A Fresh Take on Modern Continental: JIN Gastrobar at Mid Valley Southkey JB Reveals Its Latest Menu

Source: Media Outreach

KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA – Media OutReach Newswire – 25 February 2026 – First established in 2019, JIN Gastrobar introduces a refreshed take on modern continental cuisine, bringing together thoughtfully crafted dishes, curated gin selections, and signature cocktails in a warm, contemporary setting. Conveniently located within Aurum Theatre at The Gardens Mall and Mid Valley Southkey JB, the restaurant welcomes diners without the need for a movie ticket, making it an accessible dining destination for both moviegoers and dine-in guests alike.

JIN Gastrobar’s new menu includes a variety of intercontinental mains such as grilled meats and fish, delectable pastas, desserts, and not forgetting JIN Gastrobar’s signature cocktails and mocktails.

Inspired by a play on the words “Jin,” meaning gold in Mandarin, and “Gin,” one of its signature pours, JIN Gastrobar was created as a space where food, drinks, and meaningful moments come together. The space is designed to suit every occasion, from intimate date nights and quality time with loved ones to casual gatherings and solo indulgence.

A Prelude of Flavours

The refreshed menu begins with a variety of appetisers, including sharing platters, starters, soups, and salads designed to offer warmth and balance. Highlights include:

  • Chargrilled Octopus (RM68)
  • Canadian Atlantic Lobster Roll (RM58)
  • Trio of Fries (RM32)

Mains from Land and Sea

The main course selection spans grilled meats, fresh seafood, and comforting pastas, offering something for every palate. Amongst a range of selections, diners can choose from:

  • Linguine al Mentaiko (RM35)
  • JIN’s Wagyu Burger (RM48)
  • Smoked Duck Carbonara (RM40)
  • O’Connor’s Black Angus Ribeye (250g) (RM125)
  • Wild-Caught Mediterranean Grilled Branzino (Whole Fish) (RM98)

Complementary sides such as russet steak fries, sautéed spinach, sautéed mushrooms, truffled mashed potatoes, and Peruvian asparagus with broccolini are available, priced from RM15 to RM35.

Desserts and Signature Sips

To end on a sweet note, guests can enjoy desserts including Classic Tiramisu (RM25), Chocolate Brûlée, Lime and Lychee Mousse (RM25), and Apple Crumble with Ice Cream.

features signature cocktails (RM50 each) with flavour profiles such as olive, pineapple, calamansi, and lychee. Non-alcoholic mocktails include Peach Sunrise, Pineapple Passion, Calamansi Fizz, Elderflower Fizz, and Virgin Mojito.

Dine & Post, Get Rewarded

From 21 January 2026 to 21 March 2026, the first 300 GSC Rewards members who dine in and post an Instagram Story tagging @jingastrobar will receive a complimentary mocktail.

  1. Dine in at JIN Gastrobar.
  2. Post an Instagram Story and tag @jingastrobar.
  3. Present the Story to staff to redeem a complimentary mocktail.

JIN Gastrobar operates daily from 11:00am to 10:00pm at The Gardens Mall, Kuala Lumpur and Mid Valley South Key, Johor Bahru

With its refreshed menu and inviting ambience, JIN Gastrobar offers a versatile dining space suited for every occasion.

For further updates, stay tuned to JIN Gastrobar’s social media channels: https://www.instagram.com/jingastrobar/?hl=en

https://www.jingastrobar.com.my/#/
https://www.instagram.com/jingastrobar/?hl=en

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/a-fresh-take-on-modern-continental-jin-gastrobar-at-mid-valley-southkey-jb-reveals-its-latest-menu/

Tech – New Zealanders concerned about AI harm and impact on society, new research shows

Source: InternetNZ

InternetNZ | Ipurangi Aotearoa will launch new annual Internet Insights research on Monday, 2 March 2026.
The report provides insights into our attitudes towards the Internet and our online world. As we spend more of our lives online, this research helps us, as a country, better understand how we use the Internet and how we feel about it.
Key research insights include:
  • New Zealanders’ use of AI and the concerns about its impact.
  • How much time we spend online for personal use (outside of work), and what we do with that time.
  • Which social media apps we are using.
  • Specific concerns we have about our lives being increasingly spent online.
Early access to research:
If you’d like to read the report before it goes live from 2 March, we’re happy to release it to you under embargo (2 March, 6am) and arrange any interviews or quotes you might need.
InternetNZ Chief Executive Vivien Maidaborn is available for interviews on Sunday, with some limited availability on Thursday and Friday.
About the research:
Internet Insights is an annual research report commissioned by InternetNZ | Ipurangi Aotearoa. The 2025 research was carried out by Verian, with interviews conducted between November 25 and December 8, 2025.
The sample size was 1003 and consisted of New Zealanders over the age of 18 sourced using online consumer panels. Results have a margin of error of +/- 3.1 per cent.
About InternetNZ | Ipurangi Aotearoa
InternetNZ | Ipurangi Aotearoa is the home and guardian of the .nz domain. We’re not government-funded – we’re an independent, not-for-profit organisation that operates .nz for the benefit of all New Zealanders, reinvesting domain revenue back into the community. We provide grants, help to fund other organisations, and advocate for an accessible and safe Internet that benefits everyone in Aotearoa. Find out more on our websitehttps://internetnz.nz/about-internetnz/

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/tech-new-zealanders-concerned-about-ai-harm-and-impact-on-society-new-research-shows/

