Black Caps suffer heavy defeat as defending champions India win T20 World Cup

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ishan Kishan of India celebrates his fifty runs ICC Men’s T20 World Cup Grand Final. www.photosport.nz

Defending champions India have thumped the Black Caps by 96 runs in this morning’s T20 World Cup final in Ahmedabad.

Batting first, the co-hosts posted a big total of 255 for 5 and despite a half-century from opener Tim Seifert, New Zealand couldn’t keep up with the required run rate, eventually all out for 159.

Captain Mitchell Santner scored 43 runs at the back of the innings but it was never going to be enough.

Jasprit Bumrah took four wickets for India who become the first team in history to win back to back men’s T20 World Cup titles. It’s also India’s biggest win in a T20 World Cup match.

Jimmy Neesham was the best of the Black Caps bowlers with three wickets.

India batter Sanju Samson top scored with 89 runs with fellow opener Abhishek Sharma and No.3 Ishan Kishan both scoring half centuries.

The Black Caps beat South Africa to reach the final, with India beating England in the second semi-final.

As it happened:

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/black-caps-suffer-heavy-defeat-as-defending-champions-india-win-t20-world-cup/

Decade mistakenly in a cash fund: ‘Why didn’t the bank contact me?’

Source: Radio New Zealand

The bank’s cash fund returned 2.8 percent a year over the past 10 years, compared to 4.2 percent for its conservative fund. File photo. 123RF

A woman who did not realise that her KiwiSaver was mistakenly in a cash fund for more than a decade is taking her complaint to the Banking Ombudsman.

Amanda Pringle said she was contacted by her bank, Westpac, in 2014, after she received $17,000 in back payments she was owed in child support.

She went to an appointment with her bank and was signed up to KiwiSaver for the first time.

It was only this year when a friend suggested she look at switching her KiwiSaver that she found she was in a cash fund, with a total balance of about $50,000, despite increasing her contributions to 6 percent of her income.

Morningstar data shows Westpac’s cash fund has returned 2.8 percent a year over the past 10 years, compared to 4.2 percent for its conservative fund, which Pringle thought she was in.

If she had not made a choice and had joined KiwiSaver the next time she changed jobs, she would have been placed in a default fund.

Westpac’s default fund has returned 10.9 percent a year over three years.

Pringle said the staff member who enrolled her in KiwiSaver did not explain how different funds might perform. “I trusted that she had my best interests at heart – I also had minimal life insurance and she upped that, and sort of talked about you know, you’ve got two children it’s important to do that.

“I didn’t really understand the terminology that well because I do struggle to process things along those lines, with a car accident I had when I was 16.

“I haven’t had anyone helping me to understand the terminology financially and I thought they would have my best interests at heart.”

She said even if she was given information noting she was in a cash fund, she would not have known what that meant. “I just thought our verbal discussion was enough to know that she had my best interests at heart and I was signing there because I felt like she was basically trying to help me out.”

When she was able to, she increased her contribution rom 3 percent of her pay to 6 percent, thinking it was the right thing for her retirement. “I was doing what I could and I did receive letters but to be honest I wouldn’t have understood how it worked.”

When she understood what happened, she said, she was “absolutely gutted”.

“I’ve just started online banking in the last few years when I got a new phone and so I didn’t really know, [a friend] said to go in and have a look and see because he thought that it was strange that I had worked so long and not made a lot of interest on it and he said oh my god you’re in a cash fund. I wouldn’t have known what it meant but I felt really annoyed because they had rung me out of the blue to come in and see them.. they’ve done me no favours whatsoever, it’s cost me big money.”

She said if she had been left to default in, she would have been much better off. “I just felt really, really upset.”

Westpac said it would not uphold her complaint.

It said it had looked at how KiwiSaver accounts were set up for Pringle in 2014.

It said when staff helped customers join KiwiSaver their role was to explain how it worked and provide the relevant information and paperwork. “They are there to help customers understand their options however they cannot choose a KiwiSaver fund or tell a customer which fund to select as this is formal financial advice.”

The bank said a recommendation could only be given if a customer chose to receive formal financial advice.

“Where formal financial advice is not being provided the choice of KiwiSaver fund is made by the customer and recorded on the application form. Customers can also review and change their KiwiSaver fund at any time after their account has been set up.

“Regular KiwiSaver statements were sent to you over the years which clearly showed that your savings were invested in the cash fund. The statements also include contact details and explained that you could get in touch with us if you had any questions or needed help reviewing the information.”

It said it had not identified a bank error in how the account was set up or managed.

Pringle said she felt that even if the bank had acted according to its rules, someone should have contacted her about the decision and explained the potential impact.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/decade-mistakenly-in-a-cash-fund-why-didnt-the-bank-contact-me/

Second oil spill in Akaroa Harbour in two months sparks concern for wildlife

Source: Radio New Zealand

The spill in Akaroa Harbour. Facebook/Environment Canterbury

A wildlife expert has serious concerns for dolphins and seabirds after a navy ship spilled hundreds of litres of oil into Akaroa Harbour yesterday.

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

The defence force said the ship had been in Akaroa Harbour doing a training exercise, and the source of the leak had been found and was no longer leaking.

