Who could be Iran’s next supreme leader? And how is he chosen?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Shahram Akbarzadeh, Director, Middle East Studies Forum (MESF), Deakin University

Since beginning their assault on Iran, that United States and Israel have been explicit that their ultimate goal is regime change.

The attacks are supposed to present a historic opportunity for Iranians to overthrow an authoritarian state and embrace democracy.

Yet, as the Iraq war in the early 2000s made clear, regime change does not necessarily bring a liberal alternative. It first destroys the existing order and creates a political vacuum. This is fertile ground for rival factions to fight it out and settle scores.

How a new supreme leader will be chosen

The US-Israel aerial campaign has targeted the regime’s leadership and its nerve system: Iran’s military bases, missile sites and strategic infrastructure. The supreme leader of Iran and its head of state, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is among the casualties.

While the authorities have moved fast to show they are still in charge, the death of the supreme leader is a shock.

The regime is now engaged in an existential battle for its survival. This makes the selection process for Khamenei’s successor all the more crucial.

The Iranian constitution sets out the mechanics of the succession process through a body called the Assembly of Experts. This is a collective of 88 Islamic religious scholars who have gone through a strict vetting process by the Guardian Council to confirm their loyalty to the supreme leader.


Council on Foreign Relations, Reuters, AAP

The Guardian Council is responsible for ensuring compliance with the vision set out by the supreme leader. It consists of 12 men, half appointed by the supreme leader and the other half by the head of the judiciary (himself an appointee of the supreme leader).

The council vets parliamentary candidates and bills, as well as nominations for the Assembly of Experts, which holds elections every eight years.

The Assembly of Experts represents the conservative camp in the ruling regime, and it would look for the safest option for a new supreme leader.

It will likely look for a successor who closely resembles Khamenei – resourceful and flexible enough to make tactical adjustments when necessary, but able to push hard against internal and external threats when it counts.

This is not the time to take a chance with a “moderate” alternative. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) will be advocating for a hardline successor, too.

There are no obvious candidates at this point. The most likely successor had been President Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter accident in May 2024.

Mojtaba Khamenei in 2019. Vahid Salemi/AP

Those who could step into the role include Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of the deceased supreme leader, who has started appearing in more public events. Another possibility is Hassan Khomeini, the grandson of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Hassan Khomeini in 2015. Vahid Salemi/AP

But the wild card could be Alireza Arafi, who is currently a member of the Guardian Council, deputy chairman of the Assembly of Experts and director of Iran’s Islamic seminaries. He is a seasoned politician and has significant religious standing.

There is no explicit timeframe for the appointment of the next supreme leader. Given the immediate focus on the war effort, it may take some time. It could also be postponed to avoid putting a target on the successor’s back.

In the meantime, under the constitution, a three-person interim council was formed to make decisions. This council includes Arafi; the moderate president, Masoud Pezeshkian; and the hardline head of the judiciary, Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i.

The three-person council currently running Iran. AAP, Wikimedia

Regional pressure building

Meanwhile, the IRGC has effective free rein to lead the fight against the US and Israel.

Pezeshkian, the president of Iran, is officially in charge of this effort as the head of the national Defence Council. But in practice, he is seen as a weak president with no real autonomy. He simply parroted Khamenei during the June 2025 war with Israel, and has given no indication he will try to chart a new course now. This may be expected, given Iran is under attack.

As a result, the combative IRGC is setting the agenda. We can see evidence of this in the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s indiscriminate attacks on neighbouring states. For IRGC, this is not the time for a measured response, but for a show of military capabilities to punish the US-Israeli aggression. It appears to be acting according to a pre-prepared script.

Iran’s attacks on Persian Gulf countries hosting US military bases, such as the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait, are burning bridges.

In recent years, Iran had worked hard to improve its relations with its Arab neighbours. It resumed diplomatic ties with Saudi Arabia in 2023 and was deepening its bilateral ties with the Saudis for the upcoming Hajj, the annual pilgrimage of Muslims to Mecca.

In return, members of six-country Gulf Cooperation Council called on US President Donald Trump to avoid a military confrontation with Iran in early January as his administration ratcheted up the rhetoric of regime change.

Now that these countries have been hit by Iranian missiles and drones, they will need to recalculate their options. They are reportedly considering ending their neutrality and striking back at Iran.

Trump has suggested the war could take four weeks. For Iran, time is on its side. As long as it can withstand the aerial strikes and inflict damage on the United States directly and indirectly – inflicting damage on the global economy – the regime will likely hold on to power.

Tehran expects that if it can hold out long enough, Trump will lose patience with the war effort and realise regime change is much harder than he anticipated.

ref. Who could be Iran’s next supreme leader? And how is he chosen? – https://theconversation.com/who-could-be-irans-next-supreme-leader-and-how-is-he-chosen-277360

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/who-could-be-irans-next-supreme-leader-and-how-is-he-chosen-277360/

View from The Hill: Leaked election review slates Dutton while highlighting Liberals’ longer term intractable problems

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

In an example of short-term thinking, the Liberal Party’s federal executive decided on Friday to bury its election review. But it was unable to cremate it.

On Tuesday the review was referred to at the Liberal parliamentary party’s regular meeting. No one called for its formal publication. There was no need. By then, it had been widely leaked. Later, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese tabled it in parliament.

Before Christmas former leader Peter Dutton had a hissy fit about the assessment of him in the review, done by former federal minister Nick Minchin and former New South Wales minister Pru Goward. That led to some changes, although it’s hard to imagine how the original version could have been tougher on his disastrous performance.

The picture that emerges is of an autocrat who distrusted and shut out others from their proper roles before and during the election, but who then could not deliver results.

The first of the review’s recommendations is blunt: “The Party must never again allow the Parliamentary Leader and Office to effectively run the campaign.

“The Federal Director [of the party] is the Campaign Director and must have overall responsibility for the conduct of the campaign.

“Just as you should never be your own barrister in a court of law, the Parliamentary Leader must never be his own campaign director.”

In its critique of the relationship between Dutton and party director Andrew Hirst, with its mutual complaints, the review says: “The Leader and his Chief of Staff had little trust in the Federal Director/Federal Secretariat, a breakdown which evolved over the parliamentary term, but was not effectively communicated to the Federal Director or the Federal President.

“The Federal Director irregularly attended shadow cabinet meetings, unlike past practice, and briefed the Party Room seven times during the term. Face to face meetings with the Leader were also infrequent,” the review says.

“The Federal Director observed that the Leader’s chief of staff would seek to direct campaign decision making for which he did not have responsibility.”

“The Leader’s office observed that the Party’s campaign team, headed by the Federal Director, had in the six years of Anthony Albanese’s leadership failed to develop an effective negative of Albanese.”

Although the reviewers do not reference it, the dramatic breakdown brings to mind the 1996 split between prime minister Paul Keating and Labor national secretary Gary Gray. In the 1996 campaign, Gray dubbed Keating “Captain Wacky”.

The review presents extremely depressing reading for the Liberals, not just because it finds so many faults with the party’s preparation and performance last term and in the campaign that it will be near impossible to fix them all by 2028. Even more serious, it points to underlying demographic trends working against the Liberals that have become ingrained.

“The 2025 Federal Liberal campaign failure is widely considered to be the worst campaign the Party has ever fought,” the review says.

“It was the result of an extraordinary combination of internal errors by the Parliamentary Party and the Party’s organisation, compounded by several adverse external factors,” including an interest rate cut and the flood-induced delay of the election.

Another external factor, Donald Trump’s election as US president, “soon became problematic for the Opposition Leader”, as Labor successfully identified Dutton with Trump.

The review points out: “Successful campaigns are based on a relatively straightforward rule – get the right message to the right people in the right place at the right time. The Liberal Party in 2025 comprehensively failed to follow that rule.

“There was no clear, effective message, either positive or negative. The campaign was disastrously misled in targeting and resourcing by its market research. This led to unfounded confidence that the Party could win the election.

“The overall strategy, determined by the Leader, was unclear.

“The campaign was fatally flawed by the Leader and his office taking over the overall conduct of the campaign, leaving the Party’s organisation responsible only for campaign mechanics.

“Furthermore, while Peter Dutton was never opposed or criticised openly by his parliamentary colleagues, there was widespread acknowledgement that he lacked appeal, especially to women, but his image was never successfully remade or addressed. Compounding this, the Opposition failed to frame the Prime Minister sufficiently negatively.”

Even if we assume next time there may be a better leader, without the strains between the leader’s office and the federal director, and other problems (such as flawed polling) are rectified, the Liberal Party will still be faced with two deeper, seemingly intractable problems. It has lost younger and middle aged voters, and it has been deserted by female voters. There are no obvious pathways for the party to get these cohorts back.

The review says: “The Liberal Party only won a majority of votes in the over 55 age group, 55.8% [two party preferred]. All other demographics were lost. This includes professional and managerial workers, sales, clerical and services workers, blue collar workers and those unemployed.

“Based on Crosby Textor’s post-election survey of voting provided to this review, while 46.8% of men voted Coalition (TPP), only 42.1% of women did so, representing a gender gap of 4.7% and worrying in a country where there are more female voters than male.

“It is also no longer the case among women that only professional women chose not to vote Liberal; women in all age and socio-economic demographics predominantly voted for non-Liberal parties.

“Crosby Textor post-election polling also found seats with a higher female to male voter ratio were less inclined to vote Liberal. This was more pronounced in outer metropolitan and inner regional seats. Redbridge polling confirmed the Crosby Textor results.”

(table from Liberal review of the 2025 election.)

“The female vote decline was referenced by many submissions. Some attributed it to the lack of female candidates in winnable seats and called for quotas. While the percentage of women candidates in winnable seats varied across the state divisions despite this, even in a state like NSW with a high number of female candidates, the swings were broadly comparable. Excellent female candidates failed to be elected.”

As Angus Taylor faced his first parliamentary week as leader, there is little evidence the Liberals are shaping effective pitches to these constituencies. The Taylor opposition, alarmed by One Nation, was focused on the issue of ISIS brides, likely to be well down the list of ordinary voters’ priorities.

ref. View from The Hill: Leaked election review slates Dutton while highlighting Liberals’ longer term intractable problems – https://theconversation.com/view-from-the-hill-leaked-election-review-slates-dutton-while-highlighting-liberals-longer-term-intractable-problems-277243

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/view-from-the-hill-leaked-election-review-slates-dutton-while-highlighting-liberals-longer-term-intractable-problems-277243/

Is Australia’s scorched earth baiting program actually paving the way for fire ant invasion?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nigel Andrew, Professor of Entomology, Southern Cross University

Right now, Australia is undertaking the world’s largest removal of invasive ants. The goal: eradicate fire ants (Solenopsis invicta).

These aggressive South American ants are named for the burning sensation of their sting. They pose risks to many native species – and to human health.

Fire ants have made it to Australia nine times, arriving in cargo ships. Eight times, authorities were able to stamp them out early. But an infestation detected in Brisbane suburb in 2001 has now spread across more than a million hectares of South East Queensland.

Authorities have used broadcast baiting to tackle fire ants, releasing pesticides over massive stretches of land since 2001. This approach works for small outbreaks. But my recent research suggests it may actually be making it easier for fire ants to spread.

When large areas are baited, the result is an ecological vacuum. Competitor species are wiped out and hardy fire ant survivors can press forward.

Fire ants are a “weedy” species. They love environments heavily modified by human behaviour, such as roadsides, industrial areas and paddocks. When baits are laid on the edge of their infestation, competitors and predators are also decimated – and advancing fire ants find it much easier to survive.

Red fire ants thrive in disturbed areas, such as paddocks, farms and cities. Here, cane farmer Larry Spann stands next to a fire ant nest on his land in Norwell on the Gold Coast. Jono Searle/AAP

What’s behind the current strategy?

Decades ago, researchers found a weak spot for fire ants. The biggest larvae act like a distributed stomach for the colony. They take solid food, digest it and transfer it as liquid to adult ants to eat.

Queensland authorities use two insect growth regulators (Pyriproxyfen and S-methoprene) to target this stage. These chemicals are infused into tasty corn grit and soybean oil. Once taken back to the nest by workers, these delicious treats are fed to the larvae, who spread the toxins by liquid feeding. Over a few weeks, the fire ant colony collapses.

