Courier companies fined over $1 million for cartel conduct

Source: Radio New Zealand

The penalties follow separate hearings at the Auckland High Court. 123RF

Two courier companies found to be involved in cartel behaviour have been ordered to pay more than $1.2 million combined.

Courier service Aramex has been penalised $700,000, while a second company, GoSweetSpot, has been penalised $525,000 in two separate cases of cartel conduct investigated by the Commerce Commission.

The commission said it is also issuing warnings to another nine courier services for behaviour it believes could be considered cartel conduct under the law.

“The freight and courier sector has been an area of ongoing concern and focus for us, with the commission taking five court cases in the last 15 years,” Commerce Commission chair Dr John Small said.

“We expect these penalties and warnings to bring about a change of behaviour in the courier sector.”

Both Aramex and GoSweetSpot earlier admitted to entering into contracts that allocated customers between themselves and a competitor. Aramex also admitted to including fixed prices in its contract. The breaches were separate and the contract agreements were not with one another.

Dr Small said it was vital the courier sector remains highly competitive and free of behind-closed-doors agreements.

“This outcome sends a strong message that it will not be tolerated,” he said.

“Companies engaging in cartel conduct should expect to be on the receiving end of enforcement action.”

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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/2026/03/04/courier-companies-fined-over-1-million-for-cartel-conduct/

Retailer charged for selling nitrous oxide

Source: New Zealand Police

Last week Police said we’d be taking action on the illegal sale of nitrous oxide in our communities and this week we are seeing results.

“Many districts, including Eastern, Counties Manukau, Waikato, Central, and Bay of Plenty had already begun working with retailers to ensure they knew the laws around the sale of nitrous oxide,” says Assistant Commissioner Tusha Penny.

“One retailer has shown complete disregard for the law and has persisted in selling this substance for recreational use. That retailer has now been charged under the Psychoactive Substances Act.”

District Commander Superintendent Will Loughrin said this result will be great for the Rotorua community.

“We took a planned prevention approach and this shows if retailers ignore us, we will follow through with enforcement action.

“We have taken more than 300 cannisters out of circulation. That will mean reduced harm for our young people, and also less danger on the road because of it.

“Our beat team had engaged with the retailer several times, yet he refused to heed our warnings. So now he will face the consequences, which is a criminal charge of selling or suppling a non-approved psychoactive product which carries a fine of up to $500,000 or a maximum term of two year’s imprisonment,” says Superintendent Loughrin.

The man will appear in the Rotorua District Court tomorrow.

“This is the first prosecution of a retailer in our district and I hope that any other retailer selling nitrous oxide for recreational use will note this and think again.”

Assistant Commissioner Tusha Penny says she is disappointed some retailers are choosing to snub the law despite engagement by Police.

“However, I am pleased to see this great effort by our staff and this demonstrates that we will use enforcement if people break the law.”

Police urge anybody who is aware of a retailer selling nitrous oxide for recreational use to contact Police on 105 or call CrimeStoppers on 0800 555 111 to report it.

If people see discarded cannisters in public they should contact their local council for advice about safe disposal, as these cannisters can explode if not emptied and disposed of properly as a hazardous substance.

Notes to media

Next week Police will be able to provide an update on numbers of letters delivered to retailers by Police around the country.

ENDS

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/retailer-charged-for-selling-nitrous-oxide/

TVNZ chair calls Paul Goldsmith after police minister dissatisfied with gang numbers story

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Mark Papalii

The media and broadcasting minister Paul Goldsmith has confirmed the board chair of TVNZ contacted him after the police minister expressed dissatisfaction with a 1News story about gang numbers.

Goldsmith said the chair of the public broadcaster, Andrew Barclay, had raised the story during the call, but Goldsmith did not respond to the matter.

1News aired a story last Thursday, showing gang members now narrowly outnumbered police officers.

The report aired the same day the latest Crime and Victims survey reported 49,000 fewer victims of violent crime in the year to October 2025 than two years previously.

Following the airing of the report, Police Minister Mark Mitchell took to Facebook to express his frustration with the story.

Mitchell said it was “absolutely unbelievable” that on a day the government had announced fewer victims of violent crime and a reduction in serious repeat youth offending, 1News “chose instead to engage in unbalanced journalism by running a story about gang membership with none of the context around the outstanding work our Police are doing in cracking down on gangs in New Zealand”.

Five days later, on Tuesday night, 1News ran a second story which reported on the crime statistics that the government had announced the previous week.

Media and communications minister Paul Goldsmith, who is also the justice minister and was present at the government’s announcement, confirmed he had spoken to the 1News journalist after the first story aired.

“Just like I often do when I’m not happy with a story, I ring the journalist and give them the benefit of my opinions.”

Goldsmith then said he had a “very short” call from the chair of TVNZ’s board, Andrew Barclay, “on a range of matters”, and the story came up in passing, “but I hadn’t raised the issue”.

He said he “absolutely” did not bring the story up himself, and he did not discuss editorial matters with the board member.

“It’s not appropriate for me to be talking about political discussions and editorial matters with the board, and I haven’t,” he said.

“We certainly do remonstrate and argue with journalists over stories, and we do that on a regular basis.”

Goldsmith would not go into the details of the call, saying that the reporting came up “in passing,” and then they moved on to other matters.

“I just said, well, that’s not for me to discuss. And then we moved on to other issues.”

He confirmed the phone call took place before the second story aired.

Mark Mitchell expressed dissatisfaction with a 1News story about gang numbers. Mark Papalii

During Question Time on Wednesday, Mitchell again raised what he said was an “unbalanced” report.

Labour’s police spokesperson Ginny Andersen then asked Mitchell whether he, any member of his office, or any person acting on his behalf made contact with the TVNZ board regarding the report.

Mitchell said after he put up his Facebook post, he had received a call from a “senior” TVNZ person to apologise, but he had not contacted anyone at TVNZ, and confirmed the person he spoke to was not a member of the public broadcaster’s board.

Earlier on Wednesday, Mitchell explained he had said publicly on Newstalk ZB that he had received a call and an apology from TVNZ.

“I have private conversations with all of you guys, and that is quite normal, and that is quite okay.”

He said he did not name who that was, but he was very clear he had received an apology.

“You’re accountable as well for what you report and what you say,” he said.

“You don’t have carte blanche, and if you decide to take carte blanche, then don’t be surprised when the public actually judge you for and that’s exactly what happened.”

He said it was the “Kiwi way” to address it directly.

“I don’t rush off straight away to report people and try to get people in trouble. No, I’d rather just talk to them, highlight the issues, which is what they did.”

It was put to Mitchell he had posted on Facebook about it, which he acknowledged.

“We did that because, because we felt the story was very unfair. I think Paul Goldsmith spoke to them directly.”

Labour leader Chris Hipkins weighed in ahead of Question Time too, saying if any member of the TVNZ board had been involved in a decision to run the additional story on Tuesday night, TVNZ needed to be “very upfront with the New Zealand public about that”.

He also called for the member of the board to resign “immediately” if that had occurred.

Hipkins confirmed he didn’t have any evidence to suggest it had occurred, he wasn’t alleging it had occurred, but if it had, “then that member of the board has got themselves into some great difficulty.”

RNZ has contacted TVNZ for comment.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/tvnz-chair-calls-paul-goldsmith-after-police-minister-dissatisfied-with-gang-numbers-story/

Forest and Bird granted leave to appeal part of Dome Valley landfill approval

Source: Radio New Zealand

Dome Valley. The Wireless / Luke McPake

Legal action over a controversial mega-dump in Auckland’s Dome Valley is continuing, with Forest and Bird granted leave to appeal part of the decision to approve the landfill.

Forest and Bird will appeal the Environment Court’s 2023 decision to allow the landfill to go ahead, focusing on river protections.

The proposed landfill is 80 hectares and would collect around half of Auckland’s annual waste – but about 12 kilometres of streams in the valley would be destroyed within its footprint.

Forest and Bird senior environmental lawyer May Downing said the case raises critical questions about how rivers are protected across the country.

“These aren’t just a river that’s nice to look at they’re essential habitat for indigenous fresh water species,” she said.

“The concern really is the normalisation of river loss when it’s something that should be stopped, not normalised especially for this type of development.”

Dome Valley is five kilometres from Warkworth and home to Hochstetter’s frogs, freshwater species, pekapeka-tou-roa long-tailed bats and diverse birdlife.

Downing said the landfill’s approval also raised questions about whether riparian planting elsewhere can really mitigate the loss of rivers destroyed by a landfill.

