Politics live: Christopher Luxon faces grilling after disastrous week

Source: Radio New Zealand

Finance minster Nicola Willis is joining Christopher Luxon at the weekly post-Cabinet media conference, with an update on the economy. But attention is likely to fall on the Prime Minister with questions about his leadership, the polls and Iran.

Follow all the latest news with RNZ’s live blog.

The prime minister is facing disastrous poll numbers, while also dealing with global issues, as missiles continue to tear through Middle Eastern skies.

Pressure is mounting on the Christopher Luxon with a poll result last week putting National in the 20s.

Listen to the PM’s appearance on Morning Report here:

Luxon batted away questions last week about stepping down as party leader following the latest Taxpayers’ Union Curia poll that had National on 28.4 – down nearly 3 points from its poll last month.

Luxon said on Friday evening none of his Cabinet colleagues had told him to reconsider his future, saying “all of them” back him.

He said he was “absolutely not” considering standing down and said he had the skills to lead the National Party and the country.

Luxon also made a personal explanation in the House on Tuesday night, after he stated incorrectly the government was automatically extending visas for people in New Zealand affected by the war in Iran.

RNZ / Angus Dreaver

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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/2026/03/09/politics-live-christopher-luxon-faces-grilling-after-disastrous-week/

Woman summonsed following fatal dog attack, March 2025

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute to Detective Senior Sergeant Natalie Flowerdew-Brown:

Police have today summonsed a 35-year-old woman in relation to the death of four-year-old Timothy Rolleston, following a dog attack in Katakati in March 2025.

The woman faces a charge of owning a dog that causes death to a person.

She is due to appear in the New Plymouth District Court on Monday 16 March.

Timothy’s family have been notified of this outcome.

Our thoughts remain with them, and we continue to offer them the necessary support.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/woman-summonsed-following-fatal-dog-attack-march-2025/

If you drink, don’t drive. It’s a decision that can save a life

Source: New Zealand Police

Canterbury Police remind motorists that drink driving is never worth the risk.

If you’re heading out to enjoy an event, a gathering, or a night with friends, plan a sober ride home for your safety, and for everyone else on the road.

Over the weekend, several well‑attended events were held across rural Canterbury, including at the Lincoln Domain on Saturday evening and in Waipara on Sunday.

Senior Sergeant Rachel Walker says Police were pleased that the events were largely trouble‑free, but that it was disappointing to see that some drivers still chose to consume alcohol and then get behind the wheel.

“These decisions put themselves, their passengers and other road users at serious risk.”

Police commend the many motorists who made the right call by arranging safe transport and driving responsibly but have seen enough when it comes to impaired driving.

“The consequences of crashes caused by alcohol or drugs are devastating,” says Senior Sergeant Walker.

“For whānau, communities and for the emergency responders who attend them.

“Our staff will continue to maintain a strong presence on the roads to educate drivers and prevent harm.

“We see the damage so we’re unapologetic about prevention.”

With several major events coming up, including Supercars, Super Rugby fixtures and two busy long weekends with Easter and ANZAC Day, Police urge everyone to plan before heading out.

“If you’re drinking or using drugs, legal or illegal, don’t drive.

“Choose a sober driver. Call a taxi. Use public transport. Stay the night.

“One decision can save a life.” 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/if-you-drink-dont-drive-its-a-decision-that-can-save-a-life/

Iran conflict: Request for Australian help shows the changing nature of warfare

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rocket trails are seen in the sky above the Israeli center coastal city of Netanya amid a fresh barrage of Iranian missile attacks. AFP / JACK GUEZ

The Gulf states’ calls for Australian military assistance shows the changing nature of weaponry, and warfare leaders on both sides of the Tasman are reckoning with it, say defence experts.

The Australian government is considering a request for help from all six Gulf states – Oman, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar – for protection against Iranian drone and missile attacks, which have targeted airports and oil infrastructure, the ABC reported.

New Zealand Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters said the government has not received a request for military assistance and is not considering it.

Massey University professor of International Relations Bethan Greener said Australian ministers will have to carefully weigh what counter-drone and missile protection means.

“What’s quite important about the requests is by nature they are being deemed defensive, and so the Australian government is having to weigh what that might look like, and whether or not engaging in any way in this war could potentially pull them into a more offensive action.”

Malcolm Davis, senior defence strategy analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, told Nine to Noon the Gulf states’ request was a “legitimate” one.

He said the government could offer a short-range surface-to-air missile system called NASAMs, which would involve teams operating on the ground in the Gulf states.

Greener said the request showed the changing nature of warfare – the Australian government had recently become highly interested in counter-drone operations, launching a project called Land 156 in late January focused on safeguarding critical infrastructure.

“I think this conflict will be quite a telling one with regards to what kind of weaponry we are going to see, what kind of movement of troops or manoeuvre, the difference in air power crewed, or uncrewed.

“For a long time, a lot of western militaries have still clung to the model of an infantry – often a light mobile infantry, backed by artillery and armoured components – this really does change things up.”

Greener said the New Zealand government was also looking at this, with an announcement 10 days ago that the defence force would trial air, land and sea drones made from kiwi company Syos Aerospace.

“It’s quite important this year that New Zealand is looking much more seriously in to how it might utilise drones, I know that’s contentious for New Zealanders, it’s discomforting, the idea of unpeopled vessels potentially carrying ammunition – those sorts of ethical questions.”

