Live: Israel launches fresh attacks on Iran and Beirut, Iran continues strikes across Gulf

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow the latest with our live blog above

Fresh strikes have hit half a dozen countries across the Middle East in the widening conflict surrounding Iran.

The latest blasts were reported in Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, as Israel urged countries to cut ties with Iran.

Israel said its air force had launched a new “large scale” wave of strikes “targeting the Iranian terror regime’s infrastructure in Tehran”, following the latest salvo of missiles fired from Iran, including in Tel Aviv and in several sites in central Israel.

Iran, in turn, appealed to the UN Security Council to step in, while warning of more intense attacks on US forces and Israel as the war raged for the fourth day.

Iranian drones struck the US embassy in Saudi Arabia after previously hitting the mission in Kuwait.

In Lebanon, air strikes hit Beirut’s southern suburbs, an area where Hezbollah holds sway, while Hezbollah said it had targeted a military facility in Israel in response.

Israel ordered its forces to take control of more positions inside Lebanon to create a buffer zone, and the Lebanese army pulled back some of its forces.

Explosions were also heard in the Bahraini and Qatari capitals of Manama and Doha.

The International Atomic Energy Agency said a key Iranian nuclear site, Natanz, was damaged, but “no radiological consequence” was expected.

The UN refugee agency said the escalation of hostilities has displaced at least 30,000 people in Lebanon, and the Iranian Red Crescent said more than 780 people have been killed nationwide.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/live-israel-launches-fresh-attacks-on-iran-and-beirut-iran-continues-strikes-across-gulf/

Rising Kiwi Ollie Dunbar pulls off major upset at NZ Squash Open

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ollie Dunbar in action against Velavan Senthilkumar at the New Zealand Squash Open. Professional Squash Association

New Zealand teenage wildcard Ollie Dunbar has caused a major boilover on the opening day of the New Zealand Squash Open in Christchurch, toppling a top-50 ranked opponent.

The 18-year-old stunned world No.49 Velavan Senthilkumar in five games at the Isaac Theatre Royal venue.

The world No.125 needed just over an hour to prevail 11-8, 11-6, 6-11, 2-11, 11-5, staving off a mid-game fightback from his Indian opponent.

It comes 12 months after recording his maiden World Events win – at the same tournament.

“It was nice to do it last year, there was a bit more pressure on me this time around. But I enjoy playing on this court, so I’m looking forward to another game on it tomorrow,” Dunbar said.

“Over the last year or so I’ve definitely got better at the mental side of my game. It was good to be able to come through after being 2-0 up and seeing him come back to force a fifth game.

“It’s an incredible court and stage here. I’m so happy to play on it whenever I can. It’s been great to have lots of my friends here and have some people from my club come down to watch me.”

Dunbar was to take on two-time world junior champion Mohamad Zakaria of Egypt in today’s second-round match.

Joelle King in action at the Nations Cup tournament in Tauranga. PHOTOSPORT

It was a tougher day for the New Zealand women, with Joelle King and Kaitlyn Watts both beaten in five games.

Former world No.3 and 11-time New Zealand champion King was making her return from injury, having last played on tour 10 months ago.

She went down 11-2, 7-11, 8-11, 11-7, 11-8 in 50 minutes to Canadian No.1 Hollie Naughton.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/rising-kiwi-ollie-dunbar-pulls-off-major-upset-at-nz-squash-open/

A gold mine, an Australia mining giant, and a community divided

Source: Radio New Zealand

A visual simulation released by Santana Minerals showing what the mine would look like from Māori Point Road, Tarras. Supplied

A proposed gold mine is on the fast-track list. Proponents says it will bring jobs and money to the region, but opponents say it will be an economic ‘short-term sugar hit … with long-term consequences’.

Plans for a large, open cast gold mine in Central Otago are pitting locals against each other, while a mining industry executive says New Zealanders are too negative and catastrophise projects they don’t understand.

Australian company Santana Minerals has applied for fast-track approval to build an open cast mine in the Dunstan mountain range, an hour’s drive east of Queenstown, after discovering what it calls the largest single gold deposit in New Zealand in more than four decades.

According to the documents submitted to the fast-track panel, Santana will build four open mine pits. The largest, Rise and Shine Open Pit will be one kilometre long, 800 metres wide and 200 metres deep. There will also be three shallower pits, a processing plant that is one kilometre long and 120 metres wide, and a tailing storage facility to store mineral waste dust.

It says the project will employ hundreds of people and be worth $6 billion in revenue and more than $1b in taxes and royalties for New Zealand.

The fast-track panel is set to decide by late October and, if approved, it will be the first new mine to get the go-ahead under the accelerated process.

Opponents fear it will destroy threatened plants, scar the unique landscape and pollute the land and water. They say New Zealand will not get all the economic benefits because Santana is an Australian company, and they warn it will open the door to more mining in the region.

Two main groups are campaigning against the mine with backing from famous residents including actor Sir Sam Neill and painter Sir Grahame Sydney, as well as the former prime minister Helen Clark.

One of the groups, Sustainable Tarras, has already been fighting plans to build an international airport near the town. It calls the Santana proposal ‘David versus Goliath’ and is asking for donations to fund experts to fully understand the economic, environmental and social impacts of the mine.

“We are fighting this hard,” it says on its website.

Artist Gregory O’Brien, who organised a fundraising exhibition for the group, says the “proposed desecration of a heritage area for purely monetary gain is an outrage to all of us, as it is to the citizens of Central Otago and to all New Zealanders”.

“Painters, photographers, writers, film-makers, choreographers and other arts practitioners from within Central Otago and further afield are incensed at the churlishness of both the mining consortium and the Government’s ruinous ‘fast-track’ (aka ‘Highway to Hell’) legislation.

“The environmental cost of such a cold-blooded, extractive exercise is simply too high, as is the social impact and down-stream legacy.”

On the other side, Santana Mine Supporters, a Facebook group with 6,800 members says Central Otago “deserves opportunity – higher-paid local jobs, stronger regional businesses, and meaningful investment back into our community. We also believe development must be done properly, with high standards, transparency, and long-term accountability.”

RNZ Central Otago reporter Katie Todd has spoken to many locals, including farmers who see it as a positive move for the region and a continuation of the area’s mining legacy.

She says the application has been drawn out.

“Santana Minerals were asking for it to be considered within 30 days or so and we’ve recently learnt it’s going to be more like 140 days.

“In part that’s because of iwi opposition. Kā Rūnaka, which is a collective of Otago hapū, has raised concerns about potential Treaty settlement breaches and their concerns were described by the panel convenor of the fast-track application as significant and immutable.

“So that’s going to be something to watch,” says Todd.

Matthew Sole of Central Otago Environmental Society says communities are divided over the mine.

“There’s a lot of tension in the community,” he says. “There are certainly a lot of people for it.

“It’s the comments you receive on social media when you try and put up a counter argument and the difficulty I find with it is it’s actually hard to have a conversation.”

Sole says many people are under financial pressure and are concerned about the country’s future.

“I take a wider, longer term view that we’ve got to move on from exploitation to economies that have a right relationship with our environment. I think we’ve got to change away from these extractive processes to more enduring relationships and regenerative relationships with the land.”