Legislation – RMA reform at a crossroads for farmers – Federated Farmers

Source: Federated Farmers

A dark cloud is shading Matt and Tory Simpson’s optimism that a new dawn for land use regulation is around the corner.
Like thousands of other farmers, the owners of Ranui Station in Canterbury were delighted to hear pledges from the Government that resource management reform would reduce red tape, and balance environmental protection with property rights.
“It’s hugely disappointing to find the reality falls short of the rhetoric,” says Matt, who’s co-chair of Federated Farmers High Country.
“The two new bills are riddled with flaws and the select committee now has a mammoth task ahead to get things back on track.”
For the Simpsons, and many other landowners and businesses, it’s far more than just a desire for less paperwork, bureaucracy, hearings and expensive resource consents.
“Livelihoods are at stake,” Matt says.
“We look after nature and want to develop this place so it’s in good shape and a going concern for the next generation.
“We have high hopes the new resource management laws will help us combat the Outstanding Natural Landscape overlay restrictions on more than half the station, and other clamps on our ability to diversify income streams,” he says.
Last December the Government released two new bills – the Planning Bill and the Natural Environment Bill – to replace the Resource Management Act (RMA).
Federated Farmers has lodged a comprehensive submission on the bills, re-stating strong support for overhaul of the RMA.
“We absolutely back the goals and principles agreed by Cabinet,” Feds RMA Reform spokesperson Mark Hooper says.
“Those include enabling primary sector growth, narrowing the scope of effects of the RMA, and greater use of national standards while reducing the need for resource consents.
“If you want that in less jargony terms – that means faster, better, more efficient processes and knocking on the head the trend of endless hearings, appeals and uncertainty.
“Unfortunately, somewhere in between the ambitions of Government MPs and drafting of the legislation, something has fallen over.”
A major concern is that, as currently written, instead of a farm plan replacing the need for a resource consent, a farm may need both.
“We see a risk of farmers facing more red tape under the Natural Environment Act than they presently do under the RMA,” Hooper says.
There are too many ambiguous, principle-based clauses in the two bills, which is likely to see continued expensive, time-consuming and litigious decision making, he says.
The environment bill fails to clearly rule greenhouse gas issues out of scope – despite these already being dealt with in other Acts – and the lack of a clear scope section and definition of effect also leaves the door open to intangible, hard-to-measure concepts such as the ‘mauri’ of water.
“Too much power is left in the hands of the Minister, under any future government, to impact the economy under National Policy Direction.
“And there’s still too much uncertainty over how farmers will access compensation for overlays and other restrictions on their property.
“We pushed hard for a risk-based approach to auditing and certification of farm plans but that’s also missing,” Hooper says.
Federated Farmers’ other concerns include the carry-over of aspects of outdated Water Conservation Orders from the RMA, lack of protection for stock drinking water, and inability to insure against inadvertent breaches of regulation.
Hooper says time pressure may be a reason for “too much drag and drop” of content from the RMA into the draft new legislation.
“The Government and officials worked hard last year to make a series of amendments to the existing RMA.
“These were important fixes that enabled farmers to get on with production.
“That took focus away from the two new bills, and perhaps in the back of their minds was the fact there would be a five-month long select committee process and chances to weed out flaws.”
But Hooper believes the select committee has a challenging task.
“Federated Farmers has already voiced its unwavering opposition to clauses in the Natural Environment Bill which enable the Minister to auction, tender, or levy water.
“Getting rid of these potential water taxes is probably quite easily handled with changes of wording.
“But for other parts, the bill is drafted holistically and it’s more like a spider’s web, with layer upon layer of clauses that are interactive with other clauses.
“It’s going to take a lot of effort to untangle it.”
Hooper says it’s vital the select committee works diligently, and that its members who represent the coalition Government stick up for the original goals of RMA reform: simplicity, efficiency, less cost and litigation.
“Quite frankly, they’re principles and goals that an elected representative of any political persuasion should defend.”
Notes:  You can find the Federated Farmers’ submission on the Natural Environment Bill and Planning Bill here – https://www.fedfarm.org.nz/Web/Policy/Submission/2026/February/Submission-on-the-NEB-Bill-and-Planning-Bill.aspx  

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/legislation-rma-reform-at-a-crossroads-for-farmers-federated-farmers/

Milestone Systems expands Singapore footprint with the launch of Asia Experience Centre, strengthening regional leadership in video technology

Source: Media Outreach

SINGAPORE – Media OutReach Newswire – 25 February 2026 – Milestone Systems, a world leader in data-driven video technology, today announced the opening of its new Experience Centre in Singapore, representing a major expansion of the company’s regional footprint in Asia. The Centre will serve as a next-generation hub for solution design, cross-industry collaboration, and real-world testing of video innovations enabled by data analytics, hybrid-cloud architectures, and AI. It directly complements the Singapore government’s national agenda, announced at 2026 Budget by PM Lawrence Wong, by creating a stronger foundation for safe, industry-ready AI adoption in critical sectors.

Milestone Systems Singapore Experience Centre

The new facility underscores Milestone’s long-term commitment to Asia and supports the region’s rapid transition toward intelligent, automated and increasingly interconnected operational environments. It is designed to help governments, enterprises, and critical infrastructure operators accelerate deployments of video-driven solutions that enhance safety, efficiency, and resilience while ensuring that innovation aligns with global standards of responsible AI adoption.

“Asia is the world’s most dynamic security and smart infrastructure market, and enterprises are expecting deeper operational intelligence and more adaptable system architectures,” said Kiean Khoo, Asia Business Head, Milestone Systems. “Our expanded Singapore hub gives the region the capabilities, collaboration space, and expertise required to address these new opportunities and scale innovation.”

Asia’s security and smart infrastructure market accelerates

Asian growth in demand for intelligent video and integrated security solutions is being driven by rapid urbanisation, infrastructure expansion, and rising expectations for real-time operational insights across airports, transport hubs, hospitality, critical infrastructure, and public spaces.

“Our expanded presence in Singapore reflects two clear realities: the scale and pace of demand across Asia, and the importance of scaling through open ecosystems and responsible innovation,” said Morten Illum, Chief Revenue Officer, Milestone Systems. The Experience Centre will play a pivotal role in helping partners and customers build AI-enabled solutions that are trustworthy, interoperable and ready for real-world complexities.”

The Asia-Pacific Physical Security Market size is estimated at USD 42.25 billion in 2025, and is expected to reach USD 59.54 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 7.1% during the forecast period (2025-2030).[1] It is increasingly defined by intelligent video, access control, and integrated security solutions. Market trends show a significant migration from legacy CCTV systems to IP-based, hybrid, and cloud-enabled platforms, with an emphasis on interoperability, analytics, and AI-driven decision-making.

