Ten year old boy found after being reported missing in Northland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ten-year-old Riwi was last seen on the morning of Saturday 21 February. Supplied / NZ Police

A 10-year-old boy who went missing yesterday has been found.

Northland police were concerned for the welfare of a 10-year-old Whangārei boy who had been missing for more than a day.

The boy was last seen as his home in the suburb of Kensington yesterday morning.

Police confirmed shortly before 8pm tonight that the boy has been found “safe and sound”.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/22/ten-year-old-boy-found-after-being-reported-missing-in-northland/

Serious injuries after crash involving a car and cyclist in Canterbury

Source: Radio New Zealand

Evans Pass Road is currently closed however police said traffic management is being arranged. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A serious crash involving a car and a cyclist in Sumner has resulted in serious injuries and road closures.

Emergency services responded to reports of the crash near the intersection of Sumnervale Drive and Evans Pass Road at about 5:30pm on Sunday.

Police said initial reports indicate there are serious injuries.

Evans Pass Road is currently closed however police said traffic management is being arranged.

The Serious Crash Unit had been notified, and police are asking motorists to avoid the area.

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Tribunal finds teacher who had manic episode at school guilty of serious misconduct

Source: Radio New Zealand

A teacher who was experiencing a manic episode of bipolar disorder accessed pornography at school, swore at students and made inappropriate comments to other staff members.

The man had only been teaching in New Zealand for a week, and had told the school about his condition, but had little support and ended up in hospital under a compulsory treatment order after his mental health deteriorated significantly.

The Teaching Council then opted to charge him for serious misconduct, despite acknowledging that the incidents occurred because he was seriously mentally unwell.

The man wasn’t provided any training, had no local family or medical support and had told the school’s principal about his disorder before he started teaching there.

After the series of incidents, the school made a referral to the Teaching Council, which then opted to press charges of serious misconduct against the man, who had returned to his home country and was no longer teaching in New Zealand.

According to a ruling by the Teachers Disciplinary Tribunal made last year but only released this week, the teacher was trained overseas and arrived in New Zealand in March 2023.

Because of delays with his visa he’d only been in the country five days before he started teaching, and had no formal training in the New Zealand education system.

The teacher had a history of Bipolar Affective Disorder and received regular treatment overseas, including hospitalisation. He disclosed this to the principal of the school where he was to be working.

However, he did not have appropriate accommodation or a psychiatric care plan in place to manage his bipolar condition and while he was still taking his prescribed mood stabiliser on a daily basis, he did not augment this with antipsychotic medication to appropriately manage the heightened stress of transitioning to a new country.

Over seven days of teaching at the new school, his mental health deteriorated, and there were a series of incidents that led to the Teaching Council charging him for misconduct.

According to the summary of facts, the teacher was found drinking beer on school grounds, swore at students, made inappropriate comments about a student’s mother, and similar comments to two female teachers, as well as sharing information about his personal life that made staff feel uncomfortable.

The man also made comments about violence as well as other homophobic comments, removed his shirt to show people his back tattoo and accessed pornography on his personal cellphone using his school account, during school hours.

At the instigation of school staff, the teacher was assessed by the Mental Health Crisis Assessment Team and underwent a period of inpatient treatment under a compulsory treatment order.

The school filed a report to the Teaching Council and subsequently dismissed the man, who has since returned overseas.

‘Overbearing, aggressive and reckless’

The teacher admitted the charges against him but noted that the “homophobic comments do not reflect his views on the LGBT community when he is stable”.

He also said that while he had accessed pornography at school, he’d done so inadvertently when he opened his internet browser for the first time during the day.

A report was prepared by a clinical psychologist for the Teaching Council, which found that the man was insightful about what factors contributed to his manic episode, and that he were to work in teaching again he would need appropriate therapeutic support.

A Complaints Assessment Committee appointed by the Teaching Council to lay charges against the teacher before the tribunal said that his behaviour exhibited a pattern that was “overbearing, aggressive and reckless” and met the criteria for sexual misconduct.

The committee said that the swearing at students, drinking alcohol in front of them and viewing pornography at school could have had an impact on student wellbeing.

Overall, the committee said that the teacher had failed to manage his disorder and had “a tendency to act aggressively, inappropriately and impulsively towards a student and staff”.

The tribunal found that the teacher was guilty of serious misconduct, but noted that the incidents occurred in the context of his deteriorating mental health.

“The tribunal does not have the evidence or the expertise to determine whether the respondent was aware that he was about to experience a manic episode or the extent to which he then was competent to control his disinhibited behaviour,” the tribunal said.

“Fundamentally, managing personal factors including health issues is necessary to show due regard for maintaining professional relationships with students and working respectfully alongside colleagues.”

The tribunal ordered that the teacher be censured, and if he returns to teach in New Zealand must tell any prospective employer about the finding against him. He was also ordered to pay $6500 in legal costs.

In a statement to NZME, a spokesperson for the Teaching Council said the teacher was granted a provisional practising certificate, which meant he would have been mentored for two years before becoming fully registered.

“A disclosure of a mental health condition such as bipolar disorder does not automatically prevent someone from being registered or certificated,” the spokesperson said.