Sole has produced a YouTube video of the area that will be mined and points out unique, threatened plants and remnants of past mining endeavours that are part of its precious heritage that he says are at risk. He says the old mining era cannot be compared to today’s.

“We’re talking about two different things. The early mining was largely mining of individual endeavour and it was largely with human hands with the use of water,” he says.

The impact of modern mining is “devastating, it has lost its context and meaning because of the vast industrial scale by massive machinery. We’re not comparing like with like”.

In a story for Newsroom last week, Jill Herron wrote that nearly a million hectares across Otago, and another 100,000 in Southland, are now at various stages of being “pegged” by gold mining companies.

But chief executive of New Zealand Minerals Council, Josie Vidal, says people have no need to panic and “possibly none” of the areas that have been identified on a minerals map drawn up by Earth Sciences New Zealand will be mined.

Heightened interest in the area is driven by the record price of gold, she says. She believes many will be hobby gold miners and doubts there would be any other large mines like Santana that are at a serious stage.

“There’s a lot of interest in gold of the traditional gold mining areas of which Otago is one, and there’s quite a lot of interest from smaller prospectors who could do quite well out of getting a fairly small amount of gold because the price is so high.”

She calls the Santana proposal “a bog standard gold mine”.

“I’m mystified by the attention. It’s a gold mine like any other. There’s no reason for it not to proceed.”

When The Detail asked Santana for an interview, it replied in an email with a number of conditions.

On balance and representation it said, “Please confirm who else will be featured or interviewed, and whether local voices and businesses many of which support the project – not just high-profile critics – are being included to reflect the full spectrum of community sentiment”.

It later declined our interview request but referred us it its 9,400-page application.

In an email, it said it welcomes scrutiny.

“What we cannot support is the amplification of assertions that have already been addressed, in writing, in data, numerous interviews and expert reports – simply because they are emotive or convenient to repeat and you haven’t bothered to fact check their claims.

“If the program’s objective is balance and informed debate, then the technical evidence must sit alongside the sentiment.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/a-gold-mine-an-australia-mining-giant-and-a-community-divided/

Ministry underestimated scale of secondary teacher shortage

Source: Radio New Zealand

Secondary schools need more teachers in the system than previously thought. File photo. Richard Tindiller

The Education Ministry has been underestimating the scale of the secondary teacher shortage, and says correcting its calculations caused this year’s jump in the forecast shortage.

The ministry last week forecast a likely shortfall of 1220 secondary teachers this year and next, up from last year’s projection of 880 for the same period.

The ministry’s education workforce head Anna Welanyk told RNZ the change was because the ministry previously assumed schools hired in outside teachers to cover about half of the time when their regular teachers were out of their classrooms due to factors such as non-contact time.

Welanyk said research last year showed that was true for primary schools, but not for secondary schools which used relief teachers for almost all of their teachers’ non-contact hours.

“We went out and talked to the sector to find out more information about exactly whether or not those assumptions were valid and determined that for primary, they were bang on and for secondary, they really weren’t,” she said.

She said that meant secondary schools needed more teachers in the system than previously thought.

“Because we changed the assumption to reflect what we understand to be something closer to the real life scenario, it’s meant that we’ve had to add on an additional 580-odd additional teachers into the secondary space.

“It’s not that the situation’s got dramatically worse or that our forecasting was not where it needed to be. It’s more that more detail in terms of the research that we’ve done has pointed us in a slightly different direction.”

She confirmed that it also meant the ministry had under-estimated demand for secondary teachers in previous forecasts.

Welanyk said without the change the ministry would have forecast a shortage of 140 rather than 710 secondary teachers this year.

“The situation, as described by the data in the report, is a more accurate reflection of the pressure on the system.”

In 2023, the ministry under-estimated demand for primary teachers after failing to account for changes to their collective agreement.

Meanwhile, Welanyk said there were early signs that enrolments in initial teacher education programmes had increased 30 percent his year.

“It’s very promising. It’s the highest increase that we’ve seen in quite a while, since before covid. So what that tells us is that people are interested in teaching as a profession. They do see it as a viable career path,” she said.

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MediMap failings likely to be canvassed as part of Manage My Health review

Source: Radio New Zealand

MediMap’s failings will likely be covered by the review into Manage My Health. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

MediMap’s failings will likely be covered by the review into Manage My Health, despite the recent data breach not being included by name.

The prescription portal was now being brought back online, having been down since 22 February, after it was discovered patient information had been changed.

MediMap said it had “rebuilt a secure production environment, completed a forensic review and validation of our data, identified the specific demographic records that were altered, and strengthened authentication controls, supported by independent cyber security specialists”.

All user passwords would be reset and any medication changes made manually during the outage would require clinical review, it said.

It acknowledged the “patience and professionalism” of healthcare staff dealing with manual processes, and apologised to residents, patients, families and healthcare providers for any disruption and distress.

A court injunction had been granted which prohibited anyone from accessing, using, copying, sharing or publishing any of the data.

The MediMap breach followed a hack of the patient portal ManageMyHealth (MMH) in late December, which sparked a review, commissioned by Health Minister Simeon Brown, to be carried out by the Ministry of Health.

The minister’s office said while MediMap would not be explicitly included by name in the review currently underway, the systemic issues which led to it would likely apply to both.

“The Ministry of Health’s review into the Manage My Health (MMH) cyber security incident is considering the broader issue of how private companies secure health data,” a spokesperson said.

A Ministry of Health spokesperson said the aim of the review was to understand the causes of the MMH breach, and the response, and to recommend improvements to ensure data breaches were better prevented in the future.

“While our focus remains on Manage My Health, the learnings will apply more broadly to other digital platforms which manage heath data.”

MediMap has been approached for comment.

On Thursday last week, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said Cabinet had just signed off on a new cyber security policy and strategy.

“It’s entirely appropriate that we look at our whole settings, because we need to make sure we’ve got tougher cyber securities around our critical infrastructure.”

He also sent a strong message to businesses.

“The Kiwi laid-backness in a cyber security world where there are real risks and challenges is not good enough. You need to be investing, and making sure that your systems and your protocols are up to speed, and are actually on-point, and that they continually evolve.”

He said the government would be consulting on the problem over the next few months, and considering incentives and punishments.

Last week, Manage My Health began notifying a further group of patients affected by the December attack.

It did not respond to questions about why these people had not been notified earlier.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/medimap-failings-likely-to-be-canvassed-as-part-of-manage-my-health-review/

Is a mark on the wall ‘damage’? Landlords, tenants puzzle over wear and tear

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

A “very small dent” or black mark on a wall. A Raro spill on the carpet. A broken mop and bucket.

These are some of the issues that have divided landlords and tenants who have appeared before the Tenancy Tribunal in the past month, working out what is “wear and tear” and what counts as “damage” to a rental property.

Tenancy Services says fair wear and tear refers to the gradual deterioration of things that are used regularly by people living in a property. Tenants are not responsible for this provided they are using the property, or the chattels provided, normally.

But tenants are responsible for intentional or careless damage.

“An example of this would be where a stove element wears out from normal cooking. This is fair wear and tear. However, if the stove was being used to heat the kitchen and stopped working properly, this would not be considered normal use.”

It’s an issue that can cause a lot of consternation.

In one case heard last month, a landlord sought compensation for the $28.82 cost of replacing a mop and bucket, among more expensive items.

