‘Significant smoke’ coming from building fire in Auckland’s Onehunga

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A “well-involved” building fire producing “significant smoke” has closed a busy road in Auckland’s Onehunga.

Multiple crews from across Auckland are responding to the fire which Fire and Emergency New Zealand was alerted to just after 8pm on Sunday.

Police said officers were called to assist and the building is producing “significant smoke”.

“Those in the area are advised to stay inside and close windows and doors.

“Motorists are advised to avoid the area and expect delays.”

Cordons are in place on Onehunga Mall between Arthur and Church streets, police said.

St John have told RNZ it has one ambulance stationed at the scene as a precaution.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/significant-smoke-coming-from-building-fire-in-aucklands-onehunga/

The furry rescuer helping teams working on Mt Maunganui landslide

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kora is on full alert, at the scene of the devastating Mt Maunganui landslide, where searchers have been combing through the slip looking for victims.

A four legged rescuer is being praised for her tireless work helping at the scene of the tragic Mt Maunganui landslide.

Kora, a Tauranga Land Search and Rescue dog, has been working at the scene of the devastating slip, trying to track the bodies of those who were trapped beneath the earth and rubble.

Animal protection organisation Rescue, Revive, Rehome Bay of Plenty praised Kora’s work and temperament, in a Facebook post on Sunday.

“There are so many heroes working on Mauao right now, giving their time, strength, and hearts to help bring missing people home. While every single person involved deserves recognition, we wanted to take a moment to shine a light on one very special four-legged hero,” they said.

“Kora is not only beautiful, but incredibly skilled. She has a calm, gentle nature and is friendly with everyone she meets.

“Like all certified LandSAR search dogs, she is trained in advanced tracking and scent work. She can follow ground scent left behind by a person – whether it’s from hours ago or even days old – and can also locate personal items such as hats, backpacks, or wallets.”

Kora with her handler Nick Petry on the scene at Mauao.

Kora has been a LandSAR search dog since 2020, and is trained to signal to her handler Nick Petry if she sees, smells or hears anything useful as she searches, RRR said.

A post on Kora’s Facebook page read: “Our thoughts are with the families affected by the landslide at Mt Maunganui and Welcome Bay.”

“Thank you Kora, arohanui,” one poster said in reply.

“Goodest dog”, another said.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/the-furry-rescuer-helping-teams-working-on-mt-maunganui-landslide/

Roads closed, Onehunga building fire

Source: New Zealand Police

Cordons are in place on Onehunga Mall between Arthur and Church Streets following a building fire this evening.

Police were called to assist Fire and Emergency New Zealand just after 8pm.

The fire is producing significant smoke – those in the area are advised to stay inside and close windows and doors.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area and expect delays.

ENDS

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/roads-closed-onehunga-building-fire/

Wellington Phoenix win secures them second spot in A-League

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington Phoenix Brooke Nunn during the A-League Women Marty Melville/ Photosport

The Wellington Phoenix women have surged up to the second spot on the A-League ladder with a 3-1 victory over Adelaide United in Porirua.

Two goals in three minutes gave the home side a 2-0 lead at half-time and the momentum to halt Adelaide’s five game unbeaten run.

A tumbling Makala Woods scored the first of the Phoenix’s goals in the 15th minute, against the run of play, when she managed to get the ball over the goal line despite losing her footing.

Woods then turned provider when she controlled a ball from a throw in at the top of the box and passed to Brooke Nunn who scored past an advancing Adelaide goalkeeper to double the lead in the 18th minute.

Nunn scored her second goal of the game with less than 10 minutes to play when she shot from outside the top of the box and into the top corner of the net.

Adelaide scored a conciliation goal in the 87th minute to substitute Isabel Hodgson.

New Phoenix signing, American striker Mackenzie Anthony, had her work visas approved in time to make her debut off the bench, replacing a cramping Woods in the 78th minute.

Her inclusion was a boost for the Phoenix who the day before the game were uncertain if she would be cleared to play.