“The key consideration in the decision-making is whether the diagnosis impacts a person’s ability to teach safely and effectively. Each case is assessed individually, with careful consideration given to fitness to teach and the safety and wellbeing of learners.”

Under the current requirements for teachers to become registered, applicants must declare their commitment to the code and standards and confirm they are physically and mentally able to carry out a teaching role safely and satisfactorily.

Jeremy Wilkinson is an Open Justice reporter based in Manawatū, covering courts and justice issues with an interest in tribunals. He has been a journalist for nearly a decade and has worked for NZME since 2022.

* This story originally appeared in the New Zealand Herald.

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Ten year old boy reported missing in Northland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ten-year-old Riwi was last seen on the morning of Saturday 21 February. Supplied / NZ Police

Northland police are concerned for the welfare of a 10-year-old Whangārei boy who has been missing for more than a day.

Ten-year-old Riwi was last seen as his home in the suburb of Kensington yesterday morning.

He is believed to be wearing a royal-blue hoodie, black shorts and orange basketball-style Crocs.

Police said Riwi may be in Tikipunga or the surrounding suburbs.

Anybody who has any information on his whereabouts have been urged to contact police.

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Mediawatch: Immigration amping up in election year

Source: Radio New Zealand

Henry Cooke in The Post last week analysing responses to the free trade agreement with India. The Post

A recent European industry summit at a chateau in Belgium wasn’t expected to make headlines.

But when British boss Sir Jim Ratcliffe complained to Sky News UK about “huge levels of immigrants coming in”, it was bulletin-leading stuff in Britain.

“The UK has been colonised by immigrants really. The population of the UK was 58 million in 2020, now it’s 70 million,” said the billionaire founder of the global chemical company INEOS.

He went on to claim the current UK Labour government and its under-pressure leader Sir Keir Starmer lacked the courage to confront that – and rising numbers of people on benefits.

These days men of means criticising the British government is not out of the ordinary – or sounding off about immigration.

Several billionaires backed Brexit and now back Nigel Farage’s new anti-immigration political party Reform which is surging in opinion polls right now.

To its credit, Sky News UK said Sir Jim Ratcliffe was off by about 10m on the UK’s recent population growth – an egregious error for a business tycoon with a ruthless focus on budgets and bottom lines.

A further fact check by the BBC revealed only 6.5 million Britons not working today receive benefits – not the 9 million Ratcliffe claimed.

A billboard depicting INEOS Chairman and Manchester United shareholder Sir Jim Ratcliffe, near Old Trafford stadium, in Manchester. AFP

The fact Sir Jim Ratcliffe himself migrated to Monaco for tax reasons – not paying tax being the main one – amplified outrage in the UK.

And Ratcliffe’s blurt made back-page headlines as well as front-page ones because he is also the part-owner of Manchester United. Many of its players, staff and supporters are either immigrants or the children of immigrants.

(NZ Rugby could have been dragged into this too, but Ratcliffe controversially backed out of its INEOS sponsorship deal in mid-2025.)

Guardian sportswriter Barney Ronay was not surprised by the comments.

“He knows that a slash-and-burn Reform government would be good for business. Immigration is just a wedge issue in this dynamic. This is pre-electioneering on behalf of the super wealthy.”

Wedging immigration into party politics

The anti-immigration One Nation party is polling above 20 percent nationally in Australia. That’s more than the Liberal and National parties of the centre-right put together.

Here, the proposed free trade agreement (FTA) with India has pumped immigration up the political agenda.

When the Prime Minister announced an agreement had been reached with India just before Christmas, NZ First issued a statement criticising it.

Winston Peters told Richard Harman’s subscriber news service Politik that family members of about 5000 people on a new employment visa would be eligible to come to New Zealand.

“You go from saying it’s one child – that’s 10,000 people – to possibly 25,000 or more. They’re not the most populous country in the world for nothing,” Peters told Politik.

“It’s an open secret around Parliament that Peters wants to campaign this year on immigration,” Richard Harman concluded at the time, noting that the NZ First statement condemning the FTA attracted a stream of racist comments on social media.

Two months on, that’s no secret anymore.

“On the question of immigration, which is going to be massive in this matter, the truth is not being told. It means we can have tens of thousands of people getting here by right …taking those opportunities away from New Zealanders,” Peters told the Herald’s Ryan Bridge show at the end of January.

The next day the Prime Minister told reporters Peters was wrong and trade minister Todd McClay later told RNZ that NZ First had pulled support for the India FTA before he’d actually secured it.

But the problem for the news media was the terms deal with India still weren’t clear.

What’s the deal?

Last month the Herald’sAudrey Young reported an Indian government fact-sheet had said that the agreement removes caps on Indian students here – but the Trade Minister Todd McLay had already told Parliament that it doesn’t.

And last week, Todd McClay couldn’t confirm that.

In a long sit-down chat on last Sunday’s TVNZ Q+A show, host Jack Tame repeatedly asked if the total number of temporary Indian migrants in New Zealand will increase.

McLay said the FTA doesn’t extend the rights of visa holders to bring relatives in, though most temporary migrants can after a period of time anyway – and New Zealand doesn’t discriminate.