To date, eradication using this method has succeeded only in areas under 10,000 hectares. Authorities have to treat the entire area multiple times to ensure no nest is missed.

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Fire ant eradication programs are ongoing.

Fire ants have predators and competitors

Evidence from the United States – where control efforts have been underway since the 1950s – suggests fire ants are not actually a superior competitor.

Instead, they thrive where native ants and invertebrates are found in lower abundance and diversity. They find it much harder to penetrate undisturbed forests with thick leaf litter, where competitors and predators can repel them or keep them in check.

To spread, new queens must leave the nest, mate mid-air and land in a vacant area to start a fresh colony. This is when fire ants are most vulnerable.

In suburbs and rural areas, new queens have to run the gauntlet of invertebrate defenders. Native species such as meat ants (Iridomyrmex species) and green-headed ants (Rhytidoponera metallica) are aggressive defenders of territory. Even the invasive coastal brown ant (Pheidole megacephala) is a fierce competitor. Spiders, lacewings, earwigs, birds and predatory beetles all find a slow-moving fire ant queen to be an energy-rich meal.

These defenders should be our key allies in the fight against fire ants. Unfortunately, the chemical baits are indiscriminate. Many other invertebrates eat the baits – including rival ant species and predators.

The problem of scale

At over 1 million hectares, South East Queensland’s infestation is 100 times larger than any area ever successfully eradicated. Covering this entire area perfectly and doing so multiple times is effectively impossible.

In southern US states, authorities tried broadcast baiting for decades before giving up. In Georgia, a massive baiting program at first seemed to have succeeded. But within 14 months, fire ants had returned, moving faster and at higher densities than native ants. In Florida, new infestations are almost always found in disturbed areas where competitors were removed.

Fire ant queens can survive baiting

While newly mated fire ant queens are vulnerable to predators, they are not vulnerable to baiting.

This is due to a biological quirk. After the mating flight, a newly mated red fire ant queen digs a hole and seals the entrance for up to four weeks.

During this time, the queen lives off her fat reserves while she raises her first batch of workers. If authorities drop baits during this time, the new nest won’t be affected.

Fire ant queens starting a new colony live off their fat supplies for four weeks while they raise their first workers. Kenneth G. Ross/AP

Is a precision approach better?

There’s now no chance we can eradicate these ants using broadcast baiting.

A better option is to use a number of strategies for integrated pest management. These could include:

1. Targeting nests, not areas

When nests are found, they can be removed by injecting hot water into the nest, or by applying pesticides such as fipronil. These scientifically robust methods avoid the widespread collateral damage from broadcast baiting.

2. Using precision baiting

Insect growth regulators are very effective. We can avoid collateral damage with underground bait stations (similar to termite baits) or containers only fire ants can access.

3. Boost landscape resistance

Areas of thick leaf litter and shrub cover are natural resistance zones, home to fire ant competitors and predators. Protecting and enhancing defender habitat is crucial.

4. Assess emerging technologies

Researchers are experimenting with new control methods, such as using viruses as biocontrols, genetic tools and chemicals exploiting fire ant communication methods. These have to be rapidly assessed. If any prove safe, effective and scaleable, authorities could add these to the eradication toolkit.

Time to rethink

Eradication efforts aren’t working. As my research shows, broadcast baiting may actually pave the way for a more rapid spread.

The baiting program is becoming controversial. Some communities are not comfortable with the approach, causing tension, while organic farmers can lose their certification if genetically modified baits are used.

Changing approach could cut costs, avoid killing native competitors and predators and build public trust for this long-term fight. The first step is to realise if we fight against nature, we will lose.

ref. Is Australia’s scorched earth baiting program actually paving the way for fire ant invasion? – https://theconversation.com/is-australias-scorched-earth-baiting-program-actually-paving-the-way-for-fire-ant-invasion-276980

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/is-australias-scorched-earth-baiting-program-actually-paving-the-way-for-fire-ant-invasion-276980/

International law or ‘might is right’? Australia’s choice on Iran and other conflicts

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Donald Rothwell, Professor of International Law, Australian National University

The Iranian diaspora has been celebrating and governments around the world have generally not mourned the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in last weekend’s US and Israeli air strikes on Iran.

While there has been much political justification for these attacks from Washington and Jerusalem, neither has sought to legally justify their conduct. No real effort has been made to reference the acknowledged right of self-defence, most likely because the evidence for invoking self-defence did not exist. In other words, there was no prospect of Iran launching an imminent attack.

Inevitably, the legal basis for the original missile attack on Iran will become a minor detail as the conflict develops. Nevertheless, what occurred on February 28 will remain important.

Lawyers place great emphasis on precedent, and international lawyers particularly look to state practice in interpreting how international law actually operates, which can evolve over time. This allows the interpretation of international law to account for new developments, such as military force and cyber attacks.

This evolution is particularly important because international law is principally contained in, and associated with, the 1945 United Nations Charter. This means it is more than 80 years old.

[embedded content]

Australia’s approach to force and the law

Australia has generally been prepared to adopt an evolutionary approach towards how force can be used consistently with international law.

In the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States, for example, Australia accepted the US could exercise self-defence. So Australia supported the US’ retaliatory attacks on Afghanistan and joined “Operation Enduring Freedom”.

Similarly, the Australian government supported Israel acting in self-defence following the 2023 Hamas attacks.

Australia was more cautious with using force to militarily disarm Iraq in 2003. While it ultimately joined with the US and United Kingdom in “Operation Iraqi Freedom”, it only did so following an extensive public and political debate in Australia. This included the publication of the Howard government’s legal advice justifying military intervention.

With respect to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Australia has taken a much clearer position, pointing out the illegality of that conduct. It has joined more than 20 other countries in the International Court of Justice asserting there was no legal basis for Russia’s actions.

On January 3 2026, the US military intervened in Venezuela, resulting in the arrest and detention of President Nicolás Maduro and his wife on US narco-terrorism and related drug-trafficking charges. Since then, the Trump administration has engaged in a breathtaking array of international conduct, raising multiple significant international law issues.

This includes:

  • the threat to use military force to seize Greenland
  • the threatened imposition of significant tariffs against six European countries in response to debates over Greenland’s future
  • creation of the “Board of Peace”, initially focused on Gaza reconstruction but with a much larger global mandate potentially rivalling the United Nations
  • the seizure of vessels on the high seas linked to Venezuela and Iran
  • the Iranian missile strikes and a strategy targeting the Iranian leadership.

For longstanding allies such as Australia, this conduct by the Trump administration creates a significant challenge. This is especially so when seen against the backdrop of the ANZUS alliance, and now increasingly through the lens of AUKUS. Australia has to date paid $1.6 billion to the US and committed a further $3.9 billion to Australian AUKUS ship-building facilities.

The ‘say nothing’ approach

While Australia’s AUKUS future rests with the US and UK, what options does Canberra have in the face of the Trump administration’s approach to international law and international relations? It can either say nothing, or say something.

All the statements made to date by Albanese government regarding the legality of the US and Israeli conduct have been in the “say nothing” category. At most, the Albanese government has said any legal justification needs to be made by the US and Israel. To say something with respect to international law would require a clear statement that indicated Australia’s position.

Norway’s Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, for example, issued a statement following the military strikes asserting that: “The attacks this morning and the spreading of the conflict to Iran’s neighbouring countries is not in line with international law.”

It should be acknowledged that it would be exceptional for Canberra to issue a unilateral statement such as this on a matter in which Australia was not directly involved. However, in these matters, the Albanese government has a record of acting together with so called “like-minded” countries such as Canada and New Zealand.

In 2024–25 the three countries issued joint statements on the Gaza conflict, outlining a shared position on international humanitarian law.

Sometimes, though, Australia is prepared to chart a course that is separate from the US. For example, Australia has adopted a different position from the US and Israel with respect to the recognition of Palestine. It has moved towards conferring formal recognition along with Canada, France and the UK in September 2025.

[embedded content]

How the use of force is controlled and regulated is fundamental to international law and international relations. It goes to the very heart of the UN system. Australia has aspirations for a seat on the UN Security Council, commencing in 2029.

It needs to make clear whether it supports the UN Charter or the “might is right” approach of the Trump administration.

ref. International law or ‘might is right’? Australia’s choice on Iran and other conflicts – https://theconversation.com/international-law-or-might-is-right-australias-choice-on-iran-and-other-conflicts-277357

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/international-law-or-might-is-right-australias-choice-on-iran-and-other-conflicts-277357/

Why surging oil prices are a shock for the global economy – but not yet a crisis

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Stella Huangfu, Associate Professor, School of Economics, University of Sydney

Global oil markets have reacted swiftly to escalating tensions in the Middle East as the United States and Israel continue their assault on Iran.

After oil tanker traffic through a key chokepoint, the Strait of Hormuz, stopped, the benchmark oil price, Brent crude, jumped about 6% to over US$77 a barrel. It initially spiked as high as US$82, its highest level since January 2025.

A roughly US$10 jump in a matter of days is a significant move and delivers an immediate inflationary jolt for oil-importing economies.

What does this mean for households, businesses and central banks?

Why oil still matters

Oil may no longer dominate the global economy as it did in the 1970s, but it remains embedded in modern production.

It feeds directly into petrol prices, diesel, aviation fuel and shipping, and shapes the cost of transporting and producing everything from food to manufactured goods. When oil prices rise quickly, the effects spread beyond energy markets.

Economists call this a “negative supply shock”: the result is production becomes more expensive. Companies can absorb higher costs or pass them on to consumers. In practice, they usually do both.

The result is an uncomfortable mix of higher inflation and slower economic growth.

The inflation impact will weigh on central banks

The most immediate effect is at the petrol pump. Higher crude prices lift fuel costs and push up headline inflation. For households already facing cost-of-living pressures, that can be felt quickly.

For example, when the price of oil goes up by $10 a barrel, the rough rule of thumb is that the price of gasoline for US drivers could rise by about 25 cents a gallon. Elsewhere, such as Australia, it’s estimated at around 10 cents a litre more for every US$10 rise.

Transport and logistics costs also increase, and some of those higher costs filter into the broader price level over time.

How much inflation rises depends how long the disruption to oil markets lasts. A brief spike might add only a few tenths of a percentage point to inflation. A sustained increase would be more problematic.

Central banks are watching closely. Inflation in the US and Europe has eased from post-pandemic peaks. In Australia, inflation has fallen from its pandemic highs, but recent data show renewed upward pressure. Reflecting those concerns, the Reserve Bank of Australia raised the official cash rate in February.

An oil shock could weaken global growth

Higher fuel costs risk adding fresh momentum to inflation now, arriving at precisely the wrong time, just as policymakers at the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank were hoping it was coming under control.

In one of the first comments from a central banker on the economic impact of the conflict, the Reserve Bank of Australia’s governor today noted the supply shock could add to inflation pressures.

However, Governor Michele Bullock also warned that a prolonged impact on energy markets

could have adverse effects on global economic activity and result in downward pressure on inflation. It is not obvious how this might play out.

Oil-driven inflation is particularly challenging for central banks. Raising interest rates cannot affect the supply of oil. Unlike demand-driven inflation – where strong consumer spending can be cooled by higher interest rates – supply-driven inflation reflects higher production costs.

If central banks lift rates to contain prices, they risk slowing growth further. But the interest rate rises cannot directly lower oil prices.

Pressure on household budgets

Higher oil prices also squeeze household budgets.

When families spend more on fuel, they have less to spend elsewhere. Since household consumption typically accounts for around 60% of the economy in advanced economies, even modest shifts in spending can matter.

Businesses face similar pressure. Higher energy and transport costs reduce profit margins and can delay hiring or investment.

The effects vary by country. Europe is a major net energy importer. While Australia exports coal and gas, it relies heavily on imported oil and refined fuel. That leaves both economies exposed to higher global oil prices.

The United States is more mixed: higher prices support its energy sector, but still lift costs for most households.

The current jump in the oil price is not enough to trigger a global recession. But it adds another headwind as global growth moderates.

How does this compare with 2022?

The obvious comparison is the oil price surge following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Then, crude prices briefly climbed above US$120 a barrel, intensifying already high inflation. In response, the US Federal Reserve hiked rates rapidly to rein in inflation.