The win was also Mania Elliott’s 50th game for Phoenix. She came off the bench in the 55th minute to mark the milestone.

The Phoenix began the game in ninth on the points table and with the best defence in the competition, their goal difference has then allowed them to secure second place behind Melbourne City.

The Phoenix now have five wins, three draws and three losses ahead of their next game against the Newcastle Jets on 1 February.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/wellington-phoenix-win-secures-them-second-spot-in-a-league/

Taranaki man hopes to break a Guiness World Record by unicycling around the world

Source: Radio New Zealand

Norm Joe, from Startford, will unicycle the length of New Zealand before tackling the world. KATIE TODD ./ RNZ

A New Zealand man is hoping to break a Guinness World Record with a hobby he picked up during the Covid-19 lockdown.

Norm Joe – from the Taranaki town of Stratford – is planning to unicycle around the world, beginning with the length of New Zealand.

He set off from Bluff on 16 January, hoping to reach Cape Reinga by May.

Joe will then fly to Alaska, cycling east across Canada and the United States, then fly to Portugal to continue across Europe and Asia.

“I’m going around the world, basically, if I can,” he said.

Norm Joe on his unicycle. KATIE TODD / RNZ

“It’s a big call at this stage, because I’ve only done 160 kilometres, but I need to do 29,000 kilometres for the Guinness World Record.”

It had been less than six years since Joe learned how to unicycle – a Covid-19 hobby that became serious.

“I started with a little 20-inch unicycle I found at a council clean-up – someone chucked it out, and I thought, well, that’s interesting. I took it home, I chucked it under the house, and then Covid hit, and then we had to lock up, so I started playing around with it in the backyard.

“Once I could walk my dog with a unicycle, I thought, yeah, I’ve graduated. So I went and bought a proper one.”

Joe then started commuting to work with the unicycle.

“A unicycle is not like a bike. A unicycle feels more like an appendage or a prosthetic limb to me. It’s like skiing. I think this is what skiers and surfers feel. You just intuitively think and you move that way. A unicycle is the same, eh?”

Joe would be raising money for the charity WaterAid – providing water, sanitation, and hygiene to the world’s poorest communities.

He chose that as he was working as a draftsman for Sydney Water – rebuilding the infrastructure in the Australian city.

It has only been a week since Joe began, but he said he loved the reaction from people who had seen him riding on his unicycle.

“It’s a real conversation starter, I guess. People love it. They come up to me and talk.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/taranaki-man-hopes-to-break-a-guiness-world-record-by-unicycling-around-the-world/

What we know about the pause in recovery at scene of Mount Maunganui landslide

Source: Radio New Zealand

All recovery operations have come to a halt at the scene of the Mount Maunganui landslide over concerns of further slips.

Staff working at the campground, where six people are unaccounted, were evacuated at 11.50am on Sunday.

In a press conference, Bay of Plenty District Commander Superintendent Tim Anderson labelled the hillside as “unstable” and “unsafe”.

He said geotechnical experts spotted a crack in the hillside – left of the slip – after being called to the scene.

‘Foolish’ to continue work

Anderson told media it would be “foolish” and “negligent” to have continued work.

“I haven’t sighted the crack myself, but I have been told by experts… I have been advised that it is unsafe for anyone to work below that slip.”

Mount Maunganui recovery site. RNZ / Nick Monro

He said he understood family members of the victims may be frustrated.

“While we certainly understand the frustrations this will cause, certainly our family members wanting to get their loved one back and also our own police staff, we’ve had to do that for the safety of everyone concerned.

“Fair to say there is a degree in understanding in terms of the safety, you’re dealing with obviously a significant tragedy from a number of days ago and we are not going to add any further harm to that.”

Anderson said families of the landslide victims were informed of the halt in recovery work prior to the media stand-up.

What next?

Anderson said “equipment that can mitigate the risks that remain” was being brought to Mount Maunganui.

He said the technology was “advanced” and “sensitive”, but did not specify where it was being brought in from.

“We have a number of staff looking at that slip and monitoring the signs to keep everyone safe.”