Otago University professor of zoology Liz Slooten said seabirds could have their feathers covered in oil, causing them to lose their insulation, sink, drown or be unable to catch fish.

She said the risk for marine mammals was breathing in polluted fumes, getting oil in their eyes, or eating contaminated fish.

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

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

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

“So now we’ve had two oil spills in a marine mammal sanctuary, and these dolphins are already seriously under threat – mostly from fishing impacts.”

Slooten said more needed to be done to stop spills happening, and when they did, there needed to be an “immediate professional response”, rather than the current inadequate one.

Most of the oil cleaned up – council

But Canterbury Regional Council coast and harbours manager Guy Harris said teams had successfully cleaned up most of the oil today through absorbent booms.

“We think we probably got about 200 litres – so depending on how much went in there, we’ve either got nearly all of it, or two-thirds of it at the worst.”

“Definitely by the end of today [Sunday] we were doing sweeps and getting nothing at all on the booms.”

It was not a large spill, he said, but the oil was quite “toxic” and “thick” for wildlife. Its thickness made it easier for teams to pick up.

Harris said there had been no reports of oiled wildlife on Sunday, but Ecan would keep observing this week and next.

“Our response systems are great, we’re trained by MPRS, the Marine Protection Response Service – we’re experienced, we get to as many spills as we can.”

The deputy harbourmaster will be out on the water early this morning assessing conditions and deciding on the plan for today.

Wainui Beach had been closed to swimming yesterday by the council, and the council would be assessing whether that was needed today, Harris said.

A defence force spokesperson said the ship’s company has been working with the harbour master since 8 in the morning on Sunday to contain and clean up the slick.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/second-oil-spill-in-akaroa-harbour-in-two-months-sparks-concern-for-wildlife/

The world at our breakfast table: Three Kiwi staples that almost all end up offshore

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Five years after Who’s Eating NZ, this series revisits where our food goes, but this time through the lens of Kiwi breakfast, lunch and dinner staples. We track how much of what we produce is eaten here, and who has a seat at our global table during meal times. First, let’s tuck into some brekkie.

For many Kiwis, it’s an essential start to the day, but if you think of our dairy produce as a single flat white, New Zealanders get one small swig and the rest is drunk overseas.

There are 4.7 million dairy cows grazing 1.7m hectares of dairying farmland, yet only 235,000 are effectively producing milk to moisten our Weet-Bix at home. According to

DairyNZ estimates we produce enough milk for 90 million people to have 2.5 servings of dairy each day.

This is a boon for our export earnings – and it’s growing. A whopping 95 percent of the dairy we produce is exported, earning billions in the process. Dairy exports were worth roughly $24 billion in 2025, a 54 percent increase from the $16b it earned five years earlier.

China has grown to become our biggest buyer of dairy exports. From a mere $13.5m in 1990, it climbed to $8b last year – about a third of the total.

It’s a long way ahead of the next biggest buyer, Indonesia, which spent $1.2bn buying our dairy last year. It’s a promising market for growth – a new school milk programme in the country is slated for 83m children. Saudi Arabia was the third biggest buyer, purchasing $1.1bn of our dairy.

The flipside to the lucrative export trade is that the prices we pay at home for dairy are tied to prices exporters can get offshore. When international butter rose last year, Kiwis saw the price on local supermarket shelves reach sky-high levels.

In June, shoppers were paying $8.60 for the cheapest 500g block, according to Stats NZ. That same month, Consumer NZ shared a photo of a 500g tub of semi-soft butter priced at $18.29, prompting a flood of frustrated comments. “We make the butter here (WHY IS IT SO EXPENSIVE),” one person wrote. “Apparently NZ doesn’t make butter,” another said, adding they were being sarcastic.

Butter brought in $800m of export earnings, up from $332m in 2020, a 143 percent increase. The United States was the biggest buyer of butter in 2025. Walmart, Trader Joes, Whole Foods, and Costco all sell New Zealand butter, marketing it as grass-fed and richly coloured.

A smear of honey on toast is a sweet treat for many Kiwis, but behind the sticky spread is an industry that has seen booms, busts and stockpiles.

A mānuka honey goldrush spurred on by jars selling for thousands of dollars offshore saw a proliferation of beehives. Some beekeepers say it led to too many bees and too much honey.

Unlike other products, honey can be stored indefinitely. Apiculture New Zealand said between 2018 and 2022 we produced twice as much honey as we were exporting, and a stockpile was created.

When RNZ looked at food exports in 2020, less than 40 percent of honey made its way offshore. Now that figure has climbed to 72 percent, leaving 28 percent for local tables.

Now the number of registered beehives has plummeted from 900,000 to 500,000 and the stockpile is being consumed.

Our export market has shifted. In 2020 China was our biggest buyer, spending $95m, however since 2021 top spot has swung to the US. By 2025, China’s spending dropped to $58m, putting them behind the UK and in third place.

Bad weather has affected 2026 honey harvests.

Fancy a few spoonfuls of zingy kiwifruit for brekkie? While locals enjoy a taste, 95 percent of the fruit is whisked off around the world.

Despite their moniker, kiwifruit aren’t native to New Zealand. They’re originally from China, with seeds arriving in New Zealand in 1904.