She said it wasn’t surprising the New Zealand government had not been asked for military assistance from the Gulf states, and reflected the size of the country’s military.

Davis said governments had not taken “the counter-drone mission seriously enough”, and it was something Australia and other Western powers were now considering.

“Now we’re finding that we’re confronted with this reality, and it’s not just about Iran, it’s also about what China and Russia can do in a conflict.”

He said he expected a decision from the Australian government on military assistance early this week.

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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/2026/03/09/iran-conflict-request-for-australian-help-shows-the-changing-nature-of-warfare/

Politics live: Christopher Luxon faces pressure after polling woes

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is holding his weekly post Cabinet media conference to face questions about his leadership, the polls and Iran.

Watch it live here from 4pm:

Follow all the latest news with RNZ’s live blog.

The prime minister is facing disastrous poll numbers, while also dealing with global issues, as missiles continue to tear through Middle Eastern skies.

Pressure is mounting on the Christopher Luxon with a poll result last week putting National in the 20s.

Listen to the PM’s appearance on Morning Report here:

Luxon batted away questions last week about stepping down as party leader following the latest Taxpayers’ Union Curia poll that had National on 28.4 – down nearly 3 points from its poll last month.

Luxon said on Friday evening none of his Cabinet colleagues had told him to reconsider his future, saying “all of them” back him.

He said he was “absolutely not” considering standing down and said he had the skills to lead the National Party and the country.

Luxon also made a personal explanation in the House on Tuesday night, after he stated incorrectly the government was automatically extending visas for people in New Zealand affected by the war in Iran.

RNZ / Angus Dreaver

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/politics-live-christopher-luxon-faces-pressure-after-polling-woes/

Asian and New Zealand share markets tumble

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZX sign RNZ / Angus Dreaver

New Zealand and Asian share markets have tumbled as concerns mount about over the war in the Middle East and its impact on the world economy.

The benchmark NZX 50 fell 3 percent in mid-Monday afternoon trading, while across the Tasman, the ASX 200 fell 4 percent.

In Japan, the Nikkei plunged 6 percent.

It comes as global oil prices surge amid supply concerns, with travel through the vital Strait of Hormuz at a halt.

The benchmark Brent Crude rose to its highest level since 2022, as prices surged past US$100 a barrel, to settle at around $108.

Forsyth Barr investment adviser Mark Fowler said investors were nervous.

“I think the markets are starting to really speculate about how protracted this conflict is going to be in the Middle East,” he said. “And we’ve seen this enormous surge in oil prices.”

Fowler said there was potential for a global economic shock as prices flow through.

“Markets are starting to realise the reality of that sort of inflationary pressure,” he said.

“Everyone thought that this would be a short-term shock, but if it’s more medium-term, what are the wider ramifications for global markets? And you’re really starting to see concerns around that now.”

Kiwibank economists said “things are likely to get worse before they get better”.

“We’re bracing for much higher volatility, with a bigger market reaction in the near term,” they said.

“Our hope [is] that markets rebound quickly once the dust settles, as they did in 2022 following the Russia and Ukraine crisis period.”

Kiwibank said with disruptions to oil, gas and shipping, an immediate lift in inflation was “all but a done deal”.

“But the downside risks to global and domestic growth cannot be ignored either,” they said. “And ultimately, under this kind of supply shock induced inflation, it’s the damage to demand that is likely to dominate.”

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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/2026/03/09/asian-and-new-zealand-share-markets-tumble/

Lanes reopen following crash, Mercer

Source: New Zealand Police

All lanes have now reopened following an earlier crash on the Waikato Expressway.

One person was transported to hospital in a serious condition following the single vehicle crash on State Highway 1, Mercer.

Three other people sustained minor to moderate injuries.

Police would like to thank motorists for their patience and understanding while the scene was cleared.

ENDS.

Holly McKay/NZ Police

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/lanes-reopen-following-crash-mercer/

Appointment of the Aged Care Commissioner

Source: New Zealand Government

Associate Minister of Health Casey Costello has today announced Ms Erin James’ appointment as Aged Care Commissioner. 

The Aged Care Commissioner sits within the Office of the Health and Disability Commissioner, and advocates for quality health and disability services, and ensures the health system responds to the needs of older people.

“The appointment of Ms James as Aged Care Commissioner comes at a time when we are doing work across the aged care system to improve how care is designed and delivered”, Ms Costello says.  

“We need a system that provides the right care at the right time and place, that allows for better transitions between types of care, and that is sustainable”.

Ms James is currently the Director of Optional Protocol to the Convention Against Torture (OPCAT) team at the Office of the Ombudsman.

She has been appointed for a five-year term, beginning on 7 April 2026.  

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/appointment-of-the-aged-care-commissioner/

Zac Lomax switches codes, signs with Western Force

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lomax played three tests for the Kangaroos. photosport

Australian superstar Zac Lomax is switching codes.

Lomax is leaving the NRL to join the Western Force with an eye on next year’s Rugby World Cup.

The move ends weeks of speculation surrounding his playing future, after he became one of the first official signings of the R360 league.

Lomax’s relationship with the NRL was further soured after he was locked in a legal battle in attempting to transfer from the Eels to the Storm.