The adjudicator said the evidence did not prove the damage to the mop and bucket was more than normal wear and tear.

But in another, a tenant’s former partner spilled Raro on the carpet and the adjudicator was “satisfied that the damage was caused carelessly”.

Last month, a landlord who argued the walls had been damaged was told one area of damage looked to be a “very small dent or black mark” and fair wear and tear.

Another landlord was told that there was not enough evidence that the tenant caused damage by causing chips on a granite bench top or pin holes to her walls.

Cassie Metcalfe, of iRentProperty, said there was confusion among landlords and tenants about how the rules might apply.

“When we think of what’s reasonable, different people will have different interpretations of that.

“There’s a lot of things to consider. One is the number of occupants in the house, the length of the tenancy, the condition of things when the tenants first moved in. I think it takes all parties to apply a level of fairness and reasonableness to come to an agreement. There’s no clear cut line unfortunately.”

She said landlords should make sure their inspections were done to a good standard and records kept. Tenants should report issues.

“You want to make sure these are documented, photographed wherever possible. If there is wear and tear at the end of the tenancy this could end up going to the tribunal where the mediator or adjudicator is making a decision and they can rely on the evidence you have.”

Sarina Gibbon, director of Tenancy Advisory, agreed people entered tenancies with different expectations.

She said wear and tear could be thought of as “time doing its thing” while damage was “someone not doing their job”.

“When I reflect on talking to landlords and tenants it’s always that expectation if you’re on the landlord side of the equation that you expect the property to be left in a pristine condition – that the tenant should take extra care as if they own the property. Let’s be honest, we’ve all hired a car before, we know how we treat a hire car … it’s really about the relationship rather than nitpicking the little things.”

She said having a bit of room to move meant tenants and landlords had to engage with common sense and be pragmatic.

“In a way it is good that wear and tear is not strictly defined – I’m not convinced that it would serve the benefit of the sector to have it strictly defined but I understand that from a day to day it does create some frustration.

“When people are trying to nitpick a tenant for $30 damage I would say the problem isn’t the $30 problem, your biggest problem is that it is not a productive relationship.”

She said landlords were often caught out by betterment. They cannot expect to be put back into a position that is better than they were in before the damage occurred.

“The tribunal is consistently good at accounting for betterment when it is ordering compensation. If the tenant had damaged something the tribunal would say – let’s say we’re talking about carpet … the tribunal will account for the fact that it is 10-year-old carpet, you’re not going to get replacement value.

“This isn’t an insurance policy, this is about restoring the landlord back to the position the landlord would have been in if the damage had never occurred. I don’t think people go into the process expecting that they get betterment, they don’t consciously think about it because think they ‘I have to put in a new carpet so the tenant should pay for the carpet – what they don’t account for is the carpet had deteriorated for 10 years.”

NZ Property Investors Federation spokesman Matt Ball said that was a bigger problem.

“On the face of it, this seems like fair principle, however the practical application of it sometimes results in significant financial harm to the landlord. For example, you may have a perfectly good five-year-old dishwasher that has been fully depreciated, with a book value of zero. The tenant can literally destroy this appliance and the landlord cannot claim any compensation, even though the appliance may have had many years of useful service left.

“The reason for this unfairness is that depreciation isn’t a measure of the item’s actual value. Depreciation is an agreed way a business owner can offset the cost of assets against income over time. It is never a full recovery of the cost of the asset, so if the asset is damaged or destroyed, the landlord is left out of pocket. In the same way that insurance policies often have an agreed value for items covered, it would be good if the law was changed to allow the Tenancy Tribunal to set an agreed value for destroyed or damaged assets so that landlords aren’t financially disadvantaged when a tenant causes actual damage.”

He pointed to a case last year in which a landlord said insurance had covered a claim up to $15,000 for meth contamination but the cost had been $18,000 more.

The adjudicator said that after three years, things like linen, bedding, crockery and cutlery were deemed to have no value for tax purposes. The adjudicator said when things were taken out of the claim that had no residual value, there was $10,836 in damaged goods – below the insurer’s payout.

“What strikes me in this case is that the landlord is left worse off, even though, as the adjudicator states in their ruling, ‘the landlord should be returned to the position they would have been in had the tenant not breached their obligations, and should not be better or worse off’,” Ball said.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/04/is-a-mark-on-the-wall-damage-landlords-tenants-puzzle-over-wear-and-tear/

Generational shift sees younger investors choosing managed funds over property

Source: Radio New Zealand

Younger investors are choosing KiwiSaver over property. RNZ

Traditional property investment is losing ground to KiwiSaver and other managed funds as a preferred way to make money.

ASB’s latest Investor Confidence Survey for the fourth quarter ended in December (Q4) indicated owning your own home or having a property investment was no longer seen as providing the best returns among those surveyed.

Instead, KiwiSaver and managed funds emerged as the top two performers in the eyes of investors.

ASB senior economist Chris Tennent-Brown said the survey identified a shift in perceptions on what could deliver the strongest investment returns.

“Pretty amazing to see housing knocked off the perch,” he said.

“Despite all the global uncertainty, strong KiwiSaver and managed investment funds, those returns are flowing through to confidence in those products and outshining housing.”

The December (Q4) survey also indicated investor confidence rose 11 percent over the third quarter (Q3), with the lower North Island reporting the most significant rise with confidence rising to 10 percent in Q4, compared with 3 percent in Q3.

He said there had been a generational shift since the 1987 stock market crash saw large numbers of New Zealanders’ investments in shares.

“The generational divide is apparent with the over 60s holding steady in their belief that your own home is still the best investment, which is unsurprising.

“Gen Z on the other hand believe the best returns currently lie in investing in shares of publicly listed companies, signalling the rise of the DIY investor as an accessible path to growing your portfolio.”

Tennent-Brown said the survey underscored the importance of financial education and the evolving needs of investors.

“The under 30s have been leading the way in this shift in sentiment for some time, however this quarter’s findings show a change in sentiment among most other age groups.”

However, he said New Zealanders continued to be interested in buying homes to live in, as indicated in the increase in confidence in our Housing Confidence survey.

“I think it’s really interesting to see people hopefully separating housing as a way of putting a roof over your head, which of course is a big part of our security and aspiration in New Zealand, versus investment returns,” Tennent-Brown said.

“It just means perception of property as an investment is evolving.”

The ASB investor confidence survey had been tracking NZ market sentiment since 1997.

The latest survey was based on 672 online interviews in Q4 2025 with adults aged 18 years and older throughout New Zealand. A sample of this size had a maximum margin of error of 3.8 percent at the 95 percent confidence level. Fieldwork occurred between 1October – 16 December 2025.

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Australia’s Middle East military HQ hit in Iranian drone attack, Qatar halts LNG production

Source: Radio New Zealand

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US President Donald Trump is warning ‘a big wave’ of strikes against Iran is yet to come.

Speaking to CNN, Trump said the US hasn’t even begun to hit the Iranian regime hard.

Missile strikes continued to fly over the Middle East overnight, with multiple countries threatening escalation of the ongoing conflict.

Top members of the Trump administration have spoken publicly about ‘Operation Epic Fury’ for the first time at a Pentagon press conference. The US said the goal of the war was not regime change, despite the deaths of top Iranian leaders, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the United States was not ruling out any options in the war, but promised, “This is not Iraq … This is not endless”.