“It appears sometime in the last two weeks the government has decided that – unlike almost all other temporary work visas… that for some reason this visa that applies only to Indians will mean that people cannot bring their families,” Tame asked, hinting that NZ First’s stance could explain the change.

“Under the Free Trade Agreement there is no right extended further. This is something that a government could do in the future if it wants,” McClay countered.

Last week, the Herald’s Audrey Young helped with a point-by-point summary headed Fact or fiction: Who’s telling the truth on the India free trade agreement?.

That followed Herald political editor Thomas Coughlan clearing things up after obtaining part of the yet-to-be published agreement’s text.

But the lack of clarity had allowed anti-immigration advocates to make hay.

Immigration angst

Last week, The Post’s deputy political editor Henry Cooke noted just 5 percent named “immigration” as a worry issue in the most recent IPSOS issues monitor poll – and a later opinion poll showed majority public support for the FTA.

But simply posting results of the latter online surfaced “seething prejudice and racism one finds against Indians online right now, right here in New Zealand.”

“It is possible that anti-immigration sentiment has ticked up now that this deal has huge prominence in news media, with Winston Peters standing against it and Labour slowly finding its way to probably supporting it,” Cooke wrote.

It’s not hard to find concerns about cultural decline and references to racist replacement theory in the output of local alternative media.

“You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to know that if you dilute a culture up to a particular point, that culture disappears,” Reality Check Radio’s Paul Brennan said recently while also insisting the media ignore that issue.

On the same platform, after Winston Peters first sounded the alarm earlier this year, self-described Christian nationalist William McGimpsey said the India Free Trade Agreement has “significant migration risks” Under the heading: Is mass immigration tearing at the social fabric of New Zealand? McGimpsey reckoned 20 percent of people living in New Zealand were not citizens. And some should “politely be asked to leave to reduce the size of the immigrant population to manageable levels and reclaim our country.”

McGimpsey listed news stories that he claimed “show the problems that occur when people from foreign cultures with different values and ways of life are imported here.”

He cited reports of Auckland area beaches stripped of seafood.

This week NZ First’s Shane Jones announced a ban on collecting kaimoana from rock pools along Auckland’s east coast for two years to crack down on what he called “turbocharged foraging.”

On The Platform, host Sean Plunket had no qualms about asking Shane Jones if the problem was created by “recent arrivals to New Zealand.”

“I’ve already said in other parts of the media landscape, that this is a Peking duck problem. We have groups organised via social media on Chinese language sites,” he said.

“I’m coming under attack for my remarks. I don’t care. The vast majority of New Zealanders have been excluded from discussion as to who decided to change the demography of our country,” Jones added.

“I don’t care if I come on your programme or anywhere in New Zealand and I get called out as a racist. You watch me campaign on this issue, buddy,” he told Plunket.

Debating immigration out loud

While some say the media ignores the issue, immigration had aired extensively often in the news.

Unconstrained immigration. What’s the alternative? was the title of a session at the annual New Zealand Economics Forum at the University of Waikato last week.

It also raised the rather clunky question: ‘How do we grow without losing who we are?’

“In an election year, it’s so predictable that immigration becomes a really contested issue,” Tahu Kukutai from the Te Ngira Institute for Population Research told the forum.

“On the one hand we really need skilled migrant labour to fuel our economy. On the other hand… we don’t want m migrants, you know? ‘They’re changing our country.’ That sort of polarised view on immigration is really unhelpful,” she said.

The panel chair Josie Pagani said a recent UN study predicted a halving of the population by the end of the century in more than 20 developed countries.

Leading demography expert Professor Paul Spoonley said New Zealand’s fertility rate was 25 percent below where it needed to be for our population replacement.

Treasury Secretary Ian Rennie made headlines with warnings of the Silver Tsunami on its way. And he said 20 to 40 percent of New Zealand graduates were migrating, often in their peak years of productivity.

On Newstalk ZB, host Mike Hosking agreed – but had a different interpretation of our migration problem.

“Immigrants have replaced our kids. We’ve been dumbed down. Our brightest haven’t been replaced with America’s brightest or Europe’s brightest, but from countries like India and the Philippines. We’re exporting scientists and doctors and bringing in nurses and baristas,” he said.

But it isn’t just scientists leaving and kitchenhands coming in. Some migrants from India and the Philippines do have urgently needed skills – and plenty of people with middling work skills are leaving the country too.

But Hosking was at pains to say: “I love immigration.”

“But we are being forced into this. Not long ago, our net gain was in excess of 100,000 a year. We brought them in and the good ones didn’t leave. See, I figure we can recapture all of that, but a mindset shift is needed.”

Part of that mind shift could be being really clear about what you mean by ‘good’ ones and ‘bad.’

In The Post this week, columnist Dave Armstrong pointed out the unintended consequences of the immigration bar being raised.

Dozens of immigrant bus drivers who rescued Wellington from its recent bustastrophe might now have to leave the country at the end of their visas because new higher English language standards brought in recently will be tough to meet.