For decades they were known as Chinese gooseberries until exporters Turners & Growers renamed them as kiwifruit in 1959, a move Time magazine called “a stroke of marketing genius” and described as effectively hijacking the fruit. The stroke of marketing genius and tightly controlled export rules controlled by legislation has paid off.

New Zealand is the world’s biggest kiwifruit exporter and leads the way with new varieties, which are fiercely protected. In 2025, a Chinese grower was ordered by local courts to rip out 260 hectares of yellow SunGold kiwifruit grown without a license and pay Zespri compensation of $1.8m.

Looking at export numbers it’s clear why Zespri fought so hard to stop its intellectual property being hijacked. In the 2024/2025 financial year, gold kiwifruit was the top seller. According to Zespri’s annual report, 121.8 million trays of SunGold kiwifruit were sold compared to 58.4m trays of green kiwifruit. The new RubyRed variety sold 1.5m trays to 13 different markets.

In the past five years export earnings from kiwifruit have increased 66 percent to $4.5bn, with green, gold and red varieties all contributing. Since 1991, we’ve earned around $37bn from the furry fruit. During this time, the top buyer of kiwifruit shuffled between Europe and China. Japan, South Korea and the US were also large buyers.

At home, prices are seasonal, peaking in the summer and falling during winter. In July last year, StatsNZ reported a 1kg bag cost $3.72.

Stay tuned for Wednesday’s story, where we take a look at who we’re sharing our lunch with and dive into avocado, seafood, apple and water exports.

Where the data came from:

Dairy: Dairy Companies Association of New Zealand and StatsNZ trade data items with a harmonised system description containing “Dairy produce”

Honey: Apiculture NZ and StatsNZ trade data items with a harmonised system description containing “Honey”.

Kiwifruit: Zespri and StatsNZ trade data items with a harmonised system description containing “Fruit, edible; kiwifruit”

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Queenstown Lakes District facing double the housing insecurity over one year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Happiness House manager Léna Boss suspected the cost of living was reaching a crunch point. SUPPLIED

The proportion of Queenstown Lakes residents facing housing insecurity has doubled in the past year, a new survey shows.

The Queenstown Lakes District Council annual quality of life survey found 10 percent of Queenstown Lakes residents had to spend at least one night with friends or family, or in a car, caravan, tent, poor or overcrowded accommodation, or on the street during the past 12 months.

The situation was even more acute for those aged 18-24 with 17 percent having to rely on friends or family for temporary accommodation, ten percent having to sleep in their car, five percent sleeping in the street and five percent sleeping in a tent.

One person told the council they spent three months on the street with their cat and were declined 65 rentals.

Restaurant worker Mateo De Leon was among those who had struggled with housing in the tourist resort.

He thought he had a place to stay in Queenstown this summer, until his flat split up and the landlord pulled the rental from the market.

His backup plan – a van he moved into with his friend – broke down and the situation became even more desperate.

“Ninety percent of the hostels were fully booked out and the ones that weren’t charged like $300 per night. It was absurd. So it was definitely not an option,” De Leon said.

“We decided, the first night, to try to sleep at the restaurant we were working at but that didn’t really work out. So we ended up not sleeping that night.”

De Leon eventually went to Facebook to find urgent accommodation and ended up sleeping in a stranger’s van.

He had since left Queenstown, partly because of the high cost of living.

The previous quality of life survey found only five percent of respondents reported experiencing housing insecurity or homelessness.

Mayor John Glover said it was worrying to see housing insecurity in an otherwise “busy, thriving, prosperous district”.

“It tells me that there are some people who are doing it really hard. The levels have been varying from year to year, but I think we need to be really watchful for any emerging trends,” he said.

He suspected cost of living was a factor but he cautioned against reading too much into the numbers.

The last time 10 percent of the district reported experiencing housing insecurity or homelessness was in 2023, when there were widespread stories of accommodation shortages that prompted some workers to stage a lakeside protest.

“I’m not sensing the same chronic, absolute urgent shortage of accommodation that we had a couple of years ago when, you heard horrific stories of people having to literally, rush somewhere seconds after a listing was [put up],” Glover said.

Coalition to End Women’s Homelessness project director Victoria Crockford said she was not surprised by the reported increase in housing insecurity.

Many people were struggling to find a place to call home, Crockford said.

“I think it’s probably a symptom of an increase in cost of living pressures but also symptomatic of the fact that whilst we have an absolutely stellar record on getting houses consented in this district – and the council has done a very effective job at that – what our record is less golden on is the ability to provide the types of affordable housing that are needed across all segments of the population living here,” she said.

The private rental market was not successfully providing homes for workers and families across many income brackets, she said.

“I genuinely believe that the big gap that we’ve got is that we have failed to plan for workers’ accommodation – good quality workers’ accommodation targeted at the people who come here initially for the short term but often end up staying and actually propel our core industries and keep this town humming.”

Glover said housing affordability was a persistent challenge for the district and the council was hoping to grow the Queenstown Lakes Community Housing Trust’s affordable rental and home ownership schemes.

“Clearly if you’re in a hospitality job, on or at or just above minimum wage, there’s some significant challenges to working out an existence here,” he said.