Further daily assessments are being done by geotechnical experts to determine the next steps in the recovery operation, Anderson said.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/what-we-know-about-the-pause-in-recovery-at-scene-of-mount-maunganui-landslide/

Man arrested after alleged kidnapping

Source: Radio New Zealand

(File photo) RNZ

A man has been arrested after what police describe as a kidnapping incident.

The 29 year old was arrested after the incident unfolded in Blenheim early on Saturday morning, Inspector Simon Feltham said in a statement.

“On Saturday 24 January around 3am, police were called to the incident on Lakings Road,” he said.

The man is expected to due to appear in Blenheim District Court on Monday.

As the matter was now before the courts, Feltham said police would not comment further.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/man-arrested-after-alleged-kidnapping/

One person arrested and charged following kidnapping incident, Blenheim

Source: New Zealand Police

Attributable to Marlborough Area Commander, Inspector Simon Feltham:

Police have arrested a person in relation to a kidnapping incident in Blenheim early yesterday morning.

On Saturday 24 January around 3am, Police were called to the incident on Lakings Road.

A 29-year-old man has been arrested and charged with kidnapping. He is due to appear in Blenheim District Court tomorrow [Monday 26 January].

As the matter is now before the courts, Police are unable to comment further.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/one-person-arrested-and-charged-following-kidnapping-incident-blenheim/

Smoke seen rising over Mount Wellington, firefighters battling hotspots

Source: Radio New Zealand

Firefighters have extinguished a scrub fire on Auckland’s Mt Wellington, where large smoke clouds had been seen rising.

It broke out shortly after 4pm on Sunday afternoon.

By 5:30pm there were 28 firefighters working on dampening down hot spots at the vegetation fire, which was on the western side of the maunga, Fire and Emergency said.

Crews called to the scene included Mt Wellington, Remuera, St Heliers, Ōtāhuhu and Ōtara.

A helicopter had responded but had been stood down.

Fire and Emergency could not say how big the blaze got in size.

A video sent to RNZ showed clouds of grey smoke rising in front of the maunga.

There was “a lot of smoke rising” around Mount Wellington and the intersection of the Mount Wellington Highway and the Panmure Highway, a witness told RNZ.

“Lots of sirens a few minutes ago. A helicopter hovering in the area before,” they said.

Another person told RNZ they could see one fire truck on the northern side of the maunga.

Police were also at the scene.

A fire truck seen on Mount Wellington in Auckland on Sunday afternoon. Supplied

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Goff takes aim at Peters ‘deafening’ silence on Trump’s NATO comments

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former high commissioner to the United Kingdom Phil Goff has accused Foreign Minister Winston Peters of failing to stand up for New Zealand. RNZ

Phil Goff has accused Foreign Minister Winston Peters of failing to stand up for New Zealand soldiers after US President Donald Trump said allied troops “stayed a little back” during the war in Afghanistan.

In a sharply worded Facebook post on Saturday, the former high commissioner to the United Kingdom said Peters’ silence in response to Trump’s remarks was “deafening”.

Trump’s comments came last week in an interview with Fox News in Davos, Switzerland, when questioned whether NATO allies would support the US if it were attacked.

“‘Will they be there, if we ever needed them?’ And that’s really the ultimate test. And I’m not sure of that,” he said.

US President Donald Trump. AFP / Fabrice Coffrini

“You know, they’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan, or this or that. And they did – they stayed a little back, a little off the front lines.”

The remarks sparked outrage among US allies, including the UK, whose prime minister, Keir Starmer, described them as “insulting and frankly appalling”.

Goff contrasted those responses with what he said was silence from New Zealand’s leadership, singling out Peters and his role as foreign minister, for not defending that record.

“No comment has come from any government leader,” he wrote.

“Peters, who claims to lead the patriotic party in NZ, has been typically silent as he has whenever Trump has lied outrageously,” Goff wrote.

Goff said the comments were an affront to New Zealand’s sacrifice in the 20-year conflict.