“By all means, spend money to train good, dependable bus drivers from New Zealand, but in the meantime, it seems madness to send perfectly good bus drivers home because they didn’t complete a 300-word essay to the standard of a postgraduate university student,” Armstrong wrote.

Whether we’re breeding bus drivers or brain surgeons here, it’s taking longer.

Fresh figures out this week also showed that just 14 percent of births were to mothers younger than 25. And as the gap between generations grows, living together under one roof is also in the up

On Newstalk ZB, Heather Du Plessis-Allan asked Paul Spoonley to ask if this was immigration at work as well.

“You’ve got people from countries like India where, for example, where it is absolutely fine and it’s normal. Or is this actually us, like native New Zealanders, people who’ve been here for a few generations also starting to do this?” she asked.

“No, it’s us. There are definitely some cultural practices, but no – it’s us. We’re changing,” he said.

The ‘us’ and ‘them’ was a little awkward there – and a reminder of just how few of ‘them’ are heard when ‘we’ in the media cover this issue.

Last Wednesday Winston Peters interrupted Green MP Teanau Tuiono to ask why “someone from Rarotonga” should say ‘Aotearoa’.

Teanau Tuiono was born here in New Zealand.

Accused of racism and scapegoating, Winston Peters told Parliament the next day he wasn’t sorry.

But by then his deputy, Shane Jones had gone further – and cruder – NZME’s rural show The Country.

“We are going to continue to remind Kiwis that unfettered immigration is going to fatefully change the trajectory and the character of our nation. And we’re not having it and people are not campaigning on it,” Jones bullishly told host Jamie McKay.

“You’re just being racist. Some of these Indians who might be migrants here will do the work that some of the drug addled Northlanders won’t do,” McKay countered.

Mackay, who also cited Filipinos sustaining dairy farming and Catholic churches in the south.

“But we don’t need any more Uber drivers,” Jones replied.

“Just because I said that the people that are plundering all the rock pools around Auckland happen to be from the migrant community – and in a playful way I use the term the Orient Express – doesn’t mean that I’m a racist.”

Stereotyping migrants as seafood plunderers and Uber drivers clearly is not ‘playful.’ And whether people think it is racist or not, it is a play for political support.

There will be plenty more of this in our media in election year as NZ First – and others concerned about immigration – make this an issue in terms certain to cause offence and attract media attention.

“It’s not hard to imagine anti-migration politics taking a real hold here,” Henry Cooke warned in The Post last week.

“If our major party politicians want to avoid that, MPs will have to explain why immigration is so crucial to a country facing such a demographic challenge.”

Hopefully the news media will sort fact from fiction as we go – as the Herald and others have done lately with claims about the FTA with India.

And hopefully journalists will also sort the facts about immigration from the opinions of people in politics who seem inspired by those exploiting the issue for political support overseas.

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Super Rugby: Crusaders crushed by Brumbies in Christchurch

Source: Radio New Zealand

Leicester Fainga’anuku of the Crusaders is tackled by Charlie Cale and Rob Valetini of the Brumbies during their Super Rugby Pacific match at the Apollo Projects Stadium. PhotoSport / John Davidson

The Crusaders have gone down 50-24 to the Brumbies in their Super Rugby Pacific clash at Apollo Projects Stadium in Christchurch.

The Brumbies led the Crusaders 19-14 at half time.

See how the game unfolded here:

George Bell scores for the Crusaders during the Crusaders v Brumbies Super Rugby match at the Apollo Projects Stadium. PhotoSport / John Davidson

Team list

Crusaders: 1 Finlay Brewis, 2 George Bell, 3 Fletcher Newell, 4 Antonio Shalfoon, 5 Jamie Hannah, 6 Dom Gardiner, 7 Ethan Blackadder, 8 Christian Lio-Willie, 9 Noah Hotham, 10 Rivez Reihana, 11 Sevu Reece, 12 David Havili (c), 13 Braydon Ennor, 14 Chay Fihaki, 15 Will Jordan

Bench: 16 Codie Taylor, 17 Tamaiti Williams, 18 Seb Calder, 19 Tahlor Cahill, 20 Corey Kellow, 21 Louie Chapman, 22 Taha Kemara, 23 Leicester Fainga’anuku

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‘Nepo baby’ Jack Whitehall has spawned ‘nepo parents’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Although Jack Whitehall is currently working in the US, he says he hasn’t cracked America yet – just given it a little dent.

“There’s a small dent, a tiny little scratch. You couldn’t return it to the shop, put it that way, but I don’t think it’s completely cracked yet.”

Whitehall says filming the new TV series The ‘Burbs in the backlots of Universal Studios was like being “part of history”.

Jack Whitehall in The ‘Burbs.

PEACOCK

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Kiwi author Steffanie Holmes on paying the bills with romance novels

Source: Radio New Zealand

Back in 2015, Steffanie Holmes decided to have a crack at becoming a full-time writer in the genre she loved to read – paranormal romance.

Nine years later, she’s got over 55 books under her belt and an international fanbase.

Holmes tells Saturday Morning about her journey to finally paying the bills with her books, the adversity she’s faced being legally blind, and the game-changer that is self-publishing.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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Live: Crusaders v Brumbies – Super Rugby Pacific

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the Super Rugby Pacific action as the Crusaders take on the Brumbies at Apollo Projects Stadium in Christchurch.