“As the region accelerates into the AI-era, our customers are looking for trusted, high-quality data to power autonomous decision-making,” Khoo added. “The new Experience Centre is built to help organisations validate AI-driven workflows safely and responsibly. It lets businesses experiment, optimise and innovate with the confidence that their systems meet the highest standards of governance, transparency and human oversight. “

A strategic hub for the era of Agentic AI

As organisations adopt AI—systems capable of planning, reasoning and autonomously executing tasks—video technology is becoming a core source of trusted, high-value data. The Asia Experience Centre will act as a proving ground for businesses seeking to explore how video, sensors, and multimodal data can be integrated to support e.g. AI agents in performing complex operational workflows.

The Centre features an expanded environment for scenario testing, multi-vendor integration, and modelling of high-density, real-time environments such as airports, urban transport, critical infrastructure, manufacturing floors, retail ecosystems, hospitality facilities and smart city districts. It can evaluate how AI workflows interact with real operational conditions, including video quality, data continuity, cybersecurity controls, and compliance requirements.

Driving innovation for a more connected and resilient Asia

Illum added further: “Milestone Systems is deepening its role as a catalyst for innovation across the region’s evolving security and smart-infrastructure landscape with the launch of the Asia Experience Centre. By combining open-platform video technology, responsible AI principles, and a strong partner ecosystem, the Centre will help accelerate Asia’s transition toward safer, smarter and more data-driven environments.”

Hashtag: #MilestoneSystems

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/milestone-systems-expands-singapore-footprint-with-the-launch-of-asia-experience-centre-strengthening-regional-leadership-in-video-technology/

Health – Growing demand shows addictions sector needs more investment

Source: NZ Drug Foundation

An increase in people accessing specialist addiction treatment highlights the hard work the sector is doing despite a longstanding lack of funding, the NZ Drug Foundation says.

A new monitoring report released by Te Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission today shows an increase in people accessing specialist addiction treatment, with over 3,000 more people accessing these services in 2024/25 compared to the previous year.

Drug Foundation Executive Director Sarah Helm says the increase is positive, but more investment is needed to meet the need in the community.

“It’s remarkable to see the heroic work that the sector is doing despite being underfunded for decades,” Helm says.

“We can’t solve issues like the big increase in methamphetamine harm without a step change in investment in addiction support. It’s desperately needed.”

Helm points out that despite the increase in people accessing services, the number of declined referrals to specialist addiction services is also increasing.

“The increase in declined referrals is concerning and it’s important we understand what is driving this.”

The report also shows more New Zealanders are accessing drug harm reduction information and support online, highlighting the importance of platforms like The Level.

The number of people accessing substance use support online has more than doubled in the last five years, from an estimated 73,326 people in 2020/21 to 197,494 in 2024/25.

Of that number, 174,818 people accessed information via The Level, the NZ Drug Foundation’s online harm reduction platform, in 2024/25.

Helm says the significant growth demonstrates that people who use drugs want to know how they can stay safer.

“Getting trustworthy information and advice in front of people early, no matter where they sit on the spectrum of drug use, is a no-brainer. It saves lives, prevents people from developing more severe issues, and saves the health system money.”

Helm says that if people can access information and support early enough, many substance use issues can be addressed at home or with whānau support, and don’t necessarily need intensive specialist support.

“We’ve focused hard on improving the self-help sections of The Level, with lots more planned this year, so it’s pleasing to see the growth in people accessing this crucial information.”

Notes:

Find the latest report from Te Hiringa Mahara – Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission on their website: https://www.mhwc.govt.nz/news-and-resources/mental-health-and-addiction-service-monitoring-2026-downloads
The Level combines research with real-life experiences from people who use drugs in New Zealand and provides relevant, trustworthy, and easy to understand support and advice. It is operated by the NZ Drug Foundation.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/health-growing-demand-shows-addictions-sector-needs-more-investment/

Further appeal in Omahu homicide

Source: New Zealand Police

Attribute to Acting Detective Senior Sergeant Kris Payne: 

Hawke’s Bay Police investigating the homicide of Sharlene Smith are releasing further information and appealing for public assistance.

On Tuesday, 3 February 2026, Police were called to a worksite on Taihape Road, Omahu, after Sharlene’s body was located on the property.

Through ongoing enquiries, Police have identified a likely route taken by a vehicle of interest. We know this vehicle was used on the day Sharlene’s body was left at the worksite, and officers have carried out extensive work to locate and review CCTV footage from the relevant timeframe.

Police are appealing for sightings of a white 2005 Mazda 3 sports hatchback between 8am and approximately midday on Sunday 1 February 2026, travelling from the Awatoto area, through Taihape Road/Omahu Road and the Fernhill area, and into Marewa, Napier. [see pictured map]

We are asking anyone who saw this vehicle, or who has home, business, or dashcam CCTV footage from those areas during that time, to please contact Police if not already spoken to.

Police are also seeking two items, belonging to Sharlene, that are believed to have been discarded along the same route:

  • a handbag [pictured], and
  • a Samsung Galaxy A06 mobile phone.

Anyone with information is urged to get in touch through 105, either online at https://www.police.govt.nz/use-105, or by calling 105, and referencing file number 260203/9739.

You can also provide information anonymously through Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/further-appeal-in-omahu-homicide/

A call to court: Woman charged over burglaries

Source: New Zealand Police

A Police response to calls for help brought a woman’s alleged offending spree across Auckland suburbs to a halt.

The woman will now face court over two burglaries and a stolen vehicle.

Senior Sergeant Shaun Richardson, of Auckland City Police, says units responded to Grey Lynn after 2.30am following calls from residents around Richmond Road.

“Residents reported hearing a woman calling for help in the vicinity of Westmoreland Street West.

“Police and ambulance attended the area and eventually located a woman stuck at a property under renovation; she had fallen between a retaining wall and earthworks.”

