potentially harm children caught in the crosshairs.

    Law Society Immigration and Refugee Committee convener Simon Graham Supplied

    Law Society Immigration and Refugee Committee convener Simon Graham said current policy balanced individual rights and the public interest, but the proposed legislation would shift the goalposts against vulnerable people, especially children and families.

    “You could have a child born here, only ever gone through the New Zealand educational system, seven, eight years of age, all the formative years, and then that child is now being asked to return back to a country, [with] language barriers, different educational system, whatever that might be.

    “When a child is into that seven, eight-year period, a fundamental shift occurs. Generally speaking, child psychologists will say this is going to cause or this has the potential to cause a problem for this child. And these are the types of things that currently the system looks at and weighs up in the balancing exercise. But if that’s removed, who’s going to consider this issue or weigh it up?”

    Concerns were widespread in the legal community, he added, and he was worried other governments’ policies could be creeping into New Zealand’s thinking.

    “I do wonder, stepping back from it all, whether there is some overseas influence as we see in other jurisdictions. It’s a sort of hardening line in a lot of these areas, probably for good reason, in certain European countries and America, where there’s this excess and it’s causing problems, whereas I think New Zealand is different from that. I don’t think we have the same tensions – but possibly our policy choices are now potentially mirroring or lining up with some of these overseas jurisdictions.”

    ICE agents depart the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on February 4, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. AFP / John Moore

    Deadline over appeals

    The Immigration and Protection Tribunal (IPT) – which hears appeals against deportation, as well as residence and asylum application refusals – has seen a large increase in cases, as migration numbers have risen. In terms of deportation appeals among temporary migrants, its latest annual report shows 188 people lost and 174 won their cases.

    Graham said a 42-day deadline already limited who could appeal, and the tribunal weighed up humanitarian circumstances against public interest concerns.

    Under the Immigration (Enhanced Risk Management) Amendment Bill, migrants classed as visitors – which can include renewable partner and parent visas – would not be able to appeal on humanitarian grounds to the IPT at all.

    “From a legal perspective, I think it’s unnecessarily harsh and unnecessary because there’s already systems in place to weigh the balance. This seems to be shifting the balance unnecessarily in one direction without any real justification for it. So it’s certainly harsh and it could potentially create very harsh and unfair outcomes in a certain percentage of cases.

    “What parameters or safety nets are going to be put in place to substitute for the Immigration and Protection Tribunal process? Has that been thought about? And if it has, what is that process and who oversees it?”

    The ‘Mama Hooch’ clause

    Another proposal would extend the ability to deport people from 10 years after they become residents, to 20 years. Non-residents, such as temporary workers and students, would lose their chance to appeal deportation if they committed a crime.

    Immigration Minister Erica Stanford last week said New Zealand had “one of the most lenient criminal deportation liability regimes” compared to Australia, the UK, Canada, and Ireland, saying those countries all made residents liable for deportation indefinitely, including for relatively minor convictions.

    She cited the notorious sex offending ring in Christchurch operated by rapist brothers Danny and Roberto Jaz who have been in New Zealand too long to be deported, under current laws.

    Graham said that framing did not acknowledge the new law would strip appeal rights from less serious offenders, or who had immigration question marks.

    “I noticed the minister made reference to the Mama Hooch guys as a general sort of overlay as to justify some of these changes to the policy, and being not able to deport these guys for serious criminal offending,” he said. “And that’s a legitimate question and consideration, I understand that. But I believe that the proposals also incorporate all the other reasons which would trigger deportation liability, which encapsulates for example, providing misleading information to immigration as part of a visa process.”

    Auckland University’s Centre for Asia Pacific Refugee Studies co-director, Professor Jay Marlowe, worried discussion about the bill and amendments also blurred important distinctions between migrants, asylum seekers and refugees.

    Professor Jay Marlowe University of Auckland

    The Jaz brothers are the children of Australian migrants, and arrived about 25 years ago as teenagers.

    “I would be cautious about how the Mama Hooch case is being used in this context. It was an extremely serious case, but one that involved harm occurring over time within New Zealand, and raises serious concerns about how institutions responded to women’s complaints. Linking that case directly to asylum policy risks conflating different issues and shifts attention away from the need to address those underlying failures.

    “Extending deportation liability to 20 years means we may be dealing with people who arrived as children and have grown up here, raising questions about responsibility and belonging. There are parallels with Australia’s section 501 deportations, which New Zealand has criticised – and it raises a fundamental question about whether we are managing harm here, or shifting responsibility elsewhere.”

    Stanford has been approached for comment.

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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/2026/03/25/fears-for-nz-children-in-harsh-immigration-crackdown/

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    Auckland man dies in police custody

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    The man died at the Auckland District Custody Unit this morning. File photo. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

    An Auckland man has died after being arrested by police in the Auckland suburb of Mt Roskill this morning.

    Acting Auckland City District Commander Inspector Grant Tetzlaff said a critical incident investigation was now underway after the man’s death in custody.

    The man was arrested shortly before 10am this morning on Morrie Laing Avenue, after officers responded to several reports of “a disorder”.

    He was arrested without incident and taken to the Auckland District Custody Unit, where he collapsed.

    An ambulance was called and first aid was given to the man, but he was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Tetzlaff said next of kin had been informed. He said support had been provided to the family, as well as police staff who had been involved.

    “Several investigations will now get underway, including the critical incident investigation, which will examine the course of events this morning.

    “As part of this process police have notified the Independent Police Conduct Authority.

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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/2026/03/25/auckland-man-dies-in-police-custody/

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    Appeal for information as man arrested for alleged sexual offences

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Attributable to Acting Detective Senior Sergeant Karli Whiu:

    Polce investigating alleged serious sexual offending by a Flaxmere man are appealing for anyone who may have information to come forward.

    On Monday 23 March, a 37-year-old Flaxmere man was arrested and he appeared in the Hastings District Court yesterday.

    He has been charged with abduction for sex, impedes breathing/blood circulation, two counts of unlawful sexual connection with female over 16, and four counts male rapes female over 16.

    The 37-year-old has been granted name suppression and is remanded in custody to reappear on 14 April in Hastings District Court.

    Police are now appealing for anyone who may have information on any other alleged offending by this man to come forward.

    This may have occurred in the Hastings area from approximately 14-15 March this year.

    We know it can be incredibly difficult and at times distressing to talk about these matters, but we would like to reassure any victims of offending that we will take them seriously.

    Police has a number of officers and detectives dedicated to these cases and we provide a safe space to report offending in confidence.

    If you have any information that may assist Police in our investigation, please contact us online at 105.police.govt.nz or call 105, referencing file number 260316/3776.

    We can then contact you to make appropriate arrangements to discuss matters in an appropriate and safe way.

    ENDS

    Issued by the Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/25/appeal-for-information-as-man-arrested-for-alleged-sexual-offences/

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    Former Interislander ferry expected to dock in Port Nelson after months at anchor

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    The former Interislander ferry is now flagged in the Caribbean nation of Saint Kitts and Nevis. Supplied / Jason Grimmett

    Former Interislander ferry Aratere is expected to arrive in Port Nelson later this week for the first time in nearly four months.

    RNZ understands the ship, which has since been renamed Vega, will undergo a crew change and be restocked with fuel and provisions.

    KiwiRail retired the ferry last August and announced in October it had been sold to a buyer who would deliver it to a shipbreaking yard in India.

    Since being renamed Vega, the Interislander logos had been painted over and it is now flagged in the Caribbean nation of Saint Kitts and Nevis.

    It is still not known when the ship will leave the country.

    It has been anchored in Tasman Bay since early December with a crew from India, who had been onboard since October.

    A Maritime NZ spokesperson said inspectors last visited the vessel in mid-February while it was in Tasman Bay, and planned to do so again while it was berthed in Nelson.

    Inspectors had been regularly engaging with Vega, its operator and flag state regarding crew welfare and compliance with international requirements, Maritime NZ said.

    “During these visits, inspectors speak directly with crew and assess compliance with relevant international conventions and flag state requirements relating to crew conditions and vessel safety.”

    The Maritime Union has previously raised concerns about the wages and living conditions of those onboard.

    Nelson branch president Paul Stewart said he understood Vega was coming in to Port Nelson this week for a crew change, to get rid of rubbish and resupply with food and water.

    The union was planning to board the ship, if the captain granted permission, to check on the crew’s welfare and ensure they were being paid correctly, Stewart said.

    There had been lots of rumours floating around so the union were keen to speak to the crew directly, he said.

    “We haven’t had any contact with them. You hear rumours floating around that they’re not getting paid right or one member wants to jump off because the conditions are bad and that sort of thing. So we just want to get on board just to verify everything, pull the crew aside and just have a chat with them and touch base – see how they’re actually doing and get some definitive answers.”

    The union had previously said the crew were being paid “significantly below international and domestic benchmarks”.

    Whether the ship would leave for India after coming into port or return to anchor in Tasman Bay was the “million dollar question”, Stewart said.

    RNZ understands some crew had been swapped out from the ship, with one person flown home to be with a sick family member, while a delivery of five pallets of food supplies was made several months ago.