Kick off is at 3.35pm.

Team list

Crusaders: 1 Finlay Brewis, 2 George Bell, 3 Fletcher Newell, 4 Antonio Shalfoon, 5 Jamie Hannah, 6 Dom Gardiner, 7 Ethan Blackadder, 8 Christian Lio-Willie, 9 Noah Hotham, 10 Rivez Reihana, 11 Sevu Reece, 12 David Havili (c), 13 Braydon Ennor, 14 Chay Fihaki, 15 Will Jordan

Bench: 16 Codie Taylor, 17 Tamaiti Williams, 18 Seb Calder, 19 Tahlor Cahill, 20 Corey Kellow, 21 Louie Chapman, 22 Taha Kemara, 23 Leicester Fainga’anuku

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Two people dead, three others in critical condition after SH1 crash in Marlborough

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hato Hone St John sent four helicopters, three ambulances and two managers to the scene. 123RF

A crash near Redwood Pass has left two people dead and three others in a critical condition.

Emergency Services were called to the two-vehicle crash around 10.30am on Sunday.

Police said two people were dead at the scene.

Hato Hone St John sent four helicopters, three ambulances and two managers to the scene.

It said two people were airlifted to Wellington hospital in a critical condition, while another was taken taken to Christchurch hospital, also in a critical condition.

Police said the Serious Crash Unit had been advised.

The New Zealand Transport Agency warned motorists to avoid the area until the incident site was cleared.

Those travelling between Marlborough and Canterbury were advised to detour via the inland route, with State Highway 1 closed.

The detour could add between two and three hours from Christchurch.

There is no current estimate for when State Highway 1 would reopen.

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Wellington Phoenix face familiar scramble following swift Italiano exit

Source: Radio New Zealand

Giancarlo Italiano has quit as Wellington Phoenix coach. photosport

Giancarlo Italiano’s dramatic exit as Wellington Phoenix’s head coach leaves the struggling A-League club in limbo with eight games remaining in the season.

Italiano stepped away from the team he had been the head coach of since 2023 after another hefty derby loss to Auckland FC.

He publicly announced his departure not long after the final whistle on Saturday.

The Phoenix play title-contenders Sydney FC in Wellington on Sunday, so the club will need to make some quick decisions about who takes on the head coach role either in an interim or permanent capacity.

Unless the 10th placed Phoenix can string wins together and get other results to fall their way, they will miss the play-offs and the season will be over in nine weeks time.

Italiano was the Phoenix’s sixth permanent head coach in 19 seasons, but this is not the first time the club has been left scrambling to fill the role.

The question is whether the club will turn to the same man that has temporarily filled in three times previously – Chris Greenacre – to see out the season.

Former Phoenix coach Ufuk Talay with assistant Chris Greenacre in 2021. Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz

The club’s first coach, former All Whites coach Ricki Herbert, was in charge for six seasons before he resigned during the season after a run of poor results in 2013.

Former Phoenix player Greenacre, at the time an assistant coach with the team, stepped in for the remainder of the 2013 season.

Experienced A-League coach Ernie Merrick was next to take on the permanent role for three seasons before leaving in similar circumstances to Herbert and Italiano in 2016.

Again Greenacre was part of the solution, helping to fill the void before the club’s third coach Darije Kalezic joined.

When Kalezic left during the 2017/18 season after a breakdown in contract negotiations for the following season, Greenacre, who was then a youth programme head coach with the Phoenix took charge of training and head coach duties.

Fourth coach Mark Rudan had success with the Phoenix before leaving for family reasons, but at least he made until the end of the 2018/19 season before returning to Australia.

Australian Ufuk Talay became head coach in the 2019/20 season and brought with him Italiano as a analyst and second assistant coach.

Talay left the club four seasons later, at season’s end, with the accolade as the club’s most successful coach and Italiano moved into the head coach role.

The Phoenix have yet to announce the plan to replace Italiano but they will not have to look far to find Greenacre should they decide he is again the go-to.

Player to coach

Chris Greenacre celebrates scoring for the Phoenix in 2010. Dave Lintott/Photosport

Greenacre, a former Manchester City and Tranmere Rovers striker, played 84 times for the Phoenix between 2009 and 2012.

He scored 19 goals during his Phoenix playing days and became a fan favourite along the way.

A long held ambition to coach started at the Phoenix in 2012 when he made the quick transition from player to assistant coach.

Greenacre has served as an assistant coach under Phoenix coaches – Herbert, Merrick, Kalezic, Rudan and Talay.

He is the Phoenix academy’s head of pro development and has coached the reserves team since 2017.

In 2024 Greenacre also coached the New Zealand Under 20 team.

Licensed to do the job

Des Buckingham and Chris Greenacre. Photosport

Coaching qualifications, in the form of licences, matter in football.

When Greenacre was leading the Phoenix in an interim capacity after Merrick quit, he was doing so in a co-coach role with Des Buckingham.

At the time, under Football Federation Australia (now Football Australia) regulations the coach needed a Pro Licence which Buckingham held and Greenacre did not.