Timeline of events:

  • 2021: Landfill given conditional approval by Auckland Council’s independent commissioner panel
  • 2023: Environment Court provisionally granted consent after iwi and community groups appealed council’s decision
  • 2024: High Court dismissed two appeals of Environment Court decision
  • 2025: Forest and Bird asked for leave to appeal High Court decision, in Court of Appeal
  • 2026: Court of Appeal grants leave in part for Forest and Bird to appeal

As part of the consenting process, developers can often offset the loss of a stream by agreeing to undertake stream protection work elsewhere – sometimes in different regions.

In this case, Waste Management proposed a general mitigation, offset and compensation package to address the stream loss, including riparian planting of up to 60km of streams elsewhere – likely in the Hoteo catchment of the Kaipara Harbour.

It alternatively offered to pay $10 million for these works to be done – these will be considered in the ongoing Environment Court process.

Forest and Bird’s appeal relates to the interpretation of the National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management and whether it allows streams to be removed to make way for a landfill.

When Waste Management lodged plans for the dump, it was strongly opposed by iwi and community groups due to cultural and environmental concerns.

Waste Management has said the landfill was needed to cater for Auckland’s growth.

It opposed Forest and Bird’s application for leave to appeal the decision, as did interested parties Manuhiri Kaitiaki Charitable Trust, Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei Whai Maia and Environ Holdings.

Auckland Council declined to comment on the Court of Appeal’s decision to allow an appeal in part.

A hearing date for the appeal is still to be confirmed.

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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/2026/03/04/forest-and-bird-granted-leave-to-appeal-part-of-dome-valley-landfill-approval/

Drugs and firearms charges follow Riverhead warrant

Source: New Zealand Police

A Police investigation has shut down a suspected methamphetamine manufacturing operation and seized several firearms in north-west Auckland.

Two arrests were made in the operation, led by the Waitematā Gang Disruption Unit, after Police descended on a Riverhead property early on Tuesday.

The operation included Police staff from the GDU, local Kumeū Police staff and the Armed Offenders Squad.

“We have been investigating the manufacture of methamphetamine, and these enquiries led us to a property with suspected links to the Headhunters,” Detective Senior Sergeant Josh Lautogo says.

“Police arrived at the property and executed a search warrant, locating a range of equipment, materials and substances used in the manufacture of methamphetamine.”

Two firearms were also located: a semi-automatic M4-style rifle and a 3D-printed semi-automatic pistol.

A quantity of cash and methamphetamine was also recovered from a locked ammunition box at the property.

“The box had been thrown off a deck on the property by one of the occupants as our staff were approaching the address, and it was soon secured,” Detective Senior Sergeant Lautogo says.

A 62-year-old man and 35-year-old woman were arrested at the address and will appear in the Waitākere District Court today.

The pair have been jointly charged with possession for supply of methamphetamine and the possession of equipment and materials.

The 62-year-old man has also been charged with unlawful possession of a firearm and pistol.

“Our investigators continue to target those nestled amongst our communities who are manufacturing illegal drugs,” Detective Senior Sergeant Lautogo says.

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/drugs-and-firearms-charges-follow-riverhead-warrant/

Man facing murder charge after death of woman in Kāpiti Coast

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

A 24-year-old man who previously faced lesser charges after a woman was found dead in a Kāpiti Coast house has now been charged with murder.

The woman was found dead at an address on Mataua Road in Raumati Beach in February.

Following her death, the man was charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and appeared in the Porirua District Court.

Police, who launched a homicide investigation, were considering further charges and have confirmed the man has now been charged with murder.

Police said the man is remanded in custody and is due back in the High Court at Wellington on 20 March.

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/man-facing-murder-charge-after-death-of-woman-in-kapiti-coast/

All Blacks jersey to be ‘earned’ under new coach Dave Rennie’s regime

Source: Radio New Zealand

The All Blacks will have to earn their jersey under new coach Dave Rennie.

On Wednesday, Rennie was announced as All Blacks head coach following weeks of guessing games in the wake of Scott Robertson’s sacking.

Speaking to media for the first time in Auckland this afternoon, Rennie said he will have no loyalties to incumbents and players will be picked purely on form.

Rennie has been away from Aotearoa for several years, most recently spending three seasons in Japan.

Having spent no extended periods with any current All Blacks, Rennie will reward recent performance.

“Whether I was coming back to this role or not, I watch every game of Super Rugby. So I’m not concerned around having an understanding of where players are at, but I’ll watch it closely.

“One advantage is players are going to have to earn the right to wear the jersey. I’ve sort of got no loyalties. I don’t come from a team where I’ve had a lot of these guys previously, and so I think that’s really exciting. We’ll select based on form.”

Dave Rennie will take charge ahead of the All Blacks for the July home series against France, Italy and Ireland. Alan Lee / www.photosport.nz

Rennie is also open at looking overseas for his All Blacks, currently not permitted under the New Zealand eligibility criteria.

“I’ll comment on Brodie Retallick. I get to see him train and play every week. He’s stronger than he’s ever been. He’s fitter than he’s ever been I’m not sure if I’m allowed to, but there’s no doubt you want to win a World Cup, ideally, you’ve got your best players available.

“Obviously Richie’s (Mo’unga) coming back, which would be good. He’s been in great form in Japan. And yeah, look, certainly you have someone like a Brodie Retallick coming into the environment. I reckon it’ll really grow the whole group and if I had the chance to get him back, I’d certainly jump in it.”

No player will be safe under Rennie’s regime, with Scott Barrett no guarantee to stay on as skipper.

“I think you’ve got to work through those things and I’m keen to have a chat with players. I know Scott Barrett is fantastic player and current captain and so I’d be keen to have a chat to him about going forward.”

Rennie saw off Jamie Joseph in the two-man race to replace Scott Robertson.

The 62-year-old will coach through to the 2027 Rugby World Cup.

NZR chairman David Kirk said it went down to the wire between Rennie and Joseph and he told the latter this morning he had missed out.

Rennie said Joseph called him straight afterwards to congratulate him: “I really appreciate his message … that just shows class of the man.”

Rennie got online with his wife and three sons to share the news.

Dave Rennie and NZ Rugby chair David Kirk after Rennie was announced as new All Blacks head coach. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

“The wife was yawning because I woke her up … the boys were really proud … it was pretty special.”

He said his plan was always to return to Palmerston North later this year to spend time more time with family.

“They [his sons] said don’t turn down an opportunity to apply just for us because you’re going to be back in New Zealand anyway. So, I’ll see a lot more of them … their support is massive.”

The former Chiefs and Wallabies head coach will take up the role in June, when the Japanese Rugby League One season ends, where he coaches Kobelco Kobe Steelers.

Rennie said becoming All Blacks coach was his dream job.

“It’s not an easy job to get hold of, there are so many good coaches in New Zealand.”

He said he had no hesitation on taking on the role and all the scrutiny that goes with it.

“Im ready for it, I’ve coached across the world, I’ve worked with some fantastic people and I’ve learnt a lot.

“I’m excited to come back home and do the jersey justice.”

NZ Rugby chair David Kirk said it was down to the wire between Rennie and Jamie Joseph. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

He will take charge ahead of the July home series against France, Italy and Ireland. Rennie has no doubt the All Blacks can win next year’s World Cup.

“It will take a lot of work, it will take a lot of alignment … it’s a sprint from here by the time we start we’ll have about 15 months until the World Cup.”

Rennie said selection would be based on form.

“I guess one advantage is players are going to have to earn their right to wear the jersey, I’ve sort of got no loyalties, I don’t come from a team where I’ve had a lot of these guys previously so I I think that’s really exciting.”

Rennie said he would focus on the All Blacks culture.

“We’ll be really clear on that and that will be driven within.”

NZR will work with Rennie to confirm the wider All Blacks coaching and management team but Rennie said he was keen to bring some people in.

“I’ve got a history of surrounding myself with quality people who can make a difference and I’m keen to do that.”

Kirk said Rennie had a proven track record of building strong performance environments and his clear direction for the team gave them confidence the All Blacks will be well positioned to perform at the Rugby World Cup.

Rennie, who is of Cook Islands descent through his mother, becomes the first All Blacks head coach with Pasifika heritage.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/all-blacks-jersey-to-be-earned-under-new-coach-dave-rennies-regime/

Property owners fined for illegal work on Northland beach

Source: Radio New Zealand

A still from a video taken by a local resident shows a digger at work on the beach at Church Bay, northeast of Whangārei. Supplied

Two waterfront property owners have been fined more than $6000 for carrying out illegal earthworks on a Northland beach.