“For Trump, a man who dodged the draft five times, to belittle the efforts of those who came to the assistance of the US after 9/11, and sacrificed their lives is disgraceful.”

New Zealand lost 10 service personnel in Afghanistan.

Goff, a former foreign affairs and defence minister, said Trump’s remarks were deeply personal.

“Ten New Zealanders died in the war. I attended the funerals of several of them, including my nephew Matt, and saw the grief and pain of their loved ones,” he said.

He also pointed to the actions of Willie Apiata, who was awarded the Victoria Cross for bravery during a 2004 operation in Afghanistan.

“Willie Apiata was behind the front line when he won his VC, deep in enemy territory,” Goff wrote, rejecting Trump’s claim that allied forces avoided combat.

He urged ministers to follow the example of countries such as Canada, which have taken a firmer public line with the US president.

While New Zealand is not a full NATO member, it holds the position of highly valued partner under the Individual Partnership and Cooperation Programme (IPCP).

In March of last year, Peters removed Goff from his role as high commissioner to the UK after the former Labour MP criticised the US president, questioning whether he “really understands history”.

Comments disrespectful to the fallen – NZRSA

The Royal New Zealand Returned and Services’ Association (NZRSA) has also condemned Trump’s remarks.

In a statement, the organisation said Kiwi troops served and died with NATO forces in Afghanistan and any suggestion that allied soldiers “avoided frontline combat was incorrect and deeply hurtful to veterans and the families of those killed”.

“New Zealanders who have been killed or injured in service in recent decades were doing so in support of multinational operations.”

Veteran: Claims ‘ill-informed’

Former army major Simon Strombom, who served in Afghanistan, described Trump’s comments as ill-informed and sensationalist.

Former army major Simon Strombom. Supplied

Strombom, now managing director of the NZ Remembrance Army, said he worked closely with British, Canadian and other NATO forces and saw firsthand their professionalism and exposure to danger.

“The majority of the weight of the coalition headquarters was not American,” he previously told RNZ. “There were 48 countries involved, and the rest were predominantly NATO.”

Strombom said the comments would be especially painful for families who lost loved ones in the conflict.

“It’d be pretty hard for a family to have suffered such a loss and then hear comments like that, undermining the actual sacrifice,” he said.

Defence Minister Judith Collins previously said the country took great pride in the professionalism, courage, and commitment of all who served in Afghanistan.

Peters’ office has been approached for comment.

Trump has since partially walked back his remarks, praising British troops on his Truth Social platform as “great and very brave”.

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Smoke rises over Mount Wellington, firefighters responding

Source: Radio New Zealand

Firefighters are at the scene of a scrub fire in the Auckland suburb of Mt Wellington, where large smoke clouds have been seen rising.

It broke out shortly after 4pm on Sunday afternoon.

Crews called to the scene include Mt Wellington, Remuera, St Heliers, Ōtāhuhu and Ōtara.

A helicopter has also been called in.

A video sent to RNZ showed clouds of grey smoke rising in front of the maunga.

A fire truck seen on Mount Wellington in Auckland on Sunday afternoon. Supplied

There was “a lot of smoke rising” around Mount Wellington and the intersection of the Mount Wellington Highway and the Panmure Highway, a witness told RNZ.

“Lots of sirens a few minutes ago. A helicopter hovering in the area before.”

Another person told RNZ they could see one fire truck on the northern side of the maunga.

Police are also at the scene.

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Mount Maunganui slip – update

Source: New Zealand Police

Police have made the difficult decision to postpone recovery efforts at Mount Maunganui for today.

The search area was evacuated about 11.50am, after a contractor driver noticed potential instability on the face of the slip, Bay of Plenty District Commander Superintendent Tim Anderson says.

“The safety of the people working on the recovery is at the front of our mind, and the risk today is too significant to allow us to carry on.

“Families have been told of the decision and our commitment to resume work as soon as possible.”

Superintendent Anderson says the decision was made following advice by two independent geotechnical experts.

“Rain and wind is continuing to complicate the recovery effort and a crack has now been seen above the slip area.