Buckingham became the head coach and the Phoenix said Greenacre, with a UEFA A Licence, was the co-coach.

Greenacre has since upskilled and in 2022 completed the AFC Pro Diploma.

Kelly Guimaraes

Brazilian Kelly Guimaraes was Italiano’s lead assistant coach for the 2025-26 A-League season and could also get the call-up to the top job.

He arrived in Wellington with a decade of assistant coach experience with the likes of Paranaense, Corinithians and Gremio in Brazil.

At the time of his appointment he said the assistant coach “needs to be very close with the players so they can act as an intermediary between them and the head coach”.

“We also have to be another set of eyes for the head coach.

“The head coach has a lot of things to think about, to plan and to organise and sometimes the assistant coach can see something that helps the coach.”

Guimaraes and Italiano would have worked closely together and it may cause less disruption to the squad for him transition to the head coach role, even if just until the end of the season.

“In Brazil as a footballer and coach I have learned the players need the freedom to play and use their creativity,” Guimaraes said in July.

“I think we’re going to motivate the players to be free and create.

“Of course they will respect the team’s tactical plans, but they will be free to create and to make something different.”

The players and the team could use something different to get them through the remainder of the competition before the club will face some big decisions about the future.

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Taranaki police retreat from ‘hostile’ group at car meet

Source: Radio New Zealand

A video posted on YouTube shows about a dozen people approaching a police car, which then reverses, with people running after it. Supplied / YouTube

Police officers retreated after their car was surrounded by what they describe as a “hostile” group of people at a car meet in Taranaki early this morning.

Police said they were notified of a group of antisocial road users gathering at Kina Road, Oaonui at about 1am.

A video posted on YouTube shows about a dozen people approaching a police car, which then reverses, with people running after it.

Officers spoke to some of the people, but found them hostile, police said.

“Due to the hostile nature of the group, it was determined that the safest course of action was to monitor the meet from nearby and gather information.”

Police will use the information they gathered for follow-up enquiries.

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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/2026/02/22/taranaki-police-retreat-from-hostile-group-at-car-meet/

Two people dead, another in critical condition after SH1 crash in Marlborough

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hato Hone St John sent four helicopters, three ambulances and two managers to the scene. 123RF

A crash near Redwood Pass has left two people dead and a third in a critical condition.

Emergency Services were called to the two-vehicle crash around 10.30am on Sunday.

Hato Hone St John sent four helicopters, three ambulances and two managers to the scene.

It said two people were airlifted to Wellington hospital in a critical condition, while another was taken taken to Christchurch hospital, also in a critical condition.

Two people have since died.

Police said the Serious Crash Unit had been advised.

The New Zealand Transport Agency warned motorists to avoid the area until the incident site was cleared.

Those travelling between Marlborough and Canterbury were advised to detour via the inland route, with State Highway 1 closed.

The detour could add between two and three hours from Christchurch.

There is no current estimate for when State Highway 1 would reopen.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/22/two-people-dead-another-in-critical-condition-after-sh1-crash-in-marlborough/

Three people airlifted to hospital in critical condition after SH1 crash in Marlborough

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hato Hone St John sent four helicopters, three ambulances and two managers to the scene. 123RF

A crash near Redwood Pass has left three people in a critical condition and closed State Highway 1.

Emergency Services were called to the two-vehicle crash around 10.30am on Sunday.

Hato Hone St John sent four helicopters, three ambulances and two managers to the scene.

It said two people were airlifted to Wellington hospital in a critical condition, while another was taken taken to Christchurch hospital, also in a critical condition.

Police said the Serious Crash Unit had been advised.

The New Zealand Transport Agency warned motorists to avoid the area until the incident site was cleared.

Those travelling between Marlborough and Canterbury were advised to detour via the inland route, which was significantly longer.

The detour could add between two and three hours from Christchurch.

There is no current estimate for when State Highway 1 would reopen.

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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/2026/02/22/three-people-airlifted-to-hospital-in-critical-condition-after-sh1-crash-in-marlborough/

Dogs that injured three people in Christchurch could be euthanised, councillor says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Animal control officers seized two dogs after the attack in the Christchurch suburb Brywndwr. Sam Sherwood / RNZ

The two dogs that attacked and injured three people in Brywndwr yesterday could be euthanised, a councillor says.

One person has critical injuries, another was seriously injured, and a third was treated for minor injuries at the scene.

Animal control officers seized two dogs after the attack.

Fendalton ward councillor David Cartwright said it was “absolutely devastating”.

“My thoughts go out to [the victims], their family, and obviously the first responders who would have been faced with what I understand is quite a gruesome situation when they arrived.”

Staff would now work through what happens to the dogs, he said.

“My understanding is that there will be an investigation, and then a possible euthanasia for the dogs, if it’s found that they are … violent or uncontrollable.”

Staff would work alongside police, talk to any witnesses, and be sure that they had impounded the correct dogs, said Cartwright.

The Dog Control Act says dogs can be impounded if they’ve attacked a person or another dog.

The owner of a dog that causes serious injury can be imprisoned for up to three years or fined up to $20,000.