Reports of a digger moving sand and soil at Church Bay, in Tūtūkākā Harbour, northeast of Whangārei, on 10 February sparked a flurry of complaints from local residents and hapū.

The Northland Regional Council sent inspectors to the bay and ordered a halt to the earthworks, which it said were being carried out without authority on the beach and a reserve administered by the district council.

Regional council regulatory services group manager Colin Dall said one of two property owners involved had since been issued with an abatement notice and three infringement notices, or fines, totalling $4000.

A second property owner had been issued with two fines totalling $2500.

Dall said the abatement notice forbade any further unauthorised disturbance of the beach.

The fines were the standard amount set in the Resource Management Act.

Dall said prompt notification and inspection had stopped the property owners from carrying out further work, which would have resulted in more breaches of the RMA.

He said nature had since taken its course with the scraped area of beach more or less back to its pre-disturbance state.

Dall said the Whangārei District Council was also considering enforcement action relating to earthworks on the beachfront reserve.

At the time, one of the property owners told local media he had acted to prevent further erosion after January’s torrential rainfall, and believed the situation was urgent.

He described the earthworks as “hauling loose sand back up the beach”.

A spokeswoman for local hapū said she was “horrified” by the scale of the damage, which she described as covering an area as large as a rugby field.

The Northern Advocate reported that some locals lay down in front of the digger to stop it.

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Speech to second Pacific Stakeholder Fono

Source: New Zealand Government

Tēnā koutou katoa, and warm Pacific greetings to you all. Thank you for the opportunity to gather for this important fono. 

I want to begin by thanking Reverend Hiueni for opening today’s fono and bringing us together in prayer this morning.  

Thank you also to MC Fuimaono for your welcome and introduction. 

I also acknowledge Public Service Commissioner Sir Brian Roche.  

I also want to greet former parliamentary colleagues Dame Winnie Laban, Aupito William Sio and the Honourable Alfred Ngaro. Thank you for your longstanding commitment to Pacific peoples in New Zealand. 

To our Pacific leaders and public sector leaders, thank you for attending this second Stakeholder Fono and for the valuable insights you shared at the first gathering in November. 

Scene setting 

At the first fono, you heard from senior officials who provided important context about the global, geopolitical and domestic pressures shaping our environment. These forces are changing the face of how we work, how community needs are changing, and how the public sector must respond.  

New Zealand is of the Pacific, and our country is enriched by the strength, culture, and contribution of Pacific peoples. Your success is New Zealand’s success. Pacific communities are among the youngest and fastest-growing in the country. That growth represents enormous potential; for families, for communities, and for the future workforce and economy. 

That is why the Government is focused on delivering practical improvements in the areas that matter most: safer communities, better education, stronger health outcomes, secure housing, and real economic opportunity. 

Delivering for Pacific Communities Strategy 

Not long after the first fono, the Ministry published its Delivering for Pacific Communities Strategy, a practical three-year plan to ensure Pacific peoples benefit directly from government policies and programmes. 

The Strategy focuses on the priorities Pacific communities told us matter most: economic opportunity, health, housing, education, and law and order, the fundamentals that support strong families and thriving communities. 

Across these areas, the Government is committed to delivering real results, not just intentions. 

I will briefly precis these areas of law and order, education, housing, health and economic opportunity. 

Law and order 

Good societies are safe societies. In the 2025 Global Peace Index, New Zealand ranked third highest. Safety is foundational. Pacific peoples are disproportionately affected by crime, and we need to continue to address the drivers and the remedies. 

We have taken strong steps to restore law and order. There were 49,000 fewer victims of violent crime in the year to October 2025 than there were in October 2023. Ram raids are down by 85 per cent and there has also been a 22% drop in serious repeat youth offending compared to when we took office – well ahead of our target of a 15% reduction by 2030. 

Alongside this, we are supporting community-led pacific initiatives that make a difference on the ground. For example, the Government is investing $1 million over four years in the Auckland Pacific Wardens Trust, recognising the vital role Pacific Wardens play in keeping people safe and strengthening community wellbeing. 

Safer communities allow families, businesses, and young people to flourish. 

Education 

Education is the pathway to social mobility and improved quality of life. Social investment insights tell us the huge impact education has on our life’s trajectory. 

Pacific learners, on average, face lower achievement across several indicators. To address this, we are seeing the highest shakeup in education in years. We have mandated one hour each of reading, writing, and maths every day, supported by structured literacy and phonics checks to improve reading outcomes. 

We are already seeing progress. The proportion of new entrants meeting expected phonics levels has risen from 36 per cent to 58 per cent. 

At the same time, programmes such as Tupu Aotearoa are creating pathways into employment, education, and training. We have already exceeded our target, placing more than 1,000 Pacific people into new opportunities. 

I am also encouraged by the huge increase in Pacific People enrolling in tertiary education. 

Investment in STEM is also important to participate in jobs and the workforce of the future. The Toloa Scholarships programme is seeing hundreds of Pacific students supported to carry out study in fields vital to New Zealand’s future. 

Here is where we are cutting new ground with the Ministry. I have ministerial responsibility for the Integrated Data Infrastructure (IDI) and in June I also safely uploaded the largest amount of data ever into the IDI. As part of this I also recently uploaded Toloa Scholarship data into the IDI. The first grant-related data set to ever go into the IDI. This will provide two sets of insights: a look back at the attributes of the recipients, and a look forward to data insights of attributes of success. 

Education is not just for youth but for adult learners also, and programmes such as MSD’s Alo Vaka are helping Pacific adults build skills and economic security, supporting over 300 people into better employment or business opportunities, and helping participating households increase incomes by around $9,000 to $12,000 on average. 

I am also exploring converting the certificates of completion that people receive from the Centre for Pacific Languages into micro-credentials that then sit on their CV for future stacking. This will add immense value. 

Health is closely linked to housing, both of which are key priorities for this Government. 

We have made significant investment into Pacific housing initiatives, totalling $150 million. 

We are cutting some never-trod ground in Pacific health. Healthy Homes is an HNZ initiative directed at improving young people’s health outcomes against ED attendance, and against off-work and off-study impacts.  

Do healthy homes also benefit older people? In 2024, I landed the Pacific Healthy Homes Initiative which for the first time in any agency includes older people in the eligibility criteria. More specifically, Pacific people over 45 years with an ASH condition. We commissioned Otago University for before and after assessments. Initial data concludes older Pacific people benefit from warmer homes.  

The programme is achieving real results, including delivering more than 5,200 interventions to date, such as insulation, heating and minor repairs in Pacific households. 

We are investing $35.9 million to deliver 41 homes through the Pacific Building Affordable Homes Fund, and it has been a privilege to personally open Penina homes in South Auckland, and the Pacific Trust in the Waikato, and providers in New Brighton, Christchurch.  

The Our Whare Our Fale programme in Eastern Porirua, shows the power of partnership between iwi, community organisations, and government to improve economic and health outcomes for families.  

Supported by a substantial $114 million Government investment over three years, it will deliver up to 300 affordable homes by 2034. On assuming the portfolio three years ago, this was still requiring sign off, but for me the vision was impactful and the implementation deliverable. 

I signed it off, and the first stage has already delivered 18 warm, energy-efficient homes and a communal fale, and I was glad to be there with Minister Potaka and Sir Bill English to mark its completion.  

This project will support families into stable homes designed for multigenerational living, with families expected to begin moving in by the end of the year.  

Homes are kept affordable through shared-equity support, perpetual land leases from Ngāti Toa that remove land costs, and construction at cost rather than market rates.  

I want to acknowledge Central Pacific Collective, Te Rūnanga o Toa Rangatira, and the Ministry for Pacific Peoples for their collaboration on Our Whare Our Fale.  

It is an initiative that is delivering real results, with a further 32 homes expected by late 2026 and ongoing employment throughout construction.  

Strong financial capability supports long-term economic resilience and home ownership, which is why the Ministry funds 12 providers to deliver the Financial Capability Programme across New Zealand. 

Since July 2025, 674 individuals completed financial literacy training and 266 were supported with tailored home ownership plans. 

Together, these initiatives enable Pacific families to step into home ownership while also creating Pacific-led construction and employment opportunities. 

The progress in Pacific-led affordable housing reflects the Government’s broader focus on fixing the housing system and enabling long-term supply. 

Alongside this work, the Government is focused on unlocking land for housing, supporting infrastructure, and reducing the barriers and costs that slow down building. 

Health  

Unfortunately, we know that Pacific peoples continue to experience poorer health outcomes, which is why improving frontline health services is a priority. 