Crockford said women in Queenstown historically experienced higher rates of housing insecurity than men.

Homelessness and housing insecurity was often not visible on the streets, she said.

“I think that in some ways, because it is hidden, it is even more dangerous. And by dangerous, I mean it’s dangerous because we don’t think it exists and therefore we don’t have any sort of formal response to it,” Crockford said.

Happiness House manager Léna Boss said she had noticed a lot of solo parents seeking food support at the Queenstown community support centre recently.

She suspected the cost of living was reaching a crunch point.

People were often surprised to learn Queenstown had no emergency accommodation, Boss said.

Workers needed to know the true cost of living in the district before moving to the area, she said.

“It’s very hard to be able to afford a place in Queenstown, even if you’re a family. Rents are outrageous … we’re talking about a two-bedroom for $900,” she said.

“Queenstown looks so pretty on the map. It’s touristic, it’s vibrant, there’s this community that looks so amazing and all these things happening. And there’s a lot of work. But the problem is do people do their research before they come to actually find out is there not only work but can they live here? Can they afford to live here? And this is a very big challenge.”

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PM Christopher Luxon facing a ‘last straw scenario’ – commentators

Source: Radio New Zealand

“The trend is not good” for the Prime Minister, says Liam Hehir. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Last week was “disastrous” and a “last straw scenario” for the prime minister, says a former National Party chief press secretary, while another political commentator says National MPs will be considering whether now is the right time for a leadership tilt.

Janet Wilson was chief press secretary for both Todd Muller and Judith Collins and says a recent poll that put National in the 20s was not a “nail in the coffin” for Christopher Luxon.

But she says it encapsulates people’s view of him and the state of play for the National Party as a whole.

Liam Hehir says Luxon’s performance last week when it came to foreign policy did not matter as much as the poll, which reflects a broader trend for him, and “the trend is not good”.

Hehir says first term prime ministers normally get a free run in their first re-election bid, and Luxon is in a “very unusual position for a first term Prime Minister, coming under immense pressure”.

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

Labour was up slightly on 34.4, while the Greens, ACT, and Te Pāti Maori were all up on 10.5, 7.5, and 3.2 respectively.

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

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

Luxon will make his regular media appearances on Monday morning, including on RNZ’s Morning Report, ahead of another week at Parliament that will see the National Party caucus get together on Tuesday for the first time since Friday’s horror poll.

Wilson told RNZ she thought Luxon had lost his messaging and status, “and I think he’s lost his imprimatur at this moment to be a leader”.

She said there were three likely scenarios that could play out this week, the first being what seemed to be occurring now – that Luxon had “dug in,” he would maintain business-as-usual and say he wasn’t going anywhere.

The second scenario was that his senior leadership team had asked him to consider his future, but he says he’s not going anywhere, “it’s a bit like scenario one: status quo is maintained.”

The third scenario, she said, was if Luxon told the senior leadership he wasn’t going anywhere, but the senior leadership team then decided it’s time for change.

She concluded the most likely probability was scenario one, “he is going to dig in and say, it’s only one poll – journalists, the commentariat, have gone mad.”

Hehir told RNZ every single MP in the National Party saw themselves as a potential leader.

“Whenever anyone’s under pressure, whenever the actual leader is under pressure, they will be wondering to themselves whether or not it’s the right time.

“You’d have to be crazy not to assume that in the wake of a series of pretty bad polls, that the ambitious people in the party aren’t considering their options.”

Wilson explained the effect on a caucus when polling was low was “severe,” that it was “horrific, actually”.

“What happens is MPs start doing the numbers, and they start looking at the likelihood of what their chances are for the upcoming election, and whether, in fact, their skin is going to be saved in the midst of the mayhem of what’s going on,” Wilson said.

She got a sense that was occurring right now.

“I think the more that the leader says, ‘there’s nothing to see here, it’s all fine’, the more it exacerbates the problem for those in the back bench.”

Wilson pointed out it was to Luxon’s advantage that a lot of his caucus were newer MPs, “the strategic art of politics is yet to occur to most of them”, though not all of them, she said.

She also referred to the previous political term, where National went through a succession of leaders, and the memory of that time had “frozen” the senior leadership.

“They’ve all been there before, so why would they want to go back to that necessarily?

“They’re aware of the risks. They’re not necessarily thinking about the rewards.”

If there was going to be a leadership challenge, Wilson said it would need to be “quick” and “clean”, and Luxon would need to “sit back.”

Hehir was skeptical about changing a leader in election year.

“It’s a bad idea to change leaders unless you’re absolutely certain that the new leader is going to keep all the votes you currently got and add additional votes.

“It’s the only way that it’s worth the instability, the permutations of a leadership change.”

The complications and difficulties being considered would be the pairing of a new leader and deputy leader, said Hehir.

With the National Party, he said, whenever the leadership is being considered, “you’re not just looking at the ideological factions, but you’re also going to look at the personalities involved.”

“If there was to be a leadership change, it would probably be a disaster unless everything lined up. And I’m just not sure that it does.

“The history of leadership changes in the National Party when they haven’t been managed, has not been good. Very rarely has it resulted in an election win or a changing of a course correction in terms of the overall trajectory.”