Units on scene established a burglary had occurred at the address.

Senior Sergeant Richardson says the woman was allegedly in possession of a handbag which had been stolen.

“Further checks established the handbag had allegedly been stolen just hours earlier in Epsom,” he says.

“Just before midnight, an offender had allegedly entered a house and stolen a handbag and keys, before driving off in a late model Audi hatchback.”

The 31-year-old woman was transported to hospital for her injuries.

She has since been charged with two counts of burglary for both the Epsom and Grey Lynn incidents, as well as unlawfully taking a motor vehicle.

Police have opposed the woman’s bail.

It’s expected a bedside court hearing will take place later today.

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/a-call-to-court-woman-charged-over-burglaries/

Statement following sentencing of Nathan Boulter

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute the following to Detective Senior Sergeant Karen Simmons, Christchurch Metro Crime:

Police acknowledge the sentence handed down to Nathan Boulter for the murder of Chantal McDonald in the High Court at Christchurch. The 37-year-old will now serve a minimum of 17 years in prison without parole.

Today’s sentence will never bring Chantal back, or end the devastating sense of loss inflicted on her loving family.

There is no prison term that will ever make up for what happened to Chantal or the profound sense of loss her loved ones have had to endure.

However, today brings a small comfort in knowing the community will be protected from a violent, controlling and pathetic gutless coward who so needlessly took Chantal’s life.

It is extremely disappointing that he made the decision to not physically appear in Court today and face Chantal’s family.

Chantal was a much-loved and devoted mother, daughter, sister and friend. She was regarded as a vibrant and special person to all who knew her, which makes her loss even harder to bear for those who were lucky enough to know her.

We are continuing to provide support for Chantal’s family as they navigate life without her.

Her family have been extremely dignified throughout this entire process and I commend them for that.

They are appreciative of the support they have received, but request privacy. They ask that media do not attempt to contact them.

I want to thank all of the Police investigators, staff, and the Crown prosecutor who dedicated themselves to getting justice for Chantal.

They have worked relentlessly to bring this case to court and hold Chantal’s killer accountable for his horrendous crime.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/statement-following-sentencing-of-nathan-boulter/

Tech Security – What to Do After a Data Breach

Source: Source: Botica Butler Raudon Partners

A data breach is when an unauthorised third-party accesses sensitive or confidential information. Think: login details, NHI and IRD numbers, or financial information. Breaches can stem from cyberattacks, like phishing or malware, but also from insider threats or system flaws.

If your data was exposed through a breach the risks are largely the same. If only your email or phone number are involved, the impact may be limited to spam, scams, or unwanted contact. But if financial details or NHI numbers are exposed, you could face stolen funds, credit damage, and even identity theft.

1. Confirm if your data was compromised

When a company suffers a data breach, they’re legally required to notify affected customers. But even without an official notice, unusual account activity may signal trouble. That’s why it’s important to check proactively for signs of a data breach instead of waiting for confirmation.

·       Check your accounts: Look for weird transactions, password changes, altered settings, or new login alerts.

·       Review your credit reports: Scan your credit reports for unfamiliar accounts or inquiries.

·       Watch for suspicious login alerts.

·       Try a data breach checker: Plug your information into a breach detection tool to see if your data has surfaced on the dark web – the hidden part of the internet where leaked data is often posted or sold.

2. Determine what data was exposed

Different kinds of data exposure lead to different risks.

·       Personally identifiable information (PII): Exposure of PII, like your full name, address, or birth date can make you a more vulnerable scam target.

·       NHI number: This is a significant security concern, as an NHI number can be exploited for identity theft, insurance claims, and phishing scams.

·       IRD number: This is among the most serious breaches, since IRD number can be used for identity theft and fraud.

·       Email address: If your email appears in a data breach, you’re likely to see an uptick in spam and phishing messages.

·       Passwords: If your password or account credentials are leaked, you are at heightened risk of account takeovers.

·       Credit card details: If your credit card details are exposed in a data breach, you’re at risk of credit card fraud.

3. Secure vulnerable accounts

After a data breach, attackers may try to break into your accounts or lock you out of them.

·       Change your passwords.

·       Set up multi-factor authentication (MFA).

·       Remove unfamiliar devices.

4. Freeze or lock your credit

If highly sensitive information like your IRD number is exposed in a data breach, criminals could try to open new lines of credit in your name. Placing a credit freeze on your credit reports prevents lenders from accessing them.

5. Set up fraud alerts

Fraud alerts give lenders a heads-up that you may be a victim of fraud when they run your credit. If you were involved in a breach or suspect you may have been, request the standard one-year fraud alert. If you actually fell victim to identity theft, look into an extended fraud alert, which protects you for seven years.

6. Monitor your reports

Continue to monitor your reports closely for at least a year after a data breach – potentially longer if you notice suspicious activity.

·       Bank statements: Review transactions for unauthorised or unfamiliar charges.

·       Credit reports: Look for unfamiliar accounts or credit checks that could signal fraud.

7. Warn people you know

If your accounts or contact details were exposed in a data breach, attackers may try to use that information to scam your friends, family, or coworkers. To reduce the risk, give your contacts a heads-up so they know to be cautious with unusual messages. Remind them not to click suspicious links, download unexpected attachments, or share sensitive information without confirming it’s really from you. A quick warning can go a long way.

How to protect yourself from future data breaches

No one can fully guarantee protection from a data breach, but good security habits can reduce your risk and limit the damage if one occurs.The key is to protect your accounts, share less information, and stay alert for scams:

·       Use multiple email accounts.

·       Strengthen your passwords: Create unique, complex passwords for every account.

·       Look out for signs of scams.

·       Verify before you click.

·       Limit information sharing.

·       Sign up for identity theft protection.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/tech-security-what-to-do-after-a-data-breach/

Firearms incident, Hei Hei

Source: New Zealand Police

Attributable to Detective Sergeant David Parker:

A scene examination is ongoing at a Hei Hei property in Christchurch following an firearms incident this morning.