Recent results show encouraging progress on the targets that matter most for families: 

  • Childhood immunisation rates at age two have risen to 82.6 per cent, the largest improvement across all targets 
  • Faster cancer treatment, supported by $604 million funding for new medicines 
  • Shorter emergency department stays despite higher demand 
  • Reduced waiting times for specialist appointments and elective procedures  

Our Elective Boost has delivered thousands of additional surgeries that make a real difference to people’s lives – hip and knee replacements, cataract surgeries, and other procedures – helping people return to work, family life, and the activities that give them purpose. 

Economic Opportunity 

Economic growth is central to long-term wellbeing. 

Pacific communities are a powerful driver of New Zealand’s economy, and strengthening Pacific businesses creates jobs and prosperity that benefit everyone. 

Unfortunately, we know Pacific unemployment is unacceptably high. The cost-of-living crisis, an economic downturn and high inflation hit our most vulnerable communities the hardest. 

That is why we have prioritised practical initiatives to support Pacific communities into sustainable employment and economic opportunity.  

Alo Vaka has provided targeted support to over 1,200 individuals and supported more than 300 individuals into better employment. 

We are investing in programmes such as the Pacific Business Trust, which has created hundreds of new jobs. 

Our Toloa Scholarships Programme will see hundreds of secondary students supported through strong education to employment pathways in high growth industries, enabling skills that are critical for the future economy. 

Pacific people already play a vital role across essential industries. Strengthening skills, entrepreneurship and leadership will lift productivity and competitiveness across the country. 

At the same time, this Government is focused on getting the broader economic settings right. Inflation has already more than halved from its peak, easing pressure on families and businesses, and we have lifted the incomes of working households experiencing hardship through tax relief and more affordable childcare. While it is encouraging to see inflation trending downward and pressure beginning to ease, we know there is still more work to do. 

Our young people are our greatest asset and backing them to succeed is essential to building a stronger future for New Zealand. 

Pacific youth are one of the youngest and fastest-growing population groups in New Zealand, and their wellbeing will shape our collective future. 

They carry Pacific languages, cultures, and identities forward. They are not only the leaders of tomorrow, but innovators and change-makers of today. 

I warmly acknowledge our Youth Panel – Lyonah, Tyler, Lupe, and Kaiata. Your perspectives ensure policies remain grounded in lived experience and focused on real opportunities. 

When young people are equipped to thrive, our communities and our economy thrive with them. 

Thriving Pacific communities 

Across all these areas, safety, education, health, housing, and economic opportunity, the goal is the same: strengthening the fundamentals so Pacific families can thrive. 

When communities are safer, children are learning, people can access timely healthcare, families have stable homes, and businesses are growing, the benefits extend far beyond any one group. Strong Pacific communities contribute to a stronger New Zealand. 

Progress takes sustained effort, partnership, and trust. Government can’t do this alone, and we value the leadership and expertise within Pacific communities. 

Lastly, as the previous Ministers here will agree, it’s a great privilege to be the Minister for Pacific Peoples and to be able to engage and support the Pacific community in New Zealand. In this task, I am ably supported by the staff here at the Ministry for Pacific Peoples.  

I know there has been some discussion in the previous months regarding the Ministry for Pacific Peoples and where it sits within the structure of government. I want to be clear with everyone here that I believe it is important that there is strong voice for Pacific peoples within government, both at a ministerial level and within the public service. I am also very proud of the Ministry being in the top agencies or better across a range of public service performance measures reported over the recent months. 

The Prime Minister has said there will be no structural change regarding the ministry in this term of Government. 

That’s not to say that there isn’t room for improvement. This government believes that the entire public service needs to do better to ensure they are truly delivering for the communities they serve. That includes things like improved efficiencies, through use of AI and streamlining back-office services. Others will speak more on this. 

Conclusion  

In closing, thank you for coming here today and prioritising this fono. 

Ngā mihi ki a koutou. 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/speech-to-second-pacific-stakeholder-fono/

Māori-led tech company prepares to go global

Source: New Zealand Government

A Tauranga-based Māori health technology company is expanding into major international markets following support from the Government’s Māori Development Fund, Māori Development Minister Tama Potaka says.

Carepatron, a Māori-led company, has developed an AI-powered clinical support tool integrated into practice management platforms to improve efficiency, accessibility, and scalability for health providers.

“Growing the economy means backing Māori enterprise to scale, export, and compete internationally,” Mr Potaka says.

“Investment from the Māori Development Fund accelerated the development and deployment of Carepatron’s clinical support tool. That support has helped drive a 50 per cent increase in export revenue and positioned the company for continued expansion across North America, the United Kingdom and Europe.

Carepatron’s growth aligns with the objectives of Tōnui Māori | Going for Growth with Māori and the Government’s goal of doubling the value of New Zealand exports over the next decade.

“We are focused on practical steps that lift productivity and strengthen our export performance. Māori businesses are central to that ambition.”

“Building a future for Māori enterprise means investing in capability, innovation and global reach. When Māori businesses succeed offshore, that growth flows back into whānau, hapū, Iwi and regional communities.”

Strengthening Māori participation in high-value sectors such as technology will be key to building a more resilient and outward-looking economy.

“Backing enterprise is a priority for our Government. That means disciplined, targeted investment that delivers measurable results, stronger exports, growing revenue, and a future where Māori enterprise continues to play a leading role in New Zealand’s economic success.”

Note to editors: 

Te Puni Kōkiri administers the Māori Development Fund and invested $250,000 to accelerate the development and deployment of Carepatron’s AI Clinical Support Co-Pilot. Carepatron invested an equivalent amount.
Organisations applying to the Māori Development Fund must fit funding priorities, meet criteria and be able to report on outcomes achieved. See www.tpk.govt.nz for more information.
More information about Tōnui Māori is also available here.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/maori-led-tech-company-prepares-to-go-global/

First look inside the new Wellington Library

Source: Radio New Zealand

Walking through the Victoria Street entrance of Te Matapihi ki te Ao Nui, at first glance the library is the same yet different. 

There are hundreds of thousands of books, metal bridges and escalators from before. But beyond that, the revamped library offers a whole new host of creative spaces and technologies.

The new library has more places to read, relax and gather, says redesign project leader Gisella Carr.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/first-look-inside-the-new-wellington-library/

‘It’s in the blood for many of us’ – Wairarapa welcomes the world to the World Shearing Champs

Source: Radio New Zealand

One hundred and fifty shearers and woolhandlers representing 27 countries were welcomed to Masterton with a pōwhiri, which kicked off the 2026 Golden Shears.

The pressure at this year’s competition, which runs from Wednesday to Saturday, will be a bit higher as it coincides with the World Premier Shearing and Wool Handling Championships, which were last hosted in Wairarapa in 2012.

Woolhandler Joel Henare (Te Aitanga a Hauiti) is going for a third World individual woolhandling title and a 12th consecutive Golden Shears Open Woolhandling title.

“This is the Olympics in the shearing world and just anyone who’s good at this and takes it to another level, they’ll be here, you know, putting on and displaying these skills,” he said.

Joel Henare. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

New Zealand has one of the highest standards of sheep shearing and wool preparation standards in the world, with the quality of wool preparation as the backbone of that standard, but the rest of the world is catching up, he said.

“Eighty percent of our industry is predominantly Māori… The sheep first came to Tairāwhiti in 1769 with James Cook. So, that’s how long sheep have been around. And we’ve been preparing the wool fibre to fabric market for the world.”

The championships are centred on the Masterton War Memorial Stadium, but some early stages are being held in a marquee across the road in Queen Elizabeth Park, as organisers cope with a programme of 29 World Championships and the annual Golden Shears event – over 600 competitors in total, with more than 6000 sheep to be shorn.

Joel Henare at the Golden Shears last year, winning the Open woolhandling title for an 11th time. Pete Nikolaison / supplied

Pou Tikanga of Rangitāne o Wairarapa Mike Kawana said Golden Shears has been a part of the area for a long, long time.

It’s always a great time for local whānau to come together and be a part of a kaupapa that brings people from all over the country in most years, but this year, bringing people together from all over the world, he said.

“Our Māori whānau around here are very apt and very skilled in all aspects of the shearing world and I have my own connections as well. My dad was a shearer and some of my uncles, of course, so it’s in the blood for many of us.

“So, exciting to have occasions such as this where we see people from all walks of life and all over the whenua, all over the motu, and all over te ao nei, hui mai mō te kaupapa.”

Mike Kawana at the 2026 Golden Shears pōwhiri. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Kawana said the Māori community in Wairarapa has often had a part to play in the Golden Shears over the years in different aspects, but the local whānau are always pleased to be able to be a part of the occasion.