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/pm-christopher-luxon-facing-a-last-straw-scenario-commentators/

Live cricket: Black Caps v India T20 World Cup final

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the T20 World Cup final action as the Black Caps take on India at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad.

The Black Caps are coming off the back of a stunning win over South Africa, in which Finn Allen hit the fastest century in T20 World Cup history.

Meanwhile, defending champions India staved off Jacob Bethell’s brilliant hundred to beat England by seven runs in a thrilling semi-final.

First ball is at 2.30am NZT.

New Zealand’s Finn Allen plays a shot during the 2026 ICC Men’s T20 Cricket World Cup semi-final match against South Africa at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata on March 4, 2026. AFP

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Measles case: Parliament tour included in new locations of interest

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Alexander Robertson

A tour through Parliament is among several new locations of interest connected to a measles case in a traveller who visited New Zealand.

The traveller was infectious during their visit from 23-27 February.

The new locations include both Auckland and Wellington airport, several trains between Upper Hutt and Wellington, and an afternoon parliament tour.

Health New Zealand said anyone who suspected they had measles should phone ahead before visiting their doctor so they could take precautions to stop it spreading.

Symptoms include a runny nose, fever, cough, sore watery eyes and a rash that develops a few days after the fever.

The new locations of interest include:

  • 23/02/2026 (7:30am to 8:30am) Train HVL Epuni to Upper Hutt
  • 23/02/26 (9:30pm to 1:00pm) Nga Manu Reserve, Waikanae
  • 23/02/26 (12:15pm to 4:15pm) Adrenaline Forest, Porirua
  • 23/02/2026 (4pm to 5:30pm) Train HVL Upper Hutt to Epuni
  • 24/02/2026 (9am to 10am) Train HVL Epuni to Wellington Station
  • 24/02/2026 (3pm to 4pm) Train HVL Wellington Station to Epuni Station
  • 25/02/26 (5:15pm to 8:30pm) Fraser Park Sportsville / Ricoh Sports Centre
  • 26/02/2026 (8.30am to 9.30am) Train HVL Epuni to Wellington Station
  • 26/02/26 (12:00pm to 1:30pm) Cable Car, 280 Lambton Quay, Wellington
  • 26/02/26 (1:30pm to 4:00pm) Parliament Tour (bespoke tour for educational group)
  • 26/02/26 (4:10pm to 8:20pm) Wellington Airport Domestic Terminal
  • 26/02/26 (8:30pm to10:30pm) Auckland Airport Domestic Terminal
  • 26/02/26-27/02/26 (9:00pm to 1:00am) Auckland Airport’s International Terminal

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/08/measles-case-parliament-tour-included-in-new-locations-of-interest/

Waitaki District Council considers free parking for seniors in Oamaru

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Waitaki District Council is considering allowing people aged over the age of 80 park for free in Oamaru. 123RF

The Waitaki District Council is considering allowing people aged over the age of 80 park for free in Oamaru.

Age Concern Otago has asked the council to consider removing parking fees as part of its upcoming parking strategy after new parking meters introduced last December made some elderly people anxious.

Age Concern’s Waitaki coordinator Kathryn Bennett said fear of receiving a $70 parking ticket meant some people had stopped coming into town.

“There is a need to ensure that seniors are treated fairly and have equitable access to their community,” she said.

“Free parking for people 80 and over would benefit this demographic as they are often the most challenged with technology.”

Parking costed $2 per hour in Oamaru and people could get one hour free by entering their number plate details into machines.

Bennett pointed to Gore District Council which had two-hour free parking for people aged over 80, although Age Concern preferred all-day free parking in Waitaki.

Gore’s over-80s parking scheme was introduced in October 2021.

Permit-holders were identified via a parking sticker on the front window of their vehicle, of which there were 357 currently in Gore.

A Gore District Council spokesperson said the policy was designed to support older residents, remove financial barriers and encourage social connection and participation in the CBD.

A report would go to Waitaki District Council later this year.

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Showreel showcases Dunedin as diverse filming location

Source: Radio New Zealand

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Lights, camera, action, Ōtepoti! A new pitch is hoping to put Dunedin centre stage as the next Hollywood A-list film location.

Enterprise Dunedin has teamed up with Dunedin-raised comedian James Mustapic to entice location scouts, filmmakers and producers to set their sights on the southern city for their next project.

The showreel was designed to sell Dunedin as a place to film, with Mustapic testing his acting chops playing some familiar characters in parodies of famous films.

Around him, the city transformed from a deserted island, the Big Apple, an alien planet to an English Estate.

A movie poster for the showreel Supplied/ Enterprise Dunedin

“Dunedin and its amazing locations are the lead actors, quite the ensemble, I’m just here in a sort of supporting role really,” Mustapic said.

He grew up in Dunedin, but said he had a new appreciation for the city after returning for filming.

“Not many actors can claim to have been in a New York crime drama, historical fiction, sci-fi adventures and fantasy epics all in one location for the same project,” he said.

“The city (and I) got to be cinematic chameleons.”

James Mustapic swaps the Scottish Highlands for the Otago Peninsula. Supplied/ Enterprise Dunedin

Film Dunedin, which is part of Enterprise Dunedin, produced the showreel.