Today’s situation is less extreme. Prices are well below those peaks, global demand is softer, and interest rates in the United States, Europe and Australia are several percentage points higher than they were in early 2022. Inflation has been trending down in most major economies.

Still, households may be more sensitive now. After years of rising prices and higher interest rates, consumer confidence is fragile. Even moderate increases in petrol prices can influence spending.

The key question is whether this is temporary, or the start of a sustained climb.

What if prices rise further?

If oil prices continue moving higher – especially toward US$100 a barrel – the risks would increase.

Inflation would be pushed higher. Central banks could face an uncomfortable choice: tolerate higher energy-driven inflation or keep interest rates higher for longer.

Financial markets would adjust quickly, and volatility could rise.

The most serious scenario would involve supply disruptions that constrain global output, increasing the risk of slower growth combined with persistent inflation.

A shock, but not yet a crisis

For now, the 6% jump in oil prices represents a clear inflationary impulse and a moderate drag on growth. It complicates the outlook, but does not resemble past energy crises.

What matters most is persistence. If prices stabilise, the impact should be manageable. If they continue to climb, oil could again become a central driver of global inflation – and a renewed challenge for central banks.


Read more: The oil price surge is just one symptom of a supply chain network that is not fit for this age of global tensions


ref. Why surging oil prices are a shock for the global economy – but not yet a crisis – https://theconversation.com/why-surging-oil-prices-are-a-shock-for-the-global-economy-but-not-yet-a-crisis-277228

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/why-surging-oil-prices-are-a-shock-for-the-global-economy-but-not-yet-a-crisis-277228/

Why do some of us vividly remember dreams and others say they ‘don’t dream’?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Yaqoot Fatima, Professor of Sleep Health, University of the Sunshine Coast

Some mornings, you wake up and the dream is right there. Clear and vivid. You might still feel the emotion in your chest, and it can take a few minutes to remember where you are and what was real.

Other mornings, you open your eyes and there is nothing. Just a quiet sense of having slept.

You might know people who think they do not dream. However, the reality is we all do. Sometimes we have many in one night.

What varies is whether people remember their dreams and how often they remember them.

Dream recall myth vs reality

During the night, we cycle through periods of light sleep, deep sleep and rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep. A full cycle takes about 90 minutes.

People generally spend more time in deep sleep in the first half of the night and more time in REM sleep in the second half.

The main function of deep sleep is restorative: to replenish energy, repair our bodies and help store memories.

REM sleep is important for memory consolidation and emotional processing. Later in the night, REM sleep becomes longer. This is the stage most closely linked to vivid, emotional dreaming.

If you wake up during or just after REM sleep, you are much more likely to remember a dream. If you wake from deep sleep, you probably will not, even though you were dreaming earlier. It isn’t a sign something is wrong; it’s simply how the sleeping brain works.

Another myth is dreams only happen in REM sleep. While REM dreams tend to be more intense and story-like, dreaming can happen in other stages, too; they are just often quieter and harder to recall.

So if you wake up some mornings with a clear recollection of your dream, and other mornings with nothing at all, that is completely normal. It doesn’t mean you didn’t dream. It just means you woke up at a different point in your sleep cycle.

Why do some people remember their dreams more often?

Several factors affect whether you recall dreams.

As you get older, your capacity to recall dreams decreases. Some studies suggest women are more likely to remember dreams than men. Some medications, such as antidepressants and sedatives, can affect your dream recall.

Timing plays a big role. We spend more time in REM sleep later in the night, so dreams that happen closer to morning are easier to remember. Waking up briefly during the night offers a chance to remember dreams before they fade. That’s why parents of young children and light sleepers, who are more likely to wake up from REM sleep, often report remembering more dreams.

How you wake up also matters. If someone jolts you awake, the dream can vanish in an instant. But if you are woken gently, someone softly calling your name, there is a better chance the dream lingers long enough for you to remember.

Some people are naturally “high recallers” and are just better at capturing their dreams before they fade. And therefore, they consistently remember dreams.

Why do some dreams feel intense?

Dreams can sometimes feel highly emotional, dramatic or unusually vivid. This is largely because REM sleep, the stage most associated with dreaming, involves increased activation of regions of the brain that control our emotions, such as the amygdala and limbic system.

This occurs alongside relatively reduced activity in parts of the prefrontal cortex that regulate logic and emotional control.

Stress, life changes or heightened emotions can make dreams feel more intense. Dreams often reflect elements of real-life experiences as the brain tries to process events from the day and consolidate them into long-term memory.

In most cases, having intense dreams is entirely normal and part of healthy emotional processing.

So is dreaming a reflection of good sleep?

Remembering your dreams does not automatically mean you had poor sleep, and forgetting them does not mean your sleep was perfect.

Rather than using dream recall as an indicator of sleep quality, it is more helpful to focus on how you feel during the day. Indicators such as feeling rested on waking and daytime energy provide a more meaningful indicator of your sleep health.

For most people, differences in dream recall and dream intensity are normal and shouldn’t cause concern. Dream frequency varies widely among people and across lifespans.

However, it may be helpful to seek advice from a health professional if:

  • you experience persistent daytime exhaustion despite adequate time in bed

  • nightmares are frequent, highly distressing or interfere with your mood and functioning

  • sleep is regularly disrupted by awakenings, panic or prolonged difficulty returning to sleep.

If you feel rested, functional and emotionally stable during the day, occasional vivid dreams or changes in recall are completely fine and simply part of how healthy sleep unfolds.


Read more: Could cutting back on caffeine really give you more vivid dreams? Here’s what the science says


ref. Why do some of us vividly remember dreams and others say they ‘don’t dream’? – https://theconversation.com/why-do-some-of-us-vividly-remember-dreams-and-others-say-they-dont-dream-275569

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/why-do-some-of-us-vividly-remember-dreams-and-others-say-they-dont-dream-275569/

Paramount acquires Warner Bros Discovery in mega deal: the winners, losers and Trump’s man in the middle

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Liam Burke, Associate Professor and Cinema and Screen Studies Discipline Leader, Swinburne University of Technology

Netflix’s planned acquisition of Hollywood studio Warner Bros Discovery (WBD) has fallen apart at the eleventh hour, as Paramount Skydance has made a “superior” proposal to buy the conglomerate for A$156 billion.

While the independence of the companies following the acquisition is unclear, Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison has already discussed plans to merge the portfolios of streamers Paramount+ and HBO Max to compete with Netflix.

Netflix withdrew from the process following Paramount Skydance’s proposal. It said WBD would have been “‘nice to have’ at the right price, not a ‘must have’ at any price”.

Who were the winners and losers in this hotly contested bidding war? And what happens next?

Winner #1: Warner Bros Discovery CEO David Zaslav

Longtime Discovery cable network CEO David Zaslav engineered his company’s merger with Warner Bros in 2022 to create Warner Bros Discovery.

This merger also saw the combination of Discovery’s reality content, Warner Bros’ film library and HBO’s quality TV series on the streaming service Max (now HBO Max), to challenge Netflix.

But Max didn’t live up to its name, as audiences for HBO originals such as The White Lotus showed little interest in Discovery shows like Dr Pimple Popper.

Unable to significantly lift WBD’s share price, Zaslav initiated plans to separate the failing cable assets, such as Discovery, from the streaming growth areas, such as HBO Max, in preparation to sell the company.

Despite Zaslav facing continued criticism, his gambit paid off, attracting high bidders for WBD. If the Paramount deal happens, Zaslav’s personal WBD shares and equity will be valued at US$790.5 million (A$1.2 billion).

Zaslav, who recently extended his WBD contract through 2030, will be a key figure in the transition, but his role after the sale remains unclear.

Winner #2: David Ellison

David Ellison is the head of Skydance Media and son of one of the world’s richest men, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison. Ellison’s Skydance Media acquired the struggling Paramount Studios in 2024.

While Paramount has some storied IP such as Star Trek, Captain Kirk is no match for the Warner Bros’ cross-generational franchises – including Harry Potter, Batman and Looney Tunes.

Factoring in Warner’s coveted film library, premium HBO shows and the news might of CNN (also a division of WBD) to the Skydance Corporation, David Ellison is set to become one of the most powerful people in traditional media.

Winner #3: Donald Trump

Donald Trump is a longtime friend of Larry Ellison. The US Federal Communications Commission’s chairman, Brendan Carr, has openly praised the conservative direction of CBS since David Ellison took over the parent company Paramount. Trump vowed to stay out of the WBD sale.

Meanwhile, Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos was grilled by Republican senators earlier this year over Netflix’s “woke” content. This senate hearing seemed to set the tone for what would have been a challenging regulatory process for Netflix to acquire WBD.

While Netflix was facing political opposition, David Ellison was Republican stalwart Lindsey Graham’s guest at Trump’s State of the Union address. Thus, WBD shareholders were assured the Paramount deal had Trump’s tacit approval.

Winner #4: Netflix

Netflix stock declined sharply since its plans to acquire WBD were announced in December.

Investors were nervous about this unprecedented purchase, by a company whose playbook had been “builders rather than buyers”.

News of Netflix’s withdrawal from the WBD sale has seen the streaming giant’s shares surge. The company will also receive a US$2.8 billion termination fee, paid by Ellison’s Skydance. Netflix certainly won’t leave the process empty handed.

Loser #1: the creative community

Despite concerns regarding a Netflix takeover of Warner Bros Discovery, there was comparatively little overlap between the companies. Unlike WBD, Netflix doesn’t own linear and cable stations, make movies for cinema, or have a news division.

Paramount and WBD, however, are near identical companies, albeit at different scales. The joining of these two Hollywood Studios will allow for what Ellison describes as “synergies” – being interpreted as thousands of jobs lost as duplicated departments across the two companies are combined and cut.

Loser #2: audiences

Ellison has promised to run the Warner Bros and Paramount film studios independently, and produce 30 films each year for cinema.

Audiences had similar hopes ahead of Disney’s acquisition of 20th Century Fox in 2019. But since that deal, the combined Disney and 20th Century theatrical output has fallen by 46%. A similar decline may occur if Warner Bros and Paramount end up under the same corporate umbrella.

Also, while Elision has produced dozens of films under Skydance Media, they have been a mixed bag – with a trashy Geostorm for every crowd-pleasing Top Gun: Maverick.

By contrast, Warner Bros is coming off a year-long hot streak with Sinners, One Battle After Another and Weapons. Would such auteur-led films get made with David Ellison in charge?

Loser #3: journalism

Skydance’s 2024 takeover of Paramount quickly resulted in editorial changes at the company’s news division, as conservative political commentator Bari Weiss was brought in as the CBS editor-in-chief.

In the ensuing months senior CBS news producers have complained of “political bias”, with veteran broadcaster Anderson Cooper announcing he was leaving CBS’s flagship news show 60 Minutes amid the turmoil.

There are concerns a similar conservative agenda may be brought to WBD news network CNN, leading to more ideological driven programming across America’s prominent news networks.

What comes next?

European and US lawmakers will review the deal as concerns around merging two of the remaining five legacy Hollywood studios persist.

Nonetheless, most of the resistance to the Netflix deal stemmed from the combining of the world’s first and fourth biggest subscription video-on-demand services. As Skydance’s Paramount+ is a smaller streamer, the company does not face the same anti-competitive arguments Netflix did.

It is likely that by the time The Batman: Part II lands in cinemas in 2027 the bottom of the Warner Bros logo will read “A Skydance Corporation”.

ref. Paramount acquires Warner Bros Discovery in mega deal: the winners, losers and Trump’s man in the middle – https://theconversation.com/paramount-acquires-warner-bros-discovery-in-mega-deal-the-winners-losers-and-trumps-man-in-the-middle-277220

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/paramount-acquires-warner-bros-discovery-in-mega-deal-the-winners-losers-and-trumps-man-in-the-middle-277220/

The 2026 Adelaide Biennial, titled Yield Strength, requires slow looking and quiet consideration

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Catherine Speck, Emerita Professor, Art History and Curatorship, Adelaide University

These are troubled and changing times – a view of the zeitgeist that permeates Yield Strength, the 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art.

The stresses and anxieties navigated on a daily basis include political extremism, challenges to social cohesion, ecological collapse, the enduring effects of colonialism, and social and economic inequality.

Yield strength is also a technical term. Taken from engineering, yield strength refers to the maximum stress a material can withstand before starting to break down.