It’s been an exciting start to 2026 for Wairarapa with local kapa haka group Te Rangiura o Wairarapa taking out first place at the Ngāti Kahungunu regional kapa haka competition in Waipukurau in February, he said.

Te Rangiura o Wairarapa will represent the region at Te Matatini 2027.

The 2026 Golden Shears pōwhiri. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

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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/2026/03/04/its-in-the-blood-for-many-of-us-wairarapa-welcomes-the-world-to-the-world-shearing-champs/

Amnesty International Update – Urgent call to protect civilians and respect international law amid escalating regional conflict following US and Israeli attacks on Iran

Source: Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand

Amid rapid expansion of regional hostilities across the Middle East following the ongoing joint United States-Israel attacks on Iran and the subsequent wave of Iranian retaliatory attacks across the region, Amnesty International is issuing an urgent call on all parties to protect civilians, adhere to international humanitarian law, in particular by ending unlawful attacks, such as deliberate, indiscriminate or disproportionate attacks on civilians and civilians infrastructures.
Military operations have spread across the region and now involve more than 10 countries. They have already resulted in significant loss of civilian life and destruction of civilian infrastructure. Israel has escalated its attacks on Lebanon in the past 24 hours in response to Hezbollah’s attacks. The US has said that “the hardest hits are yet to come”. Iran has warned of further intensification and insecurity across the whole region following the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader and commander-in-chief Ali Khamenei.
“Civilians should not pay the price for the unlawful and reckless acts by parties to the conflict, ravaging the principles of humanity and distinction at the heart of international humanitarian law and threatening the very foundations of international peace and security. The stakes could not be higher. Across the region, civilians have already endured successive cycles of conflict and mass violations and crimes under international law. Their protection should now be the top priority. Instead, they are facing more senseless killings and repression,” said Agnès Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty International.
“Parties to the conflict must immediately refrain from and cease unlawful attacks, whether direct attacks on civilians, indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks, or the use of explosive weapons with wide area effects in densely populated areas. They must take all feasible precautions to prevent civilian harm.
“As the threat of a protracted international conflict grows, compliance with international human rights law and international humanitarian law is more urgent than ever. Any failure to uphold these obligations will intensify an already devastating human toll and push the region even further towards another humanitarian and human rights catastrophe.”
Attacks on Iran and Iran’s response
On 3 March the Iranian Red Crescent Society, reported that 787 people have been killed in Iran since the attacks began. On 28 February 2026, according to the Iranian authorities around 150 school children were among 165 people killed when a school in the southern city of Minab, Hormozgan province, was struck. The UN has described the bombing of this school as a ‘ grave violation of humanitarian law’, with UNESCO warning that attacks on educational institutions endanger students and teachers and undermine the protections guaranteed under international humanitarian law. The UN Human Rights Office has called for a prompt, impartial and thorough investigation into the “horrific” incident.
Amnesty International verified six videos from the aftermath of the strike that impacted the school, which show black smoke rising from the partially collapsed building and rescuers and excavators searching through the rubble for victims. Footage filmed from the school entrance shows walls marking the parameter of the school yard and building, with smoke visible in the background from the direction of a nearby Iranian Revolutionary Guards Compound.
According to the head of the Medical Council of Iran, 10 medical centres have been damaged by the Israeli and US attacks. Hospitals in Iran have already been subjected to militarized raids by Iran’s security forces who committed widespread human rights violations against injured protesters and medical workers during and in the aftermath of the protest massacres in January 2026.
The Iranian authorities shut down access to the internet again on 28 February, preventing millions of people from accessing essential information about armed hostilities and communicating with loved ones inside and outside the country, and suppressing the flow of information about violations of international humanitarian and human rights law.
The armed conflict has intensified concerns about the fate and safety of prisoners across Iran, including the thousands of protesters and dissidents arrested in connection with the January 2026 uprising. These concerns stem from reports by human rights defenders of explosions near prisons and other facilities where prisoners are held as well as Israel’s previous attack on Tehran’s Evin prison during the 12-day war.
Human rights defenders are also expressing fears that the Iranian authorities have often used armed conflict as pretext to subject dissidents to intensified patterns of torture and other ill-treatment as well as summary, arbitrary or extrajudicial executions. Amnesty International calls on the Iranian authorities to immediately release all those arbitrarily detained and take effective measures to secure the safety of all other prisoners, including through temporary release on humanitarian grounds. Concerns for the rights of people in Iran are compounded by the Iranian authorities’ well-documented record to repeated crimes under international law and other serious human rights violations, including during successive lethal crackdowns to eradicate dissent. On 8-9 January, Iranian authorities carried out unprecedented massacres of thousands of protesters and bystanders during anti-establishment protests calling for an end to the Islamic Republic.
Iranian authorities responded to US and Israeli attacks with missile and unmanned aerial vehicle attack in Israel and across the Gulf region, including in the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman and Saudi Arabia.
Media reports and official government statements indicate that some of the attacks, including as a result of falling debris from intercepted missiles or drones, led to some deaths, injuries or damage to civilian infrastructure. According to the authorities in Abu Dhabi, an Iranian drone targeting Zayed International Airport (AUH) was intercepted, leading to “falling debris” killing one person and injuring seven. On 2 March, both the Qatari and Saudi authorities claimed their oil facilities were targeted by the Iranians, and a Gulf Cooperation Council statement condemned “indiscriminate and reckless missile and drone attacks.”
In Israel, according to media and rescue agencies, at least 10 people have been killed and tens injured as a result of Iranian attacks. This includes nine people killed and more than 20 injured in Beit Shemesh after an Iranian ballistic missile strike, as well as the death of a woman in the Tel Aviv area from falling shrapnel. Iranian strikes also damaged at least 40 buildings in Tel Aviv, according to local authorities.
Israel has escalated severe restrictions on movement across the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), effectively blocking movement between villages and towns in the occupied West Bank including East Jerusalem. The authorities have also closed all external crossings into and out of the OPT including Kerem Shalom/ Karem Abu Salem and Rafah crossings blocking lifesaving aid and effectively placing the entire Gaza Strip under siege. Kerem Shalom/Karem Abu Salem was reopened on 3 March.
These arbitrary measures are gravely exacerbating the suffering of Palestinians living under Israel’s unlawful occupation and apartheid and are further compounding the multi-layered humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where Palestinians are still living through Israel’s ongoing genocide.
In Iraq, a faction [Saraya Awliya Al-Dam] of the Iran-aligned militia groups, calling itself the Islamic Resistance, has claimed responsibility for multiple drone attacks on Erbil in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and later in the capital Baghdad, primarily targeting US military facilities. According to Kurdish Iranian opposition groups, drone strikes have targeted their positions in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq following warnings from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Escalation between Hezbollah and Israel in Lebanon
Following Hezbollah rocket attacks on northern Israel, which the group said was retaliation for Khamenei’s killing, the Israeli military significantly escalated its attacks on Lebanon, including the suburbs of Beirut, overnight on 2 March. Israeli air strikes in Lebanon had killed at least 40 people and injured 246, according to the Lebanese authorities, by 3 March. Before the recent escalation and since the November 2024 ceasefire agreement, Israel had been carrying out near daily attacks in the south of Lebanon, killing more than 380 people, including 127 civilians.
A new, mass “evacuation” warning, issued by the Israeli authorities after midnight on 2 March, has again displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians across Lebanon. The vague and broad warning covered more than 50 villages across the country’s south and east, and led to panic, clogged roads and another round of displacement for many. Additional broad mass evacuation warnings were issued early on 3 March ordering people in dozens of additional villages in southern Lebanon to leave their homes and expanding the area under threat.
On 2 March, the Israeli military said it would strike Hezbollah-affiliated financial institutions in multiple locations across Lebanon, then did. Israel previously targeted branches of the Hezbollah-affiliated financial institution in October 2024, which Amnesty International described as a likely violation of international humanitarian law, calling for such attacks to be investigated as a war crime.
International humanitarian law strictly prohibits direct attacks on civilians and civilian objects, as well as indiscriminate strikes that fail to distinguish between civilians and civilian object and combatants and military objectives, and disproportionate attacks. Aerial attacks impacting schools, medical facilities or residential buildings, as well as the firing of ballistic missiles and other explosive weapons with wide area effects into densely populated areas, raise grave concerns of possible violations of international humanitarian law.
Amnesty International is closely monitoring the situation and call on all parties to adhere to international humanitarian law. In instances of civilian death, injury and infrastructure harm, parties should initiate immediate investigations and hold anyone responsible for violations of international law to account.
“The escalating crisis in the Middle East poses a grave threat to multilateralism and to the integrity of the international legal order. Unlawful acts by parties to the conflict, particularly those committed by influential states, not only endanger civilians across multiple countries, but also accelerate the erosion of the global norms that are essential for the protection of human rights and global peace and security,” said Agnès Callamard.
“It is imperative that all parties take urgent measures to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure, including airports, hospitals, residential buildings, schools and prisons. They must also ensure safe and unhindered humanitarian access to all affected areas and enable independent international monitoring.
“We call on the international community to intensify diplomatic efforts to prevent further military escalation to avert additional civilian harm, and halt any further crimes under international law against populations who have already endured decades of repression. In line with international law, states must exercise the utmost restraint, refrain from any conduct that could fuel further violations, and remember that they have clear obligations not to aid or assist internationally wrongful acts, as well as a duty to cooperate to bring such breaches to an end.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/amnesty-international-update-urgent-call-to-protect-civilians-and-respect-international-law-amid-escalating-regional-conflict-following-us-and-israeli-attacks-on-iran/