    RNZ understands issues with paperwork for the ship’s entry to India are the reason it had not left New Zealand.

    The Environmental Protection Authority last month said the application for the ship’s export was complete but it had not received an update from the Competent Authority in India about the requested import consent.

    The authority told RNZ this week it was unable to provide an update.

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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/2026/03/25/former-interislander-ferry-expected-to-dock-in-port-nelson-after-months-at-anchor/

    AM Edition: Top 10 Business Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

    AM Edition: Here are the top 10 business articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026 – Full Text

    Bullying allegations against senior Corrections staffer raised more than a month ago

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Corrections’ Commissioner of Custodial Services Leigh Marsh. Supplied / Corrections

    Allegations of bullying against one of the most senior staff at Corrections were raised more than a month ago.

    RNZ earlier revealed Corrections commissioner of custodial services Leigh Marsh was facing an employment investigation in relation to allegations of bullying.

    On Wednesday, Corrections chief executive Jeremy Lightfoot confirmed the concerns were raised on February 15.

    “No other formal concerns have been raised about this individual, and they have not previously been subject to an employment investigation.”

    Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

    After receiving the concerns, advice was sought from the human resources team and support was put in place for the staff member who raised the concerns, Lightfoot said.

    “The decision was then taken to undertake a formal employment investigation.”

    Lightfoot said it was important staff felt confident raising any concerns.

    “And as an employer I have a duty of care to ensure the ongoing privacy and wellbeing of those involved.

    “For these reasons, it would not be appropriate for us to provide further details about this employment matter at this time. I acknowledge the public interest in the conduct of our senior leaders and Corrections is committed to being transparent about the findings of this investigation at the appropriate time and in line with our obligations under the Official Information Act and Privacy Act.”

    In response to questions about the inquiry into Marsh earlier this week Lightfoot told RNZ he expected “high standards of all our staff and take any allegations raised about their conduct extremely seriously”.

    “Corrections can confirm that concerns have been raised about one senior leader that will be investigated by an external independent investigator.

    “The concerns raised relate to alleged conduct around management processes and bullying within the employment relationship.”

    The staff member who raised the concerns with Lightfoot was “being supported while this employment matter is ongoing”.

    He also confirmed three operational deputy chief executives, including Marsh, would be undertaking six-month secondments into different DCE roles within Corrections.

    “I had already been considering moving the operational DCEs into each other’s areas later this year. This is because I believe these secondments will allow each operational DCE to deepen their understanding of each other’s respective areas so we can continue building a coherent, cohesive organisation. Their employment agreements were developed to allow such secondments to take place.

    “The decision to do this now was brought forward to ensure that a thorough and fair employment process for both parties in relation to the above complaint can be carried out.”

    The secondment sees Marsh move to DCE of Pae Ora.

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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/2026/03/25/bullying-allegations-against-senior-corrections-staffer-raised-more-than-a-month-ago/

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    Tens of thousands lost to crypto ATM scams, ombudsman says

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Several scams involved people depositing money through cryptocurrency ATMs. RNZ / Paris Ibell

    A woman who withdrew $31,500 from her bank account and gave it to a scammer is one of two recent cases that have sparked a warning from the Banking Ombudsman about cryptocurrency ATMs.

    Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said she had investigated several scam cases where people had deposited money through the ATMs.

    Crypto ATMs allow people to deposit cash and buy cryptocurrency, which is sent to a digital wallet. Transactions usually happen quickly and cannot easily be stopped or reversed once completed.

    Sladden said it made them risky when used under pressure or at someone else’s direction.

    She highlighted two cases, in which she said people believed they were following legitimate instructions but lost large amounts of money.

    In April last year, a woman responded to a job ad online and, following instructions, went to her bank and withdrew $31,500, telling the teller it was for a car.

    She put the money into a cryptocurrency wallet via a crypto ATM but later realised she had been scammed and asked the bank to reimburse her. She said it should have noticed her anxious and unusual behaviour.

    The ombudsman scheme said it had to decide whether there was anything that should have caused the bank to suspect a scam.

    “A bank must follow a customer’s transaction instructions unless it detects – or should have detected – warning signs of a possible scam. If it detects such warning signs, it must make inquiries about the transaction and, if warranted, warn the customer about the possibility of a scam before processing the transaction.”

    It said there was nothing about what the customer told the bank that should have indicated a problem.

    In another case, a man lost $65,000. He authorised payments to cryptocurrency merchants and withdrew cash from ATMs that he deposited in a crypto ATM.

    The bank refused to reimburse him, saying he had authorised the payments.

    Sladden said obvious red flags included requests to keep payments secret or give false information to a bank.

    “People should independently verify who they are dealing with, and talk to someone they trust before making large or unusual payments.

    “It’s important to stop and ask questions before taking any steps that might result in the loss of money.”

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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/2026/03/25/tens-of-thousands-lost-to-crypto-atm-scams-ombudsman-says/

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    Archive New Zealand’s new Wellington building opens

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    After a million hours of labour, Te Rua – Archive New Zealand’s brand new Wellington building – is now open.

    The 10-level, $290 million building is described as one of the world’s most technologically advanced archive protection facilities and forms part of Te Kahu, a new heritage campus.

    The campus, which sees Archives New Zealand and the National Library physically joined, includes Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision and the Alexander Turnbull Library in its wider net.

    Delivered on budget and on time, Te Rua has been held up as a win for public-private partnerships, but where the nation’s archives will ultimately be stored – and how much it will cost to do so – remains unclear.

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    Preserving windows into the past

    Under the bright lights of the brand new Te Rua facility, research archivist Shaun McGuire points to a cluster of carefully laid out black and white photographs of the 488 Squadron.

    “It was a fighter squadron that was sent to Singapore prior to the outbreak of hostilities with Japan. As you can see from their general posture, they’re green as grass and not particularly military,” he said.

    “This chap here playing in the puddle – because it’s monsoonish – is Pete Gifford and the fellow playing with him is Len Farr. They’re both pilot officers.”

    McGuire said the Brewster Buffalo planes they flew were outdated by World War II, and while Peter Gifford survived the war, others were not so lucky.

    The photographs of the young men are but a taste of the historical material that will eventually be housed in Te Rua.

    RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

    The bronze-accented state-of-the-art archive facility – boasting more than 19,000sqm of floor space and 90km of storage under tightly controlled environmental condition – will ultimately be home to millions of photographs, films and records, documenting the nation’s political, cultural and social history.

    According to Internal Affairs Minister Brooke van Velden, the new facility could not come soon enough.

    “I think it’s a really awesome day for New Zealanders because it means that our nation’s history will be preserved. And I have to tell you, a couple of years ago when I went to visit the old archives building I could feel for myself that it was damp and that it was falling apart.”

    She said it was “wonderful” that country will have preserved archival material for centuries to come.

    “For all our children’s children.”

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    A public-private partnership

    Van Velden, who is also deputy leader of the ACT Party, heralded the facility as a win for public-private partnerships over successive governments, with the contract signed under the previous Labour government.

    While the taonga within the building and its fit-out is publicly owned, the building base and land belongs to Canadian Mutual Fund, PSPIB/CPPIB Waiheke Inc. and is managed by Australasian real estate assets manager Dexus – also the developer.

    The 25-year lease agreement with the Crown has the option to extend for another 25 years.

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    A spokesperson for the Department of Internal Affairs said the rent has been fixed – with yearly increases agreed upfront and budgeted for – but the amount can’t be made public due to commercial sensitivity.

    Van Velden said given the building’s specifications it would be unlikely for the lease not to be renewed.

    She said collaborations between business and the public sector, highlighted the private sector’s expertise.

    “Government has a lot of interest and expertise in particular areas, but they’re not building things all the time. They’re not experts in seismic strengthening.”

    Dexus portfolio manager for New Zealand Phill Stanley said the Kaikoura earthquake in 2016 was a “learning curve for everyone”.

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    The site, which previously housed the quake-damaged Defence House, now featured a building on 36 base isolators that could drift up to 1.3m horizontally and up to 300mm vertically, during an earthquake, he said.

    In order to meet UNESCO standards, climate control within the building must hold within ±1°C for at least 48 hours in the event of a power failure.

    “In layman’s terms, we have built the most beautiful chilly-bin on base isolators.”

    He said the project had been a career highlight and hinted at more partnerships with the Crown in the pipeline.

    RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

    Space for taonga unknown

    The relocation of more than 150,000 containers of historical material from the Mulgrave Street facility is currently underway.

    A massive undertaking, that chief archivist Poumanaaki Anahera Morehu hoped would be completed by December this year.

    However, Te Rua won’t be able to hold all the material – and how much it can take remains to be seen.

    National Librarian Te Pouhuaki Rachel Esson said while there were estimates, they won’t truly know until the material has been shifted.

    “Part of the process of bringing things over is we’re rehousing them. So some things have been in boxes that aren’t quite as good as they could be, so they’re being put in new boxes.

    “Sometimes things have been crammed into a box so they might be split out into two. We’re just not quite sure yet exactly.”

    Morehu said the new facility was never going to house everything contained in Mulgrave Street and anticipated the wider heritage campus – Te Kahu – would absorb overflow.