“The landslide material the recovery teams are working in is clay-like, it is incredibly wet and very heavy. Simple tasks are not simple and the work is exhausting.

“The decision to postpone our efforts to reunite families with their loved ones is difficult, and it is not something we do unless there are very real concerns.”

Superintendent Anderson says additional staff are being brought into the district to relieve staff working on the recovery.

“Everyone involved is committed to bringing family’s loved ones home. It is exhausting, gruelling work and I’m incredibly proud of them.”

Further information will be provided when it becomes available.

Note to media: We ask media to be respectful of family’s wishes, especially if they decline to comment.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/mount-maunganui-slip-update/

How ‘bee glue’ might improve our health

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hives in Te Urewera. Supplied/Bioeconomy Science Institute

A collaboration between apicultural scientists and a Māori land trust in Te Urewera is shedding light on the potential health benefits of propolis, or “bee glue”.

Working in partnership with Manawa Honey NZ – a business founded and run by Tuawhenua Trust – scientists at the Bioeconomy Science Institute have been investigating whether compounds from native plants contribute unique properties to propolis.

Apicultural scientist Michelle Taylor said propolis is the plant resin that honeybees collect which they mix with their salivary enzymes, beeswax and pollen.

“It’s completely different to honey, so it’s essentially bee glue. And so what they do is they use it to seal holes in their hives so that they can manage the airflow and also protect their hives from intruders that might [include] other insects or lizards or hedgehogs – or humans.”

As part of the research honey bee hives were placed on Tuawhenua Trust lands near Ruatāhuna, at the heart of Te Urewera last Autumn. The team from Manawa Honey supported scientists with the collection of native plant samples within 1500 metres of the site and propolis collection from the hives.

Analysis revealed that both plant and propolis samples contained a wide range of compounds, with the majority of major compound peaks in propolis also present in many plant samples.

Taylor said they analysed 33 native plant species, including miro, rimu and totara. The complexity of the chemical composition was an exciting surprise, as New Zealand propolis had been previously identified as poplar type, she said.

Bees in an old glass observation box Supplied/Bioeconomy Science Institute

“What we’d like to do is really understand what our propolis actually is. So, if you go out into where beehives are, you’ll often see that there’s a lot of native bush around these hives – so they’re not collecting poplar at all. They’re collecting native bush, and so that’s what we were wanting to understand, whether there actually was a difference. And our research shows that there is.”

Taylor said research on New Zealand propolis is still in its early stages, but it is recognised for its healing properties, especially in wound care, as an antimicrobial agent and as a natural immune function booster.

She is particularly interested in the connection between propolis and improved glycemic control and reduced insulin resistance.

“New Zealand has so many cases of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes, so we would really like to determine whether the properties and propolis from our native plants could be part of the therapy for these conditions.

“We’re [in the] early stages yet, so there’s no link at all from New Zealand, but internationally there is a suggestion that it could be a complementary part of the therapy.”

Manawa Honey Chief Executive Brenda Tahi. Supplied/Manawa Honey

‘We’re pretty happy with what Te Urewera gives us’

Manawa Honey chief executive Brenda Tahi said their interest in propolis research stemmed from their kaupapa, which was about a future where people were in tune with nature, spilling over into better health outcomes – something that propolis with its medicinal properties certainly fit.

Many Māori land trusts are starting to take up honey production on their whenua, she said.

“The thing about the mānuka industry in particular, in Aotearoa, is that a lot of the land that has mānuka on it is actually owned by Māori, and in the early days of the industry, it was other beekeepers who were having their hives on Māori land to get mānuka honey.

“But over the years, you know, a lot of Māori landowners and people who are interested in beekeeping, or in the honey industry, have taken up the opportunities that relate to their land.”

Tahi (Ngāti Porou) said there was a long tradition of wild honey gathering in Ruatāhuna.

“Each whānau would have a place where the hive, they’d go back year after year be on their lands, and often the hives were in the holes that form in some of our big trees like matai in the forest, and so they’d have to climb up, you know, using a rope system to climb up they’d use a kerosene tin… that was a container that was used in the old days.”