Exports up more than $2b – powering economy

Source: New Zealand Government

New Zealand’s latest international trade statistics show robust performance across global markets, reflecting the skill, innovation, and resilience of Kiwi exporters who continue to rank among the best in the world, Trade and Investment Minister Hon Todd McClay says. 

Exports rose to $29.2 billion for the December quarter, up $2.2 billion on the same period last year, reinforcing the vital role trade plays in supporting the New Zealand economy, with one in four Kiwi jobs linked to trade.

The figures, released today, also show two-way trade increased strongly reaching $61.2 billion for this quarter.

“New Zealand exporters are winning in highly competitive global markets,” Mr McClay says. 

“Our farmers and growers are recognised internationally for their quality, reliability, and innovation. And these results are a testament to that.”

Of our top exports, the highest performers were dairy (up 10%), tourism (up 9.4%) and meat (up 21.4%) for the December quarter, compared to the same period last year.

Mr McClay says the latest data demonstrates the importance of open markets and strong trading relationships, particularly at a time of trade disruption and ongoing global economic uncertainty.

“Trade is a cornerstone of our economy. It supports jobs, drives higher incomes, and underpins growth in regions right across the country,” Mr McClay says.

“The Government is focused on backing exporters, reducing barriers at the border, strengthening our network of free trade agreements, and ensuring New Zealand businesses have the confidence and capability to succeed internationally.”

“As global conditions evolve, this Government remains committed to trade as a key driver of economic growth and prosperity for New Zealanders.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/exports-up-more-than-2b-powering-economy/

Plan to mitigate stench from Christchurch treatment plant must avoid sewage washing up on beaches – community leader

Source: Radio New Zealand

Bromley wastewater treatment plant.

A community leader has urged the Christchurch City Council to avoid any chance of sewage washing up on the city’s beaches.

His comments came after Christchurch mayor Phil Mauger announced the council was considering pumping 30 percent of the city’s sewage – partially treated – into the ocean to mitigate the putrid odour plaguing the city’s eastern suburbs.

The city council was last week [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/588155/abatement-notice-issued-over-stench-from-canterbury-sewage-treatment-plant

h it with an abatement notice] after Canterbury Regional Council received more than 4500 complaints about the stench coming from the Bromley wastewater treatment plant in the past month.

Christchurch mayor Phil Mauger. RNZ/Nathan Mckinnon

Local community board chairman Paul McMahon told councillors on Wednesday he supported investigating anything that would reduce the load on the damaged treatment plant, but he did not want to see other environments ruined as a result.

“It can’t end with solids being washed up on the beach, nor in environmental damage, and it cannot create another problem downstream,” McMahon said.

The eastern suburbs have been plagued by the foul odour since a huge fire damaged the plant in 2021. Other parts of the city have been hit as the smell became markedly worse and more widespread this year.

The council had said the spike in odour was due to high rainfall.

Residents pushed back on that claim, saying in the past the council had said heavy rain helped improve pond health and reduce the odour.

McMahon raised concerns about the stench becoming worse.

“We’re also concerned that the rapid drop in temperatures we’ve seen recently with a lot of rain is going to lead to another spike, so I hope we’re prepared for that eventuality,” he said.

The regional council has expressed surprise at the plan floated by Mauger to partially screen then pump around 30 per cent of the city’s sewage out to sea.

A city council spokesperson and the mayor said the proposal has been discussed with the regional council.

On Tuesday, community board deputy chairwoman Jackie Simons told RNZ she had only heard of the proposal the day prior.

“It’s not good enough. I should have known that this was in the winds weeks ago,” Simons said.

“It’s uncomfortable for everyone and the fact that I don’t get information ahead of time – it’s frustrating.”

Asked during Wednesday’s meeting whether he expected to get a briefing on the mayor’s proposal, McMahon said that should be a normal part of the process.

Councillor Yani Johanson asked council head of Three Waters Gavin Hutchinson when elected members could expect to get a briefing on the proposal the mayor had put forward.

Hutchinson said no date had been set.

He confirmed any outfall would be in place until the new activated sludge plant was up and running, which was expected to be in mid to late 2028.

Odour testing would be uploaded directly to the council website from next week, allowing the public to check new results and search for historical data, Hutchinson said.

The council had not purchased additional odour monitors for installation in the community but had obtained some for the ponds that would give more warning of increased odour, he said.

In a response to questions from RNZ regarding the definition of partially treated, the council said partial treatment meant sewage went through much of the treatment process – including screening and the temporary activated sludge process – but, instead of being sent to the ponds to reduce bacteria, the effluent would be chlorinated and mixed with treated effluent before being pumped into the ocean.

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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/2026/03/04/plan-to-mitigate-stench-from-christchurch-treatment-plant-must-avoid-sewage-washing-up-on-beaches-community-leader/

Former financial adviser fined $15,000, investors remain out of pocket

Source: Radio New Zealand

David McEwen. Screenshot / YouTube

A former financial adviser has been convicted and fined $15,000 for breaching a banning order by the financial markets regulator, but investors remain out of pocket.

David McEwen was convicted of four charges of breaching a 2023 Financial Markets Authority stop order at the Auckland District Court.

He left the country in 2023, criminal charges were filed in March 2025, and was sentenced in absentia on Wednesday.

The convictions came after McEwen pleaded guilty in November 2025.

He has also been banned from being a director or promoter, or being involved in the management of a New Zealand company and providing financial advice services for seven years.

His application for a discharge without conviction was dismissed.

The FMA said he breached the stop order in three ways, including offering and issuing financial products relating to an entity McEwen incorporated in Singapore.

It said investors made $173,000 in payments in response to the offers.

What happened to that money remains unclear, as McEwen remains out of the country and out of the FMA’s jurisdiction, with investors losing thousands of dollars.

He also issued units in an investment vehicle called International Opportunities Partnership, which was created after the stop order was made.

The FMA said the units replaced – without investor consent – financial products that investors held relating to other entities associated with McEwen.

In return, he asked investors for an administration fee. The FMA said investors paid $17,000 to McEwen for the fee.

McEwen also offered and issued financial products, and restricted communications, related to a company called Agtech 3, which fell under the stop order.

“We were concerned about the substance of the representations he was making about the offer of the financial products to clients,” FMA head of enforcement Margot Gatland said.

“We focus our enforcement actions on preventing and addressing significant harm to consumers, markets and our financial system,” Gatland said.

“Mr McEwen breached our Stop Order in various ways almost immediately after it was made, after he had left New Zealand.”

McEwen was a business journalist prior to his investment career, and worked for well-known publications, including the Financial Times, National Business Review and Reuters.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/former-financial-adviser-fined-15000-investors-remain-out-of-pocket/

Lifestyle – ExerciseNZ CEO Slams Removal of Physical Activity Benefit by Southern Cross!

Source: Exercise NZ

“Regular physical activity is one of the most powerful things a person can do to improve their long-term health and wellbeing. In terms of increasing life expectancy, it sits second only to not smoking.”

“There are many examples globally where insurers contribute towards the cost of people being active because healthier members ultimately mean lower long-term healthcare costs. It’s a genuine win-win.”

“If we are serious about preventative health in New Zealand, supporting more people to be physically active needs to be part of the solution.”

Exercise New Zealand has criticised the decision by Southern Cross Health Society to remove its physical activity reimbursement from member policies, saying the move removes one of the few incentives within private health insurance that encourages people to invest in their own health preventatively.

Exercise New Zealand CEO Richard Beddie says while the benefit itself was relatively small, its removal sends the wrong signal at a time when improving physical activity levels should be a national priority.