    She said access to the archives was just as important as preservation.

    “It’s all good to preserve it and hold on to it, but it’s no good if nobody’s got access to it.

    “This is creating that opportunity and the campus is creating that opportunity, while it opens the doors to other facilities to think about how we play a role as archives and libraries in making this more collaborative and sharing.”

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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/2026/03/25/archive-new-zealands-new-wellington-building-opens/

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    Wellington water woes: ‘A price which is not in the plan’

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    A hefty bill is bubbling up for Wellington, after decades of underinvestment in the city’s water infrastructure. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

    The local government minister has called Wellington’s mayor for an explanation of the huge water bills that residents are facing – and are forecast to hit almost $7000 a year by the end of the decade.

    Wellington’s new water entity Tiaki Wai is a council-controlled organisation taking over Wellington, Lower Hutt, Upper Hutt and Porirua City Councils water assets from July.

    It announced this morning that residents will face an average nearly 15 percent hike in water charges this coming financial year – from $2100 to $2400.

    Those bills may rise by nearly a quarter the following year – and keep increasing – to reach an estimated $6800 per year for water services by 2036 as the water entity tries to fix old, failing infrastructure.

    Local government minister Simon Watts said those costs were higher than he was expecting.

    “I’m concerned for Wellington ratepayers again, you know we’ve got a long string of issues in this area.”

    Watts said the plan that Tiaki Wai presented to the Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) and the water regulator last year did not forecast such high costs.

    He said he phoned Wellington’s Mayor Andrew Little about this today.

    “I outlined to him that we received a plan from you which outlined a profile of cost increases, and as a result the entity has now published a price which is not in the plan, which is much higher, I need to understand, and have an explanation around that.”

    A Tiaki Wai spokesperson said the Water Services Delivery plan it presented in August last year was based on the best available information at the time, and the organisation will continue to review its costs as investment plans develop.

    Little said Tiaki Wai was responsible for what it sent to DIA last year, and he did not control or veto the organisation’s decisions under the new system.

    He said he shared the minister’s concerns about bills, but the government campaigned on this model under its Local Water Done Well policy.

    He said he will be scrutinising Tiaki Wai’s performance and pricing closely.

    “If the increases follow the path that Tiaki Wai are saying, then people are going to expect high quality, that leaks are repaired quickly, also that they can contact their water company, at any time of the day.”

    He wanted the Commerce Commission to be granted the power to intervene if water entity’s bills became unreasonable.

    Watts did not confirm if the Commerce Commission would have the power to step in over sky-rocketing bills, but said he had called in the commission in this instance to work with Tiaki Wai and the councils over the projected prices.

    Porirua Mayor Anita Baker said bills reaching nearly $7000 a year in a decade were horrendous, and could drive people away from the region.

    “At those sort of prices, who’s going to be living here? I can’t pay $6000 in water, and $6000 in rates… we have to do something.”

    She said while she supported the establishment of the water entity, and understood the scale of the work at hand, water charges still needed to be affordable.

    Wellingtonians divided over jump in bills

    Some Wellingtonians RNZ spoke to were worried about the charges due to cost of living pressures, while others said the region’s assets had to be fixed.

    Dale said she did not look forward to the future knowing those charges lay ahead.

    “That sounds pretty crap. I’m 28, so the way it will be, by the time I am 38, that doesn’t sound like I’ll be living a great life.”

    But another resident Daniel Freese said the city had ignored failing assets for too long.

    “I think it has to happen, I think we’re paying for under-investment over many years, and although it’s not good news, we just need to suck it up and pay for it.

    “If we don’t pay now, we’re going have to pay later, and it’s going to be more.”

    Resident Tom Arkell said he was keen to see water meters brought in for the city.

    “I’d like to think we could bring in some pay-per-use water monitors, that we can actually incentivise people to use less water, and to track, and therefore they could pay within what they’re comfortable, rather than getting a fixed bill no matter how much water you use.”

    Tiaki Wai is considering water meters, and the organisation expects they will take up to seven years to roll out across Wellington, and cost $590 million in total.

    Peet yesterday told reporters the dire state of the region’s infrastructure could no longer be ignored after decades of under-investment.

    “We know we’ve got a lot of leaks, we know we’ve got compliance issues with wastewater, and we all know that stormwater continues to be a significant challenge for many cities – but Wellington in particular.”

    Peet said fixing the failed Moa Point plant – which has been spewing raw sewage into the sea for nearly six weeks – will be a top priority.

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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/2026/03/25/wellington-water-woes-a-price-which-is-not-in-the-plan/

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    AM Edition: Top 10 Law and Security Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026: AM – Full Text

    AM Edition: Here are the top 10 law and security articles on LiveNews.co.nz for March 25, 2026: AM – Full Text

    Arrest in Operation Aurora

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Please attribute the following to Detective Senior Sergeant Colin Baillie:

    Police executing search warrants have arrested one person from a religious organisation that has a presence in New Zealand, Australia, Samoa and Fiji.

    A 45-year-old man will appear in the Christchurch District Court today charged with unlawful sexual connection, indecent assault, strangulation and rape.

    Today’s arrest follows a number of allegations, and partner agencies are supporting those that have come forward.

    It is possible there may be other allegations that we are not yet aware of, and I strongly encourage any survivor to speak with us, should they wish to. Your voice matters, and you will be treated with respect.

    Our staff who work in this space are specially trained, and any reports will be made in confidence, and we will provide wrap-around support.

    Please make a report by calling Police on 105 or using our online service. Click ‘Make a report’.

    Please reference Operation Aurora or use file number 260319/8197.

    Police will not be making further comment as the matter is before the Court.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/24/arrest-in-operation-aurora/

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    Nailed it: Police clean up following tip off

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police in Counties Manukau have been busy cleaning up and returning a pile of stolen goods following a tip off from a member of the public.

    On Friday afternoon, Police patrolling the Counties Manukau West area were alerted to an address of interest in Mangere Bridge by a member of the public who reported he’d had several items taken from his vehicle in Pakuranga.

    Counties Manukau West Area Commander, Inspector Dave Christoffersen, says one of the items belonging to the victim had a GPS, which lead to a property in Tima Lane.

    “Units were in the area at the time and met with the victim, who had observed his items inside the address.

    “A search of the property located multiple tools and other items, one of which was a GPS linked stolen nail gun.

    “This lead to one person at the address being arrested and charged for receiving.”

    Inspector Christoffersen says Police recovered the alleged stolen goods and have managed to return several to their rightful owner.

    “This is a great example of members of the public reporting incidents when they happen, then following up with any helpful information that comes to hand.

    “This allows the opportunity for Police to act and, as in this case, recover stolen property.

    “I would like to acknowledge the community for their vigilance and reporting suspicious activity promptly to Police.”

    A 37-year-old man was remanded in custody and will appear in Manukau District Court today charged with receives property.

    ENDS.

    Holly McKay/NZ Police

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/23/nailed-it-police-clean-up-following-tip-off/

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    Update: Common Room bar fight, Hastings

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Attribute to Detective Sergeant Heath Jones, Hastings Criminal Investigation Branch:

    Hasting Police have arrested and charged a person in relation to a fight at the Common Room bar earlier this month.

    Police responded to the fight around 1.45am on Sunday 8 March, where several people were injured – some seriously, with one requiring hospital treatment.

    Police arrested one man today in relation to the incident. The 32-year-old is due in Hastings District Court tomorrow, charged with five counts of assault with intent to injure, three counts of injuring with intent to injure, injuring with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and assault.

    Police are not ruling out any further arrests and would like to speak with the five people pictured, as we believe they may be able to assist in our enquiries.

    If this is you, or you know who these people are, please get in touch through 105 – either online or over the phone – and reference file number 260308/6292.

    Alternatively, information can be provided through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/update-common-room-bar-fight-hastings/

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    Auckland man dies in police custody

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    The man died at the Auckland District Custody Unit this morning. File photo. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

    An Auckland man has died after being arrested by police in the Auckland suburb of Mt Roskill this morning.

    Acting Auckland City District Commander Inspector Grant Tetzlaff said a critical incident investigation was now underway after the man’s death in custody.

    The man was arrested shortly before 10am this morning on Morrie Laing Avenue, after officers responded to several reports of “a disorder”.

    He was arrested without incident and taken to the Auckland District Custody Unit, where he collapsed.

    An ambulance was called and first aid was given to the man, but he was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Tetzlaff said next of kin had been informed. He said support had been provided to the family, as well as police staff who had been involved.

    “Several investigations will now get underway, including the critical incident investigation, which will examine the course of events this morning.

    “As part of this process police have notified the Independent Police Conduct Authority.

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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/2026/03/25/auckland-man-dies-in-police-custody/

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    Illegal street racing sees arrest and car impounded

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Raglan Police have arrested one person and impounded their car after reports of illegal street racing around the area over the weekend.

    The arrested person was one of multiple drivers seen driving dangerously on Nau Mai Road.

    The 19-year-old man was taken into custody around 1.30am on Sunday. He is due in Hamilton District Court on 27 March, charged with operating a motor vehicle causing sustained loss of traction, and excess breath alcohol.