Police were called to a Keri Place address around 4:35am to reports a vehicle was seen leaving the area at speed.

It was also reported that gunshots were heard.

Police attended and located evidence outside the property, which was unoccupied, to indicate a firearm had been discharged.

There will be a Police presence in the area while officers make a number of enquiries, working to determine what happened.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/firearms-incident-hei-hei/

Driving investment in new energy projects

Source: New Zealand Government

The Government is leveraging public sector energy demand to drive new energy projects and grow our national supply, Energy Minister Simon Watts says.

“As part of the Government’s Energy Package, we are pursuing possible long-term Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) across the public service starting with our three largest energy users: Health New Zealand, the New Zealand Defence Force, and the Department of Corrections,” Mr Watts says.

Following the Request for Information issued late last year, the Government is commencing discussions with the energy sector including independent generators and new entrants on opportunities to lock in long-term supply.

“We are focused on one clear outcome – increasing abundant and affordable energy to put downward pressure on power bills for households and businesses,” Mr Watts says.

“There is a strong pipeline of projects ready to go, from large grid-scale generation to site-specific and smaller repeatable projects across the country. We are backing all technologies that can deliver reliable, affordable power at scale, including onshore and offshore wind, solar, geothermal, biogas, woody biomass, hydrogen and battery storage. The priority is simple: get more generation built, faster.”

MBIE is now working with Health New Zealand, the New Zealand Defence Force, and the Department of Corrections on potential long-term PPAs to commence when their existing contracts expire.

“Locking in long-term supply will give developers the certainty they need to invest in new generation, while securing better value and price stability for taxpayers,” Mr Watts says.

“Solar will also play a practical and immediate role. I have directed officials to complete a rapid feasibility study on establishing a streamlined procurement model to accelerate the rollout commercially viable solar across government properties.

“The objective is to support aggregate demand, cut red tape, and bring installations online more quickly increasing supply and reducing peak demand pressures on the grid.”

MBIE will report back by the end of May 2026. If viable, a Request for Proposals will be issued soon after, moving quickly from study to implementation so projects can begin delivering additional generation and cost relief as soon as possible.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/driving-investment-in-new-energy-projects/

Fire and Emergency New Zealand and the Department of Conservation renew their Service Agreement

Source: Fire and Emergency New Zealand

Fire and Emergency New Zealand and the Department of Conservation (DOC) have signed a new three-year Operational Service Agreement.
The Agreement covers how the two organisations work together. It includes the fire control services provided by DOC including services such as advice, research, and personnel for deployments. It covers the designated services provided by Fire and Emergency including training of DOC personnel, wildfire risk analysis, data sharing and advice, and fire investigation reports.
Fire and Emergency Chief Executive and National Commander Kerry Gregory says the Agreement reflects the shared commitment to protecting Aotearoa New Zealand’s public conservation land, including fire prevention, research, and raising public awareness.
“It refreshes and strengthens our already strong partnership, with clearer roles, responsibilities, and accountabilities for both organisations,” he says.
Department of Conservation Director-General Penny Nelson says the renewed Agreement shows the strong ongoing relationship between DOC and Fire and Emergency, which is vital to protect special places and unique threatened species.
“Wildfire is a significant threat to biodiversity values, tracks and huts, and public safety, and the risk is only increasing due to climate change. Recent examples like the Tongariro National Park fire show how devastating wildfire can be and the importance of an effective, coordinated response,” Penny Nelson says.
“The refreshed Agreement gives us greater clarity and confidence in how we work together,and strengthens our ability to protect our people, our places, and our taonga.”
Kerry Gregory says the Agreement recognises that fire is a growing risk driven by climate change,and it acknowledges the shared focus on prevention, mitigation, and reducing risk.
“The Agreement also recognises the importance of working with Māori as tangata whenua and reinforces both agencies’ commitments to Te Tiriti o Waitangi,” Kerry Gregory says.
“Ngā mihi nui to the people in the joint project group involved in the review.”
The associated Schedules (which detail the supporting operational, service specification, and financial processes) will be jointly developed and finalised within 12 months of signing of the Operational Services Agreement. The existing 2021 Schedules will be retained in the interim. 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/fire-and-emergency-new-zealand-and-the-department-of-conservation-renew-their-service-agreement/

WEL Networks extends partnership with Downer and Ventia

Source: WEL Networks

WEL Networks has extended its partnership with Tier 1 contractors Downer and Ventia for a further three years, reinforcing our commitment to delivering safe, reliable and efficient services for our customers.
From 1 April 2026 to 31 March 2029, Downer and Ventia will continue to play a central role in strengthening and supporting WEL’s network. Their teams deliver the full spectrum of work required to keep our infrastructure operating safely and reliably, from day-to-day customer projects through to major upgrades and rapid response during storms and faults.
“Strong partnerships are essential to maintaining a resilient network. Downer and Ventia share our focus on safety, quality and customer service. This extension reflects the confidence we have in their ability to support our community,” says Dan Coffey, WEL Networks General Manager Works Programme.
Over the past three years, WEL has seen a steady lift in Customer Initiated Works (CIW) satisfaction scores thanks to our Tier 1 delivery partners, whose strong communication, high-quality service and timely delivery across CIW and wider programmes have enhanced the customer experience and supported safe, efficient delivery.
This renewed partnership builds on the successful delivery of two major infrastructure projects in 2025 – WEL’s Te Uku and Kohia substations – led by Ventia and Downer respectively.
The Te Uku Substation upgrade has been successfully delivered by Ventia, replacing ageing outdoor equipment with a modern indoor system. The upgraded substation now provides a safer, more resilient and more reliable electricity supply for the Te Uku and Raglan communities, supporting current demand and enabling future regional growth.
“We are proud to continue supporting WEL Networks in delivering reliable, essential electricity services to communities across the Waikato. Our ongoing partnership is built on a shared commitment to safety, quality and trusted service, and we look forward to strengthening the strong foundations already in place,” says Karen Boyes, Project Director North, Ventia New Zealand.
The Kohia Substation has been successfully delivered by Downer, who oversaw the construction and commissioning of the new site to support strong growth across the Horotiu and Pukete industrial areas, as well as new residential development in Horotiu. The substation is now supplying customers with a more resilient and reliable electricity supply while providing capacity for future expansion.
“Downer is proud to continue our longstanding partnership with WEL Networks, strengthening the essential energy infrastructure that supports communities across the Waikato. Enabling our communities to thrive is at the heart of what we do. This extension reinforces our commitment to keeping our people safe, building strong relationships, and delivering high-quality, innovative solutions for our customers,” says John Batchelor, Downer General Manager Energy.
Together, these projects mark significant milestones in strengthening the Waikato’s electricity infrastructure. WEL’s continued investment in network upgrades, supported by delivery partners Ventia and Downer, underscores our commitment to providing a safe, secure and reliable power supply for both current and future customers.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/wel-networks-extends-partnership-with-downer-and-ventia/