Meanwhile, Iran said it was ready for a “long war” and has targeted US military bases in other Gulf states.

Kuwait said it accidentally shot down “several” US military aircraft in friendly fire.

Iran-backed Hezbollah and Israel continue to trade blows, prompting the Lebanese government to ban Hezbollah’s military and security activities and call on the group to hand over its weapons to the state.

Trump has said he envisages the conflict could last four weeks.

Follow the latest with our live log at the top of this page.

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Labour changes tune on welfare claw backs

Source: Radio New Zealand

If the law was retrospectively passed it would effectively criminalise people who need help, not debt, Willie Jackson says. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The Labour Party has changed its tune on legislation that would allow MSD to legally claw back welfare payments once someone has been backpaid for an ACC claim.

Though it still looks set to pass with all three coalition partners on board.

The Ministry of Social Development (MSD) has been billing people for supplementary support, like the winter energy payment, once they have received a lump sum from the Accident Compensation Corporation.

The High Court ruled this long-standing policy illegal in late 2025.

One week ago, the Minister for Social Development Louise Upston moved a motion of urgency in the House to align the law to stop what the government described as ‘double dipping’ – legislation that would apply retrospectively.

Lawyers and health professionals urged the government to slow down on the change in a shortened Select Committee stage last week, arguing vulnerable people – including state abuse survivors and mothers with birth injuries – would be among those caught up in the change.

Ten experts also went as far as writing to Upston last Friday to warn her “the bill goes significantly further” than the government stated objective required and “risks producing serious inequity and unintended harm”.

The group suggested seven targeted amendments to the bill, including a provision where MSD could not claw back payments that were received in good faith, and where they would be inequitable.

Labour ‘cannot ignore’ concerns raised, suggests changes

At first reading, Labour’s Willie Jackson said if his party was in government it would “also be seriously looking” at the law change as “double-dipping” should always be avoided.

On Tuesday, he told the House the feedback he’d heard last week “raised serious concerns we simply cannot ignore”.

Jackson said the reality was many MSD clients waiting for an ACC payment were worse off if they had to repay supplementary support they had been forced to take while waiting for ACC support to come through.

“It simply isn’t fair that people who have acted in good faith have, for whatever reason, got an injury due to no fault of their own and are left in a worse situation when trying to seek support from MSD and ACC.

“Many sick and injured Kiwis took welfare payments while their ACC claims were being heard, they’re also some of the poorest and hardest working members of society.”

Jackson said if the law was retrospectively passed it would effectively criminalise people who need help, not debt.

“Many took those welfare payments because they had no other option while waiting for their ACC claim, they didn’t know at all that they would face a claw back and took the money in good conscience.

“So we must remember, and sometimes people forget about these people…but these people are not criminals, yet the feeling that we picked up from some of the submitters is that they made to feel like criminals when they’re burdened with debt and they really should be supported.”

Jackson suggested Labour would only support the bill at third reading if MSD was given clear discretion to not recover payments that would cause further hardship and inequity – and not claw back disability and rehab allowances.

He also said Labour’s support required an exemption for victims of abuse in state care.

“That certainly would placate a lot of our people who made submissions…we don’t believe that that should be so hard for us as a House to consider.”

New Zealand First’s Jamie Arbuckle said his party had raised concerns at first reading about unintended consequences and wanted to look at “some of the finer points to make some changes” at the committee of the whole house stage.

The bill has progressed with the support of National, New Zealand First, ACT and Labour, with the Greens, Te Pāti Māori and independent MPs Mariameno Kapa-Kingi and Tākuta Ferris opposed.

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Christchurch could have protest-free zones at ‘sensitive sites’

Source: Radio New Zealand

John Minto at the Bridge of Remembrance in Christchurch. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Protesting could be banned from some parts of Christchurch, if one city councillor gets his way.

The council will vote on Wednesday on a request staff investigate councillor Aaron Keown’s proposal to create protest-free zones at what he calls “sensitive sites”, including the Bridge of Remembrance, the Earthquake Memorial and places of worship and cemeteries

One of the city’s best-known protesters John Minto is alarmed, along with Amnesty International, which said the right to protest was fundamental.

Keown said the proposed notice of motion stemmed from complaints he had received about protests at the Bridge of Remembrance, singling out Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) chair John Minto.

The group has held more than 125 marches departing from the bridge, since the Israeli bombardment of Gaza began in 2023.

“As a city leader, it’s embarrassing having these people at the Bridge of Remembrance, which is a war memorial site, arguing over wars all around the world that don’t necessarily affect New Zealand, and a lot of the ones in the Middle East don’t necessarily affect New Zealand,” Keown said.

The heritage-listed bridge over the Avon River was built in 1923 to commemorate Canterbury soldiers who fought in World War I.

PSNA chair John Minto said the site was eminently appropriate to host the protests, given it included the commemoration of New Zealanders who fought and died to liberate Palestine from the Ottoman Turks during World War I.

“There are 23 New Zealand soldiers who are buried in the Gaza War Cemetery, they died fighting to liberate Palestine from the Turks. This is the most appropriate place for us to hold protests calling for the liberation of Palestine today.”

Minto said despite his long history in activism, he had never seen anything like the consistency and longevity of the pro-Palestinian movement.

“I’ve never experienced a protest movement like this where people have been consistently coming out week after week right around the country. I’m proud of New Zealanders for doing that. We’ve done it in the past and we’ll continue to do it.”

The Bridge of Remembrance in Christchurch. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Keown said he supported free speech, but not anytime or anywhere.

“I think there’s a time and place for protests, and I don’t think it’s down there [at the Bridge of Remembrance].

“A number of businesses have talked about the disruption from the great unwashed, turning up week after week to… they just change the flag usually, and it’s another protest.

“The climate change people, the Palestine people, they’re all the same usually.”

The bylaw would also apply to other protests, such as the School Strike for Climate Change or last year’s hikoi, he said

Keown said he was not aware of specific protests in cemeteries, but planned to include them.

Minto said he had attended a cemetery protest before.

“It was a protest at the Symonds Street Cemetery in Auckland where somebody had spray painted swastikas over the Jewish graves. So I was there along with a whole pile of other people to show solidarity with the Jewish community of New Zealand against an anti-Semitic attack. So protests can can happen anywhere and it’s appropriate for them to happen wherever – there should be no restrictions.”

Mandating approved protest zones was contrary to New Zealander’s sense of democracy, Minto said.

Keown said he had not kept track of how many complaints he had received.

A Christchurch City Council spokesperson said it had received 12 complaints relating to protest activity at the Bridge of Remembrance over the past year, which included concerns about Destiny Church activity during the Pride Parade.

It had also received one complaint about a protest in New Brighton, another was received by noise control about a protest at the Commodore Airport Hotel, and four others about protests with no specific location.

No complaints were identified relating specifically to cemeteries, places of worship, or the Earthquake Memorial, the spokesperson said.

In the report accompanying the notice of motion, council staff warned “protest-free sites” could be considered an unlawful restriction on peoples’ rights, and said it would advise whether the concept could be in contravention of the Bill of Rights.