The Storm are now required to pay $250,000 of Parramatta’s legal costs over the failed transfer bid.

He has signed with the Force on a two-year deal effective immediately.

“I’m incredibly excited and thankful to be joining the Western Force after reaching an agreement with Rugby Australia to make the switch to rugby union,” Lomax said in a statement.

“This is a huge opportunity and a challenge I’m really looking forward to embracing. Stepping into a new code will push me as a player and that’s something that genuinely motivates me.”

Lomax played for St George-Illawarra and Parramatta as well as representing New South Wales and the Kangaroos.

“The chance to be part of what the Western Force are building and to test myself at the highest level of rugby union is something that really excites me. Like any player, the dream of one day representing the Wallabies on a truly international stage and potentially competing at a Rugby World Cup is a powerful motivation.”

Rugby Australia chief executive Phil Waugh said Lomax is a “superb athlete” with a proven track record at representative level.

“We believe he has the talent and drive to make a successful transition to rugby. Zac brings a unique set of experiences and skills to our environment and is motivated by the challenge of competing on the global stage. We have entered an incredibly exciting period for Australian Rugby and Zac now has the opportunity to make a strong impression in Super Rugby Pacific and push for higher honours as we approach a home Rugby World Cup in 2027.”

The Force currently sit 10th on the Super Rugby ladder with one win and four losses.

This weekend they head to the capital to meet the Hurricanes.

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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/2026/03/09/zac-lomax-switches-codes-signs-with-western-force/

Disgraced former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming’s expenses revealed

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former top cop Jevon McSkimming. RNZ / Mark Papalii

A night’s accommodation at a Wellington hotel a five-minute walk from Police National Headquarters and an excess baggage payment are among a series of expenses by disgraced former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming.

Last week, the Independent Police Conduct Authority released a summary of its investigation into McSkimming’s decision to invite a woman he was having an affair with – Ms Z – to stay with him in hotel accommodation paid for by police, on numerous occasions, primarily in 2016.

The affair took place between 2016 and 2018.

The IPCA said its investigation was “impaired by a lack of records of travel expenditure and credit card statements from the time, due to the nine to 10 years that has elapsed since the spending occurred”.

RNZ earlier requested a copy of all expenses made by McSkimming covering the time of his affair.

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

Police responded with a screenshot of an expenses claim from 2017 and credit card statements for McSkimming covering the 2018 calendar year.

“New Zealand banks retain credit card statements for seven years after which records are no longer available. No additional expenses have been identified beyond those attached, and credit card records for 2016 and 2017 are no longer held as they fall outside the seven-year timeframe. Therefore, any additional credit card statements are unavailable, and Police has no reason to believe these records are held by any other agency.”

McSkimming’s work credit card had a $2000 limit. The 2018 credit card statements reveal he spent some time in Canada and the United States early in the year.

On 6 April McSkimming stayed at the Thorndon Hotel, about a five-minute walk from Police National Headquarters. The accommodation cost $121.

A significant number of expenses relate to purchases at Wellington International Airport.

In November 2018 there were some expenses at SkyCity Hotel in Auckland and a $229 payment for Audioblocks as well as an $80 excess baggage payment in Wellington. There was also an $80 transaction at Queenstown Airport.

He also spent $112 at Millbrook Resort in Arrowtown.

In December, there was a $147 payment at Wellington International Airport followed by a $98 payment later that month.

RNZ asked Police Commissioner Richard Chambers for comment on the expenses detailed in the OIA.

“This happened a number of years ago and without detailed records of the reasons for this expenditure, I cannot say whether it was appropriate,” he said.

“However, these expenses would have been considered against the travel policy at the time and were approved by a supervisor.”

Chambers said it was appropriate for police policy to provide for reasonable expenses for executive travel.

“Those expenses can include the use of hotels, parking, petrol and transport such as taxis. Such expenses should only be for work-related purposes, reasonable, and able to withstand public scrutiny.

“Last week, I sought reimbursement from Mr McSkimming for those hotel expenses for which he was found to breach the Police Code of Conduct, as set out in recent IPCA findings. As yet, there has been no response.”

Police Minister Mark Mitchell said the appropriateness of staff expenditure was a matter for police.

“My expectation is that policies involving use of taxpayer money should be clear, robust, and able to stand up to public scrutiny.”

The IPCA had not been able to review McSkimming’s credit card expenditure, and relied on the evidence of the complainant, McSkimming, his former executive assistant and one of his supervisors at the time.

“In 2016 and 2017 Mr McSkimming’s workplace was at Police National Headquarters in Wellington. He lived about 60-70kms away.”

McSkimming and his executive assistant at the time told the IPCA that he was regularly required to attend functions or late meetings in Wellington or catch early morning flights.

“On those occasions, his executive assistant would book accommodation at a Wellington hotel, paid for by Police. The rationale for these bookings was explained to us as being to avoid a long drive home after a work event, or where he was required to attend a social function to ensure he was not having a drink and then driving.”

The IPCA said the police travel policy at the time was “vague and unhelpful in providing guidance on the extent to which the examples Mr McSkimming gave were acceptable”.

“Beyond restatement of the principles applying to ‘sensitive expenditure’ as promulgated by the Office of the Auditor General, it did not provide any guidance on the use of hotel accommodation in circumstances such as Mr McSkimming’s, where the accommodation was in the same locality as the usual workplace.”