Tahi said many people were familiar with mānuka honey but that is not the only type.

“There’s lots of other honeys that are produced in our forest, so starting early in the season is hinau, and that’s a major tree in our forest that’s quite high in the canopy and also grows up on the ridges, and it’s got a really small white flower, and it flowers in about September, October, and it produces a honey – but not usually enough in surplus for us to get a pure hinau honey.

“So we get it often mixed with rātā that can follow it, and rātā – though only comes in, say, maybe every seven years – sometimes it’ll come in for a couple of years, but in the bush, you know, we get different honeys each year.”

As part of the research, samples are being taken from native plants in Te Urewera – including climbing rātā (Metrosideros fulgens). Supplied/Bioeconomy Science Institute

Other native plants that bees collected honey from included kānuka, rewarewa, tawhero or kāmahi and tāwari, which Tahi said was often the bees’ favourite.

“We’ve had mahoe honey with our very first honey, but we haven’t had that honey since, and we’ve been going 12 years now, so, you know, it just hasn’t flowered to the extent that it did that year, and in that same year tāwari was off, yeah, so this is sort of the complexities, I suppose, of doing the honeys in our region.

“Most times we’re just pretty happy with what Te Urewera gives us – we love it, you know? Every year is different, and we’ve just got to be aware of what’s happening in the forest, and we really check the flower to see what’s budding, and what’s going to happen, and then place the hives accordingly.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/how-bee-glue-might-improve-our-health/

Serious crash, SH6 blocked, Havelock, Marlborough

Source: New Zealand Police

State Highway 6 in Havelock is blocked following a crash this afternoon.

Police were notified of a single-vehicle collision with a power pole, between Long Valley Road and Prices Road, about 3.40pm.

Initial indicators are that one person has suffered serious injuries.

State Highway 6 is closed in both directions while services work at the scene.

Motorists are advised to expect delays take alternative routes if possible.

ENDS 

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/serious-crash-sh6-blocked-havelock-marlborough/

A recipe for chocolate cake you can have every day

Source: Radio New Zealand

Go ahead, eat chocolate cake every day. One healthy cookbook author gives us permission – and a recipe that’s protein-packed.

Rachel Riggs’ signature unfussy cake asks for just one bowl, a single whisk and 10 minutes to get the oven ready. The result is a chocolate dessert that contains 18 grams of protein per slice and tastes so amazing that Riggs ate a piece as part of lunch daily for six years straight.

No wonder she named it The Everyday Chocolate Cake.

Rachel Riggs’ cookbook came from her quest to make delicious food with limited ingredients.

CNN/SUPPLIED

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/a-recipe-for-chocolate-cake-you-can-have-every-day/

Media advisory – Mount Maunganui slip

Source: New Zealand Police

Bay of Plenty District Commander Superintendent Tim Anderson will speak to media regarding today’s recovery efforts

This will be held in Mount Maunganui at 4pm. Media are advised to RSVP to media@police.govt.nz for further details.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/media-advisory-mount-maunganui-slip/

Road closed, Snell Street, Morrinsville

Source: New Zealand Police

Snell Street in Morrinsville is closed following a crash this afternoon.

Police were notified of a single vehicle collision with a pole, between Young Street and Florence Drive, just after 2pm.

Initial indicators are that one person has suffered moderate injuries.

The road is expected to be closed while services work at the scene.

Motorists are advised to take alternative routes.

ENDS

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/road-closed-snell-street-morrinsville/

‘An 800-seater audience bursting into laughter at the same moment is a kind of sacred experience’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Despite a distinguished 40 year career Stephen Lovatt never had a “fire’ to be an actor when he first auditioned at the NZ Drama School, he says.

At the recent New Zealand Screen Awards Lovatt was awarded best actor in a series for his role as the abrasive Dr Emmett Whitman in Shortland Street.

His resume runs the gamut of New Zealand theatre, film and TV from Xena: Warrior Princess and Hercules to a five year stint on Neighbours and his stage work includes the New Zealand classic – Bruce Mason’s The End of the Golden Weather.