Amnesty International director of advocacy and movement building Lisa Woods said the right to protest was fundamental, and was a right that could help protect other rights.

“It’s a really important part of our society that’s used to expose injustice, demand accountability, push for change.

“Between elections there are quite limited opportunities for a meaningful say, protest is a key way we communicate to decision-makers and others in the community about what’s important and needed.”

The default position for decision makers should be to avoid restrictions and focus on facilitating protest, she said.

Limitations could be imposed, but they needed to be very specific, justified and limited – people not liking the look of a protest, or a protest disrupting business was not sufficient, Woods said.

“Protest is by its nature disruptive – that’s the point. It might cause some disruption to society’s daily functioning but only serious disruption can justify restrictions. Because it’s not a good look would not meet the test to enable a justified restriction.”

New Zealand had a proud tradition of protest, Woods said.

“We stand on the shoulders of people who have, through protest, fought for important human rights and change that we all enjoy today.

“And that continues – we want to, as a society, continue getting better, and protest is a fundamental way of that being achieved, and of achieving change in the future.”

“In our political system, there aren’t always opportunities for meaningful engagement on a regular basis in-between elections, but protest is one of the key spaces where community claims its power and tells decision makers what is important.”

Keown said police told him months ago that they needed powers like the proposed move-on orders, which he believed would help disperse protesters.

Councillor Keown welcomed the newly announced move-on powers, which he believed would “absolutely help” disperse protesters, something Woods said was of grave concern to Amnesty International.

Woods said the move-on orders were “chilling policy”.

“We are worried that it’s going to impact people protesting and how in practice such a law could be used to limit people’s rights across a range of scenarios.”

Minto said civil liberties and protest groups were concerned about misuse of the proposed powers.

“We’ll be watching very carefully how this legislation develops because there are numerous examples of legislation that’s been passed for one particular purpose but then used for another, and we’ve seen that used against the protest movement, for example trespass orders, used against the protesters quite inappropriately by the police.

“Any restriction on the right to protest peacefully in a public place, we have to resist absolutely.”

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Hundreds of tonnes of weeds removed in Lake Horowhenua clean-up

Source: Radio New Zealand

  • Seven weeks of weeding work at Lake Horowhenua has finished
  • More than 400 tonnes of invasive weeds collected
  • No easy fix for lake that for decades had sewage pumped into it.

Raw sewage was pumped into Punahau Lake Horowhenua for decades, earning it the dubious reputation as one of New Zealand’s most polluted waterways.

A years-long cleanup project is now working to restore it back to health, although it is not possible to yet put a timeframe on when the lake, west of Levin, will be safe to swim in again.

A special harvester has operated there for the past five summers, chopping out invasive weeds to give native species the chance to flourish, and replenish the oxygen-deprived water.

After seven weeks of weeding the lake, Tuesday is the harvester’s last day for the summer. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Mowing the lake

It was a crisp but calm day when RNZ visited Lake Horowhenua and headed out on the water on the paddle steamer-like $300,000 harvester – one of two in New Zealand.

Skipper Julian Everth explained how it worked.

“You have one horizontal set of teeth, which cuts horizontally, and then two vertical ones. And as you’re going along the weed gets cut out in a chunk.

“That comes out on a conveyer belt and then lands on another conveyer belt by your feet. Once it’s full there you can shift the conveyer belt backwards more and load more on to the boat.”

Over the past seven weeks Everth and another skipper have operated the harvester for 12 hours a day – mowing the 390-hectare lake bed in a grid pattern. Tuesday was their last day this summer.

Harvester skipper Julian Everth says they’ve collected more than 400 tonnes of weed this summer. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

They will collect more than 400 tonnes of weed, and the odd creature too.

“We gets lots of little perch and carp. They’re both invasive species, so we’re not too worried about them.

“Occasionally we will get eels that will swim up on to the harvester. When that happens we stop the cutting process, pull backwards a little bit and allow them to swim off.”

While the lake was safe for aquatic life, it was not recommended for humans due to the bacteria it contained.

The harvested weed was scooped into a truck and taken to Feilding for composting, rather than rotting in the lake.

“Essentially, it uses up lots of nutrients in the lake to grow. Eventually it will die and collapse,” Everth said.

“You end up with a blanket of dead weed on the bottom of the lake. When that happens it rots and makes an anoxic environment. A lot of the fish and eels can’t survive in that.”

Lake still getting poisoned – guardian

Tangata tiaki Deanna Hanita-Paki said the lake was for a long time a receptacle for effluent runoff, pesticides and worse.

“Back in the 1950s and 60s the council started putting raw sewage straight into the lake. That stayed like that until about 1985.

“They’ve had years of polluting – raw sewage straight into the lake.”

Tangata tiaki Deanna Hanita-Paki says the water quality is improving. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Lake trustees fought court battles to halt this, but their win took years and the effects of the pollution were devastating, Hanita-Paki said.

But the iwi Muaūpoko and the Horizons Regional Council were now putting much effort into nursing the lake back to life.

“It’s a lot better. With the harvester being there we can see the water’s getting better – the quality of that water was getting better and so was the weed changing, and our creatures were coming back.

“Our fish were coming back – same with the eels.”

But it was not perfect, as stormwater was still routed there.

“We’ve found that on those weather events the lake starts to smell and it smells different.

“I go out every month. We do water testing with Horizons. It started changing about October, November last year. The smell inside the lake was really bad.”

She said as far as she was concerned, the lake was still being poisoned due to toxins in the stormwater.

Weeding part of the plan

Horizons Regional Council fresh water and projects manager Logan Brown said lakes were complex.

“There is no silver bullet for restoration of Lake Horowhenua. There are lots of little projects that go together and they piece together.

“For all lakes across the country when we’re doing restoration you have to do both in-lake interventions and catchment interventions.”

Logan Brown, from Horizons Regional Council, says there’s no quick fix for the lake. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

A wetland project would also begin shortly, while the weed harvester was about to get a deep clean and then go into storage ahead of next summer.

“I like to compare it to a lawnmower. Effectively, we’re mowing the weed of the bottom of the lake,” Brown said.

“We’re not trying to get rid of all the weed. Like cutting your lawn, you leave the lawn there for stability.

“We want the aquatic plants to stay on the lake bed. That helps with stability. We get really high winds here and it just stops that stirring up on the lake bed.”

The lake is only as deep as 1.8 metres now due to silt build-up down the years.

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Questions remain over Christchurch sewage discharge plan

Source: Radio New Zealand

The scent from the damaged plant has been plaguing much of Christchurch for years. New Zealand Defence Force from Wellington, New Zealand, CC BY 2.0

The Christchurch City Council is yet to clarify how sewage will be treated before being pumped into the ocean under a new plan designed to mitigate the putrid stench coming from Bromley’s damaged sewage treatment plant.

Mayor Phil Mauger confirmed yesterday the council was investigating pumping tens of millions of litres of partially treated and chlorinated sewage into the ocean each day in an effort to combat the smell of the damaged plant.

The council was last week hit with an abatement notice after Canterbury Regional Council received more than 4500 complaints about the odour in the past month.

The plant was damaged by fire in 2021 and eastern suburbs have since been plagued by the foul odour. But other parts of the city have also been hit as it has got markedly worse this year.

RNZ had requested interviews with Mauger, city council staff and councillors representing affected areas, but none had responded.