But as the exhibition’s curator Ellie Buttrose explains in the accompanying exhibition catalogue,

metaphorically yield strength exemplifies how an awareness of another set of thresholds is forced upon us by political and environmental crises – of the finiteness of the world we inhabit and our physical and emotional capacities to respond. Fostering futures from this altered vantage point requires an understanding of the pressures that shape this moment, a respect for breaking points and a resourceful approach to alternatives.

The 24 artists in the exhibition have ambitiously taken up the challenge of considering alternative futures and working with threshold points in materials. They use a range of media from steel to digital technologies to painting.

Slow looking

Pitjantjatjara artist Josina Pumani’s rough-hewn ceramic vessels including Black Mist (2025). Their charcoal exterior and lurid red-hot interior, or vice versa, refer to the devastation wrought on Aboriginal people and their Country from 1952–63 from the British Government’s nuclear testing program.

This colonial indignity is close to her heart: her grandfather witnessed the black smoke from the atomic explosions. Pumani’s vessels, fired at 1,200 degrees, transform the clay into a hard matter symbolic of the enduring ruination of Country from radioactive fallout, and mimic somewhat the extreme heat of the fireballs released at Maralinga.

Installation view: 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Yield Strength, featuring Mina Mina Jukurrpa by Julie Nangala Robertson and Black Mist by Josina Pumani, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Photo: Saul Steed

One aspect that stands out in Buttrose’s curation is her co-location of artworks. Pumani’s vessels, at the Art Gallery of South Australia, are framed by the meditative and finely dotted acrylic paintings of Walpiri artist Julie Nangala Robertson in Mina Mina Jukurrpa (2025).

The lineal mark-making depicting the contours of Country are aerial maps of ancestral land. Its netting patterns present a new style of depicting every aspect of life, travel and ceremony.

Innovation and change continues with Yolŋu artist Milminyina Dhamarrandji. Her paintings employ clan designs for which she is the senior custodian.

These intricate designs are magnified on a large digital screen at the Samstag Museum, complete with the death adder weaving in and out, all of which sit behind her painted burial poles. Old and new are one.

Dhamarrandji, whose bark paintings are also on show at the Art Gallery, works from the Buku-Larrnggay Mulka Art Centre which hosts the ground-breaking digital media Mulka project.

Installation view: 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Yield Strength, featuring Yard by Jennifer Mathews, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Photo: Saul Steed

Jennifer Matthews presents a very different future. Her beautifully constructed and interconnected stainless-steel corridors respond to the spatial pathway viewers take through a gallery space, and lead to smaller-scale exhibits.

Aptly titled Yard (2025), the work is based on the concept of a sheep run, and is an architectural form of containment. It mirrors the artist’s interest in institutional power structures, how bodies are controlled and how much free will do we have. Big questions indeed.

Thai-Australian artist Nathan Beard injects some humour and sexual tension into possible futures in his fantasy-filled surrealistic exploration of the human body in Ciceroni (2025). Truncated latex arms and fingers extend, embracing and caressing objects ranging from Thai-Buddhist sculptures to luscious fruits.

Installation view: 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Yield Strength, featuring Ciceroni by Nathan Beard, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Photo: Saul Steed

Erika Scott takes aim at the throw-away nature of high-tech and low-tech household and garden materials in contemporary times in her over-the-top environmental horror installation Necro-realist Sunscree (2026). It touches a nerve in all of us.

In a different vein, Wiradjuri artist Joel Sherwood Spring’s chilling video and installation Diggermode 2, Cloud Ceding (2025), traces a genealogy of control from the colonial to the digital era, including the physical and environmental costs of global data storage and cloud computing.

Quiet consideration

An exhibition is only ever an ephemeral event. The permanent record lies in the exhibition catalogue.

This year the catalogue has been produced in magazine format because magazines, like biennials, respond to a specific moment. The problem is the limited shelf life of a magazine. This is compounded by the fussy focus on the text’s font and poor page layout.

Quality has been traded for a street vibe. While the rationale is understandable, the magazine format does a disservice to the engaging text and long-term memory of a timely exploration of some big issues.

Installation view: 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Yield Strength, featuring Chronicles II by Kirtika Kain, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide. Photo: Saul Steed

The focus of experimenting with materials to find threshold points has led to stand-out work such as Katrina Kain’s deeply etched and fragile copper panels, Chronicles 11 (2025) that are transformed into lurid green and russet mobiles.

The solidity once intrinsic to copper has been transformed into a form replete with vulnerability.

The rhythm of threading artists’ work through three exhibition sites, often with provocative pairings, makes for good viewing. This includes the unspoken moments in Prudence Flint’s muted paintings of semi-clad women in interiors set opposite the loud and riotous display of Erika Scott’s junk assemblage.

Yield Strength requires slow looking and quiet consideration.

The 2026 Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art is at the Art Gallery of South Australia, the Samstag Museum and the Adelaide Botanic Gardens until June 8.

ref. The 2026 Adelaide Biennial, titled Yield Strength, requires slow looking and quiet consideration – https://theconversation.com/the-2026-adelaide-biennial-titled-yield-strength-requires-slow-looking-and-quiet-consideration-274024

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/the-2026-adelaide-biennial-titled-yield-strength-requires-slow-looking-and-quiet-consideration-274024/

You know you’re alive with Simon Burke in full flight on stage in The Elocution of Benjamin Franklin

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Cymbeline Buhler King, Research Officer, School of Social Sciences, Western Sydney University

Premiering at Sydney’s Nimrod Theatre in 1976, steve j. spears’ The Elocution of Benjamin Franklin was met with critical acclaim, touring internationally, including Off Broadway where it won three Obie Awards.

Returning 50 years on for Griffin Theatre’s Mardi Gras show, I’m intrigued to consider the impact of a play with this much visibility, interrogating state-sanctioned violence against LGBTQIA+ people. To what degree did it build impetus towards the first Sydney gay pride march in 1978?

In this one-hander directed by Declan Greene, Simon Burke plays Robert O’Brien, a cross-dressing elocution teacher. Living in Double Bay, his flamboyant lifestyle receives suspicious attention from nosy neighbours. Other characters appear in the play as invisible people that Burke addresses just off stage, or over the telephone.

Benjamin Franklin turns out not to be a founding father of the United States, but a precocious student brought to O’Brien for elocution lessons. A 12-year-old prodigy with a grandiose name and a stutter, the child happens to be brilliant. He also happens to be gay, a discovery that shocks even O’Brien.

Simon Burke plays Robert O’Brien, a cross-dressing elocution teacher. Brett Boardman. Brett Boardman/Griffin Theatre

In no time, Benjamin is smoking during lessons and bringing O’Brien naked Polaroids of himself. O’Brien is clear: such photos put him in terrible danger. O’Brien is protecting himself, but he also takes Benjamin’s education seriously, and recognises the treacherous path ahead with such coquettish tendencies.

A series of incidents expose O’Brien’s cross-dressing to the community. The neighbourhood bristles and things escalate to rocks being thrown at his windows and police coming to raid his place. O’Brien sits inside burning Benjamin’s photos, but their remains are enough to put O’Brien in the psychiatric hospital Callan Park.

The play effectively creates a time when a person could be medically imprisoned on rumoured suspicions and flimsy evidence.

A formidable performance

O’Brien’s apartment is beautifully created in every nook and cranny of the tiny stage, wings used for his extensive bookshelves (design by Isabel Hudson). We learn much about the character as we settle, house lights still up.

Sound design by David Bergman forms transitions using low-frequency drones and glitchy screeches to move the register up into a high camp zone or down into the dark tale of false accusations of paedophilia. It’s affective and unsettling, capturing the emotional register of a system that can reject a person’s right to be themselves.

Burke gives a bold, brave performance, big enough to hold the brutality and atrocity at the centre of this play. He has a ball with the part, fleshing out the stage with every inch of his being turned up to ten.

He carries us with him, giving us permission to sit at the edge of history and peer down through the ugly lens it turns on our own times.

Burke has a ball with the part, fleshing out the stage with every inch of his being turned up to ten. Brett Boardman/Griffin Theatre

Burke takes us through the full gamut of this material. He starts with a gyrating seduction of Mick Jagger in poster form. He flips at the ring of his phone, placing a posh English accent on top of his Aussie drawl. He moves from high camp to poignant, with gestures and chuckles that become familiar, bringing us close to the character, a portrait painted with depth and pathos.

Retreating into his apartment as the heat on him increases, his limited personal space becomes claustrophobic. Having a single actor on stage heightens how isolating vilification is.

The extremes of this performance take their toll, and Burke finds on-stage moments to restore his energy, some of which are flat. There is room for more interiority in these moments. Burke’s O’Brien is richly complex, but the audience needs more quiet time with him, and those quiet moments need to feel like they could go somewhere unexpected.

An impressive young playwright

This play was a blockbuster in 1978, despite the playwright being just 23.

An accomplished dramatic work for someone so young, there remain fault lines in it that show his inexperience.

Most notably, the playfulness of the first half drops too suddenly, leaving the audience with none of that intimacy in the second half.

It has a logic: the medications O’Brien is given at Callan Park cut him off from himself. Without that well of selfhood, he’s got nothing. It’s a strong, but harsh theatrical choice. The transition is clunky and it feels dated, leaving the final act hollow. It rings true, but doesn’t carry us with it.

If the play had been based on an historical character, specificity would sharpen the tragedy. Making him fictional widens the lens to the broader phenomenon of state-sanctioned homophobic violence.

This production challenges us to consider how far we have and haven’t come in 50 short years.

The Elocution of Benjamin Franklin is at Belvoir Downstairs, Sydney, for Griffin Theatre, until March 29.

ref. You know you’re alive with Simon Burke in full flight on stage in The Elocution of Benjamin Franklin – https://theconversation.com/you-know-youre-alive-with-simon-burke-in-full-flight-on-stage-in-the-elocution-of-benjamin-franklin-274976

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/you-know-youre-alive-with-simon-burke-in-full-flight-on-stage-in-the-elocution-of-benjamin-franklin-274976/

PNG Media Council calls for police probe into alleged assault over jail break report

Pacific Media Watch

The Media Council of Papua New Guinea (MCPNG) has condemned an alleged assault on a senior female reporter and called on the police to conduct a full independent investigation into the incident last Friday.

Council president Neville Choi also condemned the attack and threat against one of its own
members, saying reporters in Papua New Guinea must be “respected for the work that they do in informing and educating the public of what is happening around them”.

A statement at the weekend by the MCPNG detailed the circumstances of the attack and although the reporter was not named in the report, she was bylined in her news story about injuries suffered by prisoners in an attempted break-out at the Bomana jail near the capital Port Moresby.

The reporter, Rebecca Kuku, is an experienced reporter of The National daily newspaper.

Her article reported that “more than 50 remandees were injured, and nine hospitalised in what a top official described as a failed jail break” at the Bomana Correctional Service Institution on Monday, 23 February 2026. Photographs of some of the injured remandees were published with the article.

The MCPNG statement said “an attack on one journalist is an attack on the media industry”.

The statement said that the attack happened about 11am on Friday, February 27, as Kuku was about to enter Correctional Service headquarters to attend a Press conference.

‘Confronted by 5 officers’
“She was confronted by five Correctional Service male officers who questioned her about an article that she had reported on in relation to injuries sustained by prisoners at the Bomana Correctional Service facility,” the statement said.

“One of the CS officers punched the female reporter on her left ear, to which she reacted by pushing him away in self-defence, while another officer attempted to slap her across the face.

“Following the incident, the reporter returned to the office and reported the matter to her editor before filing a formal police complaint regarding the attack.”

“The unprovoked attack was in relation to a news article in The National carrying the reporter’s byline entitled “50-plus prisoners injured in ‘failed’ jail break.”

The ‘failed’ Bomana jail break news report in The National on 27 February 2026. Image: The National screenshot APR

The MCPNG quoted a brief statement by The National newspaper management:

“The National merely reported a serious assault upon prisoners perpetrated, it has been confirmed, by warders.

“The Prime Minister has ordered an investigation. For warders to now assault a journalist is reprehensible and does nothing to improve the image of the service.

“We are fully supporting our journalist in filing a criminal assault case. We are calling on the CS command to look into this and discipline the officers responsible.