There was now an updated sensitive expenditure policy, which sets out the principles to be applied when spending taxpayers’ money.

Police travel policy at the time, and still, requires “the travel approving senior manager need only be informed where a partner, family member or friend accompanies a Police employee on travel at their own expense where they have made their own travel arrangement but intend to share travel facilities (eg accommodation…) that will be paid for by Police”.

McSkimming told the IPCA he thought Ms Z stayed with him eight to 10 times.

“This is corroborated by Ms Z. Mr McSkimming breached policy by not informing his senior manager approving the travel that she would be staying with him. If he had done so, we consider it highly likely that approval would have been declined.

“In any case, whether or not he informed his manager, he breached the Police Code of Conduct by staying in hotels at Police expense and inviting the woman with whom he was having a sexual relationship to join him. If he had paid for the hotels himself, that would have been a different matter. However, the fact that the hotels were paid for by Police gives rise to the perception that he was using taxpayer money to further a clandestine affair, thus bringing Police into disrepute.”

Chambers earlier said he was “very concerned” to learn of McSkimming’s use of hotels in Wellington and agreed with the findings of the IPCA.

“This showed a disregard for taxpayers’ money and Police expenditure policy.

“I intend to write to Mr McSkimming seeking reimbursement of the costs of these hotel stays.”

Chambers said as the IPCA report states, the police policy for sensitive expenditure requires spending to be reasonable and able to withstand parliamentary and public scrutiny.

Mitchell earlier said he welcomed the IPCA report and its findings which showed the investigations conducted by police were appropriate and adequate.

“Any misuse of tax-payer money is, under all circumstances, unacceptable. I support the Commissioner in his efforts to recoup these expenses.”

“It is my view that unless there are exceptional work-related circumstances, staff should not require hotel accommodation in the same centre as their normal place of work.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/disgraced-former-deputy-police-commissioner-jevon-mcskimmings-expenses-revealed/

Employment Legislation – Expect protests the PSA warns employers pushing 90-day fire at will trials

Source: PSA

Date: 3:09PM 09/03/2026
Employers trying to insert 90-day “fire at will” clauses into new collective agreements will face protests outside their workplaces, the PSA says.
“We need to resist 90-day trials whenever employers attempt to use them. We will hold rallies and keep opposing them.
“Employers are on notice about the damage 90-day trials cause to individuals and we will not hesitate to name and shame them if they go ahead anyway,” Fitzsimons said.
“This Government has made it easier to employ people on insecure employment but it is still wrong, oppressive and immoral to do so.
“The message employers could not be clearer: you don’t need trial periods, treat people fairly from day one, show respect for working people. Good employers don’t need to hide behind 90-day trials. More humane, dignified and fair employment rights are good for workers, good for business and actually good for New Zealand too.
Fitzsimons was speaking today at a rally in Dunedin outside the office of mental health and addiction support provider Able Minds, where staff represented by the PSA are pushing back on their employer’s insistence at introducing 90-day trials.
The rally heard from Jacqueline Atkinson who worked in a previous career as a baker on a 90-day trial and was suddenly dismissed from a local bakery just after Easter when the seasonal demand ended.
Jacqueline talked about balling her eyes out in her car after it happened.
“I remember going home quite devastated and thinking how could my boss say I was not good enough? I had told him I was going there to learn.
“I was freaking out about how I was going to pay the mortgage on my first house that I had bought with my partner if I didn’t find another job.
“It was an awful experience. Nobody should be subject to that. You should absolutely have the right to work in a job where you are treated fairly. You should have the right to a job where there are opportunities to grow and excel,” Atkinson said.
The rally also heard a stirring speech from Taieri MP Ingrid Leary about this Government’s appalling record on employment rights and from three Greens MPs – Dunedin-based MP Francisco Hernandez, Workplace Relations and Safety Spokesperson Teanau Tuiono and Green MP Mike Davidson.
The Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi is Aotearoa New Zealand’s largest trade union, representing and supporting more than 95,000 workers across central government, state-owned enterprises, local councils, health boards and community groups.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/employment-legislation-expect-protests-the-psa-warns-employers-pushing-90-day-fire-at-will-trials/

Appeal for information following burglary, Dannevirke

Source: New Zealand Police

Attribute to Tararua Area Response Manager, Senior Sergeant Carey Williamson: 

Manawatū Police are appealing for information following a burglary in Dannevirke last week.

On Friday 6 March, around 11.40pm, Police were called with a report that a burglary was in progress at a store on High Street.

Officers responded immediately, however the offenders had already fled the scene – taking with them a large amount of alcohol and cigarettes, as well as an amount of cash.

A scene guard was in place overnight and a scene examination was carried out early Saturday morning.

Enquiries are ongoing, however, Police would like to hear from anyone who was in the High Street area, between 11pm and midnight last Friday, and may have witnessed the incident, or any suspicious behaviour.

Additionally, anyone travelling in that area, around the same time, with dashcam footage is urged to get in touch so that we may be able to review that footage.

Information can be provided through 105, either online or over the phone, referencing file number 260307/3053.

You can also provide information anonymously through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111 – referencing the same file number.