Water search and rescue underway, Palmerston North

Source: New Zealand Police

Attribute to Palmerston North Area Prevention Manager, Inspector Phil Ward:

A water search and rescue operation is currently underway in Palmerston North.

At around 11.20pm last night, Police were called with a report that various personal items appeared to have been abandoned in a suspicious manner on Albert Street.

Police responded and found the items which led them down to the Manawatū River, where a man could be seen in the water.

Officers made voice appeals to the man, in an attempt to get him to come back to land, however he disappeared under the water.

Police Search and Rescue and Fire and Emergency New Zealand, attempted to locate the man, but had no luck.

Due to the rough terrain of the river and limited visibility, emergency services were stood down around 1.30am today.

The search recommenced at first light today and involves Police Search and Rescue, Land Search and Rescue, Palmerston North Swiftwater Rescue, and use of the LandSAR boat and drones, to assist searching the Manawatū River.

The community can expect to see an increased Police and emergency services presence in the Albert Street area while the search is ongoing.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/water-search-and-rescue-underway-palmerston-north/

Advocacy – Gaza-based Humanitarian organisations petition Israeli High Court as closure deadline approaches – Oxfam

Source: Oxfam Aotearoa

The clock is ticking on a large part of the humanitarian response sustaining civilians in the occupied Palestinian territory.
Thirty-seven international aid organisations have been ordered by Israeli authorities to cease operations in the occupied Palestinian territory by the end of February under revised Israeli registration rules. With efforts to force closures imminent, a group of leading humanitarian organisations have taken the unprecedented step of jointly petitioning the Israeli High Court to suspend the measures before irreparable harm is done to civilians who rely on their assistance.
On 30 December 2025, the affected organisations were formally notified that their Israeli registrations would expire the following day and that they would have 60 days to wind down activities in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. The notification letter stated that the decision could only be overturned if organisations completed the full registration process, with which they cannot legally or ethically comply.
Efforts to force closures could begin as early as 28 February 2026. The effect would be immediate, extending well beyond individual organisations to the wider humanitarian system. In Gaza, families remain dependent on external assistance amid continuing restrictions on aid entry and renewed strikes in densely populated areas. In the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, military incursions, demolitions, displacement, settlement expansion and settler violence are driving rising humanitarian needs.
Palestinian Authority registration provides the lawful basis for international NGOs to operate in Palestinian territory. Under the Fourth Geneva Convention, an occupying power must facilitate relief for civilians under its control. Conditioning humanitarian presence on sweeping administrative demands, including the transfer of comprehensive national staff lists, alongside vague and politicised grounds for denial, risks disrupting life-saving services and eroding the obligation to ensure civilian welfare under occupation.
The demand to transfer personal data raises acute security and legal risks. It exposes national staff to potential retaliation and undermines established data protection and confidentiality safeguards. For European organisations in particular, compliance would create serious legal and contractual liabilities. More broadly, such requirements set a precedent that could chill principled humanitarian engagement in highly politicised contexts.
International NGOs have proposed practical alternatives, including independent sanctions screening and donor-audited vetting systems, that preserve both compliance and staff protection without disclosing personal data. No substantive response has been provided. Enforcement has meanwhile begun in practice, including blocked supplies and denial of visas and access for foreign staff.
Alongside UN agencies and Palestinian partners, international NGOs support or implement the delivery of more than half of all food assistance in Gaza, 60 per cent of field hospitals’ operations, nearly three quarters of shelter and non-food item activities, all inpatient treatment for children suffering severe acute malnutrition and 30 per cent of emergency education services, in addition to funding over half of explosive hazard clearance.
The petition seeks an urgent Interim Injunction to suspend expiry of registrations and prevent further enforcement pending judicial review. The petitioning organisations contend that these administrative measures constitute an effort to curtail established humanitarian operations in a manner incompatible with the obligations of an occupying power under international humanitarian law.
Governments must act urgently to prevent implementation of these measures and to ensure that humanitarian relief remains principled, independent, and unhindered. If these measures take effect, aid will be impeded not because needs have eased, but because it has been rendered optional, conditional, or politicised. At a moment when civilians depend on assistance to survive, that outcome would carry immediate and irreversible human consequences.
Petitioners and supporting organizations
1. All We Can
2. ActionAid Australia
3. Alianza Por La Solidaridad
4. Association of International Development Agencies (AIDA)
5. Bystanders No More
6. CADUS e.V.
7. Choose Love
8. Christian Aid
9. Churches for Middle East Peace
10. DanChurchAid
11. Danish Refugee Council
12. Diakonia, Sweden
13. Humanity & Inclusion – Handicap International
14. medico international
15. Middle East Children’s Alliance
16. Movimiento por la Paz, Desarme y Libertad – MPDL
17. Muslim Aid
18. Nonviolent Peaceforce
19. Norwegian Church Aid
20. Norwegian Refugee Council
21. Oxfam
22. Pax Christi International
23. Première Urgence Internationale (PUI)
24. Pro Peace
25. Refugees International
26. Start Network
27. Tearfund
28. Terre des hommes Italy
29. Terre des hommes Lausanne (Tdh)
30. United Against Inhumanity
31. Weltfriedensdienst e.V. (WFD; World Peace Service)
Notes:
Executive Summary – Joint Petition against the Inter-Ministerial Team:
1. Introduction