Film Dunedin head Stefan Roesch said the city and its surrounds had a lot to offer and was under-utilised as a filming destination.

“You can literally film any genre here, be it sci-fi, zombie. We’ve got [these] beautiful sweeping vistas around Middlemarch which could be amazing for fantasy films or for certain sci-fi genres, and it’s all within half an hour to an hours’ drive if you’re based in Dunedin,” Roesch said.

Supplied/ Enterprise Dunedin

The showreel was created entirely in-house by Enterprise Dunedin.

Research into screen-influenced tourism showed a significant increase in interest for some locations once a production gained traction, Roesch said.

“A recent report commissioned by the New Zealand Film Commission estimates that $2.7 billion in international tourism expenditure is linked to screen industry output.”

Roesch wanted the showreel to cut through the noise and offer a different take on a typical destination pitch.

“We wanted to do something completely different and create a story that hopefully will garner some attention, and at the same time showcase the width and breadth of our locations in a way that already gives production companies ideas what genres could be filmed in Dunedin,” he said.

The city has a good history of attracting productions – X-Men Origins: Wolverine, The Power of the Dog, The Hobbit and Uproar to name a few.

Netflix’s 2022 release The Royal Treatment was filmed in Dunedin and saw more than 42 million viewing hours within the first four days of its release.

“It generated thousands of bed nights … it was a crew of 120-130. I believe 60-65 percent of the crew were locals so there was a great upskilling part in that,” Roesch said.

Dunedin was still underutilised as a filming destination and Roesch said he would love to welcome more sets to the city.

Supplied/ Enterprise Dunedin

Dunedin Mayor Sophie Barker could not wait for more people to see the showreel.

“Super excited about it. When it was shown to all of us councillors there was clapping at the end. It was just such fun and I think the wonderful thing was how much it showcased Dunedin,” she said.

“We have so many different landscapes, so many quirky spots and you don’t really want to be everything to everybody, but I think we are.”

Filming was a boon for accommodation and local hospitality, but she said it also encouraged viewers to become visitors to the city.

“Film brings huge numbers of people into town. It also is great for our city profile because things like The Royal Treatment had huge numbers … watching it…

“We know that people come and see places that were in films.”

She did not want to play favourites when it came to suggesting locations, but said the Hereweka/ Harbour Cone could possibly make a striking Mount Vesuvius on film.

The showreel cost almost $20,000 to produce, with about half the budget covered by income from location permitting fees.

Now the showreel has been launched, there were hopes Dunedin would soon feature on more film call sheets into the future.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/08/showreel-showcases-dunedin-as-diverse-filming-location/

Death following water-related incident, Waimakariri River

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute to Senior Sergeant Stephen McDaniel:

One person has died following a water-related incident in the Waimakariri River today.

The incident was reported to emergency services around 4.30pm.

Despite the efforts of emergency services, the person died at the scene.

The death will be referred to the Coroner.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/08/death-following-water-related-incident-waimakariri-river/

Five wickets in five balls: Central Stags bowler achieves a world first

Source: Radio New Zealand

Brent Randell, who has taken five wickets in five balls, known as a triple hat-trick. www.photosport.nz

Central Stags pace bowler Brett Randell has achieved a cricketing rarity, taking five wickets in consecutive balls, which has been described a “triple hat-trick”.

New Zealand Cricket statistician Francis Payne said Randell becomes the first player in first class cricket history to take five wickets in five balls – and the first to take six wickets in eight balls. His deed of seven wickets in 12 balls has been bettered just once.

The 30-year-old’s feat came in the Stags’ Plunket Shield match today against Northern Districts at McLean Park in Napier.

He eventually finished with seven for 25, which is the second best in Central Districts history, betterd only by left arm spinner Bryan Yuile’s nine for 100 in 1966.

“I’m pretty blown away,” Randell told the NZC website.

“The high was pretty crazy, it was like a pinch-me moment.

“I was trying to stay level-headed and keep putting the ball in the same area and then after the actual hat-trick, just the same things – trying to put the ball in the same area.

“It gets drummed into us a lot that we don’t want to go searching for wickets, so I was trying to just keep bowling the same ball, and our “Plan A” that we’d talked about, and it came off.

“I had no idea that it was the first time it [five wicket in five balls in first-class cricket] had happened in the world, it’s seriously cool. I mean, I don’t really have any words at the moment, to be honest. I’ll take it.”

The Stags had scored 373 in their first innings and thanks to Randell dismissed Northern for just 82. Central enforced the follow-on and at stumps in their second innings Northern were five for 152, with Randell this time wicketless.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/08/five-wickets-in-five-balls-central-stags-bowler-achieves-a-world-first/

F1: Brit George Russell wins Australian Grand Prix, Kiwi Liam Lawson 13th

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kiwi Liam Lawson trails Mexican Sergio Perez during the Australian Grand Prix. AFP

Kiwi driver Liam Lawson has finished 13th in Formula One’s Australian Grand Prix, after a disastrous start in a race, won by Briton George Russell.

Italian Kimi Antonelli completed a Mercedes quinella in the F1 season-opener, while Charles Leclerc of Montenegro finished third, with Lewis Hamilton, Lando Norris and Max Verstappen next in that order.