    Senior Constable Brendon Richardson, Waikato Road Policing Team, says Police continue to run a dedicated operation focused on responding to and investigating illegal street racing activity that endangers road users, damages roads and causes disturbance to the public.

    “We are taking a district-wide approach to this and will take action against those that are putting others at risk.

    “Police are also working with our partner agencies and local councils around other measures that can assist us in preventing this behaviour.

    “I also want acknowledge Constable Hetal Patel who assisted with this arrest and contributed greatly to the outcome,” Senior Constable Richardson says.

    Police are asking anyone that sees illegal or dangerous driving to make reports so officers can follow up and hold offenders to account.

    Photos and video footage is helpful for Police to follow up on offenders that quickly speed off when driving unlawfully. These can also be used to identify the vehicles, hotspots and times dangerous driving occurs and helps to identify the drivers.

    If you see any dangerous driving, call 111 immediately.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/24/illegal-street-racing-sees-arrest-and-car-impounded/

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    Name release, fatal crash, Waipaoa

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police can confirm the name of the man who died following a crash in Waipaoa on 20 March, and are appealing for information from the public.

    The man was 75-year-old Owen Rutherford Lloyd, from Whatatutu.

    Our thoughts are with his family and friends during this difficult time.

    Police are now appealing to the public for any information in relation to the crash that may assist our investigation.

    We would also like to speak with anyone who may have CCTV, or dashcam footage from the Matawai Road area between 6am and 7am on 20 March.

    A 29-year-old man has been charged with dangerous driving causing death, and is due to appear in Gisborne District Court today.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/23/name-release-fatal-crash-waipaoa/

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    Fatal crash, Tremaine Avenue, Palmerston North

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    One person has died and three others are injured following a three-vehicle crash in Palmerston North overnight.

    Emergency services were called to the crash on Tremaine Avenue, near Malden Street, about 2.30am. It involved two cars, one of which caught fire, and a utility vehicle.

    Sadly, one person died at the scene. Another has serious injuries and two others have been treated for minor injuries.

    The crash also caused power to be cut to multiple addresses.

    The Serious Crash Unit has carried out a scene examination and enquiries into the cause are ongoing. The reopened about 7am.

    Appeal for information:

    Senior Sergeant Christine Pinfold from the Central District Command Centre said Police would like to hear from anyone who captured CCTV prior to the crash.

    “We believe the vehicles were travelling south on Tremaine Avenue, towards Malden Street when the crash occurred.

    “We ask that people with CCTV in the area please review it and contact us if they have video showing two vehicles travelling down the avenue just before 2.30am.”

    Anyone with CCTV showing the vehicles is asked to make a report online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update report”, or by calling 105. Please use the reference number 260324/3928.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/24/fatal-crash-tremaine-avenue-palmerston-north/

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    Fatal crash, Makara

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Two people have been located deceased in a vehicle in Makara this morning.

    Police were called to Makara Road at around 8:05am following reports of a vehicle upside down in a body of water.

    Upon arrival, two people were located deceased in the vehicle.

    Enquiries into the circumstances of the deaths are ongoing.

    Makara Road was closed while a scene examination took place and has since reopened.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/fatal-crash-makara/

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    Two dead after car flips upside down into stream in Wellington

    March 25, 2026

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Two bodies have been found inside a car that was discovered upside down in a stream in rural Wellington this morning.

    Police, Fire and Emergency and Wellington Free Ambulance were called to the crash in Mākara just after 8am.

    Fire and Emergency shift manager Alex Norris said crews arrived to find a car partially submerged in the stream on Mākara Beach Road – a narrow, winding road between Karori and Mākara Beach.

    The bodies were found by police when they arrived at the scene.

    The road was closed for several hours but has since reopened.

    Google Maps

    A local resident who did not want to be named said they could see the crash site from their home.

    They said they saw at least four police vehicles, two ambulances and a fire appliance attending the crash as well as white blanket laid on the ground.

    RNZ / Mark Papalii

    “Usually you hear stuff a night but we didn’t hear anything out of the ordinary. Our neighbour told me it’s quite a common place where people go off there’s about a two to three metre drop from the road down to the stream.

    “I’ve witnessed cars having a head on collision on the stretch before and a bunch of near misses. I haven’t really had a chance to let it sink in. I’ve talked to some of the locals this morning and they’re really shocked” he said.

    RNZ / Mark Papalii

    The road skirts a small stream bordered by wire fencing down the bank from Mākara Road.

    Mākara Village cattery owner Cody Stephens said he saw police cars and a fire engine fly past his property this morning, heading towards the beach.

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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/2026/03/25/two-dead-after-car-flips-upside-down-into-stream-in-wellington/

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    Remains found in Wellington centuries old

    March 25, 2026

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Human remains found in a garden on Wellington’s south coast last year have been determined to be centuries old.

    A homeowner discovered the remains in his garden in Ōwhiro Bay on June 22, 2025.

    Detective Constable Sarah Steed says radiocarbon dating has been conducted on the remains, which show them to be from the 1600s-1700s, and possibly pre-European.

    “This information will now be supplied to the Coroner for consideration,” Detective Constable Steed says.

    “Consultation will take place with local iwi to arrange a suitable burial site, once the remains are release by the Coroner.”

    ENDS

    Issued by the Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/23/remains-found-in-wellington-centuries-old/

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    How an annual influenza vaccine can reduce the risk of heart issues

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    The vaccine’s protection against heart issues comes directly from reducing the risk and severity of influenza. File photo. CDC

    Getting an annual influenza vaccine can reduce the risk of a heart attack or stroke by a third, according to the Immunisation Advisory Centre.

    The centre said there was a growing amount of evidence which showed that getting the vaccine was about as effective as using common heart medication.

    Heart disease and stroke are the leading causes of death in New Zealand, accounting for 12,000 deaths per year.

    Since 2003, strong evidence has emerged demonstrating that the flu vaccine offered substantial cardiovascular protection.

    This protection comes directly from reducing the risk and severity of influenza, plus likely further non-specific immune protection.

    Dr Philip Shirley from the Immunisation Advisory Centre told Midday Report that it had been known for about 100 years that in a really bad flu season the number of people having heart attacks and strokes increased.

    “More recently we’ve been able to show that if you take a swab of someone in the community and they have influenza, they’ve got a six to 10 times the base rate of having a heart attack for the next seven to 10 days after they’re proven to have influenza.”

    That happened for two reasons, he said.

    The first was if you catch the flu it goes into your nose and then your chest, he said.

    “From there the virus can actually relocate, so into your heart and when it gets to your heart it can cause conditions like myocarditis, peridcarditis, kind of inflammation of the heart, but even more concerning it can actually move into the blood vessels.

    “When it’s in the blood vessels it can disrupt plaques that are here and disrupted plaques are what causes heart attacks because they rupture, they block the blood vessel, and that’s a heart attack. If it happens in the brain then it’s a stroke.”

    Another issue was that the lungs of those suffering from severe influenza did not transport oxygen as well as usual, he said.

    “And because your lungs aren’t working properly your heart starts beating faster and harder and that’s a problem – that increases your risk.”

    The main way that the influenza vaccine protects people is because it protects you from getting influenza which can cause heart attacks and strokes, he said.

    The influenza vaccination also “changes the way that the heart responds to stress and inflammation”, he said.

    “They did some really interesting studies where people undergoing open heart surgery, some of them had an influenza vaccine the week before, some of them didn’t.

    “And when you measure their inflammatory markers after the operation, the people who had the flu vaccine had less inflammation and they showed less signs of heart stress, after one of the most stressful things you can do to your heart.”

    A third way the vaccine helps protect people was with “trained immunity”.

    “I think of it like this – if our immune system is responding to things frequently, if we’re getting vaccinated regularly, then the immune system gets stronger, not just against the target disease, but it protects you from a wide range of bio-illnesses.

    “Nearly any illness you catch can increase your risk of having a heart attack or a stroke – not as badly as influenza, but it can a bit. And getting the flu vaccine every year seems to protect you from lots of respiratory illnesses.”

    Dr Shirley said the biggest benefits of getting the vaccine would be for those with chronic health conditions or were over the age of 65, but there were also benefits for healthier people.

    “If you’re a healthy person, getting influenza is no picnic. Your rate of heart attacks and strokes might be low, but even increasing a low risk of heart attacks or strokes by six or 10 times isn’t something I would want to be doing.”

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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/2026/03/25/how-an-annual-influenza-vaccine-can-reduce-the-risk-of-heart-issues/

    Former Interislander ferry returns to Nelson

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    The former Interislander ferry is now flagged in the Caribbean nation of Saint Kitts and Nevis. Supplied / Jason Grimmett

    Former Interislander ferry Aratere is expected to arrive in Port Nelson later this week for the first time in nearly four months.

    RNZ understands the ship, which has since been renamed Vega, will undergo a crew change and be restocked with fuel and provisions.

    KiwiRail retired the ferry last August and announced in October it had been sold to a buyer who would deliver it to a shipbreaking yard in India.