“We have lodged a complaint with the CS management. Regardless of this we will continue to report fairly all matters to do with CS including this incident.”

‘Damning evidence’
Since the incident, said the MCPNG, said it had received “damning evidence” which included Whatsapp messages and voice notes which reflected the “very worrying conduct of officers” within the Correctional Services.

The media council reminded the public that “freedom of the press is the fundamental right
of journalists and media organisations to report, publish, and disseminate information, news, and opinions without government censorship, intimidation, or undue restriction”.

President Neville Choi condemned the attack and threat, saying reporters in Papua New Guinea must be respected for the work that they do in informing and educating the public of what is happening around them.

He added that citizens not happy with a news report could raise a formal complaint with the MCPNG Media by writing to the council, or via its website complaints page.

In a comment reported by ABC News, Choi said public servants and authorities needed to understand the importance of journalists.

“We’re not here to point fingers at anybody, we’re here to report the facts and for our citizens to make more informed decisions and even for authorities to pay attention to what may be happening that they don’t know about.”

The National reported that Prime Minister James Marape had ordered a full investigation.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/png-media-council-calls-for-police-probe-into-alleged-assault-over-jail-break-report/

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for March 3, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on March 3, 2026.

The future remains bleak for corals – but not all reefs are doomed
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christopher Cornwall, Lecturer in Marine Biology, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington A recent report on global tipping points warned that coral reefs face widespread dieback and have reached a point from which they cannot recover. But in our new research, we show this might

What is black sesame? Is it really the new matcha? An expert explains
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Evangeline Mantzioris, Program Director of Nutrition and Food Sciences, Accredited Practising Dietitian, Adelaide University Black sesame is the latest plant-based product to go viral, with its appealing colour and nutty taste. Social media is full of claims these dark sesame seeds are better for you than the

Jimpa lovingly follows in the tradition of artwork about fathers who came out of the closet
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Catherine Freyne, Senior Producer, Impact Studios UTS, University of Technology Sydney Jimpa is an emotionally nuanced family drama by acclaimed Australian filmmaker Sophie Hyde. “Jimpa” is the family nickname for flamboyant and provocative patriarch, Jim (John Lithgow). Born in the early 1950s, Jim came out as gay

Solomon Islands academic warns Pacific economies at risk from US-Israel-Iran conflict
RNZ Pacific A Solomon Islands academic says the US and Israel illegal bombing of Iran is “deeply alarming” and the Pacific region does not need “more global instability” US President Donald Trump warned yesterday that Operation Epic Fury against Iran — “one of the largest, most complex, most overwhelming military offensives the world has ever

Dogs can detect trafficked wildlife hidden in shipping containers from tiny air samples
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Georgia Moloney, Researcher, School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Adelaide University Wildlife trafficking is a global crisis impacting at least 4,000 species of plants and animals, including mammals, reptiles, birds, corals and rare plants. A shocking case from 2025 involved the seizure of 3.7 tonnes of pangolin

A court has drawn a clear line on antisemitic hate speech. Here’s what it said
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jeremie M Bracka, Law Lecturer and Transitional Justice Academic, RMIT University As both the federal government and states across the country pass laws cracking down on hate speech, there’s been much debate about where to draw the line on what can and can’t be said. A Victorian

Open justice no more: how Victoria’s courts are stopping journalists from doing their jobs
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Johan Lidberg, Associate Professor, School of Media, Film and Journalism, Monash University Covering the courts can be a tough gig. The pace is fast, there are many legal considerations to be across, and media outlets are hungry for quality stories, quickly. Our study aimed to capture the

NZ’s opposition leader Chris Hipkins says US-Israel strikes illegal
RNZ News New Zealand’s opposition Labour leader Chris Hipkins says he does not support the United States and Israel’s strikes on Iran. He disagrees with Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s stance that it was not New Zealand’s place to comment on the legality of the strikes. Iran and Israel have continued to trade strikes since joint

Keith Rankin Analysis – The Greater Evil
Analysis by Keith Rankin, 2 March 2026. We keep hearing that Iran is an “evil” regime run by “clerics”. This conflation of an unscientific and emotive concept (‘evil’) with a cultural occupation (‘cleric’) is made in the context of picking on an ethnic or religious group of people as inferior. In this context, ‘cleric’ applies

12 reasons why a huge split is opening up in the West over US-Israel’s ‘manifestly illegal’ war on Iran
ANALYSIS: By Nury Vittachi The West is in turmoil over countries’ top legal minds declaring the US-Israel attack on Iran to be illegal, as China did. But Israel-friendly Western politicians, including Starmer, von der Leyen, Albanese, and others are desperately blocking their ears as they try to justify actual war crimes. Here’s what the specialists

The oil price surge is just one symptom of a supply chain network that is not fit for this age of global tensions
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Maryam Lotfi, Senior Lecturer in Sustainable Supply Chain Management, Cardiff University The escalating conflict between Iran, the US and Israel has taken a critical turn. The strait of Hormuz – one of the most important shipping routes for oil and gas – is facing significant disruption. The

Honey from Australian wildflowers has potent power to kill bacteria
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kenya Fernandes, Research Fellow, Faculty of Science, University of Sydney Before antibiotics and antiseptics, healers across ancient Egypt, Greece, and China reached for honey to treat wounds. Archaeological evidence shows humans have been harvesting and collecting honey for thousands of years – and for much of that

Primary care prevents health problems from becoming more expensive – why doesn’t NZ fund it properly?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dylan A Mordaunt, Research Fellow, Faculty of Education, Health, and Psychological Sciences, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington; Flinders University; The University of Melbourne To most of us, a visit to the local pharmacy feels like a simple transaction: we hand over a prescription slip

Emptying bins and photocopying: nurses’ skills are too often wasted in general practice
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Peter Breadon, Program Director, Health and Aged Care, Grattan Institute Australians are living longer, but we’re also living longer with disease and disability. Half of us now have at least one chronic condition. As rates of disease rise, so does demand for health care. In the 40

Australians scorn this fish once adored by monks and kings
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Paul Humphries, Associate Professor in Ecology, Charles Sturt University In many parts of Europe, the common carp is a prized table fish. But the common carp (Cyprinus carpio) is arguably Australia’s most vilified fish. Nicknamed the “river rabbit” for its prolific breeding, carp is blamed for degrading

Australia’s gender pay gap is narrowing – and the public spotlight seems to be helping
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Leonora Risse, Associate Professor in Economics, Queensland University of Technology Since 2024, the Workplace Gender Equality Agency (WGEA) has been publishing the gender pay gaps of Australia’s largest companies. Now, we have enough data to make some meaningful comparisons – and this public spotlight seems to be

Westeros, Wes Anderson and Sabrina Carpenter meeting the Muppets: what to watch in March
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Corey Martin, Lecturer/Podcast Producer, Swinburne University of Technology From new releases to rediscovered classics, this month’s streaming list is brimming with both spectacle and nostalgia. We see a pared-back return to the world of Game of Thrones, a glossy portrayal of one of America’s most high-profile romances,

Eugene Doyle: Minab school massacre – hands off the children of Iran, Donald Trump
Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – COMMENTARY: By Eugene Doyle When I heard the terrible news that the Americans and Israelis had killed more than 165 children this week in an elementary school in Minab in Southern Iran it took me back to a wonderful day I spent in Isfahan in 2018.

Gordon Campbell: Why the US has no credible reason or credible end game for its war on Iran
COMMENTARY: By Gordon Campbell Funny . . . back when Russia invaded Ukraine, New Zealand didn’t wait for Vladimir Putin to tell us whether his acts of aggression were legal under international law. Instead, we immediately decided the invasion was illegal, and forthrightly condemned Russia’s actions at the time, and ever since. Different story when

‘Explicit aggression’ against Iran needs clear condemnation, envoy tells NZ
Asia Pacific Report Iran’s ambassador to New Zealand says the joint US and Israeli strikes on his country need stronger condemnation, reports TV1 News. Ambassador Reza Nazar Ahari described the strikes as “explicit aggression” and a violation of the UN Charter. “There is no doubt about it, and it deserves a very clear type of

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/er-report-a-roundup-of-significant-articles-on-eveningreport-nz-for-march-3-2026/

Does regime change ever work? History tells us long-term consequences are often disastrous

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Matt Fitzpatrick, Professor in International History, Flinders University

The latest US-Israeli bombings in Iran differ from last year’s, because one of the stated aims this time is regime change.

Engaged in the mass murder of civilians at home and fomenting violence abroad, the current Iranian regime has few friends internationally.

Many would be glad to see Iran undergo a far-reaching program of political reform. For many in the Iranian diaspora, regime change imposed from outside is better than none.

But the historical record of imposed regime change, particularly as undertaken by the United States, is patchy at best.

Things rarely go to plan, and the long-term consequences are often disastrous.

Afghanistan and Iraq

Some immediate examples spring to mind.

Still fresh in the public mind would be the shocking scenes of desperate Afghans trying to leave Kabul in 2021 as the United States conceded it could not permanently defeat the Taliban.

This admission came after two decades, thousands of deaths of US and allied troops and tens of thousands of Afghan deaths.

A Doctors Without Borders employee walks inside the charred remains of the organisation’s hospital after it was hit by a US airstrike in Afghanistan in 2015. AP Photo/Najim Rahim, File

Many would also remember then-US President George W. Bush’s disastrous speech in May 2003 about America’s regime change efforts in Iraq, begun in March that year. Here, Bush addressed the press while standing in front of a huge banner that said “Mission Accomplished”; the implication was regime change had been achieved in just a few months.

In fact, what followed was another decade of US fighting to try to stabilise Iraq, with actions arguably not wound up until 2018 or even beyond.

Once again this came at a huge cost to civilian lives, with The Lancet estimating as early as 2004 that around 100,000 “excess deaths” had occurred as a result of the US attempt to effect regime change there.

Thereafter, Iraq was continuously wracked by violence and civil war. Notably, ISIS took advantage of its weakened state to establish its “caliphate” on Iraqi territory, leading to yet another wave of US intervention.

But US attempts to impose regime change have a much longer and equally unsuccessful history, as well.

From the Bay of Pigs to Iran

The phrase “Bay of Pigs” has become a synonym for the inability to overthrow a government.

Aimed at overthrowing Fidel Castro in Cuba in April 1961, not only was then-US President John F. Kennedy’s foray into regime change unsuccessful (Castro died in his sleep with his regime still in control of Cuba at the age of 90 in 2016), it also led to the execution of CIA operatives there.

The US also faced the embarrassment of having to swap tractors for the freedom of the Cuban exiles who had carried out the failed invasion for them.

In 1953, the US and Britain actually did succeed in overthrowing Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq after he’d announced Iran’s oil industry would be nationalised in response to Western oil companies’ intransigence on royalties and control.

This regime change effort by the US did “succeed” in the short run, but it led to a series of events that culminated in the repressive regime the US aims to replace today.

Mossadeq’s toppling led to the shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, becoming an absolutist monarch in the cruellest tradition.

His savage repression led in no small way to the 1979 Iranian revolution, which became the vehicle for the present theocratic government to come to power.

It is one of the ironies of history that the son of the dictatorial shah is now presenting himself as the logical candidate to bring democracy to a new Iran.

Heavy smoke rises above Baghdad in April 2003 after coalition warplanes struck Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s Republican Palace. EPA PHOTO AFPI / KARIM SAHIB

Read more: Iran’s exiled crown prince is touting himself as a future leader. Is this what’s best for the country?


From the colonial era to WWII

Some might reach further back and argue regime change in Germany worked after the second world war.

It is worth remembering, however, that this was far from a simple process. It involved occupying Germany for more than a generation, decades of trials against ex-Nazis and splitting the country in two for more than 40 years.

As the epicentre of the Cold War, this is hardly an experiment in regime change that could be easily replicated.

Earlier examples of regime change from the colonial period provide similar lessons.

Large armies of invading colonial forces were able to pull down governments in Africa and Asia and prop up unpopular ones.

But once the occupying forces sought to remove their militaries or lost the will to resort to massacres to reinforce their rule, the shift towards decolonisation or self-rule became increasingly irresistible.

In the Dutch East Indies, French-ruled Vietnam, British India and the Belgian Congo, governments imposed by external powers were rarely viable once the threat of force was removed.