“Regular physical activity is one of the most powerful things a person can do to improve their long-term health and wellbeing. In terms of increasing life expectancy, it sits second only to not smoking.”

The World Health Organization reports that people who are insufficiently active have a 20–30% higher risk of death compared with those who meet recommended activity levels. Recent research published in The Lancet also estimates that 7–9% of deaths globally are attributable to physical inactivity, making it one of the leading preventable causes of death worldwide.

Exercise New Zealand notes that many insurers internationally actively support physical activity among their members, often contributing towards gym memberships, exercise programmes, or other activity incentives, because healthier populations reduce long-term healthcare costs.

Beddie says the organisation would welcome the opportunity to work with Southern Cross to explore how insurers can better support preventative health through physical activity.

“There are many examples globally where insurers contribute towards the cost of people being active because healthier members ultimately mean lower long-term healthcare costs. It’s a genuine win-win.”

Exercise New Zealand says stronger collaboration between insurers and the exercise sector could play an important role in improving physical activity levels across Aotearoa and strengthening preventative health outcomes.

“If we are serious about preventative health in New Zealand, supporting more people to be physically active needs to be part of the solution.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/lifestyle-exercisenz-ceo-slams-removal-of-physical-activity-benefit-by-southern-cross/

Homelessness – Out of sight is not a solution

Source: Hapai Te Hauora

Aotearoa cannot enforce its way out of homelessness.
The Government’s proposed changes to the Summary Offences Act would expand Police powers to issue move-on orders requiring people to leave a public space for up to 24 hours. These powers would apply to rough sleeping, begging and behaviour deemed disorderly, including for young people aged 14 and over.
At Hāpai Te Hauora, we are concerned that this approach focuses on visibility rather than cause.
“Using move-on orders may reduce what is seen in parts of the CBD, but it does not reduce homelessness,” says Jason Alexander, Chief Operating Officer at Hāpai Te Hauora.
“It shifts the problem without addressing why people are there in the first place.”
The real question: Why are people becoming homeless?
People do not become homeless overnight.
Homelessness is driven by housing shortages, rising rents, income insecurity, family violence, unmet mental health needs and long-standing structural inequities. It is the visible outcome of deeper instability.
In the past year, homelessness in Auckland has more than doubled. At the same time, one in seven tamariki in Aotearoa are living in material hardship.
These realities are connected.
When families are forced to choose between rent and food, when incomes fail to meet living costs, and when housing supply cannot meet demand, homelessness increases. Moving people away from a particular location does not change those conditions.
It may change what is visible in parts of the city. But it does not address the causes.
Māori are significantly overrepresented in homelessness statistics in Aotearoa.
While Māori make up around 17 percent of the population, they account for roughly 31 percent of people experiencing severe housing deprivation.
That disparity does not happen by accident.
It reflects uneven access to stable housing, income security and rental opportunities. Māori households are more likely to experience overcrowding and insecure housing, and research has also identified discrimination in the rental market, where applicants with Māori-identifying names receive fewer responses from landlords.
When housing becomes scarce and expensive, those already facing these barriers are the first to feel the pressure.
Jacqui Harema, Chief Executive of Hāpai Te Hauora, says the statistics point to deeper structural issues.
“When Māori are consistently overrepresented in homelessness statistics, it tells us the housing system is not delivering equitable outcomes,” she says.
“The response needs to focus on the drivers of homelessness.”
Housing is widely recognised as a fundamental human right. When Māori experience homelessness at disproportionate rates, it signals a system that is not working fairly for everyone.
Forcibly removing people experiencing homelessness, many of whom are Māori, to present a more curated image of the CBD raises important questions about whose wellbeing is prioritised. It also reinforces the historical pattern of contempt for the partnership embodied by Te Tiriti o Waitangi.
Move-on orders may change what is visible in certain areas. But they do not:
  • Provide housing
  • Increase income
  • Connect people to care
  • Reduce trauma
  • Prevent future homelessness
They displace people who are already vulnerable.
Homelessness is not a public nuisance to be managed. It is a public health issue to be addressed.
Public safety and public wellbeing are not competing goals. Communities are safer when whānau are housed, supported and connected. Stability reduces harm. Visibility alone does not create it.
These proposed changes have not yet progressed into law. But the framing of homelessness as something to be moved along rather than resolved has consequences.
When policy focuses on appearances rather than underlying drivers, it risks deepening instability for those already at risk.
“We should be asking what is pushing people into homelessness, not how quickly we can move them away from view,” says Alexander.
“Real progress comes from addressing causes, not symptoms.”
At Hāpai Te Hauora, we believe homelessness is not the problem itself, but a signal that our housing and income systems are failing whānau.
Moving people out of sight is not a solution.
We will continue to advocate for responses that address the root causes of homelessness and reduce harm, particularly for Māori and other communities disproportionately affected.
When whānau have stability, our entire community thrives. 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/homelessness-out-of-sight-is-not-a-solution/

Environment – Drone Spraying of Glyphosate Over Endangered Species Habitat at Te Henga Goes Ahead Despite Environment Court Appeal

Source: Flora and Fauna of Aotearoa

Flora and Fauna of Aotearoa is expressing deep alarm following confirmation that aerial drone spraying of glyphosate based herbicides (GBHs) has proceeded over the nationally significant wetlands of Te Henga — despite a last-minute application to the Environment Court of New Zealand seeking to halt the operation.

The spraying, which is aimed at targeting willow, has taken place in habitat known to support critically endangered long-tailed bats and matuku (Australasian bittern), within one of West Auckland’s most ecologically sensitive wetland systems.

This is reportedly the second year of a three-year aerial campaign to control the willow trees in the wetland, and is being carried out by the private environmental group Matuku Link in the public conservation area. The local community has twice prevented aerial spraying in this area due to major ecological and health concerns – including a successfully high court injunction in 2010 against Auckland Regional Council.

“This is shocking,” said Asha Andersen, spokesperson for Flora and Fauna of Aotearoa. “We are talking about the aerial application of glyphosate — a highly controversial agrichemical — by drone, directly over waterways and wetlands of national significance, and within the habitat of some of Aotearoa’s most endangered species.”

According to information confirmed by the Weed Management Advisory, an application for an interim enforcement order was lodged with the Environment Court last week to immediately stop the spraying. Despite this, and many other questions around its legitimacy the operation went ahead.

Flora and Fauna of Aotearoa says this raises serious questions about transparency, due process, social license and ecological risk.

“Conservation organisations should not be putting endangered species at risk,” Ms. Andersen said. “Their mandate is to protect biodiversity, not expose critically threatened wildlife to aerial pesticide applications in sensitive wetland habitats. When conservation work begins to mirror the very practices communities are concerned about, trust is eroded.”

Flora and Fauna of Aotearoa understands that Auckland Council had previously suspended aspects of the consent process for this year’s spraying on advice from the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment. Yet aerial spraying with glyphosate has now reportedly resumed with more to come on Friday 6th March.

Glyphosate, widely known under the trade name Roundup, remains a subject of international debate regarding environmental and health impacts. Its aerial application over wetlands raises additional concerns about spray drift, contamination of waterways, and impacts on non-target species including people and properties.

Flora and Fauna of Aotearoa is calling for:

An immediate halt to all aerial pesticide spraying in the Te Henga wetlands while legal proceedings are underway.
Full public disclosure of the consent status and decision-making process.
An independent ecological review of impacts on endangered bats, bittern, and wetland ecosystems.
Genuine community consultation before any further willow treatment is undertaken.

“Public conservation land must be managed with the highest level of care and accountability,” Flora and Fauna’s Ms. Andersen said. “People deserve to know what is happening in their wetlands — and endangered wildlife deserve better than to be caught in the fallout of controversial chemical operations.”