Christchurch City Council was yet to answer questions on how the sewage would be treated before being pumped to the ocean and how long such a measure would be in effect.

Community leaders and Canterbury Regional Council have been caught on the hop by Mauger’s announcement yesterday.

Local community board deputy chair Jackie Simons only heard of the proposal yesterday.

“This isn’t unusual,” she said.

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

“I have people asking me questions about this before I have the information and as the elected representative that’s not a good thing. But at the same time, I do respect my council colleagues and council staff and what they are trying to do. I know that they are pulling out everything they can to try and resolve the situation.

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

Simons said she was cautiously optimistic about the plan, but she had concerns.

“There’s a lot of gaps. There’s a lot of information that hasn’t come through because it’ll be very detailed and very complex,” Simons said.

“I’ve said I’m cautiously optimistic. I have concerns about it being discharged into our ocean because our ocean is literally not for that purpose. So I’m concerned about any harmful repercussions from discharging it to the ocean and I’m well aware that it has the potential to create problems along our coastline for people and for marine life.

“At the same time I’m also dealing with a situation that has gone on for many years in the suburb of Bromley where our people are traumatised by ongoing odour.

“There’s also younger people, and adults of course, who are having some fairly severe health impacts and it’s a very fine line to actually balance out doing something for the people without destroying our marine life. So cautiously optimistic is the word because I want our people to be better and to be able to get on and start living their lives.

“It’s not an ideal solution by any means. But at this state in time what else do we have? I can’t see that we have any other solution.”

Canterbury Regional Council director operations Brett Aldridge said he had many unanswered questions about the plan.

“We had some very high level discussions around what the mayor proposed but only in a conceptual sense and so we were pretty surprised yesterday with the city coming out saying they were in consultation with us,” he said.

“In saying that we do have a planned meeting and we will sit down and work through the proposal in a lot more detail. But at this stage we really don’t have much more detail than what the mayor announced yesterday.”

Among the regional council’s unanswered questions was what partially treating the sewage meant.

Aldridge said they were very interested in finding out what that process would look like.

However he was certain it would not result in Christchurch facing a similar situation to Wellington, where about 70 million litres of wastewater was pumped into the ocean off the capital daily after its Moa Point wastewater treatment plant failed.

“That would be a categoric no – I don’t think so at all,” Aldridge said.

“We are not in the same emergency situation that Wellington is and we really would work through what’s being proposed and what are the mitigations that are going to be required to get it out there in a state that the effects are going to be well managed and mitigated.”

Canterbury Regional Council would meet with Christchurch City Council on Wednesday to discuss the proposal.

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Squirrel to stop personal loans

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mortgage advice and finance firm Squirrel is to stop offering personal loans.

It has stopped accepting new loan appliations and from Monday would not invest in the personal loan investment class.

It said its portfolio would run down naturally as borrowers repaid their loans.

Chief executive David Cunningham said Squirrel started its peer-to-peer lending journey with personal loans.

But over time, almost all of the business had become secured residential mortgages.

“The personal loans portfolio is tiny – $4 million – versus other lending approaching $450 million. Fractionalisation of mortgages via peer-to-peer remains at the core.”

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Dog not euthanised after biting off part of young girl’s face

Source: Radio New Zealand

The child was injured by a dog which belonged to a family member who came to stay at their Waikato home. RNZ/Supplied

A woman whose young daughter had part of her face bitten off by an aggressive dog can not understand why the animal has not been euthanised, a month after the attack.

The dog belongs to a family member who came to stay at their Waikato home.

They were aware it had previously bitten an adult and had been impounded.

At that time, animal control seized the dog and it had since been required to meet a set of regulations, including wearing a muzzle.

However, the family was unaware it had also previously attacked a child.

Georjeana Tupawa’s daughter was five when she was attacked, after the dog’s owner took her into the garage where the dog was living.

It was not wearing a muzzle at the time.

The dog was seized by animal control after the attack, but the owner will not give permission for it to be destroyed.

Tupawa told Checkpoint the attack has left her daughter traumatised.

“My daughter was bitten in the face and it wasn’t just a puncture wound. The dog actually ripped her upper cheek completely off. So she is now scarred from about halfway up her lip beside her nose, straight up under her eye.”

RNZ/Supplied

Tupawa’s daughter was in hospital for several days after going through emergency microsurgery.

While her face is heavily scarred, the surgery was much more successful than it could have been.

But it is trauma that Tupawa’s daughter was now dealing with.

“She was having nightmares. I obviously stayed up at the hospital with her. It was really hard. I didn’t sleep because I was watching her. She was waking up multiple times. Kept asking, why did this happen?’.”

More than a month on from the attack, the dog is still alive in the pound.

“I think it’s inhumane, I think that it would be a real risk to allow this dog out, I think that everyone deserves a second chance and the dog was given that.”

Tupawa said if the restrictions put on the dog after the first two attacks were followed, she believed the attack on her daughter could have been avoided.

“It’s not the dog’s fault that the restrictions that were put in place were not followed and that this ultimately happened. I feel that it was a ticking time bomb. And I think that it just shouldn’t have happened.”

RNZ/Supplied

The dog’s owner has refused permission for it to be destroyed, which means the case now needs to be presented in front of a judge.

“They’ve told us that this could take weeks, months, potentially even years.”

“That says to me that this animal is being kept and I guess kind of like on death row in a way, or that the dog is going to be released and we’re going to wait for it to be fatal.”

Given the evidence it had of the attack, Tupawa said the council should have the power to destroy the dog.

“I think that the photos that we have, you know, post-op, pre-op, before they managed to do what they did. I think that those photos without any backstory should be an open and close case.”

Tupawa said there needed to be changes to the current dog laws.

“Why should this dog have to wait for it to go in front of a judge? This is an open-and-shut case.

“You look at the photo, you look at my daughter now, you look at the scar that is on her face – it’s not on her foot, it’s not on her arm, it’s on her face. How do you deal with that? How do you move on from that?”

The Waipā District Council told Checkpoint it has issued a notice to the dog owner saying they intended to hold the dog until the conclusion of a prosecution against them.

The council is seeking the destruction of the dog and will keep communication lines open with the child’s family as the process progresses.

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NRL: NZ Warriors ‘proud’ of former reserve-grader Setu Tu in Dragons debut

Source: Radio New Zealand

Setu Tu scores a try for St George Illawarra Dragons in his NRL debut. Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images

NZ Warriors are celebrating – not lamenting – the loss of powerhouse winger Setu Tu, after his impressive NRL debut for St George Illawarra Dragons.

Tu, 27, was a star performer for the Warriors reserves during their triumphant 2025 campaign, scoring 13 tries in 14 appearances, but was scooped up by the ‘Red V’ last November, after he scored two tries against Dragons in the 30-12 NSW Cup grand final victory.

After coming close to a first-grade call-up for the Warriors in 2024, when torn knee ligaments stalled his progress, he was finally given his chance on the big stage in a season-opening loss to Canterbury Bulldogs last weekend, scoring a try to cap his celebrations.

“So proud, so very proud of Sets,” fullback Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad enthused. “We want to keep as much talent as we can at this club, but unfortunately, that’s not how this game works sometimes.

“He’s got his opportunity to go overseas and work on his craft, and he was given his opportunity.