ENDS 

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/appeal-for-information-following-burglary-dannevirke/

Serious crash in Mercer, delays expected

Source: New Zealand Police

Motorists are being advised to expect delays following a serious crash on the Waikato Expressway.

Emergency services are responding to a single vehicle crash on State Highway 1, Mercer, which was reported to Police just before 2pm.

Early indications suggest one person has received serious injuries and three others have sustained minor to moderate injuries.

Two northbound lanes are currently blocked and one remains open.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area or expect delays.

The Serious Crash Unit has been notified.

ENDS.

Holly McKay/NZ Police

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/serious-crash-in-mercer-delays-expected/

Super Rugby Pacific: Crusaders win a ‘turning point’ for Blues

Source: Radio New Zealand

Blues winger Caleb Clarke scores a second half try during the Super Rugby Pacific – Blues v Crusaders at Eden Park, Auckland, New Zealand. Photosport

Prior to the weekend, an uncomfortable question had started to form in the Blues camp.

An increasingly one-sided rivalry against the Crusaders had the Blues begin to wonder whether a mental block had crept in when facing the perennial powerhouses.

Heading into Saturday night’s 29-13 win at Eden Park, the Blues had won just three of 23 against the Crusaders dating back to 2014.

Skipper Dalton Papali’i, playing in his first home game since bringing up his 100th cap the previous weekend against the Brumbies in Canberra, has endured a rough run against the Cantabs during his Blues’ career.

“I’ve only beaten them twice before in my career, third time tonight. So it’s always been a tough ride against them. Every team has that one team you always struggle with.”

Blues coach Vern Cotter said earlier in the week that the record against the Crusaders spoke for itself, and may have acted as a motivator for his troops.

“It was said, so I think the players said ‘we’ve had enough of that.’ I think it was more about us than the record. It was about us playing our game, imposing our game on them and you see what happens. I think that’s a real turning point for this team, knowing that when we do it right and we focus on it during the week, then put it out in the paddock.”

Papali’i said the head to head history can be given too much credence.

“You talk about that mental barrier, and in the years that we’ve played them and we’ve lost, we maybe push it a bit too much throughout the week and talk a bit too much about them.

“But the times I have beat them, we focused on ourselves. You study the other team as you always do, but then you’ve got to look within yourselves and actually find the buttons that push you to go forward.”

The All Blacks flanker said despite dropping two of three to start their campaign, the confidence did not wane.

“Tonight was no surprise, the whole week we were building and we weren’t panicking on the results, we talked our forward pack wanting to be dogs out there.

“I feel like when we have our attitude right, then we’re a team that can decide games and it’s all on us. I felt like we had the foot on the throat the whole game.

“I always think it is for a statement game as a forward pack to go against these guys.”

Elsewhere, the Hurricanes continued their dominance over the Waratahs, picking up their ninth win on the trot to shoot back up to third after the Lautoka slip.

The pace-setting Brumbies suffered their first loss, coming in dramatic and controversial fashion against the Reds.

Moana continue to look listless without Ardie Savea, with the Chiefs maintaining their unbeaten run against the bottom-placed battlers.

Jamie Joseph put the disappointment of missing out on the All Blacks job in the rear with a quality Highlanders win over the Force, with Caleb Tangitau continuing his stellar season in Dunedin.

Try of the round: Cody Vai’i’s miracle at Eden, launching himself to sensationally snag a Beauden Barrett crosskick and expertly grass it inches inside the line.

Stock rise: Highlanders flanker Veveni Lasaqa put in an absolute shift against the Force, bagging a try, three pilfers and making 17 tackles.

Stock drop: Taha Kemara was given the fullback jersey in Will Jordan’s absence, but made little impact from the back against the Blues, and was subbed at half-time.

Super Rugby standings after four rounds:

1. Brumbies

2. Chiefs

3. Hurricanes

4. Blues

5. Waratahs

6. Reds

7. Highlanders

8. Crusaders

9. Fijian Drua

10. Force

11. Moana Pasifika

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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/2026/03/09/super-rugby-pacific-crusaders-win-a-turning-point-for-blues/

Navy faces potential fine after Akaroa Harbour oil spill

Source: Radio New Zealand

Oil spill from HMNZS Te Kaha is contained on Akaroa Harbour. Facebook/Environment Canterbury

Canterbury Regional Council is yet to decide if there will be any penalties for the Royal New Zealand Navy after a ship spilled hundreds of litres of oil in Akaroa Harbour.

About 200 to 300 litres of lubricating oil leaked from HMNZS Te Kaha on Sunday morning because of an oil cooler defect on the ship’s starboard engine.

The Defence Force (NZDF) said the ship was in Akaroa for a training exercise.

The council’s coast and harbours manager Guy Harris said crews had cleaned up most of the oil using absorbent booms. It was not a large spill, but the oil was quite toxic and “thick” for wildlife, although that made it easier for teams to pick up, he said.

“We’ve been on the water since first light doing observations. We still haven’t seen any more black oil but we are still seeing odd sheen, which is very thin layers of oil, and we’re chasing those down.

“We’re also doing shoreline observations looking for oil on the beach, on the rocks.

“This type of oil could be quite significant if it wasn’t captured, if it was in a more remote place or the weather wasn’t so forgiving or we couldn’t get to it, it could be quite damaging. But in this instance we did everything right, and we had a few things on our side as well.”