The court will also order the dog destroyed if they owner is convicted, unless there are exceptional circumstances.

Christchurch City Council referred RNZ to police, who are investigating.

Cartwright said he also planned to ask staff to review local bylaws to ensure they were fit for purpose.

But he said a central government review of the Dog Control Act would have the biggest impact in preventing attacks.

Shane Jones says dog owners must be held accountable with hefty jail terms RNZ / Mark Papalii

The Christchurch attack comes the same week 62-year-old Mihiata Te Rore was killed by dogs while visiting a home in the Northland town of Kaihu.

Northland local and cabinet ministerShane Jones said the current laws were not fit for purpose and “homicidal dogs” were scattered around Northland – with the problem worsening over years.

Dog owners must be held accountable with hefty jail terms, he said.

Te Rore was the fourth person in New Zealand killed by dogs in the last four years, three of which were in Northland.

Elizabeth Whittaker was killed in an attack in 2023 while Neville Thomson died in a 2022 attack. A four-year-old boy was also killed in an attack in the Bay of Plenty last year.

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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/2026/02/22/dogs-that-injured-three-people-in-christchurch-could-be-euthanised-councillor-says/

Person injured in dog attack in Timaru

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emergency Services were called to Andrew Street at about 8.30pm Saturday. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

A person has been injured after a dog attack in Timaru.

Emergency services were called to Andrew Street in the suburb of Marchwiel about 8.30pm Saturday.

The person had suffered injuries to their hand from a dog bite.

Hato Hone St John confirmed it had sent an ambulance to the scene.

“Our crew assessed and treated one patient who was transported to Timaru hospital in a moderate condition,” a spokesperson said.

Animal Control was also in attendance.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/22/person-injured-in-dog-attack-in-timaru/

Pulp at Spark Arena: Britpop band still have talent and charisma in spadefuls

Source: Radio New Zealand

Showing us they’ve still got talent and charisma in spadefuls, Pulp’s Auckland show was a great reminder (if we needed one) of why they were such a supremely popular band in the 1990s.

Last night, the British band gave no sign of age wearying them, nor creative juices drying up.

At 63, frontman Jarvis Cocker still oozes cool from every pore, and his distinctive all-limbs-in-up-and-out performance was as iconic as ever.

Pulp performing at Auckland’s Spark Arena on 21 February 2026.

Nik Dirga

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/22/pulp-at-spark-arena-britpop-band-still-have-talent-and-charisma-in-spadefuls/

State Highway 1 in Marlborough closed after serious crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Serious Crash Unit has been advised. RNZ / Richard Tindiller

State Highway 1 in Marlborough is closed after a serious crash near Redwood Pass on Sunday.

Emergency Services were called to the two-vehicle crash around 10.30am.

The Serious Crash Unit has been advised.

Police said the initial indications suggest there were serious injuries.

Motorists were advised to expect delays or avoid travel if possible.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/22/state-highway-1-in-marlborough-closed-after-serious-crash/

Government announces homeless move-on orders – for all town centres, not just Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

The government has confirmed it will give police the power to issue move-on orders – not just in Auckland, but all town centres across the country.

The powers will mean police can move on rough sleepers or people displaying disorderly behaviour as young as 14 years old.

That is despite data showing public order, health and safety offence proceedings reaching levels much lower than they were a decade ago, and the police minister expressing a reluctance towards police leading a homelessness response in Auckland’s CBD and an expectation other agencies “step up and own” social issues.

Last November, it was reported the government was considering measures to move homeless people out of Auckland’s city centre.

At the time, the prime minister said the government was “up for those”, but there had to be supports in place for the homeless.

Now, Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith and Police Minister Mark Mitchell have revealed details of the policy, confirming it will be rolled out everywhere, and it will be left to police officers to decide what support a person needs, if at all.

Goldsmith said New Zealand’s main streets and town centres had been “blighted” by disruption and disturbance, with businesses “declining” as bad behaviour went unchecked.

He said police officers currently had limited options to respond, particularly if behaviour did not reach the level of offending.

“It means many disruptive, distressing and potentially harmful acts can occur before officers have any means of intervention. It doesn’t make sense,” he said.

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The government will amend the Summary Offences Act to give police the power to issue move-on orders to people who are displaying disorderly, disruptive, threatening, or intimidating behaviour.

They will also apply to people who are obstructing or impeding someone entering a business, breaching the peace, begging, rough sleeping, or displaying behaviour indicating an attempt to inhabit a public place.

The orders will require someone to leave that area for a specified time – up to 24 hours – and distance determined by the officer.

When the order is issued, the person will be warned it is an offence to breach it, unless they have a reasonable excuse for being there. The penalty for a breach would be a maximum fine of $2,000 or up to three months imprisonment.

Specifics on where people could be moved to were light.

Mitchell said someone would be required to move to a “reasonable distance” away from the area, “as specified by the constable.”

He said every situation would be different, and police had the expertise to assess and determine what support would be required.

“They do this every day,” Mitchell said.

Police Minister Mark Mitchell RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Officers were familiar with their area and already had strong networks and partnerships with social and housing services, and Mitchell expected police would work closely with these services as the frontline operational guidance was developed.