This Petition is filed by 17 leading international humanitarian aid organizations (INGOs) and the Association of International Development Agencies (AIDA) which form the critical infrastructure for providing medical services, food, and water to the civilian population in the West Bank and Gaza. The Petitioners challenge the Respondents’ December 2025 decision, which orders the “termination of their activities” due to their refusal to provide personal contact details (Nominal Lists) of thousands of local employees. The Petition presents an unprecedented “legal deadlock” in which the demands of the Israeli administration directly contradict international privacy laws and the fundamental principles of humanitarian neutrality.
2. Urgent Request for an Interim Injunction
The Petitioners seek an interim Injunction to preserve the status quo and prevent the expiration of their registration, the deportation of foreign staff and cessation of all activities until a final ruling is reached. It is argued that the “Balance of Convenience” clearly favors the Petitioners: while the Respondents will suffer no harm by maintaining the current situation, the cessation of the organizations’ activities will lead to a humanitarian collapse and irreparable harm to the right to life and health of hundreds of thousands of individuals in need.
3. Legal Arguments
A. Breach of the Inter-Ministerial Team’s Basic Obligations as an Administrative Authority
The Respondents’ conduct is tainted by administrative laches (undue delay) and a lack of good faith. The Respondents delayed their response to registration requests for many months while creating a false representation that the applications were under review. These draconian requirements were imposed without granting a Right to be Heard and without meaningful dialogue, violating the heightened duty of fairness applicable to the authority.
B. The Requirement for Employees’ Personal Details (Nominal Lists)
– B.1 GDPR Regulation and the “Adequacy” Issue: The Petitioners, who are bound by European law, demonstrate that transferring employee data from the Occupied Palestinian Territory (oPt) to Israeli security authorities constitutes a criminal and administrative offense. Since the European Union’s “Adequacy” decision regarding Israel does not apply to the territories, the organizations are exposed to heavy fines and tort claims. The Petition relies on the Schrems II precedent of the Court of Justice of the European Union, which prohibits data transfer to jurisdictions lacking independent judicial oversight over security agencies.
– B.2 The Demand for Employee Details and Violation of International Law: The requirement to provide personal phone numbers and contact details of the entire staff violates the principle of “Data Minimization” and endangers the personal safety of the employees. Turning humanitarian organizations into an information-gathering arm for a party to the conflict stands in total contradiction to the principle of neutrality.
C. The Decision for a Sweeping Cessation of Activity is Void Due to Illegality
– C.1 Decision Lacking Authority (Ultra Vires): The Team’s government mandate is limited to technical registration and visas. Assuming the authority to order the termination of an international organization’s activities is an extreme deviation from authority without an explicit legal source.
– C.2 Deviation from Israel’s Sovereignty (Oslo Accords): Pursuant to the Civil Annex of the Oslo Accords, the authority to register and manage NGOs operating in Palestinian Authority territories was transferred to the Palestinians. Israel lacks the authority to order the closure of these entities.
D. Regulation Article 8.4 – Voidness due to Lack of Authority and Breach of International LawThe Petitioners challenge the article in the regulation that allows for the suspension of registration based on vague “security considerations” without a duty of specification or reasoning.
– D.1 Applicability of Article 63 of the Fourth Geneva Convention: This article imposes an obligation on the Occupying Power to allow relief societies to continue their work. The Petition relies on expert legal opinions establishing that this provision fully applies to International NGOs (INGOs) performing essential humanitarian functions.
E. Extreme Unreasonableness and Lack of Proportionality
The decision fails the “Proportionality Stricto Sensu” test: the limited administrative-security benefit of collecting phone numbers is dwarfed by the catastrophic human damage caused by withholding aid from the population. The Respondents refused to consider “less restrictive means,” such as cross-referencing names against public global terror lists.
F. Violation of Israel’s Obligations to Facilitate Humanitarian Aid
As an Occupying Power, Israel bears positive obligations (Articles 55, 56, and 59 of the Convention) to ensure the supply of food and medical services. Arbitrary and bureaucratic interference with organizations fulfilling these duties constitutes a blatant violation of international law and the directives of the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/advocacy-gaza-based-humanitarian-organisations-petition-israeli-high-court-as-closure-deadline-approaches-oxfam/

Woman pleads guilty to dangerous driving charge, Motutere fatal crash

Source: New Zealand Police

A woman has pleaded guilty to a charge of dangerous driving causing death in relation to the fatal crash on SH1, Motutere, on 4 July 2025.

The 24-year-old woman first appeared in court on 16 December 2025.

She has now entered a guilty plea and is due to appear in Taupo District Court for sentencing on 29 April.

Police extend our thoughts to the victim’s loved ones, who are no doubt still coming to terms with the loss of their child, Jax.

As the matter remains before the courts, Police are limited in providing any further detail.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/woman-pleads-guilty-to-dangerous-driving-charge-motutere-fatal-crash/

Man arrested after Police units rammed

Source: New Zealand Police

Police have laid a raft of charges against a man after he allegedly rammed two Police vehicles, one of which he rammed multiple times.

The man’s van came to Police attention just before 1.45am in the Manukau area.

Inspector Warrick Adkin, of Counties Manukau Central Police, says the Hiace van was seen driving erratically, including running through red lights.

“The Eagle helicopter was soon overhead and monitored the van until ground staff arrived.

“Units attempted to stop it on Manukau Station Road, resulting in the successful deployment of road spikes.

“The driver of the van then rammed a stationary patrol vehicle multiple times before targeting a second patrol vehicle which was entering the area,” Inspector Adkin says.

Police units have brought the van to a stop at the intersection of Te Irirangi Drive and Great South Road a short time later.

The 23-year-old man was taken into custody.

Inspector Adkin says the man will appear in the Manukau District Court today.