Czechoslovakia’s Prague Spring protests in 1968 – an effort to throw off Soviet-imposed rule – were quickly crushed by the USSR, showing once again that regime change “works” for as long as you are prepared to enforce it with violence.

By 1989, however, the Soviet Union’s appetite for enforcing its hegemony across eastern Europe had waned, leading to a largely peaceful transition to democracy across the region.

A failure to learn from history

Today’s US leaders are unlikely to accept the counsel of history.

But they would do well to remember the simple message of former US Secretary of State Colin Powell’s “Pottery Barn” rule for attempts to overthrow governments: you break it, you own it.

At present, however, the view from Washington seems to be that you can just break states and hope someone else will fix it for you.

ref. Does regime change ever work? History tells us long-term consequences are often disastrous – https://theconversation.com/does-regime-change-ever-work-history-tells-us-long-term-consequences-are-often-disastrous-277221

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/does-regime-change-ever-work-history-tells-us-long-term-consequences-are-often-disastrous-277221/

The future remains bleak for corals – but not all reefs are doomed

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Christopher Cornwall, Lecturer in Marine Biology, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

A recent report on global tipping points warned that coral reefs face widespread dieback and have reached a point from which they cannot recover.

But in our new research, we show this might not be the case for some reefs if corals can gain tolerance to rising temperatures, or if we can cut greenhouse gas emissions and restore reefs with heat-tolerant corals at scale.

Nevertheless, the outlook likely remains bleak.

All coral reefs are under threat but some may be more tolerant to warming waters. Christopher Cornwall, CC BY-NC-ND

Coral reefs provide habitat for thousands of other species in tropical oceans. They deliver economic value through fisheries and tourism and provide shoreline protection from storm surges and extreme weather by dampening the impact of waves.

However, coral reefs are vulnerable to the effects of climate change. Our study combines previously published assessments of climate impacts on different coral reefs and reviews the scientific consensus to examine how long reef structures could persist as climate change intensifies.

Ocean warming, acidification, darkening and deoxygenation all threaten the persistence of coral reefs. Ocean warming brings marine heatwaves, which are the leading cause of mass coral bleaching that has led to a global decline in coral cover.

Marine heatwaves have already led to a global decline in coral reefs. Christopher Cornwall, CC BY-NC-ND

Corals are animals that house microalgae within their tissues that provide sugar in exchange for nitrogen. When temperatures become too hot, corals expel these symbiotic microalgae, leaving behind white skeletons.

Ocean acidification reduces the ability of corals to build their skeletons through a process called calcification. Warming, darkening and deoxygenation can also reduce calcification.

When corals expel their symbiotic algae, all that remains are bleached skeletons. Chris Perry, CC BY-NC-ND

Coral reefs are built by adding calcium carbonate, coming mostly from corals but also coralline algae and other calcareous seaweeds. But as the ocean’s pH (a measure of acidity) is reduced, processes called bio-erosion and dissolution act to remove calcium carbonate.

Our meta-analysis examined how climate change affects the calcification and bio-erosion of coral reefs and we then applied these results to a global data set of reef growth.

There is no scientific consensus on which organisms will build future coral reefs. We explore four most likely scenarios:

1. Present-day extreme reefs represent the future of coral reefs. These are locations where temperatures are already warmer, waters are becoming more acidic and oxygen has dropped to conditions similar to those expected at the end of the century. These reefs are dominated by coralline algae and slow-growing heat-resistant corals.

Some reefs already experience conditions expected at the end of the century. Steeve Comeau, CC BY-NC-ND

2. Presently degraded reefs take over future reefs. These reefs are dominated by bio-eroders such as sponges and sea urchins and have low coral cover.

3. Corals can gain heat tolerance to an extent that keeps pace with low to moderate greenhouse gas emissions scenarios. Under these scenarios, only about 36% of global corals would be lost and there would be a moderate reduction in growth. These heat-tolerant reefs are dominated by faster growing corals with symbiotic microalgae that can evolve heat tolerance.

4. Reefs where restoration practices include using heat-tolerant corals that can then disperse to other regions. These restored reefs would have lower coral cover in remote regions lacking restoration or with unsuccessful restoration practices. This kind of reef restoration would need to cover half of global coral reefs to maintain net growth – an unlikely scenario.

We found coral reefs transition to net erosion under all scenarios, even under low to moderate greenhouse gas emissions, meaning they are dissolving or being eaten faster than they can grow. Only reefs with heat-tolerant corals could prevent this from occurring.

The next step for the scientific community is to determine which reefs can persist in the future using global efforts to combine information. The major issues is that we are missing measurements from large parts of the Pacific, and we do not know how deoxygenation or coastal darkening will impact coral reefs. The processes of reef bioerosion and dissolution are also poorly described.

Although the climate has been altered to the point of threatening the future survival of coral reefs, their fate is not doomed yet if we act now.

Another question is how long reef structures will persist after living corals are removed. We do not have an answer yet. It will take global efforts to rapidly obtain these measurements to better manage and protect coral reefs before climate change intensifies.

It is up to governments everywhere, including New Zealand, to better support these initiatives before it is too late.

ref. The future remains bleak for corals – but not all reefs are doomed – https://theconversation.com/the-future-remains-bleak-for-corals-but-not-all-reefs-are-doomed-277077

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/the-future-remains-bleak-for-corals-but-not-all-reefs-are-doomed-277077/

What is black sesame? Is it really the new matcha? An expert explains

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Evangeline Mantzioris, Program Director of Nutrition and Food Sciences, Accredited Practising Dietitian, Adelaide University

Black sesame is the latest plant-based product to go viral, with its appealing colour and nutty taste.

Social media is full of claims these dark sesame seeds are better for you than the white ones. They’re said to be better at reducing your blood sugar levels, risk of heart disease, and even reversing grey hair.

But is black sesame really the new matcha? You might remember this green tea was another plant-based, viral sensation with potential health benefits.

What is black sesame? What’s in it?

Sesame seeds grow in white, yellow and black varieties. They’ve been used for centuries in traditional Asian cuisine.

Today, they’re used in both savoury and sweet dishes, and are a good source of protein. Due to sesame’s high fat content (about 50–64%, see table below) it is also valued for its oil.

But there are differences between black and white sesame in some key nutrients.

Black sesame has higher levels of fat, protein and carbohydrate, but is also higher in energy (kilojoules). Vitamin and mineral levels are also generally higher in black sesame.

Sesame seeds are clearly highly nutritious products, but the amounts of nutrients in the table are for 100 grams, which is about two-thirds of a metric cup. Most of us would find it hard to eat this every day.

Typically sesame seeds are eaten as a garnish for stir-frys, curries and bread. In some cultures they are used more widely as a major ingredient in discretionary foods that also contain sugar and fat – such as halva, biscuits, tahini paste and sesame seed bars.

Sesame seeds also contain anti-nutrients. These are natural compounds, such as oxalic acid and phytic acid. These bind to minerals (iron, calcium and zinc) and reduce how much the body can absorb and use.

For most of us, eating foods in normal quantities that contain oxalate and phytic acid is not a concern. But if you have a known deficiency, increasing your intake of sesame seeds is not a good idea. If this applies to you, it is worth discussing with an accredited practising dietitian.


Read more: What to drink with dinner to get the most iron from your food (and what to avoid)


What about antioxidants?

Free radicals are formed naturally as a byproduct of all our usual bodily processes such as breathing and moving, as well as from UV (ultraviolet) light exposure, smoking, air pollutants and industrial chemicals. These can damage our proteins, cell membranes and DNA.

Sesame seeds contain antioxidants, chemicals that “mop up” these free radicals so they cannot cause damage.

One study found higher levels of phenols (a type of antioxidant) in black sesame seeds compared to white ones.

Black sesame also contains higher levels of lignans, an important group of phenols, than white sesame.

Cell and animal studies have looked at sesamin, the main type of lignan. These demonstrate its antioxidant properties, as well as cholesterol-lowering, blood pressure-reducing and anti-tumour effects.

But higher antioxidant levels don’t always automatically translate into proven health benefits.

Is black sesame healthy?

BMI, blood pressure and cholesterol

A systematic review, which included the results of six studies with a total of 465 participants, looked into the health benefits of sesame. This included any type of sesame as either a seed, oil or capsule.

The authors reported a statistically significant decrease in BMI (body-mass index), blood pressure and cholesterol. Sesame doses were 0.06–35g/day over four to eight weeks. But not all these studies compared it to a placebo, were double-blinded (when neither participants nor researchers know who is receiving a particular treatment or placebo) and in some of the included studies medications were still being used.

Because of this the authors said the evidence was of low quality, and so could not make any health recommendations.

Only one study in the review looked at black sesame seed specifically. This looked at the effect of taking 2.52g a day as capsules compared with a placebo for four weeks. It showed a drop in systolic blood pressure (the top number in your blood pressure reading) from about 129 mmHg (a measure of blood pressure) to about 121 mmHg in people with prehypertension (blood pressure slightly higher than normal).

Grey hair

I could find no scientific studies that have looked at black sesame seeds and hair colour.

Similarly there is no current evidence any specific food or supplement can reverse grey hair.

Any risks?

Yes, about 0.1–0.9% of the population around the world have a sesame allergy, a rate that appears to be rising.

Like all food allergies, the symptoms can be mild to severe. An anaphylactic response requires emergency medical treatment.

So what should I do?

The rise of black sesame does present a new ingredient you can enjoy in your cooking. If it doesn’t appeal, regular sesame seeds are also an option.

Given the small amounts we typically eat, it won’t make an overall difference to your health if you prefer black or white sesame seeds.

And as for black sesame to reverse grey hair, don’t count on it.

Ensuring you have a wide and varied diet is the best way to ensure you get all the nutrients you need for optimal physical and mental health.

ref. What is black sesame? Is it really the new matcha? An expert explains – https://theconversation.com/what-is-black-sesame-is-it-really-the-new-matcha-an-expert-explains-275074

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/what-is-black-sesame-is-it-really-the-new-matcha-an-expert-explains-275074/

Solomon Islands academic warns Pacific economies at risk from US-Israel-Iran conflict

RNZ Pacific

A Solomon Islands academic says the US and Israel illegal bombing of Iran is “deeply alarming” and the Pacific region does not need “more global instability”

US President Donald Trump warned yesterday that Operation Epic Fury against Iran — “one of the largest, most complex, most overwhelming military offensives the world has ever seen” — will continue until all of Washington’s objectives are achieved.

The US military says it has sunk a dozen Iranian warships and is “going after the rest” in attacks which Trump said have killed 48 top Iranian leaders, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Six American service members have also been killed and five seriously injured.

At least three Pacific Island governments have advised their nationals stuck in the Gulf region to remain calm and leave when it is possible to do so.

The joint US-Israeli strikes — and Iranian retaliation — have turned international law on its head, according to some experts.

Reacting to the conflict, Solomon Islands National University’s vice-chancellor Dr Transform Aqorau said the Pacific must remain an “ocean of peace”.

‘Deeply alarming’
“The escalating conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran is deeply alarming,” he wrote in a Facebook post yesterday.

“Missiles are flying. Civilians are dying. Oil tankers have reportedly been hit. The Strait of Hormuz — one of the world’s most critical oil routes — is now closed.

“Some leaders speak of success. But war never has winners. The real cost is paid by ordinary people.

“And the Pacific will not be immune,” he wrote.

He said if oil supplies from the Gulf were disrupted, global fuel prices would surge.

“For Pacific Island countries — heavily dependent on imported fuel — this means higher electricity costs, more expensive transport, rising food prices, and increased cost of living.

“Our already fragile economies could face another severe external shock.”

Struggling with issues
Dr Aqorau said the region was struggling with a myriad of issues, including climate change, rising sea levels, drug problems, mental health pressures, youth unemployment, diabetes, slow economic growth, and growing populations.

“We do not need more global instability. We need peace,” he said.

“Pacific leaders have declared our region an ‘Ocean of Peace’ — a commitment to unity, sovereignty, dialogue, and non-militarisation. This is not just symbolic. It is strategic.

“Our islands have suffered before from global power rivalries and war. We know the long shadows they cast.”

He added that as the global order shifted, the Pacific must look more to each other for solidarity and cooperation.