Harris said any enforcement action against the Navy was yet to be determined by the regional council.

Polluting ships could result in prosecutions or fines of thousands of dollars under the Resource Management Act.

Harris said there had been no reports of any oiled or sick wildlife so far, but teams were continuing to search the area. The oil spill did not happen in Akaroa’s marine reserve.

“We’ve been looking out for seabirds such as shags or blue penguins, there’s a few other birds that come and go but they’re the main ones we’d be looking for, and maybe red-billed gulls,” he said.

The HMNZS Te Kaha (file photo). SUPPLIED / US NAVY

Otago University professor of zoology Liz Slooten said she had serious concerns for dolphins and seabirds in the harbour.

She said seabirds could have their feathers covered in oil, causing them to lose their insulation, sink, drown or be unable to catch fish. Risks for marine mammals included breathing in polluted fumes, getting oil in their eyes, or eating contaminated fish, she said.

“There’s a whole bunch of health effects that will follow on from these animals taking in oil, or diesel or other petrochemicals, so it’s a really serious problem.”

She said bottlenose dolphins had been seen to lose teeth after swimming in contaminated waters in the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon disaster, when 4.9 million barrels of oil spilled into the sea.

Slooten said it was concerning the Navy leak was the second spill in the harbour in the past two months, with more than 2000 litres of marine diesel fuel spilling from the Black Cat Cruises boat on 31 January.

Banks Peninsula councillor Tyrone Fields said Akaroa had had a “horror run” and news of another spill was disheartening.

“The health of the harbour there is really on the precipice, and I’d hate to think we’d consider doing future damage to it by continuing to pump wastewater into it. At some point we just have to start doing the right thing when it comes to our waterways.”

NZDF said the ship’s company had been working with the harbourmaster to clean up the slick.

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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/2026/03/09/navy-faces-potential-fine-after-akaroa-harbour-oil-spill/

Diabetic patient dies in Waikato Hospital stairwell after urgently needed food delayed

Source: Radio New Zealand

Waikato Hospital. RNZ / Simon Rogers

A diabetic patient collapsed and died in a Waikato Hospital stairwell after a delay getting urgently needed food.

The 79-year-old had a head injury and no pulse when he was found unconscious and alone by a passing nightshift doctor.

It was more than an hour after a nurse had gone to get him a sandwich to lift his blood sugar.

The Health and Disability Commission has just released a report severely critical of the care the man received in December 2019.

Waikato Hospital now makes sure the ward fridges are always stocked with snacks for diabetics.

The man, who had mild dementia and reduced mobility, was in the cardiac care unit after a heart attack.

The commission’s report said at about 9.30pm, he received a falling blood sugar reading of 4.4mmol/L and told a nurse he was worried about it.

At that level, his family had told nurses he could become unsteady on his feet.

The nurse went to get him a sandwich but there were none in the ward fridge so she had to go to another ward.

When she returned 10-15 minutes later he was not in his room so she left the sandwich by his bed.

Ten minutes later he was still not there and she wrongly assumed he was in the toilet.

A search for him did not begin for 55 minutes, the report said.

In reality, he had left his room and was last seen on CCTV footage at the snack machine.

He had walked past the nurses station and had been passed by seven staff members, none of whom appeared to check on him, the report said.

He had then gone out a fire exit and was not found until the passing doctor found him unconscious. He got help and tried to resuscitate him but could not.

By then the man’s blood sugar was just 1.8mmol/L, the report said.

Reaction from family and expert

In a written response to the commission after its initial findings, one of the man’s family members wanted to thank the health professionals who found him in “a severe hypoglycaemic crisis” and tried to save him.

“I can only imagine what it must have been like to stumble across a lost patient dying in a stairwell late at night.”

Health NZ had failed to keep the man safe, the family member said.

An expert nurse who reviewed the case, told the commission the man’s nurse should have made sure he ate the sandwich, especially because he experienced some memory loss and could have forgotten one was coming.

“Administering this very important snack is similar to administering medicine – you have to stay and watch the patient consume it,” the expert nurse said.

The initial delay in getting food was not the nurse’s fault but she should have checked if the man (Mr A) was there by knocking on the bathroom door when she returned.

“Not communicating with Mr A led to a cascade of terrible events,” the expert nurse said.

Waikato Hospital carried out its own adverse event review after the man’s death, the report said.

It found if the nurse had not had to go to another ward for a sandwich it would have allowed the man to get food more quickly and reduced the risk of him leaving the ward.

When his wife brought the man to the ED she had his medicine, his diabetic kit and his diabetic record book.

She had talked to staff many times about his needs.

But the family member told the commission the family was overlooked and not communicated with properly.

Very poor care

Deputy commissioner Carolyn Cooper gave her condolences to Mr A’s family.

“Mrs A was closely involved in her husband’s care, and his sudden death has been traumatic for her and the family,” she said.

Cooper found some of what happened was a severe departure from the expected level of care, and when it came to nursing management of his diabetes, it was “very poor”.

She was critical of the lack of food on the ward, the lack of communication with the man to make sure he had eaten, the delay in the search for him and the lack of a system to alert staff when a patient left the ward.

Health New Zealand’s response

Waikato Hospital now makes sure the fridges in all its cardiac units are checked to ensure there are enough snacks for patients with diabetes.