Stephen Lovatt as Dr Emmett Whitman in Shortland Street.

Supplied

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/01/25/an-800-seater-audience-bursting-into-laughter-at-the-same-moment-is-a-kind-of-sacred-experience/

Renovations begin for one of Rātana’s most important buildings

Source: Radio New Zealand

As the 25 January celebrations wind down on Sunday, the community at Rātana Pā, south of Whanganui, is preparing for renovations to Manuao, one of its most important buildings.

The large building complex at the centre of the community is used as a dining hall and accommodation among many other uses.

  • Rātana: Māori willing to work with any political party, says Kiingitanga’s Rahui Papa
  • Project lead Talia Anderson-Town told RNZ as someone born and bred at Rātana Pā, it’s an exciting time.

    “The community is very excited about what’s happening. You know, we have our temepara (temple) where we get our spiritual enlightenment, and for the Manuao it’s where we get our physical enlightenment.”

    The front face of Manuao. RNZ/ Pokere Paewai

    Rātana received $10.1 million from the government’s Regional Infrastructure Fund for the renovations, which Anderson-Town said they are thankful for.

  • Rātana Pā to receive $10m boost to fix failing marae buildings
  • “It’s a big project. It’s always been a big marae. And it’s been, you know, established to cater for the morehu (followers of the church) when they come back here into Rātana Pā, but more importantly it caters for the community as well.”

    The project is expected to take 11 months. Anderson-Town said that will take a lot of hard work and involve some disruption to the small community as the renovations progress.

    “So we’re here this year at the Rātana 25th celebrations 2026 to launch and show everyone what it’s going to look like. So over the next 11 months we’re going to have a build process and come back January 2027 will be the finished product of the Manuao building.”

    What Manuao might look like after the changes are made. RNZ/ Pokere Paewai

    Over the last 12 months the team has been meeting with the community, and with the morehu who use the building, to ensure it can last for another 50, 100 years, she said.

    “Everyone had their opinions about what the new building would look like. Some wanted to maintain what was left and others wanted to modernise it. So what we’ve got is a bit of a cross section between that. We’ve got the original blueprints, so the square footage will stay the same, but the way we use the building will change.”

    Those changes will involve sliding doors which will enable spaces to be opened up or closed off, meaning that it can serve the community for both small and large events, like the celebrations on 25 January, she said.

    “It still has its initial functions but we’ve modernised it a little bit better, to be able to use it throughout the year and also to be able to use it as a conferencing facility for people to come and hire it.

    “It’s a building that has a lot of maintenance and a lot of operating costs, and so to be able to hire it out in between our big hui it’ll mean that we’ll be able to be sustainable as well.”

    A close up of the facade. RNZ/ Pokere Paewai

    Anderson-Town said the construction will be lead by local Whanganui firm W&W Construction.

    “So there’ll be the community involved in this build, and that’s probably one of the main reasons why we have used W&W is they know about our community, they hire within our community and they’re very passionate about making sure that this building serves our community as well.”

    The main thing was to ensure that everyone had an opportunity to be a part of the build and that was first and foremost, she said. So a tono (request) was put out to any local or morehu run businesses who wanted to be involved.

    “There are going to be a lot of locals that are going to be involved in the project and that’s one of the main things for us is for people to be able to say ‘I was a part of that project’, ‘I was a part of that build’… My kaumātua and my kuia were a part of the 1980 build when they actually built the Manuao and fundraised for it.”

    Rātana Church spokesperson Kamaka Manuel said Manuao was born out of a dream of the church’s founder Tahupōtiki Wiremu Rātana.

    “And so in 1980-81, this Manuao as we see it now was opened and it was the work of many, many hours of manpower by our grandparents and our great grandparents at the time of Rātana and has eventuated to what we see here today.”

    A view of the full Manuao building. RNZ/ Pokere Paewai

    The end of the 25 January celebrations will be the start of its next chapter, he said.