    Since being renamed Vega, the Interislander logos had been painted over and it is now flagged in the Caribbean nation of Saint Kitts and Nevis.

    It is still not known when the ship will leave the country.

    It has been anchored in Tasman Bay since early December with a crew from India, who had been onboard since October.

    A Maritime NZ spokesperson said inspectors last visited the vessel in mid-February while it was in Tasman Bay, and planned to do so again while it was berthed in Nelson.

    Inspectors had been regularly engaging with Vega, its operator and flag state regarding crew welfare and compliance with international requirements, Maritime NZ said.

    “During these visits, inspectors speak directly with crew and assess compliance with relevant international conventions and flag state requirements relating to crew conditions and vessel safety.”

    The Maritime Union has previously raised concerns about the wages and living conditions of those onboard.

    Nelson branch president Paul Stewart said he understood Vega was coming in to Port Nelson this week for a crew change, to get rid of rubbish and resupply with food and water.

    The union was planning to board the ship, if the captain granted permission, to check on the crew’s welfare and ensure they were being paid correctly, Stewart said.

    There had been lots of rumours floating around so the union were keen to speak to the crew directly, he said.

    “We haven’t had any contact with them. You hear rumours floating around that they’re not getting paid right or one member wants to jump off because the conditions are bad and that sort of thing. So we just want to get on board just to verify everything, pull the crew aside and just have a chat with them and touch base – see how they’re actually doing and get some definitive answers.”

    The union had previously said the crew were being paid “significantly below international and domestic benchmarks”.

    Whether the ship would leave for India after coming into port or return to anchor in Tasman Bay was the “million dollar question”, Stewart said.

    RNZ understands some crew had been swapped out from the ship, with one person flown home to be with a sick family member, while a delivery of five pallets of food supplies was made several months ago.

    RNZ understands issues with paperwork for the ship’s entry to India are the reason it had not left New Zealand.

    The Environmental Protection Authority last month said the application for the ship’s export was complete but it had not received an update from the Competent Authority in India about the requested import consent.

    The authority told RNZ this week it was unable to provide an update.

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    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/former-interislander-ferry-returns-to-nelson/

    Fuel costs: Is there room for super-sized vehicles on NZ’s urban roads?

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    The big rise in sales of bigger vehicles has been in urban areas in recent years. File photo. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

    More needs to be done to discourage the use of super-sized vehicles in urban areas – and not just because they guzzle far more petrol at a time when there are growing concerns over price and supply, says a University of Auckland professor.

    Double cab utes and SUVs are regularly among New Zealand’s top selling new vehicles.

    Their capacity to guzzle fuel is in sharp focus at the moment with prices rising at the pump, along with concerns about diesel which largely keeps industry moving, including freight and farming.

    Those concerns have led to calls for more regulation to discourage people buying supersized vehicles.

    Professor Alistair Woodward – from the University of Auckland’s Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences – told Checkpoint that while bigger vehicles are still widely used in rural areas and by tradies in the cities, the big rise in buyers in recent years had been in urban areas.

    “They are becoming used more and more as the family vehicle, so their use is pretty widespread.

    “What has changed is that they have become very popular as an alternative to cars.”

    Woodward said more people needed to be aware of how inefficient the bigger vehicles were – “A Ford Ranger uses roughly twice as much fuel per kilometre as a Toyota Corolla.”

    But he said the bigger vehicles created a number of other challenges beyond the petrol pump.

    “They are bad for the climate with twice as much carbon monoxide, and they are very nasty if they run into you and cause problems.”

    He cited a recent study in the US which found that if a child was struck by a light truck, they were seven times as more likely to die than if they were struck by a car.

    He said two ways to discourage the rising number of bigger vehicles on urban streets were things like higher sales taxes, and resisting pressure to supersize parking spaces.

    “As these double cab utes and other vehicles get larger, they really have difficulty fitting in what used to be an adequate carpark, they cause overhangs and cause frustrations for drivers.

    “Rather than taking up more space for parking, we should do something about restricting the use of supersized vehicles in urban areas.”

    But Woodward said there did not appear to be much enthusiasm in the current government to make these kinds of moves.

    “The previous government introduced incentives for lower emission vehicles and by implication higher costs for people who buy double cab utes. The present government felt that this was not justified, and they have removed that discount scheme.

    “So we’re waiting for good moves, but in the 1970s we downsized our cars because of the oil shocks, so maybe we’ve got something to learn from 50 years ago.”

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    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/fuel-costs-is-there-room-for-super-sized-vehicles-on-nzs-urban-roads/

    Archive New Zealand’s new Wellington building opens

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    After a million hours of labour, Te Rua – Archive New Zealand’s brand new Wellington building – is now open.

    The 10-level, $290 million building is described as one of the world’s most technologically advanced archive protection facilities and forms part of Te Kahu, a new heritage campus.

    The campus, which sees Archives New Zealand and the National Library physically joined, includes Ngā Taonga Sound & Vision and the Alexander Turnbull Library in its wider net.

    Delivered on budget and on time, Te Rua has been held up as a win for public-private partnerships, but where the nation’s archives will ultimately be stored – and how much it will cost to do so – remains unclear.

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    Preserving windows into the past

    Under the bright lights of the brand new Te Rua facility, research archivist Shaun McGuire points to a cluster of carefully laid out black and white photographs of the 488 Squadron.

    “It was a fighter squadron that was sent to Singapore prior to the outbreak of hostilities with Japan. As you can see from their general posture, they’re green as grass and not particularly military,” he said.

    “This chap here playing in the puddle – because it’s monsoonish – is Pete Gifford and the fellow playing with him is Len Farr. They’re both pilot officers.”

    McGuire said the Brewster Buffalo planes they flew were outdated by World War II, and while Peter Gifford survived the war, others were not so lucky.

    The photographs of the young men are but a taste of the historical material that will eventually be housed in Te Rua.

    RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

    The bronze-accented state-of-the-art archive facility – boasting more than 19,000sqm of floor space and 90km of storage under tightly controlled environmental condition – will ultimately be home to millions of photographs, films and records, documenting the nation’s political, cultural and social history.

    According to Internal Affairs Minister Brooke van Velden, the new facility could not come soon enough.

    “I think it’s a really awesome day for New Zealanders because it means that our nation’s history will be preserved. And I have to tell you, a couple of years ago when I went to visit the old archives building I could feel for myself that it was damp and that it was falling apart.”

    She said it was “wonderful” that country will have preserved archival material for centuries to come.

    “For all our children’s children.”

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    A public-private partnership

    Van Velden, who is also deputy leader of the ACT Party, heralded the facility as a win for public-private partnerships over successive governments, with the contract signed under the previous Labour government.

    While the taonga within the building and its fit-out is publicly owned, the building base and land belongs to Canadian Mutual Fund, PSPIB/CPPIB Waiheke Inc. and is managed by Australasian real estate assets manager Dexus – also the developer.

    The 25-year lease agreement with the Crown has the option to extend for another 25 years.

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    A spokesperson for the Department of Internal Affairs said the rent has been fixed – with yearly increases agreed upfront and budgeted for – but the amount can’t be made public due to commercial sensitivity.

    Van Velden said given the building’s specifications it would be unlikely for the lease not to be renewed.

    She said collaborations between business and the public sector, highlighted the private sector’s expertise.

    “Government has a lot of interest and expertise in particular areas, but they’re not building things all the time. They’re not experts in seismic strengthening.”

    Dexus portfolio manager for New Zealand Phill Stanley said the Kaikoura earthquake in 2016 was a “learning curve for everyone”.

    Supplied / Jason Mann Photography

    The site, which previously housed the quake-damaged Defence House, now featured a building on 36 base isolators that could drift up to 1.3m horizontally and up to 300mm vertically, during an earthquake, he said.

    In order to meet UNESCO standards, climate control within the building must hold within ±1°C for at least 48 hours in the event of a power failure.

    “In layman’s terms, we have built the most beautiful chilly-bin on base isolators.”

    He said the project had been a career highlight and hinted at more partnerships with the Crown in the pipeline.

    RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

    Space for taonga unknown

    The relocation of more than 150,000 containers of historical material from the Mulgrave Street facility is currently underway.

    A massive undertaking, that chief archivist Poumanaaki Anahera Morehu hoped would be completed by December this year.

    However, Te Rua won’t be able to hold all the material – and how much it can take remains to be seen.

    National Librarian Te Pouhuaki Rachel Esson said while there were estimates, they won’t truly know until the material has been shifted.

    “Part of the process of bringing things over is we’re rehousing them. So some things have been in boxes that aren’t quite as good as they could be, so they’re being put in new boxes.

    “Sometimes things have been crammed into a box so they might be split out into two. We’re just not quite sure yet exactly.”

    Morehu said the new facility was never going to house everything contained in Mulgrave Street and anticipated the wider heritage campus – Te Kahu – would absorb overflow.

    She said access to the archives was just as important as preservation.

    “It’s all good to preserve it and hold on to it, but it’s no good if nobody’s got access to it.

    “This is creating that opportunity and the campus is creating that opportunity, while it opens the doors to other facilities to think about how we play a role as archives and libraries in making this more collaborative and sharing.”