“For him to live out his dream… man, I remember Sets serving his apprenticeship at Melbourne, and then coming back for family reasons and rejoining the club via the NSW Cup side.

“To think about that moment, and to see him go over to Vegas for the first time and put his family name on the map, it’s special and very special for Sets.”

The Warriors have copped criticism over the years for letting homegrown talent seemingly slip through their fingers, but have also benefitted recently from its return.

Nicoll-Klokstad left Mt Smart after seven first-grade games in 2019, unable to force his way past Roger Tuivasa-Sheck for the No.1 jersey, but spent four seasons at Canberra Raiders, before returning as a hardened veteran.

On the current roster, lock Erin Clark and second-rower Marata Niukore also began their careers through the Warriors junior system, but spent their formative years across the ditch, before coming back better players for their offshore experience.

Tu’s journey has been slightly different, marked by family and personal tragedy, so no-one begrudges him his breakthrough with the Dragons, although his night ended early, when he was subbed out of the game late with severe cramp.

Another happy to see him succeed was Bulldogs captain Stephen Crichton, who was first on the scene to help Tu, when he tightened up.

“He is a young Samoan kid as well and I remember when it was my debut, so I could just imagine how emotional he was,” Crichton said. “He definitely killed it out there.

“I am obviously born overseas in Samoa and I am just trying to shine that light.

Setu Tu scores a try against St George Dragons in the NSW Cup grand final. David Neilson/Photosport

“We saw another Samoan kid, obviously on the opposite side, but debuting, and we could see how proud his family is.

“I just want to shine that light for young Polynesian kids, regardless of whether you are Samoan, that you can make it from wherever you are born.”

Warriors coach Andrew Webster saw Tu’s promotion as recognition of the club’s pathway.

“He’s a great signing for the Dragons, and I’m really proud to see players departing our club and doing well in their debut,” he said. “It’s a credit to our NSW Cup and our whole development programme here.

“Setu came back here three years ago, looking for a part-time contract. He’s played in our reserve grade and now he’s got his opportunity.

“He was close [to staying] in many ways, but we were happy with what we’ve got and you can only have so many. I wish him all the best, and I was really proud of him and for his family.”

Already well served by veterans Tuivasa-Sheck and Dallin Watene-Zelezniak, Webster bolstered his wing stocks with the addition of Alofiana Khan-Pereira – a former NRL tryscoring champion – and rookie Haizyn Mellars over the off-season.

Meanwhile, several of last year’s champio reserve squad, including first-graders Moala Graham-Taufa, Ed Kosi, Bunty Afoa, Tom Ale, Freddy Lussick and captain Kalani Going, found contracts with other NRL clubs.

Webster denied that Tu’s age had counted against him being retained by the Warriors.

“Seventy-seven-year-olds are beauties at times too,” he said. “They’ve been so hungry for so long and it means so much to them.

“The motivation is just as high as a rookie, probably more, so the age wasn’t a factor. We’re already made our decision quite early on the direction we wanted to go and he had a great finish to the season.

“He was only part-time with us last season and did a great job.”

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No change to government’s LNG plans after global price spike

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Mark Papalii

The government is brushing off accusations of naivety from the opposition over plans to pursue a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal as prices spike worldwide.

The Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route connecting the Persian Gulf with open ocean, has effectively closed, after Iran said it would attack any ship trying to pass through.

QatarEnergy has suspended production of LNG, prompting prices to rise by around 50 percent in Europe, and nearly 40 percent in Asia.

Qatar supplies 20 percent of the world’s LNG.

The New Zealand government is proceeding with plans to build a billion dollar LNG import facility in Taranaki, as a back-up to address dry year risk.

The Frontier Report, commissioned by the government last year to look at the electricity market performance, said it would make “no economic sense” to develop a LNG terminal just to meet dry year risk.

The report said it should be considered as a last resort, “recognising that doing so exposes New Zealand to the global price of gas, which would have implications for the competitiveness of industry with high gas demand”.

Labour’s energy spokesperson Megan Woods said the global spike in LNG prices was the concern Labour had been warning the government about all along.

“It exposes New Zealand to this volatility around pricing around the world. We’ve got domestic, made-at-home solutions, where we use the resources we have here in New Zealand that really could give us this independence,” she said.

“What they’re doing is exposing New Zealanders to potentially very high energy bills, whether that’s for households or for businesses.”

She said it was “naive” to rely on LNG.

“New Zealanders are being put at risk, New Zealand households and businesses, from high energy prices if we rely on this form of energy, which has such volatile price spikes that we’re seeing today.”

Megan Woods says it’s naive to rely on LNG. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Woods would not go into questions over whether Labour would rip up a contract if it was signed before the election.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins has previously said if Labour entered government before a deal was done it would not go through with it.

Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick also said the party’s “fears and concerns” were being realised.

“What the government has exposed New Zealanders to by committing the better part of a billion dollars to this project is vulnerability to international supply chain shocks, which is exactly what we are currently seeing playing out as a result of what’s occurring with America’s aggression in the Middle East,” she said.

The energy minister Simon Watts said the government had taken steps to look at increasing security of supply, particularly around fuel sources that were based in New Zealand.

“The impact of volatility in international markets will play through. But in the context of where we are here in New Zealand, we have appropriate stores in place to deal with aspects of volatility.”

Asked later about Woods’ comments around naivety, Watts said future energy prices in 2027, 2028, and 2029 were all down following the government’s announcement.

“I think the announcement that we’ve made in regards to building an LNG capability to import fuel that we don’t have is the complete opposite of naivety. We don’t have LNG fuel sources in a dry year, and that’s why power prices have been spiking, and that’s what we’re looking to alleviate,” he said.

“Our major problem is we don’t have enough gas in the country to make electricity in a dry year. We solve that through importation, and we’re going to look to increase rooftop solar and battery across the board, because that’s positive as well. We want both.”

Oil prices have also risen, which the Finance Minister said the Treasury and Reserve Bank were monitoring closely.

Nicola Willis said while oil prices had risen, it was at a “far smaller level” than when Russia invaded Ukraine.

“New Zealand has very good fuel supplies. We regulated last year to ensure we have 28 days of fuel already in the country, which of course was purchased at prices a month ago, so we wouldn’t expect to see immediate impact at the pump,” Nicola Willis said.

Willis defended the LNG plans, as “ensuring that we can generate electricity when the lakes are low and the sun isn’t shining” was critical for affordability and security.

“I’m actually living in the real world,” she said.

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Deep-sea whale re-floated after stranding on central Auckland beach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Project Jonah marine mammal medics and Department of Conservation staff respond to a Beaked whale stranded in St Heliers. Supplied / Project Jonah

The Department of Conservation (DOC) has floated a whale back out to sea after it stranded on Auckland’s St Heliers Beach.

The Shepherd’s beaked whale was spotted at Ladies Bay this morning.

DOC operations manager Bec Rush said the whale had a health check and was then refloated as the tide was rising about 3.30pm

“However, it is possible the whale will re-strand overnight, and we will be monitoring for if this happens.”

Shepherd’s beaked whale strandings are semi-regular in New Zealand, said Rush, and they are occasionally seen live at sea, with reports from offshore Taranaki, Gisborne, Kaikoura, Otago, and Fiordland.