The people of West Auckland have a long history of standing up for their environment. They deserve answers.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/environment-drone-spraying-of-glyphosate-over-endangered-species-habitat-at-te-henga-goes-ahead-despite-environment-court-appeal/

Amnesty International – Urgent call to protect civilians and respect international law amid escalating regional conflict following US and Israeli attacks on Iran

Source: Amnesty International Aotearoa New Zealand

Amid rapid expansion of regional hostilities across the Middle East following the ongoing joint United States-Israel attacks on Iran and the subsequent wave of Iranian retaliatory attacks across the region, Amnesty International is issuing an urgent call on all parties to protect civilians, adhere to international humanitarian law, in particular by ending unlawful attacks, such as deliberate, indiscriminate or disproportionate attacks on civilians and civilians infrastructures.
Military operations have spread across the region and now involve more than 10 countries. They have already resulted in significant loss of civilian life and destruction of civilian infrastructure. Israel has escalated its attacks on Lebanon in the past 24 hours in response to Hezbollah’s attacks. The US has said that “the hardest hits are yet to come”. Iran has warned of further intensification and insecurity across the whole region following the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader and commander-in-chief Ali Khamenei.
“Civilians should not pay the price for the unlawful and reckless acts by parties to the conflict, ravaging the principles of humanity and distinction at the heart of international humanitarian law and threatening the very foundations of international peace and security. The stakes could not be higher. Across the region, civilians have already endured successive cycles of conflict and mass violations and crimes under international law. Their protection should now be the top priority. Instead, they are facing more senseless killings and repression,” said Agnès Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty International.
“Parties to the conflict must immediately refrain from and cease unlawful attacks, whether direct attacks on civilians, indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks, or the use of explosive weapons with wide area effects in densely populated areas. They must take all feasible precautions to prevent civilian harm.
“As the threat of a protracted international conflict grows, compliance with international human rights law and international humanitarian law is more urgent than ever. Any failure to uphold these obligations will intensify an already devastating human toll and push the region even further towards another humanitarian and human rights catastrophe.”
Attacks on Iran and Iran’s response
On 3 March the Iranian Red Crescent Society, reported that 787 people have been killed in Iran since the attacks began. On 28 February 2026, according to the Iranian authorities around 150 school children were among 165 people killed when a school in the southern city of Minab, Hormozgan province, was struck. The UN has described the bombing of this school as a ‘ grave violation of humanitarian law’, with UNESCO warning that attacks on educational institutions endanger students and teachers and undermine the protections guaranteed under international humanitarian law. The UN Human Rights Office has called for a prompt, impartial and thorough investigation into the “horrific” incident.
Amnesty International verified six videos from the aftermath of the strike that impacted the school, which show black smoke rising from the partially collapsed building and rescuers and excavators searching through the rubble for victims. Footage filmed from the school entrance shows walls marking the parameter of the school yard and building, with smoke visible in the background from the direction of a nearby Iranian Revolutionary Guards Compound.
According to the head of the Medical Council of Iran, 10 medical centres have been damaged by the Israeli and US attacks. Hospitals in Iran have already been subjected to militarized raids by Iran’s security forces who committed widespread human rights violations against injured protesters and medical workers during and in the aftermath of the protest massacres in January 2026.
The Iranian authorities shut down access to the internet again on 28 February, preventing millions of people from accessing essential information about armed hostilities and communicating with loved ones inside and outside the country, and suppressing the flow of information about violations of international humanitarian and human rights law.
The armed conflict has intensified concerns about the fate and safety of prisoners across Iran, including the thousands of protesters and dissidents arrested in connection with the January 2026 uprising. These concerns stem from reports by human rights defenders of explosions near prisons and other facilities where prisoners are held as well as Israel’s previous attack on Tehran’s Evin prison during the 12-day war.
Human rights defenders are also expressing fears that the Iranian authorities have often used armed conflict as pretext to subject dissidents to intensified patterns of torture and other ill-treatment as well as summary, arbitrary or extrajudicial executions. Amnesty International calls on the Iranian authorities to immediately release all those arbitrarily detained and take effective measures to secure the safety of all other prisoners, including through temporary release on humanitarian grounds. Concerns for the rights of people in Iran are compounded by the Iranian authorities’ well-documented record to repeated crimes under international law and other serious human rights violations, including during successive lethal crackdowns to eradicate dissent. On 8-9 January, Iranian authorities carried out unprecedented massacres of thousands of protesters and bystanders during anti-establishment protests calling for an end to the Islamic Republic.
Iranian authorities responded to US and Israeli attacks with missile and unmanned aerial vehicle attack in Israel and across the Gulf region, including in the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman and Saudi Arabia.
Media reports and official government statements indicate that some of the attacks, including as a result of falling debris from intercepted missiles or drones, led to some deaths, injuries or damage to civilian infrastructure. According to the authorities in Abu Dhabi, an Iranian drone targeting Zayed International Airport (AUH) was intercepted, leading to “falling debris” killing one person and injuring seven. On 2 March, both the Qatari and Saudi authorities claimed their oil facilities were targeted by the Iranians, and a Gulf Cooperation Council statement condemned “indiscriminate and reckless missile and drone attacks.”
In Israel, according to media and rescue agencies, at least 10 people have been killed and tens injured as a result of Iranian attacks. This includes nine people killed and more than 20 injured in Beit Shemesh after an Iranian ballistic missile strike, as well as the death of a woman in the Tel Aviv area from falling shrapnel. Iranian strikes also damaged at least 40 buildings in Tel Aviv, according to local authorities.
Israel has escalated severe restrictions on movement across the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), effectively blocking movement between villages and towns in the occupied West Bank including East Jerusalem. The authorities have also closed all external crossings into and out of the OPT including Kerem Shalom/ Karem Abu Salem and Rafah crossings blocking lifesaving aid and effectively placing the entire Gaza Strip under siege. Kerem Shalom/Karem Abu Salem was reopened on 3 March.
These arbitrary measures are gravely exacerbating the suffering of Palestinians living under Israel’s unlawful occupation and apartheid and are further compounding the multi-layered humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where Palestinians are still living through Israel’s ongoing genocide.
In Iraq, a faction [Saraya Awliya Al-Dam] of the Iran-aligned militia groups, calling itself the Islamic Resistance, has claimed responsibility for multiple drone attacks on Erbil in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and later in the capital Baghdad, primarily targeting US military facilities. According to Kurdish Iranian opposition groups, drone strikes have targeted their positions in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq following warnings from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Escalation between Hezbollah and Israel in Lebanon
Following Hezbollah rocket attacks on northern Israel, which the group said was retaliation for Khamenei’s killing, the Israeli military significantly escalated its attacks on Lebanon, including the suburbs of Beirut, overnight on 2 March. Israeli air strikes in Lebanon had killed at least 40 people and injured 246, according to the Lebanese authorities, by 3 March. Before the recent escalation and since the November 2024 ceasefire agreement, Israel had been carrying out near daily attacks in the south of Lebanon, killing more than 380 people, including 127 civilians.
A new, mass “evacuation” warning, issued by the Israeli authorities after midnight on 2 March, has again displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians across Lebanon. The vague and broad warning covered more than 50 villages across the country’s south and east, and led to panic, clogged roads and another round of displacement for many. Additional broad mass evacuation warnings were issued early on 3 March ordering people in dozens of additional villages in southern Lebanon to leave their homes and expanding the area under threat.
On 2 March, the Israeli military said it would strike Hezbollah-affiliated financial institutions in multiple locations across Lebanon, then did. Israel previously targeted branches of the Hezbollah-affiliated financial institution in October 2024, which Amnesty International described as a likely violation of international humanitarian law, calling for such attacks to be investigated as a war crime.
International humanitarian law strictly prohibits direct attacks on civilians and civilian objects, as well as indiscriminate strikes that fail to distinguish between civilians and civilian object and combatants and military objectives, and disproportionate attacks. Aerial attacks impacting schools, medical facilities or residential buildings, as well as the firing of ballistic missiles and other explosive weapons with wide area effects into densely populated areas, raise grave concerns of possible violations of international humanitarian law.
Amnesty International is closely monitoring the situation and call on all parties to adhere to international humanitarian law. In instances of civilian death, injury and infrastructure harm, parties should initiate immediate investigations and hold anyone responsible for violations of international law to account.
“The escalating crisis in the Middle East poses a grave threat to multilateralism and to the integrity of the international legal order. Unlawful acts by parties to the conflict, particularly those committed by influential states, not only endanger civilians across multiple countries, but also accelerate the erosion of the global norms that are essential for the protection of human rights and global peace and security,” said Agnès Callamard.
“It is imperative that all parties take urgent measures to protect civilians and civilian infrastructure, including airports, hospitals, residential buildings, schools and prisons. They must also ensure safe and unhindered humanitarian access to all affected areas and enable independent international monitoring.
“We call on the international community to intensify diplomatic efforts to prevent further military escalation to avert additional civilian harm, and halt any further crimes under international law against populations who have already endured decades of repression. In line with international law, states must exercise the utmost restraint, refrain from any conduct that could fuel further violations, and remember that they have clear obligations not to aid or assist internationally wrongful acts, as well as a duty to cooperate to bring such breaches to an end.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/04/amnesty-international-urgent-call-to-protect-civilians-and-respect-international-law-amid-escalating-regional-conflict-following-us-and-israeli-attacks-on-iran/