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    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/archive-new-zealands-new-wellington-building-opens/

    Two dead after car flips upside down into stream in Wellington

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Two bodies have been found inside a car that was discovered upside down in a stream in rural Wellington this morning.

    Police, Fire and Emergency and Wellington Free Ambulance were called to the crash in Mākara just after 8am.

    Fire and Emergency shift manager Alex Norris said crews arrived to find a car partially submerged in the stream on Mākara Beach Road – a narrow, winding road between Karori and Mākara Beach.

    The bodies were found by police when they arrived at the scene.

    The road was closed for several hours but has since reopened.

    Google Maps

    A local resident who did not want to be named said they could see the crash site from their home.

    They said they saw at least four police vehicles, two ambulances and a fire appliance attending the crash as well as white blanket laid on the ground.

    RNZ / Mark Papalii

    “Usually you hear stuff a night but we didn’t hear anything out of the ordinary. Our neighbour told me it’s quite a common place where people go off there’s about a two to three metre drop from the road down to the stream.

    “I’ve witnessed cars having a head on collision on the stretch before and a bunch of near misses. I haven’t really had a chance to let it sink in. I’ve talked to some of the locals this morning and they’re really shocked” he said.

    RNZ / Mark Papalii

    The road skirts a small stream bordered by wire fencing down the bank from Mākara Road.

    Mākara Village cattery owner Cody Stephens said he saw police cars and a fire engine fly past his property this morning, heading towards the beach.

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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/2026/03/25/two-dead-after-car-flips-upside-down-into-stream-in-wellington/

    Councils of flood hit areas invest in flood barriers as extra security

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    ARK flood barriers are manufactured by Tauranga company Tarpaulin Makers. Supplied/Tarpaulin Makers

    The local makers of a temporary, reusable dam say it’s got the potential to protect homes, businesses and critical infrastructure across the motu from flooding.

    Two councils that have dealt with the fallout from devastating storms time and again have bought Tarpaulin Makers’ ARK flood barriers, which they say are a quick and easy alternative to sandbags.

    Wairoa civil defence crews deployed them for the first time last month, when the Hawke’s Bay town was forecast to be hit hard by a storm.

    It escaped the worst of the weather so the barriers were not needed, but Mayor Craig Little said it was a good exercise.

    “It just gives people a little bit of security,” he said. Plus, it was far easier than filling and lugging hundreds of sandbags around town.

    The ARK flood barrier in action in Wairoa, February 2026 Supplied/Tarpaulin Makers

    “The cost of the damage from flooding afterwards far outweighs the cost of having those,” said Little.

    The 14.5 metre long PVC tubes join together to create a continuous barrier, equivalent to 160 sandbags.

    Once they’re filled with water – via a fire hydrant or water truck, in about ten minutes – they’re half a metre high, heavy and strong.

    After a flood, they can be emptied, rolled up and stored.

    The 14.5 metre tubes can be connected to make a continuous barrier. Supplied/Tarpaulin Makers

    Klint Brittain-Freemantle from Tarpaulin Makers is the brains behind the gear.

    Well before he joined the Tauranga-based company he’d seen similar products overseas, but couldn’t find anything home grown so took up the challenge himself.

    Living in Napier, he’d witnessed homes under water time and again, and then Cyclone Cook hit in 2017.

    “I drove in from home and deployed it out the front of my workshop across our big front roller doors and office.

    “The water came right up to the doors, and it basically stopped it getting flooded, the places next door to us got flooded, all through the workshop floors, but we weren’t.”

    What’s now known as the ARK flood barrier, sold by Tarpaulin Makers, was born.

    Brittain-Freemantle urged local authorities to consider them.

    “It’s almost soul-destroying at this point because we’ve got this product that’s so good and we know it works so well, and seeing people getting flooded around the country, like the recent ones in Wairoa [after Cyclone Gabrielle] … something like 400 houses got flooded.

    “Even if we would have saved a fraction of that, that’s huge for those people.”

    Tarpaulin Makers owner and general manager Beni Hafoka said many communities had big plans for flood resilience infrastructure.

    “They might take ten years to put in place, and in the meantime, communities need some short-term solutions,” he said.

    “That’s what ARK is.”

    Tairāwhiti civil defence crews practised setting up the ARK flood barrier during a demo day. Supplied/Tarpaulin Makers

    While the product would not prevent major flooding, it could be used strategically, he said.

    “In [Cyclone] Gabrielle, there was a particular power station that only just flooded up a couple of hundred mil.

    “So if we had ARK wrapped around that power station, we save that power station.”

    Tairāwhiti civil defence made the first purchase.

    For controller Ben Green, it added an element of speed to flood response.

    “You don’t have time, you’re dealing with something that’s situational, and the ability to rapidly deploy… that type of equipment … can be quite a game changer,” he said.

    Green said they bought 10 at about about $4000 each, but the cost would come down for larger orders.

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    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/councils-of-flood-hit-areas-invest-in-flood-barriers-as-extra-security/

    Fuel crisis: Rural schools struggle to get relievers, cancel trips away.

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    File photo. Toby Williams

    Rural schools are feeling the pinch of rising fuel costs, with some struggling to get relievers, and even cancelling trips away.

    Association president and Ōropi School principal Andrew King told Checkpoint rural schools were becoming less appealing for relievers.

    “Many of these relievers might travel over 100km in both directions to get to the school, which makes costs pretty exorbitant.”

    Relievers were entitled to be reimbursed for mileage, but they had to request it, and it put a strain on a school’s operational funding.

    In one case, a school had received a $970 bill for a water taxi for a reliever to be able to turn up to school.

    Students were also affected, with attendance down as parents opted not to make the trip.

    “Many of our rural families also need to drive a number of kilometres to get to a bus stop, not just the school, so that’s affecting attendance,” King said.

    Class trips were also under pressure, with fewer parents volunteering to drive school groups to their destination.

    On Wednesday, rural teachers met with the Ministry of Education to come up with a game plan.

    King said the ministry was looking at attendance data to work out some targeting funding support for schools that needed it most – and those would likely be those that were rural, isolated and small.

    That could come in the form of transport provision, or funding for mileage for teachers or families.

    “The devil will be in the detail, and we just don’t have the detail yet.”

    King said they were not addressing at this stage what would happen if there were fuel shortages on top of the cost pressure.

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    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/fuel-crisis-rural-schools-struggle-to-get-relievers-cancel-trips-away/

    Indigenous filmmakers share the love of film across cultures at Māoriland

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Filmmakers across indigenous cultures the world over are gathering in Ōtaki on the Kapiti Coast this week to connect and collaborate at the Māoriland Film Festival.

    The film festival, which runs until Saturday, is now in it’s 13th year, having grown from simply a place for indigenous filmmakers to come together to screening more than 100 short and feature films this year.

    Isobel and Dakoda are two young indigenous filmmakers from Australia who have been staying at Raukawa marae in Ōtaki as part of a cultural and filmmaking exchange between Victoria and Aotearoa.

    “It feels very safe for us and I feel very connected to everyone here. We’ve been sleeping in the same room and we’re mainly outside just playing and that, so it’s good,” said Dakoda a Yorta Yorta, Wemba Wemba, Barapa Barapa and Wiradjuri woman.

    Dakoda (left) and Isobel (right) showing the headpiece they made. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Isobel a Djadjawarung woman from Gunditjmara land in Victoria said it’s been inspiring to see how connected Māori are to their culture.

    She created a headpiece from emu feathers, echidna quills and kangaroo leather as a gift for former Māoriland festival director Libby Hakaraia who helped make their film a reality.

    “So we put it into a headpiece just to show our culture and our connection to land to give to Libby.”

    Pacific filmmakers at Māoriland. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Head of Funding at the New Zealand Film Commission Ainsley Gardiner (Ngāti Awa, Ngāti Pikiao, Whakatōhea, Te Whānau a Apanui) said it was cool to see the students from Australia bring their films to Aotearoa.

    “What’s incredible about that is that rangatahi who have been taught here at Māoriland how to make films have then gone over to Australia to teach other young people about how to make films and they’re also sharing culture. So it’s just this really dual, multifaceted experience for these young people.”

    Bringing filmmakers together is one of the most successful things Māoriland does, she said.

    “They bring together emerging filmmakers from around the world and they’re doing at a really grassroots level what we as a funding agency are trying to do at a really top level which is bring together filmmakers from around the world to make films together, to find ways to make co-productions.

    “So there’s just a really kind of essential foundational thing that happens here which is about building those relationships which actually go on to make a real difference in our industry and in the industries around the world.”

    NZ Film Commission Head of Funding Ainsley Gardiner. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Gardiner said despite the fact it was a really tough time for filmmakers at the moment she was never surprised by how good indigenous filmmakers are.

    “It’s always quite tough to be a filmmaker. I think when I was starting out and when young people are starting out, the thing to remember is that filmmaking is not a career pathway. It’s an art form and actually finding your people and finding your tribe and actually making your stories and telling your stories with the people who understand them, for people who long to hear them, is the most important part of the process.