It has given staff more diabetes and dementia management training, with at risk patients now placed closer to the nurses station.

There is an alert system on the unlocked doors at the fire exit stairs.

In a response to questions from RNZ, Waikato Hospital’s chief medical officer Margaret Fisher said it had apologised to the family for the distress and the lasting impact from the incident.

The hospital accepted the commission’s findings that it did not meet the standard of care.

It had many of the improvements mentioned in the report and was also looking at creating a patient-tracking system in acute care areas, she said.

The hospital did not answer RNZ’s questions about how well staff the ward was on the night the man died.

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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/2026/03/09/diabetic-patient-dies-in-waikato-hospital-stairwell-after-urgently-needed-food-delayed/

How hot is too hot for football in the Pacific?

Source: Radio New Zealand

. PHOTOSPORT

Medical experts are warning sporting organisations need to do more to manage the risks of heat illness in football, after recent tournaments in the Pacific were played in extreme conditions.

During a recent World Cup qualifier, three Samoan players were struck down by heatstroke in temperatures nearing 40C, while another player in the OFC Pro League required hospitalisation after pushing his body to the limit.

Heat illness can be life-threatening in sport, and has led to deaths internationally.

Dr Mark Fulcher, chair of the Oceania Football Confederation medical commission and a doctor with Auckland FC in the OFC Pro League, has seen first-hand how dangerous it can become if risks are not properly managed.

“For some people, heat is probably a small thing. It makes them feel unpleasant, they might have a headache, they might need to go lie in an ice bath for a little while. But for some people, it’s a life-threatening condition, so it’s about having an awareness that it’s not a benign problem,” said Fulcher, who has worked in elite football for 20 years.

The Football Ferns’ first OFC Women’s World Cup qualifier against Samoa on 27 February was played in ambient temperatures in the late 30s in the Solomon Islands. It was a windless day with extreme humidity.

Samoa’s head coach Paul Ifill and Samoa’s Arianna Skeers at half-time during FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers 2027 at National Stadium Honiara. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

Immediately after the match Samoa coach Paul Ifill questioned the conditions.

“We had a lot of people really struggling with the heat, we’ve got three players with heat stroke,” Ifill said.

“I think the organisers need to look at the timing, playing at 1 o’clock I don’t think is fair to the players … I’ve got players now that won’t be able to probably play for the rest of the tournament.”

It was not just the Samoan players feeling the heat in Honiara.

Football Fern Michaela Foster said the heat was something the players and coaches considered in the game plan during the tournament which wrapped up last week.

New Zealand warmup before FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers at National Stadium Honiara. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

“It is hot, the humidity has been quite challenging … in this heat we obviously want to minimise the unnecessary running.”

Fulcher said more needed to be done to manage the risk for all athletes – and it was beyond looking at the forecast.

“Sporting organisations and the people leading the organisations need to understand that this is potentially a very serious issue.

“If you look at North America there are several people that die every year from heat illness in sport.

“If you look at the NRL, they’ve had a recent issue with a fatality that was linked to heat illnesses.

“So I think we really need to look at where are these tournaments being held, when in the day, looking at historical data around temperatures and things like that to help make those determinations. Then there needs to be very clear education of all the stakeholders about the risks of heat illness and how we can mitigate those.”

Is it too hot in the Pacific Islands to be hosting tournaments?

Samoa’s Tielua Baptista is shaded by her team mates after going down injured during FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers 2027 in Honiara. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

Fulcher believed there would be locations and times of day that it would become too hot to safely host football tournaments – and cancellations would need to be considered.

He had some concerns about recent tournaments in the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea.

“The rules and regulations that we need to have for tournaments in the Pacific are probably different to the rules and regulations that you might see in the UEFA Champions League,” he said.

The world cup qualifiers were not the only football games being played in this part of the world with a lot resting on the results.

Round two of the new OFC Pro League was in Papua New Guinea in early February where the conditions in Port Moresby were described as extremely hot and humid.

A Solomon Kings player was hospitalised after a win over Auckland FC in PNG after pushing through in a match that took a physical toll on the players.

Fulcher said in these scenarios players could be their own worst enemy.

“Athletes are not very good at self-regulating and saying, hey, I’m feeling a bit hot. They want to push themselves and often push themselves until they fall over and they can’t do it anymore.

“The things that make them good athletes, that they’re not quitters, often mean they don’t know that they’ve got a problem until they’ve got quite a big problem.”

Auckland FC’s Liam Gillion and PNG Hekari FC’s Rex Naime at Santos National Football Stadium, Papua New Guinea. Shane Wenzlick / Phototek.nz

Fulcher compared the situation athletes at [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/sport/575322/tennis-atp-open-to-formal-heat-rule-after-string-of-retirements-in-shanghai-sauna the Australian Open in tennis, which is played annually in January and where players could be playing for hours in temperatures in the 40 degrees Celsius, to what the footballers were dealing with.

“If it was very hot in Melbourne, the medical infrastructure in Melbourne to deal with the Australian Open is extremely good, both in terms of experienced clinicians at a tournament and experienced clinicians in a large tertiary hospital.

“Whereas if you have heat illness in the Solomon Islands, I would say the infrastructure available at the ground, the infrastructure available at the hospital, the ability to then travel to a tertiary hospital or somewhere for additional care, it’s quite a different environment.”