‘Strength in regional unity’
“Our strength is in regional unity. Our security must be rooted in development, climate resilience, and human wellbeing — not militarisation.

“War diverts resources from schools to weapons, from hospitals to missiles, from climate action to destruction. Peace creates the space for progress.”

He said the Pacific must stand firm as an ocean of peace.

“In a world drifting toward conflict, let us choose stability. Let us choose cooperation. Let us choose peace.”

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

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/solomon-islands-academic-warns-pacific-economies-at-risk-from-us-israel-iran-conflict/

Jimpa lovingly follows in the tradition of artwork about fathers who came out of the closet

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Catherine Freyne, Senior Producer, Impact Studios UTS, University of Technology Sydney

Jimpa is an emotionally nuanced family drama by acclaimed Australian filmmaker Sophie Hyde.

“Jimpa” is the family nickname for flamboyant and provocative patriarch, Jim (John Lithgow). Born in the early 1950s, Jim came out as gay to his wife Katherine (Deborah Kennedy) in the late 1970s when their youngest child, Hannah, was a baby.

Instead of separating, Jim and Katherine improvised new rules for their marriage, raising their two daughters together for a decade, until Jim left the family home in Adelaide in search of wider social and professional horizons.

Now, Hannah (Olivia Colman) is making a film based on the story of her parents. She wants to show the courage and grace of the unconventional accommodations they made when she was growing up.

The time has come to talk to her ageing father about the project, so Hannah, her partner Harry (Daniel Henshall) and their teenager Frances (Aud Mason-Hyde) travel from Adelaide to visit Jim in Amsterdam.

[embedded content]

Emotional terrains

At 16, Frances comfortably inhabits a queer, non-binary identity. They have long idolised their geographically distant grandfather for his courageous part in the struggle for gay liberation and HIV/AIDS advocacy.

Thrust into close proximity, Frances sees things about Jim that both complicate and enrich their perception of him. They learn Katherine had offered to leave Adelaide, too, so the family could stay together. But Jim insisted on striking out on his own: a move he now admits to Frances was “purely selfish”.

Over the course of the film, the family must reckon with the complex legacy of Jim’s choices – choices he made while attempting to integrate all his various roles and identities, which themselves shifted throughout his life and the passing decades.

Growing up with a gay father

Jimpa is inspired by Hyde’s own family experience. Her late father, Jim Hyde, was an important figure in Australia’s gay rights movement; her child, Mason-Hyde, who plays Frances, is also queer and non-binary.

Watching the film, I also found parallels with my family experience. My father came out as gay in 1994, and I identify as queer. Hyde has made a semi-autobiographical film out of her family experience. I made mine the subject of my PhD in history, and am now working on a book adaptation of my thesis.

Jimpa is inspired by Sophie Hyde’s own family story. Kismet

We are not the first people to make creative work about the experience of growing up with fathers teetering at the threshold of the closet.

American cartoonist Alison Bechdel set the dazzling standard with her 2006 graphic memoir. Fun Home tells the story of her father, who secretly pursued his sexual attraction to adolescent boys and men, and his sudden death in 1980 at the age of 44. The book was later adapted into a musical.

American musician and actor Carrie Brownstein’s memoir Hunger Makes Me A Modern Girl (2015) talks about her late-to-bloom gay father.

Federal police officer and athletic strongman competitor Grant Edwards described in his 2019 memoir the effect on his childhood when his father left the family home in Sydney’s western suburbs in 1970 to live with his boyfriend.

Historical circumstances

These authors set their father’s deliberations over sexual identity in the context of broader public histories of sexual liberation and LGBTQIA+ community formation.

In Jimpa, this is achieved largely through the use of flashback sequences – there are dozens of them in the film. They have the feel of amateur footage captured on Super 8 film, slowed down to increase the effect of nostalgia, but nevertheless fleeting.

Olivia Coleman plays Hannah, a woman making a film about her father, Jim. Kismet

Instead of dialogue or diegetic sound, these sequences are poignantly scored. Sometimes they telescope personal histories – even minor characters are given this treatment. We see a glimpse of the child inside the man, the puppy inside the ailing dog. We see a flash of past contexts: a workplace, an airport departure, a new baby.

The same technique enables the inclusion of sequences which convey important historical context: a group of people stitching squares for the AIDS memorial quilt; a political campaign; a peer support meeting for partners of bisexual men.

Hyde’s film, and other works authored by the offspring of late 20th century gay fathers, show how the available categories of identity vary over time, in accordance with shifting social conditions and cultural change.

Expanding the scope of family intimacy

Jimpa makes a case for the intergenerational effects on Australian families when dads depart closets.

Despite the shadow of abandonment of both wife and children that is clearly part of Jim’s legacy, in the film’s moving final chapter, Hannah frames his decision to leave the family as “something wonderful” that “open[ed] up all their lives”.

Through a warm multigenerational lens, Jimpa posits the family as a pivotal site for the negotiation of LGBTQIA+ identities since the 1970s. It suggests these negotiations have expanded repertoires of intimacy and opportunities for individual flourishing in contemporary Australian family life.

Jimpa is in cinemas now.

ref. Jimpa lovingly follows in the tradition of artwork about fathers who came out of the closet – https://theconversation.com/jimpa-lovingly-follows-in-the-tradition-of-artwork-about-fathers-who-came-out-of-the-closet-276964

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/jimpa-lovingly-follows-in-the-tradition-of-artwork-about-fathers-who-came-out-of-the-closet-276964/

Open justice no more: how Victoria’s courts are stopping journalists from doing their jobs

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Johan Lidberg, Associate Professor, School of Media, Film and Journalism, Monash University

Covering the courts can be a tough gig. The pace is fast, there are many legal considerations to be across, and media outlets are hungry for quality stories, quickly.

Our study aimed to capture the experience of senior reporters covering the courts in Melbourne and Victoria. We conducted in-depth inverviews with 12 journalists from five of the major media outlets in Victoria.

The journalists interviewed in our study described a justice system where secrecy is expanding, access to information is shrinking, and public-interest journalism is becoming increasingly difficult. These experiences point to an undermining of the open justice doctrine, which is a crucial component of liberal democracy.

Traditionally, journalists have played a crucial role in upholding open justice. Our interview data indicate that that the role of journalism in open justice is now being challenged by the Victorian judiciary.

This is how one senior reporter described how often Victorian courts breach the 2013 Open Courts Act.

Every day there are suppression orders that do not meet the basic requirements, especially in terms of providing reasons […]the requirement to give three days notice to the media is also routinely breached. (Ben Butler, investigative journalist, ABC)

Commissioned by the Melbourne Press Club, our report paints a troubling picture of how court suppression orders, limited access to court documents and constrained access to police and government sources are undermining journalists’ ability to scrutinise public institutions in Victoria.

Suppression orders in Victoria

Suppression orders are court orders restricting what can be published about an ongoing case. They are meant to be rare exceptions to the principle of open justice. But our study shows they have become and stayed routine in Victoria.

In our interviews, reporters allege that the act is routinely breached. Courts often fail to provide the required three days notice to media before issuing an order, and interim suppression orders, which require less justification, are increasingly granted and sometimes allowed to stand for months.

Journalists described a pattern where high‑profile defendants and their legal teams raise mental health concerns to justify anonymity. A recent example of this was the rape case against the youngest son of Carlton Football Club great Stephen Silvagni, Tom Silvagni. He was finally publicly named at the end of 2025 after a suppression order kept his identity secret for 545 days. The interviewees also highlighted inconsistent practices across courts and judicial officers, with little ability to challenge decisions in real time.

Restricting access to court documents

Another serious finding in our report is how difficult it has become for journalists – and by extension, the public – to access basic court information.

A decade ago, reporters could routinely obtain the brief of evidence at committal hearings. Today, many say they receive almost nothing. Without charge sheets, witness statements or indictments, journalists say they cannot accurately follow proceedings. This threatens the accuracy and completeness of their reporting.

Changes within the Magistrates’ Court have also obscured basic details. A key column indicating which police unit (such as homicide or counter‑terrorism) is involved in a matter has been removed from public listings, making it very hard to identify serious cases in advance.

The digitisation of court systems has further complicated the information access situation. Access varies between courts, fees for copies of documents are inconsistent, and many frontline court staff appear unsure what journalists are entitled to access and view.

One reporter summarised the situation:

We’re expected to fairly and accurately report on something with 1% of the information that’s actually available and before the court. So of course, prosecutors, or defence lawyers, or magistrates read the story and go, “oh, well, that’s [inaccurate]”. But we only knew one per cent of the story and we can only write what we have (Erin Pearson, court and justice reporter, The Age).

Relationship between courts and media has deteriorated

Several reporters said Victorian judicial officers are increasingly hostile toward the media, describing a “vibe shift” on the bench. Some recounted being removed from hearings, told they could not sit in court without submitting paperwork, or without a lawyer present.

Court media teams, which once held regular meetings with journalists and editors, no longer do so. Requests for meetings with chief judges have been declined or ignored. The researchers invited the chief magistrate, chief county court judge and chief justice of the Supreme Court to participate in the study, they all declined. This disengagement, we argue, is a finding in itself indicating little or no will from the Victorian courts in building trust with the public and media.

Access to government and police sources has weakened

Journalists also report declining access to human sources within police and the state government. Victoria Police no longer routinely provides the names of accused persons, making it harder for reporters to track the administration of justice on behalf of the public. Officers were described as increasingly reluctant to speak even off the record, fearing disciplinary action.

Within the state government, decision‑making authority over media access has become increasingly centralised in the premier’s private office. Some departments now provide statements with significant portions “on background”, information reporters may use but cannot attribute to its source.

The relationship between Victorian courts and journalists has become increasingly hostile. Con Chronis/AAP

A crisis for public accountability

Our benchmarking shows Australia already performs poorly by global standards of court transparency. Even within this context, Victoria stands out as one of the least open jurisdiction in the country.

Countries such as Sweden offer far greater public access to court files, including full police briefs and allow journalists to audio record court proceedings by default. The US and UK also provide broader access to court documents, supported by constitutional or statutory protections compared to Victoria and Australia.

Our report concludes that public interest journalism in Victoria is under significant strain, particularly in court reporting. The current situation threatens natural justice, democratic accountability and public trust in the legal system.

We make ten recommendations to the Melbourne Press Club in our report. Apart from a review of the implementation of the Open Courts Act Victoria, the core recommendation is the MPC acts as a facilitator to rebuild the broken relationship between the Victorian courts and the media outlets in the state. This would be in the public interest, which both the media and the courts should serve.

ref. Open justice no more: how Victoria’s courts are stopping journalists from doing their jobs – https://theconversation.com/open-justice-no-more-how-victorias-courts-are-stopping-journalists-from-doing-their-jobs-276040

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/open-justice-no-more-how-victorias-courts-are-stopping-journalists-from-doing-their-jobs-276040/

A court has drawn a clear line on antisemitic hate speech. Here’s what it said

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jeremie M Bracka, Law Lecturer and Transitional Justice Academic, RMIT University

As both the federal government and states across the country pass laws cracking down on hate speech, there’s been much debate about where to draw the line on what can and can’t be said.

A Victorian court has drawn that line in a landmark decision. The Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) has found chanting “all Zionists are terrorists” at a Melbourne rally amounted to unlawful racial and religious vilification.

In the case, called Vorchheimer vs Tayeh, Vice President Judge Tran held that initiating the chant at a pro-Palestinian protest breached parts of Victoria’s Racial and Religious Tolerance Act.

The detailed ruling sheds light on how some judges are approaching these complicated questions. Here’s what it said.

What the tribunal found

The tribunal was not asked to rule on Zionism or Israel’s military actions. Its task was narrower: whether leading the chant “all Zionists are terrorists” at a large Melbourne rally was likely to incite “hatred, serious contempt, revulsion or severe ridicule” against Jewish people on racial or religious grounds.

Judge Tran focused on three words.

The first was “terrorists”. She described this as “one of the most extremely negative labels it is possible to attach to a person”, someone “against whom violent action is justified” and whom it is “societally acceptable to hate”.

The next word was “Zionists”. The tribunal accepted “Zionist does not mean Jew”. But it found the term carries “a deep connection with Jewish people” in historical and statistical terms.