Project Jonah spokesperson Louisa Hawkes said Shepherd’s beaked whales lived in the deep sea, and only came up to shore if something was wrong.

Stranded, injured or dead whales should be reported to the DOC emergency hotline 0800 DOC HOT (0800 362 468).

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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/2026/03/03/deep-sea-whale-re-floated-after-stranding-on-central-auckland-beach/

NZ Warriors without captain Mitch Barnett for NRL season-opener against Sydney Roosters

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mitchell Barnett in possession. South Sydney Rabbitohs v One NZ Warriors. David Neilson/Photosport

NRL: NZ Warriors v Sydney Roosters

Kickoff: 8pm Friday, 6 March

Go Media Stadium, Auckland

Live blog updates on RNZ website

NZ Warriors co-captain Mitch Barnett has missed the cut for his team’s NRL season-opener against Sydney Roosters at Go Media Stadium on Friday.

Englishman Morgan Gannon is poised for a debut in the Aussie rugby league competition on the extended interchange, while second-rower Marata Niukore is another absence in coach Andrew Webster’s first line-up of the regular season.

Co-captain Barnett was sidelined much of last season with a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament in his knee and has not passed fit for round one, with his starting front-row spot filled by Jackson Ford.

Last week, he told those gathered at the team’s official season launch that he faced four days of intensive testing in Sydney to determine his readiness and hoped to return in the early rounds.

After missing both pre-season trials with a calf niggle, Chanel Harris-Tavita will line up outside Tanah Boyd in the halves, but Niukore hasn’t been able to shrug off the same injury.

Winger Roger Tuivasa-Sheck also sat the pre-season with a hamstring tweak, but returns for the opener.

Under new NRL rules, Webster has named six on the interchange bench, featuring specialist hooker Sam Healey, outside back Taine Tuaupiki and four forwards.

Warriors: 1. Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, 2. Dallin Watene-Zelezniak, 3. Ali Leiataua, 4. Adam Pompey, 5. Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, 6. Chanel Harris-Tavita, 7. Tanah Boyd, 8. James Fisher-Harris, 9. Wayde Egan, 10. Jackson Ford, 11. Kurt Capewell, 12. Jacob Laban, 13. Erin Clark

Interchange: 14. Sam Healey, 15. Demitric Vaimauga, 16. Leka Halasima, 17. Tanner Stowers-Smith, 18. Taine Tuaupiki, 20. Morgan Gannon

Reserves: 21. Alofiana Khan-Pereira, 22. Luke Hanson, 23. Eddie Ieremia-Toeava

Meanwhile, after serving the first 15 years of his career with Manly Sea Eagles, veteran half Daly Cherry-Evans will make his Roosters debut against the Warriors, lining up outside Sam Walker.

“We saw a piece of it in the trial and I think he’ll give them a lot of experience and balance,” Webster said. “A lot of things go through Sammy Walker and [fullback James] Tedesco, so he will balance the field up and can be very dominant like we know he can be.

“A bit like us, I’m sure they’re not going to be perfect round one, but they will be experienced enough through those three to come with plenty of options. They’re a dangerous spine and Cherry’s going to add a lot.”

Last time the Warriors faced Cherry-Evans, he slotted a late field goal for a 27-26 victory in his Manly farewell. At 37, he is the oldest player in the competition.

With off-season recruit Reece Robson nursing a broken thumb, young Auckland-born Benaiah Ioelu will line up at hooker, alongside NZ Kiwis prop Naufahu Whyte.

Roosters: 1. James Tedesco, 2. Daniel Tupou, 3. Billy Smith, 4. Robert Toia, 5. Mark Nawaqanitawase, 6. Daly Cherry-Evans, 7. Sam Walker, 8. Naufahu Whyte, 9. Benaiah Ioelu, 10. Lindsay Collins, 11. Angus Crichton, 12, Nat Butcher, 13. Blake Steep

Interchange: 14. Conor Watson, 15. Siua Wong, 16. Egan Butcher, 17. Spencer Leniu, 18. Cody Ramsey, 19. Fetalaiga Pauga

Reserves: 20. Salesi Foketi, 21. Tommy Talau, 22. Toby Rodwell

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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/2026/03/03/nz-warriors-without-captain-mitch-barnett-for-nrl-season-opener-against-sydney-roosters/

All Black Sevens coach left off plane to North America

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tomasi Cama the New Zealand All Black Sevens. PHOTOSPORT

The All Black Sevens side will head to the New York and Vancouver legs of the World Sevens Series without head coach Tomasi Cama.

New Zealand Rugby confirmed on Tuesday that Cama will not fly out with the team who depart today due to visa issues.

“The team were advised his visa application could not be processed in time to travel with the team, who fly out of New Zealand today.”

Cama was appointed head coach of the All Black Sevens in August 2023 after a storied career on the field.

He played 128 tournaments for New Zealand, winning the World Rugby Sevens Player of the Year Award in 2012.

NZR said assistant coach Willie Rickards will take on the head coach duties for the two tournaments with Scott Curry as his assistant.

The Vancouver tournament runs from 7-8 March followed by New York from 14-15 March.

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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/2026/03/03/all-black-sevens-coach-left-off-plane-to-north-america/

NZ has ‘healthy stock levels’ of fuel – MBIE

Source: Radio New Zealand

Government officials and major fuel retailer Z Energy are moving to ease any concerns about the country’s fuel reserves.

The US and Israel-led air campaign in Iran has seen the country fire missiles and drones at its Middle East neighbours and threaten to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20 million barrels – a fifth of the world’s traded oil – moves each day.

Iranian strikes have also prompted Qatar – one of the world’s largest gas exporters – to halt production at key facilities, sending European natural gas prices surging by 50 percent in a single night.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) and fuel company Z Energy, said New Zealand had sufficient fuel reserves to withstand any disruption to global supplies.

MBIE said as a member of the International Energy Agency (IEA), New Zealand must hold at least 90 days of oil stocks.

The total was met through a combination of onshore stockholdings held by fuel importers and “oil tickets” – agreements with the governments of the United States, United Kingdom and Japan that allowed oil held overseas to count towards New Zealand’s IEA commitment.

MBIE said the Minimum Stockholding Obligation (MSO) – which came into force on 1 January 2025 – also required fuel importers to hold 21 days of diesel, 24 days of jet fuel and 28 days of petrol within New Zealand, including shipments already in transit within the country’s Exclusive Economic Zone.

“Our data shows that fuel importers routinely hold more than what’s required – and while these figures are commercially sensitive, we can say that we have healthy stock levels and that importers have further ships planned and on their way to New Zealand,” an MBIE spokesperson said.

Diesel holdings would have to rise to 28 days by 2028.

Together, the MSO and overseas “ticket” contracts gave New Zealand more than 90 days of effective cover, meeting its full IEA obligations.

Importers were required to report stock levels regularly to MBIE to ensure sufficient reserves are available at short notice.

Z Energy said it was closely monitoring the rapidly evolving situation in the Middle East, but there was no impact on its ability to source fuel.

“Customers can continue to fill up as normal at any Z station across the country,” a spokesperson said.

The company said it would continue to monitor developments and provide updates as needed.

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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/2026/03/03/nz-has-healthy-stock-levels-of-fuel-mbie/