Fulcher believed players travelling from the likes of New Zealand to the islands could do little to prepare for the conditions that included “very big temperature change and no real scope to acclimatise to that”.

“There are lots of publications that talk about protocols of training and heat chambers and these sorts of things, and there’s a small amount of adaptation you can do before you travel.

“But that requires significant resourcing, and that’s also not always available to some of these teams and players.

“So I think number one, it’s only partially effective and number two it’s logistically difficult to implement.”

What are the rules?

American Samoa’s Ayana Kirisimasi at a drinks break during FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers 2027. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

During the OFC Women’s World Cup qualifiers in the Solomon Islands there were drinks breaks and cooling breaks. Cooling breaks allow all players to go to their respective bench/technical area and use ice and cold towels to cool down when the mercury rises.

Governing body FIFA has also introduced three-minute hydration breaks for this year’s men’s Football World Cup in Canada, USA and Mexico.

Under the new policy, regardless of the temperature, referees will stop games 22 minutes into each half so players can rehydrate.

FIFA said this will streamline and simplify the previous rules, which required cooling breaks 30 minutes into each half when the temperature at kick-off exceeded 32 degrees Celsius.

A report published last year by Football for the Future, Common Goal and Jupiter Intelligence found 10 of the 16 venues for this year’s men’s world cup, across the three host countries, are at very high risk of extreme heat stress conditions.

Fulcher said cooling is an important strategy to try and get players to reduce their core body temperature but in “isolation they’re pretty futile”.

“The cold hard reality is often the conditions are extremely hot and cooling breaks, while they’re better than nothing, are not effective strategies.”

Over his decades involved with football and New Zealand national teams Fulcher had experimented with giving players very cold water and cold water with ice slurries during drinks breaks.

“It is very difficult to consume enough of the very cold water or ice slurries to make a meaningful difference.

“In the same way that a car with a full radiator can still overheat, players are still going to overheat despite being well hydrated.”

‘Scope to improve things’

Support staff Mark Fulcher, Wade Irvine and Roland Jeffery at Estadio Azteca for the All Whites final training session in Mexico City ahead of FIFA World Cup 2014 Intercontinental qualifying match in 2013. Andrew Cornaga / photosport.co.nz

Fulcher has been on the medical staff with New Zealand football teams that have travelled across the Pacific, Africa and “other areas where it is very, very hot”.

From what he has seen with the OFC Pro League he said the staging of the tournament itself and the preparation around the tournament by teams and officials was an improvement on what has happened in the past in the region.

“There’s still scope to improve things.

“There have been some things in these tournaments that I think have gone really well. For example, the provision of equipment to treat heat illness, circulating advice around how to manage heat illness in advance so that teams are prepared.

“These sort of things, I think, are relatively small steps, but they are definitely steps in the right direction.”

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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/2026/03/09/how-hot-is-too-hot-for-football-in-the-pacific/

The four stages of the mental load explained

Source: Radio New Zealand

If you’re responsible for the mental load in your home and feel that burden isn’t understood, supported or recognised, this article is for you.

Because the mental load is invisible and constant cognitive and emotional labour involved in managing a household or family life, it can be hard to quantify.

All that organising, planning and remembering isn’t a “normalised form of work”, even though it’s relentlessly present, says Allison Daminger.

Cognitive labour is the “thinking part” of the mental load.

Unsplash

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/the-four-stages-of-the-mental-load-explained/

Search continues for person swept out to sea near Greymouth

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police were still investigating if a kayak washed up near Blaketown on Saturday night was linked to the missing person, who was yet to be identified. SUPPLIED/POLICE

West Coast police are still looking for a person swept out to sea near Greymouth.

Emergency services received a report that a person was in trouble in the Greymouth/Blaketown area at 6pm on Saturday.

Senior Sergeant Mark Kirkwood said rough seas and white caps were making the search difficult.

“The search resumed this morning, where police, with the assistance of Precision Helicopters, conducted aerial searches of the shoreline between Ross and Charleston,” he said.

Police were still investigating if a kayak washed up near Blaketown on Saturday night was linked to the missing person, who was yet to be identified.

Police, Fire and Emergency and Surf Lifesaving staff had been involved in the search, with a specialised floating device deployed to replicate where the person might have drifted.

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Papakura incident ends with person covered in blood, another arrested

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police and paramedics at the site of an incident in Papakura, Auckland, 9 March 2026. Melanie Earley / RNZ

One person has been arrested and another is in hospital following what police say is a family harm related incident in Papakura, Auckland.

A witness told RNZ they had seen a person covered in blood outside a property on Eastburn Street at about midday.

RNZ saw a number of police officers and paramedics at the home. A person could be seen sitting in the back of one of the police cars while paramedics appeared to be working on another person in the driveway.

Two people RNZ spoke to, who did not want to be named, told RNZ the street regularly experienced incidents. One said she had been stabbed a few days earlier while breaking up a fight.

They had not heard any commotion on Monday until they went outside about midday and saw police arriving and a person standing outside with blood on them.

They said police were a common sight on the street.

Police at the scene declined to comment, but in a statement later said one person was in custody and another transported to hospital with moderate injuries following a family harm incident.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/papakura-incident-ends-with-person-covered-in-blood-another-arrested/