However, emails released to RNZ under the Official Information Act showed Mitchell’s office expressing a reluctance for police to lead a homelessness response in Auckland’s CBD.

In the email, dated 5 November, a staff member said: “Feel it is important just to flag that Minister Mitchell does not believe that police has a leadership role in this and has in the past ended up picking up the work of other agencies, which stretches their resources in other areas.”

The staffer said police “obviously” had powers that others did not, and would assist, but Mitchell was “very keen to disabuse anyone of the notion that Police will lead a response to homelessness.”

“Police are already doing good work to curb offending in the CBD. Minister Mitchell’s view is that this needs to be cross agency work led elsewhere, with police continuing to do their part on the offending piece, but that the social issues require other agencies to step up and own those issues.”

The emails showed the government was considering adding in a commitment regarding antisocial behaviour to the Auckland City Deal, with police and Internal Affairs working with the Council to “support enforcement tools and powers, including strengthened bylaws and legislative change, where required.”

Mitchell’s staffer said they were “slightly frustrated” that the wording had progressed somewhat quickly, “as it looks to me like police may end up carrying a leadership role – acknowledge that this may end up having to be feedback on the CRD paper when it comes through, but I doubt Minister Mitchell would support that wording as framed.”

Rough sleeper tents in Wellington’s Shelly Bay. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

The changes will have to go through a legislative process before coming into effect.

Police data shows public order, health and safety offence proceedings in Auckland City were at a 10-year low in 2025, with just 39 proceedings in December 2025 compared to 168 in December 2015.

Nationwide, there were 428 public order, health and safety offence proceedings in December 2025, compared to 1663 in December 2015.

Earlier this year, the Wellington City Mission said it would actively oppose any move-on orders if they were implemented without support services.

When they were first mooted in November, the Auckland City Mission said any enforcement approach would be “totally and utterly ineffective”, while Green Party co-leader and Auckland Central MP Chlöe Swarbrick said moving homeless people out of the city centre would only shift the problem elsewhere.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/22/government-announces-homeless-move-on-orders-for-all-town-centres-not-just-auckland/

Life Flight’s new aeromedical airbase for upper North Island officially opened

Source: Radio New Zealand

Life Flight chief executive Mark Johnston and Health Minister Simeon Brown officially open the new aeromedical airbase for the upper north island at Hamilton airport. Libby Kirkby-McLeod

Life Flight’s new aeromedical airbase for the upper North Island has been officially opened by Health Minister Simeon Brown, after quietly operating from a hangar at Hamilton airport since 2024.

The charity began fifty years ago after the founder, Peter Button, witnessed the sinking of the Wahine ferry and felt that a helicopter would have saved lives. It was best known for the Westpac Rescue Helicopters.

The Hamilton hanger is the upper North Island base for two of Life Flight’s air ambulance planes which provide bed-to-bed hospital transfers for critically ill and injured patients.

Life Flight’s board chair, Richard Stone, said that the airbase showed how different sectors could work together to build resilience into the health system.

“This hub is a clear example of what can be achieved when government, the community and corporate partners work together to strengthen health care for all New Zealanders,” he said.

Life Flight’s air ambulance planes which provide bed-to-bed hospital transfers for critically ill and injured patients at the new base in Hamilton Libby Kirkby-McLeod

Health Minister Simeon Brown echoed the focus on partnership.

“Fixed wing and rotary services are critically important to our health care service in New Zealand; transferring patients, providing emergency health care, and making sure everyone, no matter where they are in the country have that access to the tertiary hospitals that are needed,” he said.

Life Flight chief executive Mark Johnston said the planes flew patients around the country to where they can get the best treatment.

“From premature babies to stroke victims, Life Flight is often the only way for them to get to that care in time. Our Waikato airbase is going to provide us with faster access to this urgent care for those patients. It’s going to help us to deliver better outcomes, particularly for rural patients, and provide care to them that’s closer to home,” he said.

Johnston said it was the difference between reaching care in minutes, rather than hours.

Chief pilot for Life Flight Luke Rohloff. Libby Kirkby-McLeod

Chief pilot for Life Flight Luke Rohloff was at the event and said the New Zealand health care system was a hub and spoke service, which relied on a good transportation system for patients to get to services.

The aircraft are fitted out with intensive care equipment to enable transfer of even the most vulnerable patients.

“If you are talking about a baby needing neonatal care, sometimes we’ll see them as early as 25 weeks, and they are very small, and then maybe six months later you might be bringing them home and they’ve grown up and they are outside of the incubator, and that’s really neat,” he said.

Waipa mayor, Mike Pettit, was at the opening and said the service was fundamentally important to Waikato and surrounding regions.

‘It’s super important to keep the regions connected,” he said.

The mayor also had a personal connection to the service as his cousin, Paul Pettit, was one of Life Flight’s pilots.

Mike Pettit said every time he saw the air ambulance he would stop, look up, and tell people he was with that was his cousin up there.

“I know it’s not always Paul!” he said.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/22/life-flights-new-aeromedical-airbase-for-upper-north-island-officially-opened/