Evidence to the court showed most Australian Jews identify as Zionist in some form. Judge Tran concluded there was likely a “very strong association” between Zionists and Jewish people in the minds of rally participants.

And finally, the word “all”. The word carried “the spectre of de-individuation, a hallmark of racism”. There was “no permission for shades of grey or human complexity”.

In assessing legality, the tribunal considered the full rally context, including Holocaust imagery and antisemitic tropes on placards. Although the signs did not explicitly name Jews, the court found repeated Nazi and Holocaust references strengthened the association between “Zionists” and Jewish identity in the minds of participants.

The tribunal also noted an “observable antisemitic and pro-violent presence” at the rally. In that setting, chanting “all Zionists are terrorists” did not operate as abstract political critique. Its “natural and ordinary effect” was to “tip many rally participants over the threshold into hatred directed towards Jewish people”.

Political vs personal

The tribunal stressed that the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act is not concerned with outlawing criticism.

Hasheam Tayeh, who said the phrase in question, argued he was engaging in political protest.

But the tribunal held there is “no right to a catchy rally slogan” if it is inherently likely to incite hatred.

A court has found Hasheam Tayeh breached the Victorian Racial and Religious Tolerance Act. Joel Carrett/AAP

The chant was not confined to criticising the Israeli government after October 7 2023. It was directed, at a minimum, against “all supporters of the continued existence of Israel as a Jewish state”, the court found.

Given the tribunal’s finding that the vast majority of Australian Jews identify as Zionist in some form, the chant was therefore likely to stir hostility toward a group closely associated with Jewish identity.

The political protest defence therefore failed because the conduct was not shown to be reasonable and in good faith. The boundary is clear: speech may attack ideas, but not stir hostility against people because of who they are.

Why this matters nationally

The Victorian tribunal has drawn a clear doctrinal line. Labelling an undifferentiated group closely associated with Jewish identity as “terrorists” can amount to unlawful vilification.

Although decided under Victorian law and applying only in that state, the reasoning will resonate nationally.

Most Australian jurisdictions prohibit racial vilification. At the federal level, section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act sets a lower threshold: conduct reasonably likely to “offend, insult, humiliate or intimidate” on racial grounds.

The decision comes amid a sharp rise in antisemitic incidents across Australia since late 2023, with community bodies reporting record levels of threats, vandalism and intimidation.

The Bondi terror attack, which targeted a Hanukkah gathering, intensified national concern about extremist rhetoric and community safety.

Against that backdrop, courts are increasingly being asked to distinguish protest from incitement.

Words in real life

But the decision contrasts with the Federal Court ruling last year in a case called Wertheim v Haddad.

In this case, the court found certain lectures by preacher William Haddad conveyed antisemitic imputations, including claims that Jews control the media and politicians and that “the Jewish people are filthy”.

Yet other remarks criticising Israel and “Zionists” were treated as political commentary.

In the Victorian case, Judge Tran did not treat “Zionist” as an abstract ideological label. She examined how it functioned in social and historical context, including the antisemitic atmosphere in which the chant was delivered.

One approach parses language semantically. The other asks how it lands in real life.

In a climate where extremist rhetoric has intersected with real-world violence including reports that alleged Bondi attacker Naveed Akram was allegedly a follower of preacher Haddad, context is not theoretical. It can matter.

Context with consequences

The ruling will feed into the ongoing debate about how Australia regulates hate speech. It shows existing laws can address coded vilification, not only explicit slurs.

At the same time, the tribunal was careful: criticism of Israel is not unlawful, nor is opposition to Zionism automatically hate speech.

The legal line is crossed when rhetoric assigns a heinous criminal identity to an entire class of people closely associated with a racial or religious group, in circumstances where hatred is the likely result.

In a polarised environment, that boundary will remain contested. But this decision signals that courts will look beyond labels and ask how language operates in context. And in the real world, context can have consequences.

ref. A court has drawn a clear line on antisemitic hate speech. Here’s what it said – https://theconversation.com/a-court-has-drawn-a-clear-line-on-antisemitic-hate-speech-heres-what-it-said-277095

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/a-court-has-drawn-a-clear-line-on-antisemitic-hate-speech-heres-what-it-said-277095/

Dogs can detect trafficked wildlife hidden in shipping containers from tiny air samples

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Georgia Moloney, Researcher, School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Adelaide University

Wildlife trafficking is a global crisis impacting at least 4,000 species of plants and animals, including mammals, reptiles, birds, corals and rare plants.

A shocking case from 2025 involved the seizure of 3.7 tonnes of pangolin scales in Nigeria. These scales were believed to be sourced from more than 1,900 individual pangolins.

While this case was uncovered, many more remain undetected. These crimes aren’t just pushing species toward extinction, they’re also putting people at risk. Hunting, trafficking and handling wild animals creates opportunities for diseases to jump from animals to humans. Wildlife trafficking is therefore not just a conservation crisis, but a serious threat to public health.

In our recent paper published in Conservation Biology, we present a new method for tackling this global crime. It uses a tiny sample of air extracted from a shipping container – and the incredible power of a dogs’ nose.

Traffickers exploit shipping routes

People buy and sell a wide range of wild animals and their parts for many reasons, such as pangolin scales for traditional medicines, monkeys for exotic pets, or even porcupines for bushmeat.

Traffickers exploit global transport routes to move their products, with shipping containers in particular being ideal targets.

Containers carry up to 90% of the world’s cargo, meaning products can be easily concealed and blend into the high volume of container traffic moving through ports.

Despite this, on average only about 2% of containers are physically inspected due to resource limitations.

There are few wildlife specific detection tools, and wildlife crime is often considered a low priority. Combined, this means most trafficking slips through undetected.

Bringing the scent to the dog

To bridge this gap, we investigated air sampling as a way to screen containers for wildlife without opening them, damaging cargo, or disrupting port operations.

[embedded content]

This work was part of a four-year project, undertaken in collaboration with the world’s third largest shipping company CMA CGM.

We designed a portable air extraction device that fits onto a standard container vent and draws air through a filter to collect a sample. The sample is then presented to a trained detection dog which can indicate whether the scent of specific wildlife products is present.

In our study, we concealed pelts from five big cat species – lion, tiger, leopard, snow leopard and cheetah – inside standard-sized shipping containers. The pelts were arranged to simulate smuggling scenarios, including being hidden inside cardboard boxes to increase concealment.

Our detection dog successfully detected the pelts with almost 98% accuracy when air was extracted from the shipping container. They did so even when the pelts were concealed, demonstrating that the scent can escape into the container airspace and be reliably captured.

Detection dogs are already widely used by customs and border agencies around the world, but their ability to screen sealed containers at scale is limited. Containers are often inaccessible, stacked high, or in environments that are unsafe for dogs.

Our approach brings the scent to the dog, allowing many more containers to be screened efficiently and safely.

While the study was conducted under controlled conditions, these early results are encouraging. Pairing detection dogs with air-sampling could dramatically improve the detection of illegally trafficked wildlife hidden inside shipping containers.

The air extraction device is low cost, portable and scalable, making it well suited for use in high-risk ports and border crossings worldwide. The method could also be readily adapted for detecting other forms of trafficking, such as drugs, increasing its appeal to border agencies.

Disrupting criminal networks

Further trials are planned to validate the effectiveness of this approach in operational port environments across a broader range of wildlife products.

We are also exploring machine-based detectors to analyse samples and support the future development of this project.

However, initial findings show the dogs still outperform these technologies, which currently remain our most effective approach.

Our goal is to give frontline agencies practical tools to fight wildlife trafficking.

Through applying science-based research in the field, we can bridge enforcement gaps and detect trafficked wildlife faster, allowing us to better protect threatened species and disrupt the criminal networks behind this devastating trade.

ref. Dogs can detect trafficked wildlife hidden in shipping containers from tiny air samples – https://theconversation.com/dogs-can-detect-trafficked-wildlife-hidden-in-shipping-containers-from-tiny-air-samples-276986

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/dogs-can-detect-trafficked-wildlife-hidden-in-shipping-containers-from-tiny-air-samples-276986/

NZ’s opposition leader Chris Hipkins says US-Israel strikes illegal

RNZ News

New Zealand’s opposition Labour leader Chris Hipkins says he does not support the United States and Israel’s strikes on Iran.

He disagrees with Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s stance that it was not New Zealand’s place to comment on the legality of the strikes.

Iran and Israel have continued to trade strikes since joint US and Israeli airstrikes killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Saturday.

US President Donald Trump has warned that “bigger strikes” are to come, and says the conflict could drag out longer than the four to five weeks he initially planned.

New Zealanders in Iran are urged to leave if it is safe to do so, and register on SafeTravel.

Hipkins said he believed the strikes were illegal.

“I think New Zealand government seems to be moving away from what has been a long-standing and principled approach to these issues,” he told RNZ’s Morning Report.

‘International law matters’
“We have been very clear that we think international law matters, and that all parties to these sorts of conflicts should follow international law. That’s not the case here.”

He said it was important that the New Zealand government spoke with authority and in favour of international law.

“New Zealand’s government should stand up for the international system of rules that we rely on for our own security as a country,” Hipkins said.

“If the situation becomes that the countries with the most power can do whatever they like regardless of what international law says, that’s very bad news for a small country like New Zealand.”

Luxon has previously said it would be up to the US and Israel to explain the legal basis for their attacks.

“Issues of legality [are] for Israel and the US to talk to because we’re not party to that information or that intelligence they may have,” he said.

Luxon went on to say it wasn’t guaranteed New Zealand would ever see this intelligence — and his government would not be asking to see it.

‘Long-standing commitment’
“We’ve had a long-standing commitment under successive governments that any actions that stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon is a good thing, any actions that take to stop them from sponsoring terrorism is a good thing, any actions that stops them from killing their own people is a good thing,” he said.

“This is not a good regime and that has been a long-standing position of New Zealand governments under different administrations.”

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon . . . pressed on the government’s position on US-Israel’s war on Iran in his weekly post-cabinet media conference yesterday. Image: RNZ/Samuel Rillstone

Hipkins said he had been taken aback by Luxon’s language around New Zealand supporting any actions to stop Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

“I was somewhat shocked to see that comment . . .  that does not reflect the position that successive New Zealand governments have taken,” he said.

“Successive New Zealand governments have expressed significant concern about the Iranian regime but that does not justify any action, particularly when it breaches international law.”

Endangers rules-based order
Green Party co-leader Marama Davidson said the latest conflict in the Middle East endangered the rules-based order New Zealand relied on.

“The idea that we can start encouraging and allowing other countries to invade just because we don’t like their leaders is an incredibly dangerous take for this Prime Minister to support.

“He needs to be up front and declare whether he supports the rule of law, whether he supports countries in the world just willy nilly being able to decide, on vibes, whether they can invade or not.

“That’s really dangerous. That puts us and regions of the world in a really unsafe position.”

ACT leader David Seymour . . . “It’s critical that trade is able to continue and resume.” Image: RNZ/Mark Papalii

Deputy Prime Minister and ACT leader David Seymour is backing Luxon’s stance on the US-Israel attacks on Iran.

“One thing he’s noted that’s important is that New Zealand does not have all of the information that the US and Israel have used to justify their actions,” he told RNZ’s First Up today.

“So, we could spend a lot of time with New Zealand trying to be precise in its position, but I don’t think that’s what the world’s waiting for.”

‘Normal rights’
He said as a result of the strikes, Iranian girls will have an opportunity to “dress as you like, go to school, do things that are normal rights that have been withheld from them by this regime”.

“And finally, for them in Iran and also for all of us around the world, it’s critical that trade is able to continue and resume so that we don’t face price shocks and even more economic peril. Those are the things that I think are important.”

Seymour would not say if he expected advance warning from allies like the UK if New Zealand troops at allies’ bases in the region were in danger.

“That’s something that we constantly talk about with our allies, but I think it’s safe to say that whatever we may or may not be doing won’t be helped by me announcing it on New Zealand radio . . .

“Clearly, the safety of New Zealand personnel is critical, and whatever moves might or might not be afoot, we’re not going to discuss publicly.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters said New Zealand was not given any advance notice of the attack on Iran, and has again urged New Zealanders to leave if it is safe to do so.

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

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/03/03/nzs-opposition-leader-chris-hipkins-says-us-israel-strikes-illegal/