He faces four counts of assaults with intent to injure, intentional damage, dangerous driving, resist Police and failing to stop.

“One vehicle has been extensively damaged as a result of the incident, but first and foremost none of our staff were injured as a result of the man’s dangerous driving this morning,” Inspector Adkin says.

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/man-arrested-after-police-units-rammed/

Arrests made in Manurewa shooting

Source: New Zealand Police

Police have arrested a 34-year-old man after a shooting in Manurewa last Wednesday.

Detective Inspector Shaun Vickers says at around 8.45pm on 18 February, Police were called to Marumaru Lane after reports a person had been shot.

“The offender has gone to the door and asked for the victim, before allegedly shooting him when he came to the door,” he says.

“The victim was taken to hospital in a serious condition, and was very fortunate to have not suffered life-threatening injuries.”

Enquiries into the incident led to Police to carry out search warrants, supported by the Armed Offenders Squad, in south Auckland on Tuesday afternoon.

“Staff carried out these warrants at properties in Takanini and Manurewa around 3pm,” says Detective Inspector Vickers.

“The alleged offender was not located at either address, but as a result he handed himself into Papakura Police Station not long afterwards and was taken into custody.”

Detective Inspector Vickers is pleased two arrests have now been made over the offending.

“We will not tolerate this type of offending and two people are now before the courts,” he says.

“Further arrests cannot be ruled out as the investigation continues.”

The man will appear in the Manukau District Court today, jointly charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and commission of an offence with a firearm.

A 29-year-old woman, who is co-accused, will also appear in court today after initially being arrested last week.

ENDS.

Amanda Wieneke/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/arrests-made-in-manurewa-shooting/

Statistical area 2 and 3 population projections: 2023(base)–2053 – (second instalment) – Stats NZ information release

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/statistical-area-2-and-3-population-projections-2023base-2053-second-instalment-stats-nz-information-release/

EtonHouse Rolls Out Enterprise AI Workspace with OpenAI, Aligning Education with Singapore’s National AI Push

Source: Media Outreach

SINGAPORE – Media OutReach Newswire – 24 February 2026 – In the wake of Budget 2026 and Prime Minister Lawrence Wong’s announcement of a National AI Council to accelerate mission-driven artificial intelligence deployment, EtonHouse International Education Group has collaborated with OpenAI to roll out ChatGPT Edu across its global education network, establishing a secure, enterprise-grade AI workspace designed to strengthen governance, operational excellence and institutional capability.

Students of EtonHouse using a computer

The implementation spans the Group’s schools and education brands, including EBridge Pre-School, an Anchor Operator, extending AI integration beyond classroom experimentation into enterprise-wide infrastructure supporting operations, marketing and admissions, finance, human resources, school administration and technology development.

While education was not named among the initial priority sectors identified under Singapore’s national AI strategy, EtonHouse views schools as foundational to building long-term AI capability and literacy across society.

Governance-led AI deployment

The rollout has been structured around enterprise governance principles. Access is managed through role-based access controls, single sign-on authentication and automated provisioning, ensuring that AI tools and information remain aligned to defined job responsibilities and permission boundaries.

ChatGPT Edu operates within a centrally managed internal workspace governed by consistent policies across the Group. External sharing and third-party integrations are enabled only where explicitly approved and aligned with business requirements, reinforcing a secure and compliant AI environment.

This governance-first approach reflects a deliberate shift from isolated experimentation to structured, scalable adoption.

From classroom innovation to enterprise infrastructure

EtonHouse previously developed Lumina, its proprietary AI-powered lesson planning platform. The deployment of ChatGPT Edu represents the next phase of integration, extending advanced artificial intelligence capabilities into enterprise functions.

Within the secure workspace, teams can upload documents for structured analysis, generate comparative reports, conduct scenario modelling and retrieve institutional knowledge more efficiently. Technology teams are also leveraging Codex, OpenAI’s agentic coding tool, to enhance development workflows, supporting code drafting, review and testing while maintaining human oversight and established engineering standards.

The Group is concurrently developing internal AI assistants and structured workflows within defined governance parameters to streamline routine processes and standardise how knowledge is accessed and applied across departments.

Augmentation, not replacement

EtonHouse emphasises that artificial intelligence is being implemented as an augmentation layer rather than a substitute for professional judgement.

“Artificial intelligence is not a shortcut or a replacement technology. It is a learning infrastructure,” said Mr Ng Yi-Xian, Group CEO of EtonHouse International Education Group. “We are developing tools that help students learn more confidently, support teachers to plan and differentiate more effectively, and equip HQ teams to serve schools faster and with higher quality. AI should amplify good practice, not replace it, so we are building the governance and capability to deploy it responsibly at scale.”

The rollout will be supported by structured staff training alongside OpenAI experts clear usage guidelines and ongoing oversight to ensure transparency, responsible usage and alignment with internal policies and regulatory obligations.

“As Singapore advances its national AI ambitions, many institutions are working to bridge the gap between rapidly advancing AI technologies and their ability to deploy them effectively and responsibly. EtonHouse’s rollout of ChatGPT Edu shows how forward-thinking education organisations can translate AI into practical, trusted enterprise-wide systems that empower teams today, while building confidence for the long-term.” added Oliver Jay, Managing Director, International at OpenAI.

Education’s role in Singapore’s AI future

Budget 2026 outlined the formation of a National AI Council to guide coordinated deployment across priority sectors including advanced manufacturing, connectivity, finance and healthcare.

EtonHouse’s implementation reflects how education institutions can apply similar principles of governance, security and enterprise readiness, positioning schools not only as adopters of technology but as contributors to Singapore’s broader AI capability building.

With this move, EtonHouse signals a transition from exploratory AI usage to secure, scalable integration across its global network, reinforcing its commitment to innovation anchored in institutional discipline and responsible deployment.

Hashtag: #ArtificialIntelligence #EnterpriseAI #AIGovernance #AIDeployment #EdTech

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/24/etonhouse-rolls-out-enterprise-ai-workspace-with-openai-aligning-education-with-singapores-national-ai-push/