    “So it’s an exciting time but it’s also a sad time because… the closing of this chapter means the closing of those memories and also… understanding that the efforts of our grandparents and our great-grandparents, they lived in a world very different to ours. And so when I talk about manpower, I’m not just only meaning physical manpower, I’m talking about the manpower that they took to come together as a people and fundraise. They fundraised, you know, to be able to get the resourcing in order to be able to establish our Manauo to what we see today.”

    Minister for Regional Development Shane Jones said the concept of whakapono (faith) is an institution within the Māori community has a positive impact in creating well-adjusted and outward-thinking members of the Māori community.

    “I’ve found within te ao Māori, infrastructure has a slightly different significance and when it bolsters institutions that are meaningful to the Māori community such as Ringatū and Waitangi, then it’s a contribution that’s durable and it’ll last many generations.”

    Jones said all institutions from time to time need to upgrade their infrastructure.

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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/2026/01/25/renovations-begin-for-one-of-ratanas-most-important-buildings/

    Max Furse-Kee, teen killed in Mount Maunganui landslide, remembered as ‘wonderful son, a devoted big brother’

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Max Furse-Kee, 15, is one of the unaccounted for victims of the Mt Maunganui landslide. SUPPLIED

    The mother of a 15-year-old boy killed in the Mount Maunganui landslide says he was an “incredible, kind and beautiful human being”.

    Max Furse-Kee, 15, and his girlfriend Sharon Maccanico, also 15, are among the six people unaccounted for following the landslide.

    His mother, Hannah Furse, released a statement on Sunday.

    “My love for Max is impossible to explain, no words are big enough to describe this love or loss,” she said.

    “What I can say is from the moment I first looked at his beautiful blue eyes almost 16 years ago he had my whole heart, he was my sunshine.”

    Her son was an “incredible, kind, and beautiful human being”, she said.

    Mt Maunganui victim Max Furse-Kee with his family. SUPPLIED

    “He was a wonderful son, a devoted big brother, grandson, nephew, friend, teammate, and boyfriend. He was such a good kid, and he is so deeply loved.”

    Furse-Kee was “incredibly close” to his family, his mother said.

    “He brought so much joy, laughter, and light into our lives every single day. His incredible friends and his girlfriend meant the world to him, and the love, happiness, and sense of belonging they gave him brought him so much joy.”

    • Live: Latest updates from Mount Maunganui and weather around the North Island
    • Furse said life without her son was “impossible to imagine”.

      “In truth, all of this feels impossible to imagine. We are endlessly proud of who he is and that he is ours.”

      Furse-Kee would have turned 16 this week.

      “A ‘milestone’ birthday and something we were all looking forward to celebrating. Just days ago, my biggest fear was him getting his driver’s licence.

      “How I wish now that he could have experienced the joy of driving, and so many other moments that growing up brings. Our lives have changed so suddenly and so completely, we will never be the same.”

      Mt Maunganui victim Max Furse-Kee pictured with his player of the year trophy at Pakuranga College. SUPPLIED

      The family said they wanted to thank those who had reached out with support.

      “We also want to sincerely thank the entire team working at Mauao. We have been cared for with extraordinary kindness, compassion, and humanity. With tears in their eyes they have updated us, sat with us, fed us. They have searched for hours on end and continue to work tirelessly to bring our baby home to us.

      “Our hearts are also with the families who are waiting for their loved ones with us. We share this grief with you, and we are holding you close in our thoughts during this unimaginably painful time.

      “Max will always be loved, always be ours, and always be remembered. Love you 100 Max.”

      Four others were unaccounted for in the landslide, presumed killed – Lisa Anne Maclennan, 50, from Morrinsville; Måns Loke Bernhardsson, 20, from Sweden; Jacqualine Suzanne Wheeler, 71, from Rotorua; and Susan Doreen Knowles, 71, from Ngongotaha.

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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/2026/01/25/max-furse-kee-teen-killed-in-mount-maunganui-landslide-remembered-as-wonderful-son-a-devoted-big-brother/