In an often chaotic race at Melbourne’s Albert Park, any advantage Lawson had by claiming eighth place on the grid dissipated at the start.

He dropped back to 18th, as he complained on the Racing Bulls team radio of mechanical issues.

“What is my battery doing?,” he exclaimed.

He was able to climb to 13th place, helped by withdrawals during the race, finishing a lap behind Russell.

Before the race, Australian Oscar Piastri crashed on a reconnaisance lap. While not injured, his McLaren was too damaged to take part in the race.

Lawson’s Racing Bulls teammate Arvid Lindblad finished eighth in his F1 debut.

After dominating qualifying, pole-sitter Russell’s first win at Albert Park underlined Mercedes’ promising pre-season form.

The Briton finished nearly three seconds ahead of Antonelli, with Leclerc more than 15 seconds behind on a cloudy afternoon at the lakeside circuit.

Russell engaged in a thrilling early duel with Leclerc, as the racers swapped the lead seven times in the opening nine laps, but Mercedes soon put daylight on the rest.

After swapping out medium tyres early, following a virtual safety-car deployment, Russell rode the hard compounds for 45 laps and Mercedes’ pace did the rest.

“Great job everybody, it’s been a long time since we’ve been here,” he said over the team radio.

McLaren had a tough day, with Piastri’s race over before it began some 40 minutes before the start.

Teammate and defending champion Norris finished fifth, one place behind seven-time world champion Hamilton of Ferrari.

Only 20 of the 22 cars started, with Audi’s Nico Hulkenberg scratched just before the race, due to a reliability problem.

Another three cars failed to finish, Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar among them.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/08/f1-brit-george-russell-wins-australian-grand-prix-kiwi-liam-lawson-13th/

Why a Kiwi world record holder still misses playing Riff Raff

Source: Radio New Zealand

After 15 years bringing the iconic character Riff Raff to audiences across the world Kristian Lavercombe says he experienced a kind of mourning when he stopped playing him.

Lavercombe holds the world record for the most performances in The Rocky Horror Show, he has performed as Riff Raff 2622 times.

Now touring he’s New Zealand as The Narrator, in a production of the evergreen Richard O’Brien cult classic.

Kristian Lavercombe as The Narrator.

Supplied

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/08/why-a-kiwi-world-record-holder-still-misses-playing-riff-raff/

Football: Auckland FC draw with Perth Glory

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sam Cosgrove heads in for what was subsequently ruled to be an own goal by Perth Glory in their A-League clash at Mount Smart Stadium, 8 March 2026. www.photosport.nz

Auckland FC’s run for the A-League men’s premiership has suffered a hiccup with a 2-all home draw with Perth Glory.

The Auckland side picked up a point for the draw, but trail leaders Newcastle Jets by four points. The two teams meet next weekend in a clash that Auckland must not lose if they are to stay in realistic contention.

It looked great for the Aucklanders when Sam Cosgrove who after a melee got the ball past Glory goalkeeper Matt Sutton in just the seventh minute.

Perth levelled in the 39th minute when Brian Kaltak found the back of the net with a diving header.

Stefan Colakovski gave Glory a 2-1 lead when he got one past Auckland goalkeeper Michael Woud in the 57th minute, but four minutes later Cosgrove got higher than the Perth players surrounding him to head one into the right post, with Sutton unable to contain the richochet and the ball falling just behind him into the goal.

The referee initially called a foul on Cosgrove, but after VAR intervention he changed the decision, with it ultimately decreed an own goal by Sutton.

There were six minutes of extra time, but neither team could break the deadlock.

The draw leaves Auckland FC three points ahead of Sydney FC who are in third place.

The Glory take on the Phoenix in Wellington next weekend.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/08/football-auckland-fc-draw-with-perth-glory/

Police, helicopter rescue boaties, diver of Wellington’s southern coast

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police launch Lady Elizabeth IV found the boat about 6km off the coast.

Police and Westpac Rescue Helicopter have rescued a diver and boaties in windy and choppy conditions off Wellington’s south coast this week.

The police maritime unit responded to an emergency call from two people on a 5.4m runabout about 4pm Thursday, after they struck difficulties with 88km/h winds and two-metre waves, and were being blown out to seas.

The boat owner, who was the only occupant who knew how to drive the boat, had been scuba-diving and was still in the water closer to shore.

Police called in the rescue helicopter and volunteer coastguard to assist, and about 4.30pm, the police launch Lady Elizabeth IV found the boat about 6km off the coast.

Constable Stephanie Cox was able to board the boat in tricky conditions and drive it back to Owhiro Bay.

An hour later, the diver was located on a remote shore, after surfacing and realising his boat had gone. He was airlifted to Wellington Airport.

No-one was harmed, but all three were shaken by the experience.

“These two men can consider themselves lucky,” senior launch master Constable Nicko McGregor said. “These difficult weather conditions were no place for a small runabout to be.

“This is a reminder of how quickly situations at sea can change. Good preparation and formal training make a real difference, when things don’t go to plan on the water.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/08/police-helicopter-rescue-boaties-diver-of-wellingtons-southern-coast/

Armed police on scene in Papakura after person injured

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ

One person has been injured and armed police have been deployed after an incident in South Auckland this afternoon.