    “So while the industry itself really struggles, I don’t think filmmaking as a kind of storytelling art is ever at risk of going away.”

    The pōwhiri for Māoriland at Raukawa marae in Ōtaki. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    It’s filmmaker Taniora Ormsby’s second year at the festival but first time with a film as part of the programme. He said one of his favourite things about Māoriland is how it brings so many different indigenous people together.

    “Last year I was lucky enough to speak with people all the way from the other side of the planet, which I’ve never been able to do anywhere else except for here. To me, that’s part of the appeal, part of the reason why I came back, and to have my film shown amongst all these other amazing filmmakers, it’s a privilege.”

    Ormsby’s horror short film Devil in the Gat is playing at Māoriland, exploring the ambitions of a young Māori musician, how far he’s willing to go to achieve his dreams and “how bloody they can be.”

    “For Devil in the Gat, that’s where I started. I feel like the story of a young artist trying to break out into an industry is such a universal idea that when you naturally add the te ao Māori elements into it, it feels strangely like a good fit,” he said.

    Devil in the Gat director Taniora Ormsby. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Ormsby said Māori were natural-born storytellers, so recontextualising the stories they had been telling for years would allow filmmakers to break out into different genres, like horror.

    “A big kaupapa of mine is seeing Māori in genre spaces. I feel like we can tend to tell the same sort of colonial stories when it comes to movies, short films and TV. So I’m always excited to seeing us in different spaces like Māori horror, for instance. But who’s to say that we can’t be in a sci-fi or a comedy or all the other genres out there.”

    “Māori horror” had recently drawn attention with the release of Mārama, which was directed by Māoriland alumni Taratoa Stappard.

    Actor Te Kohe Tuhaka (right) at Māoriland. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Māoriland director Tainui Stephens (Te Rarawa) said it’s hard to believe how far the festival had come in 13 years, it started out simply as place for filmmakers to meet and get together.

    “It’s an extravagant mix of cultures and beliefs. But everyone’s united with one aim, and that’s an indigenous heart. To do things for our young people, to tell stories that bring light and entertainment and meaning to our world.”

    Māoriland director Tainui Stephens. RNZ / Mark Papalii

    Stephens said more and more collaborations between indigenous peoples are happening in film and TV, pointing to the series Chief of War as one example. https://www.rnz.co.nz/life/screens/tv/a-hawaiian-epic-made-in-nz-why-jason-momoa-s-chief-of-war-wasn-t-filmed-in-its-star-s-homeland

    “This is a chance for people to meet, swap ideas, to dream of collaboration. They leave here and many of them do it. It’s a beautiful thing to see,” he said.

    RNZ / Mark Papalii

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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/2026/03/25/indigenous-filmmakers-share-the-love-of-film-across-cultures-at-maoriland/

    Wellington water woes: ‘A price which is not in the plan’

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    A hefty bill is bubbling up for Wellington, after decades of underinvestment in the city’s water infrastructure. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

    The local government minister has called Wellington’s mayor for an explanation of the huge water bills that residents are facing – and are forecast to hit almost $7000 a year by the end of the decade.

    Wellington’s new water entity Tiaki Wai is a council-controlled organisation taking over Wellington, Lower Hutt, Upper Hutt and Porirua City Councils water assets from July.

    It announced this morning that residents will face an average nearly 15 percent hike in water charges this coming financial year – from $2100 to $2400.

    Those bills may rise by nearly a quarter the following year – and keep increasing – to reach an estimated $6800 per year for water services by 2036 as the water entity tries to fix old, failing infrastructure.

    Local government minister Simon Watts said those costs were higher than he was expecting.

    “I’m concerned for Wellington ratepayers again, you know we’ve got a long string of issues in this area.”

    Watts said the plan that Tiaki Wai presented to the Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) and the water regulator last year did not forecast such high costs.

    He said he phoned Wellington’s Mayor Andrew Little about this today.

    “I outlined to him that we received a plan from you which outlined a profile of cost increases, and as a result the entity has now published a price which is not in the plan, which is much higher, I need to understand, and have an explanation around that.”

    A Tiaki Wai spokesperson said the Water Services Delivery plan it presented in August last year was based on the best available information at the time, and the organisation will continue to review its costs as investment plans develop.

    Little said Tiaki Wai was responsible for what it sent to DIA last year, and he did not control or veto the organisation’s decisions under the new system.

    He said he shared the minister’s concerns about bills, but the government campaigned on this model under its Local Water Done Well policy.

    He said he will be scrutinising Tiaki Wai’s performance and pricing closely.

    “If the increases follow the path that Tiaki Wai are saying, then people are going to expect high quality, that leaks are repaired quickly, also that they can contact their water company, at any time of the day.”

    He wanted the Commerce Commission to be granted the power to intervene if water entity’s bills became unreasonable.

    Watts did not confirm if the Commerce Commission would have the power to step in over sky-rocketing bills, but said he had called in the commission in this instance to work with Tiaki Wai and the councils over the projected prices.

    Porirua Mayor Anita Baker said bills reaching nearly $7000 a year in a decade were horrendous, and could drive people away from the region.

    “At those sort of prices, who’s going to be living here? I can’t pay $6000 in water, and $6000 in rates… we have to do something.”

    She said while she supported the establishment of the water entity, and understood the scale of the work at hand, water charges still needed to be affordable.

    Wellingtonians divided over jump in bills

    Some Wellingtonians RNZ spoke to were worried about the charges due to cost of living pressures, while others said the region’s assets had to be fixed.

    Dale said she did not look forward to the future knowing those charges lay ahead.

    “That sounds pretty crap. I’m 28, so the way it will be, by the time I am 38, that doesn’t sound like I’ll be living a great life.”

    But another resident Daniel Freese said the city had ignored failing assets for too long.

    “I think it has to happen, I think we’re paying for under-investment over many years, and although it’s not good news, we just need to suck it up and pay for it.

    “If we don’t pay now, we’re going have to pay later, and it’s going to be more.”

    Resident Tom Arkell said he was keen to see water meters brought in for the city.

    “I’d like to think we could bring in some pay-per-use water monitors, that we can actually incentivise people to use less water, and to track, and therefore they could pay within what they’re comfortable, rather than getting a fixed bill no matter how much water you use.”

    Tiaki Wai is considering water meters, and the organisation expects they will take up to seven years to roll out across Wellington, and cost $590 million in total.

    Peet yesterday told reporters the dire state of the region’s infrastructure could no longer be ignored after decades of under-investment.

    “We know we’ve got a lot of leaks, we know we’ve got compliance issues with wastewater, and we all know that stormwater continues to be a significant challenge for many cities – but Wellington in particular.”

    Peet said fixing the failed Moa Point plant – which has been spewing raw sewage into the sea for nearly six weeks – will be a top priority.

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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/2026/03/25/wellington-water-woes-a-price-which-is-not-in-the-plan/

    Fatal crash, Makara

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Two people have been located deceased in a vehicle in Makara this morning.

    Police were called to Makara Road at around 8:05am following reports of a vehicle upside down in a body of water.

    Upon arrival, two people were located deceased in the vehicle.

    Enquiries into the circumstances of the deaths are ongoing.

    Makara Road was closed while a scene examination took place and has since reopened.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/fatal-crash-makara/

    Dozens of modern medicines languish on Pharmac’s drug wish list. for years

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    New Zealand has seen 30 years of underinvestment in the medicines budget, says Medicines NZ. File photo. 123RF

    More than four million New Zealanders are missing out on modern medicines languishing on Pharmac’s drug wish list.

    A new report commissioned by Medicines New Zealand – a group representing the pharmaceutical industry – has shown hefty delays in funding medicines.

    It found that 137 modern medicines have spent an average of six and half years on Pharmac’s ‘Options for Investment’ list – the drug buying agency’s top priority medicines list.

    The report said 83 percent of those medicines are standard-of-care drugs in other countries, meaning they are the go-to treatments.

    Medicines New Zealand is calling for ongoing material increases to the drug budget, so Aotearoa can catch up.

    Chief executive Graeme Jarvis told Checkpoint it was the result of 30 years of under-investment in the medicines budget.

    “We invest about a third of what the rest of the OECD does in their medicines budgets in terms of the publicly funded medicines budgets. So we’ve really got to look at a long-term corrective action that needs to be taken to try and get us towards that OECD average.”

    From gathering publicly available information, including information from Pharmac, Jarvis said it will cost about $328 million to clear the priority medicines list.

    “We think a step change approach should be looked at, and it’s really the year-on-year increases that we’re going to need to do.”

    Jarvis said it would only take about one percent of Vote Health – the primary funding mechanism for the country’s public health system – to clear the list.

    “At the moment, Pharmac’s getting about 4.9 percent of the vote health. So moving it to 6 percent of vote health, would actually see you in one year clearing that OFI list.

    “Then you can start dealing with some of the other newer medicines that are coming through that have yet to be ranked as well.”

    That would mean around an increase of $50-$100 million year-on-year to start moving towards the OECD average.

    Jarvis said funding would potentially have to be reshuffled from other areas to cover the cost.

    “Governments do this all the time and they move money around and, you know, internally within budgets or vote health would be in this case.