Police said they responded to reports of an injured person on Marne Road in Papakura about 3pm.

A possible weapon may have been used at the scene, said police, and armed officers are attending the incident “out of caution”.

The public have been asked to avoid the Marne Road area, and officers currently have cordons in place.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/08/armed-police-on-scene-in-papakura-after-person-injured/

NZ Navy’s HNZS Te Kaha leaks hundreds of litres of oil into Akaroa Harbour

Source: Radio New Zealand

The oil spill is contained on Akaroa Harbour. Facebook/Environment Canterbury

A Royal New Zealand Navy vessel has spilled hundreds of litres of oil into Akaroa Harbour on Saturday morning.

About 200-300 litres of oil leaked from the HMNZS Te Kaha, due to a defect to an oil cooler on the ship’s starboard engine, a defence force spokesperson said.

Immediate steps were taken to clean up the oil.

Crew used absorbent pads to clean up surface oil and an inflatable boat to disperse the oil.

“The source of the leak has been isolated and no further oil is leaking,” she said.

The ship has been in Akaroa Harbour on a training exercise and remains anchored there on Sunday.

Environment Canterbury Regional on-scene commander Emma Parr said teams were helping clean-up efforts, focused on containing and recovering the oil from the water’s surface.

Parr said the method was working well.

“We’ll continue this approach as long as weather, daylight and sea conditions allow.”

Parr said anyone who saw or smelled oil should report that to Environment Canterbury’s Pollution Hotline, 0800 765 588.

“If you observe any affected wildlife, please do not touch it. Keep a safe distance and call us on the number above.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/08/nz-navys-hnzs-te-kaha-leaks-hundreds-of-litres-of-oil-into-akaroa-harbour/

Five die during treacherous weekend on North Island roads

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / REECE BAKER

One person has died after a crash on State Highway 1, just north of Tūrangi, near Rawhira Road.

The road remained closed and diversions were in place around the western side of Lake Taupō.

Motorists were advised to continue avoiding the area.

The past 24 hours have been treacherous on the roads, with four other people dead in separate crashes.

One was killed on Coast Road in Karitane on Sunday morning and a motorcyclist died in a crash on Foxton Shannon Road in the Manawatū soon after.

At about 12.30am, an occupant was killed in a single-vehicle crash at Paparoa.

On Sunday afternoon, police also confirmed the driver of a vehicle involved a Dome Valley crash on Saturday evening died at the scene.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/08/five-die-during-treacherous-weekend-on-north-island-roads/

Diver and boaties rescued after being blown out to sea

Source: New Zealand Police

Teamwork between the Police Maritime Unit and Westpac Rescue Helicopter successfully rescued a diver and boaties in windy and choppy waters off the Wellington South Coast earlier this week.

Around 4pm on Thursday 5 March, the Wellington Police Maritime Unit responded to a 111-emergency call to Police from two people on board a 5.4m runabout on Wellington’s South Coast.

The boaties were experiencing gale force winds up to 88km/h, it was getting rougher with up to 2m waves as they were being blown out to sea.

The boaties also reported that the boat owner and skipper who had been on the trip with them had been scuba diving closer to shore and was still in the water.

With the escalating situation and risk to the boaties and diver’s lives, Police called on emergency support from Life Flight’s Westpac Rescue Helicopter and Wellington’s Volunteer Coastguard to assist in rescue efforts.

Around 4.30pm, the Police Launch vessel, Lady Elizabeth IV, located the small runabout about 6km off Wellington’s South Coast.

The missing skipper/scuba diver was the only one of the three of them who knew how to drive the boat properly. The two boaties left onboard were unable to drive the boat to safety.

Crew on the Police Launch were able to use their tender (inflatable boat) to safely put a crew member onto the runabout. This was challenging in the rough conditions but necessary in the circumstances.

Launch Crew member Constable Stephanie Cox was able to take control and drove the runabout back to Owhiro Bay boat ramp on Wellington’s South Coast.

Around 5.30pm after the initial 111 call to Police, the Westpac Rescue helicopter located the missing diver on a remote shore waving out to them. The diver had surfaced after his dive, realised his boat had gone and he then managed to swim to shore on the south coast. The diver was flown back to the Life Flight base at Wellington Airport.

Both boaties and the diver were unharmed but shaken after the experience.

Senior Launch Master Constable Nicko McGregor says the incident highlights the importance of preparation before going out on the water.

“These two men can consider themselves lucky. These difficult weather conditions were no place for a small runabout to be.”

Constable McGregor says when heading out on the water, make sure you:

  • Check the weather, sometimes the wind and waves can couple to make an unsafe day on the water – especially if you’re not a confident and experienced boatie
  • Carry proper safety equipment
  • Have at least two forms of communication, and ensure they are put in a waterproof case or pouch
  • Everyone on board understands basic emergency procedures.

“This is a reminder of how quickly situations at sea can change. Good preparation and formal training make a real difference when things don’t go to plan on the water,” says Constable McGregor.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/08/diver-and-boaties-rescued-after-being-blown-out-to-sea/