    “The other option is that they have got operational allowance still available, despite what’s going on with the recent announcement around the potential relief. So there might be the potential to put $50 million in this year and then look at doing something next year as well – there is existing funding that is available for that.”

    The drugs on the list covered a wide range of different conditions.

    “Cancer drugs, there are rare disorder drugs, there are neurology drugs for mental health, epilepsy, chronic diseases like diabetes as well, heart failure drugs.”

    Jarvis said that without the medicines, these diseases were having a massive material impact on the rest of the health system.

    “So we’re ending up with essentially, unfortunately, our hospitals being literally the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff.

    “It is well established that medicines can actually keep people in a primary health setting through GPs and community and away from what is the expensive end of town, which is really into the into the hospitals.”

    While the cost to fund all the medicines may sound high, Jarvis said any medicine that had made the list was on there for a reasonable price.

    “The medicines that are on these priority lists, there has been health technology assessment done. They’ve been found to be very cost effective and therefore they are value for money.”

    Many of the drugs on the list were up to 15 years old.

    “We’re talking often about products that are generics, you know all genericized, so they’re quite old, they’re not what we would call new medicines.

    “Other countries that are poorer than us are very happy to fund these medicines because they see they are valued for money.”

    Health Minister Simeon Brown’s office said he was not in a position to comment on funding as discussions were sensitive ahead of Budget Day.

    He pointed to a record $604 million investment in Pharmac in 2024.

    The minister said that money covered 33 new cancer medicines and 33 treatments for other conditions. But he said there was more to do to expand access to life saving and life extending medicines.

    The Minister responsible for Pharmac David Seymour acknowledged that funding of medicines still took too long.

    While Pharmac was achieving better outcomes for patients and increasing access, he said there was room for improvement.

    He said when Pharmac was given the money it needed, it acted quickly.

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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/2026/03/25/dozens-of-modern-medicines-languish-on-pharmacs-drug-wish-list-for-years/

    Tens of thousands lost to crypto ATM scams, ombudsman says

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Several scams involved people depositing money through cryptocurrency ATMs. RNZ / Paris Ibell

    A woman who withdrew $31,500 from her bank account and gave it to a scammer is one of two recent cases that have sparked a warning from the Banking Ombudsman about cryptocurrency ATMs.

    Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said she had investigated several scam cases where people had deposited money through the ATMs.

    Crypto ATMs allow people to deposit cash and buy cryptocurrency, which is sent to a digital wallet. Transactions usually happen quickly and cannot easily be stopped or reversed once completed.

    Sladden said it made them risky when used under pressure or at someone else’s direction.

    She highlighted two cases, in which she said people believed they were following legitimate instructions but lost large amounts of money.

    In April last year, a woman responded to a job ad online and, following instructions, went to her bank and withdrew $31,500, telling the teller it was for a car.

    She put the money into a cryptocurrency wallet via a crypto ATM but later realised she had been scammed and asked the bank to reimburse her. She said it should have noticed her anxious and unusual behaviour.

    The ombudsman scheme said it had to decide whether there was anything that should have caused the bank to suspect a scam.

    “A bank must follow a customer’s transaction instructions unless it detects – or should have detected – warning signs of a possible scam. If it detects such warning signs, it must make inquiries about the transaction and, if warranted, warn the customer about the possibility of a scam before processing the transaction.”

    It said there was nothing about what the customer told the bank that should have indicated a problem.

    In another case, a man lost $65,000. He authorised payments to cryptocurrency merchants and withdrew cash from ATMs that he deposited in a crypto ATM.

    The bank refused to reimburse him, saying he had authorised the payments.

    Sladden said obvious red flags included requests to keep payments secret or give false information to a bank.

    “People should independently verify who they are dealing with, and talk to someone they trust before making large or unusual payments.

    “It’s important to stop and ask questions before taking any steps that might result in the loss of money.”

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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/2026/03/25/tens-of-thousands-lost-to-crypto-atm-scams-ombudsman-says/

    Crusaders prepare for move to indoor Te Kaha One New Zealand stadium

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    One NZ Stadium Christchurch. Christchurch City Council

    With the opening of One New Zealand Stadium in Christchurch just weeks away, the Crusaders are facing a significant shift – leaving behind a proven home fortress and adapting to life under a roof.

    While always intended as a temporary base, Apollo Projects Stadium has been a very happy hunting ground for them – they are four from four in finals at the venue, and have an impressive regular season record.

    While the move to a new, modern venue marks an exciting step forward for the franchise, the shift indoors also brings uncertainty, with the Crusaders set to lose the cold and unpredictable conditions that have often worked in their favour at home.

    Former All Blacks and Highlanders first-five Lima Sopoaga is well placed to assess the impact of a move to a roofed stadium.

    Sopoaga played in the Highlanders’ final season at Carisbrook in 2011, and their first at Forsyth Barr in 2012, later helping the side to their 2015 title.

    He said the move changed how visiting teams approached games in the south.

    “Usually when you come down south, it’s cold and it’s grim and you’re like, ‘oh, rugby’s going to be hard today’, but no matter how cold or grim it is outside, you know you’re going to have near perfect conditions on the inside.”

    But Sopoaga said the roof also worked in the Highlanders favour in another way.

    “We were able to build a really cool fan base from it.

    “I really found it helped us because more people came to the games and then in essence you got more energy out of the games and the crowd was a factor. When you’re playing tight matches they’d really get in behind you. I really enjoyed it.

    “We actually got bands and students coming to the game because it wasn’t so cold.”

    As a goalkicker, Sopoaga said he loved the conditions at Forsyth Barr, but expectations went up when the team moved.

    “It can work against you because then you’re expected to not miss.

    “You can’t say, ‘oh, there was a wind or the ball was wet’, so you’ve got to be deadly accurate.”

    Sopoaga believed the Crusaders may face a similar shift, with visiting teams likely to embrace the conditions.

    “They’ll still get to work and do what the Crusaders do, because they’re such a fantastic franchise.

    “But now teams can go down there in the middle of winter and be like, ‘oh, let’s have it, let’s throw the ball around’”.

    Sopoaga said this change will suit attacking teams like the Chiefs and the Blues (who only won once at Apollo Projects stadium in 16 matches).

    Crusaders embracing new era

    Crusaders assistant coach James Marshall said the squad is eager for the move.

    “Obviously we’ve got a good record in Apollo Projects, but I think everyone’s pretty happy to get to the new stadium.”

    Marshall also suggested the move will benefit the fans, and said there was a feeling of excitement across the city with the new stadium set to open.

    “It’s going to be an absolute game changer for not only us, but for Christchurch and the fans not having to sit in the cold, wet nights.”

    Crusaders assistant coach James Marshall said the move is exciting for attacking rugby. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

    But Marshall said it’s not just the fans who are happy about the move.

    “I’ve spoken to coaches from other teams, players from other teams, they have all mentioned that same thing, glad they’re not having to come down in the winter months and play at Apollo Projects.”

    The challenge now is how the Crusaders establish the same home dominance under a roof.

    Marshall believes the team needs to find something else for opposition teams to fear, and with dry conditions all season long, Marshall is excited at the prospect of the team’s attacking play reaching a new level.

    “We’re coming in with no record at the moment, but I back our team’s skill set under the roof to be as good as anyone.

    “We can go in with a lot more of an attacking mindset into those big games and really back the boys’ skill set and hopefully fitness that will make other teams fear that side of us.”

    Lima Sopoaga has the most points for the Highlanders. PHOTOSPORT

    Roofed stadiums in other sports

    Overseas, roofed stadiums offer mixed evidence on home advantage.

    A study from 2014 found that NFL teams who play in domed stadiums (stadiums with a roof), had a similar home winning record to outdoor teams, but won significantly fewer games away from home.

    Of the 52 teams who have made the Super Bowl since 1999, only nine are from domed home venues, and only three have won the Super Bowl (1999 St Louis Rams, 2007 Indianapolis Colts, and the 2010 New Orleans Saints).

    Closer to home, a number of teams in the AFL share the retractable roofed Docklands Stadium as their home ground.

    While the roof is ‘retractable’, the majority of games at the stadium are now played with the roof shut.

    Carlton, Essendon, St Kilda, Western Bulldogs and North Melbourne share the stadium, and only Essendon in 2000 and the Western Bulldogs in 2016 have won the Grand Final (which is always played outdoors at the MCG).

    The trend suggests that while roofed venues offer certainty, they do not guarantee dominance – leaving the Crusaders to forge their own advantage in Christchurch’s new era.

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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/2026/03/25/crusaders-prepare-for-move-to-indoor-te-kaha-one-new-zealand-stadium/

    Live cricket: Black Caps v South Africa – fifth and final T20

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Follow all the cricket action as the Black Caps take on South Africa for the fifth and final T20 international match.

    The Black Caps are currently locked 2-2 in the series, after losing by 19 runs in their fourth match at Hnry Stadium in Wellington on Sunday.

    First ball at Hagley Oval is at 7.15pm.

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

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/25/live-cricket-black-caps-v-south-africa-fifth-and-final-t20/