What is breastfeeding aversion and how can you manage it?

Source: Radio New Zealand

While many women find breastfeeding an enjoyable bonding experience, some will have an involuntary and overwhelming urge to remove their child from the breast.

Intense negative feelings during breastfeeding can be caused by breastfeeding aversion response (BAR).

Women describe BAR as a “skin-crawling” feeling or like “fingernails on a chalkboard”, as well as feeling angry or violated.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/16/what-is-breastfeeding-aversion-and-how-can-you-manage-it/

Crews fight Auckland townhouse fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Jessica Hopkins

Firefighters battled a fire in a townhouse in the Auckland suburb of Albany Heights on Monday.

Fire and Emergency received multiple calls about the blaze about 5.10am.

There were no reports of injuries or anyone missing.

Fire crews put out the fire and were leaving the area.

Firefighters at the scene of a fire in in the Auckland suburb of Albany Heights. RNZ / Jessica Hopkins

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‘No need to panic’, fuel supplier says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Petrol has tipped over the $3 a litre mark in some areas. RNZ / Dan Cook

The CEO of one of New Zealand’s largest independent fuel suppliers says there is no need for people to panic-buy fuel as motorists worry about rising prices.

Petrol stations across the country are seeing a surge of drivers filling up as petrol prices rise.

Petrol (91) has tipped over the $3 a litre mark in some areas because of the conflict in the Middle East.

US President Donald Trump is calling for countries to send ships to secure the Strait of Hormuz, which is effectively closed as Iran launches attacks to halt maritime traffic.

The area is critical because around 20 percent of the world’s oil consumption or 20 million barrels a day, usually passes through it.

It’s resulted in several petrol stations running dry over the weekend.

Waitomo CEO Simon Parham said demand at the company’s petrol station has increased by about 15 percent.

“We’ve had the odd run out from here and there, but it’s really been for a maximum of 30 minutes,” he told Morning Report.

“What we are seeing is that increase in demand, coupled with a very stressed driver system, anything from a delay at the terminal to a truck breaking down, it’s just caused that slight delay in he system, so you have a slight run out.

“There’s nothing to worry about.”

He expects to see the demand soften.

“In saying that, $20 doesn’t buy you what $20 did two weeks ago at the pump.”

Parham said New Zealand has 50 days’ worth of fuel and is optimistic this can be managed.

“We’re still in good shape… There’s no need to panic. Yes, we are suffering from high prices, which is tough on everyone, but there is no need to panic at the moment.”

He said if the cargo orders can’t be placed, that’s when New Zealand may need to look at managing stock.

“If we are staying around that 50-day mark, that’s a rolling 50 days, then we’re fine. If we start to see that drop back, then that’s when we have to manage stock,” Parham said.

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Adam Hall claims silver at Paralympics

Source: Radio New Zealand

Paralympian skier Adam Hall. © Jeff Crowe / Photosport 2026 www.photosport.nz

Wānaka skier Adam Hall has finished second in the slalom on the final day of the Winter Paralympics in Italy.

The 38-year-old improved from fourth after the first run to the silver medal position thanks to an impressive second run that produced a combined time of 1:31.38.

Leader after the first run, Russian Aleksei Bugaev held a commanding advantage of more than a second and a half, and he would not be denied gold. He crossed the finish line in a total time of 1:28.55 for a comprehensive victory, reclaiming the title he last won in Sochi 2014.

It is Hall’s sixth Olympic medal from six games taking him level Patrick Cooper as the most decorated New Zealand Winter Paralympian.

Hall has now claimed four Paralympic medals in the Men’s Slalom Standing (two gold, one silver, one bronze).

Adam Hall New Zealand (silver), Aleksei Bugaev Russia (gold), Robin Cuche Switzerland (bronze), victory ceremony for the men’s slalom standing at the Winter Paralympic Games Milan Cortina 2026. DAISUKE URAKAMI / AFP

“I’m in a dream. I don’t know what just happened,” Hall said afterwards.

After the first run, sitting in fourth, I just had to lay everything out there. I knew waking up to all that snow that I had to bring out that Taieri attitude that it is just an ordinary winter day.

“I just had to attack it and let it rip. It was years and years of experience and leaving nothing behind. Wow! What a way to come down and perform like that against such a strong field.”

“There are no words to describe what this means. I put a pounamu under my bib, which made me feel like all of New Zealand has been on this journey with me. I hope I’ve continued that great legacy of Winter Paralympians, and to have brought home another medal is amazing. I love to thrive on that pressure.”

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Cricket: Contrasting results for New Zealand teams

Source: Radio New Zealand

Black Caps player Bevon Jacobs. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

The Black Caps admit they didn’t adjust quick enough to the wicket as they suffered a 7 wicket loss to South Africa in the opening T20 international.

After deciding to bat first New Zealand were bowled out for just 91 in the 15th over in Mt Maunganui.

The home side was 36 for 5 before James Neesham hit 26 and Mitchell Santner and Cole McConchie both made 15.

“A weird game of cricket, we were probably a bit slow to adapt to the surface,” quick bowler Zak Foulkes said afterwards.

Nqobani Mokoena took 3 wickets, while Gerald Coetzee, Ottneil Baartman and Keshav Maharaj took 2 each.

“They bowled really well up top and put us under a lot of pressure and 92 was never going to be enough,” Foulkes added.

South Africa did lose 3 wickets but reached their target in the 17th over.

“We strive scrapping and we came together and said lets make this the hardest 92 runs for them to get and we made it look hard for them at times,” Foukes said.

Melie Kerr congratulates Georgia Plimmer. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Earlier the White Ferns had not troubled dispatching South Africa by 80 runs.

New Zealand scored 190 for 7 with captain Amelia Kerr top scoring with 78 and Georgia Plimmer 63. Sophie Devine then took career best figures of 4 for 12 as South Africa finished on 110 for 7.

Plimmer was very happy with their overall game.

“That was one of the best performances we’ve put in for the last couple of years. We could put on 190 runs and then for the bowlers to bowl at the stumps and execute those change-ups I think it was a pretty well rounded performance,” Plimmer said.

The second double header of five is in Hamilton on Tuesday.

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99-year-old dementia patient died after bedroom assault by another rest home resident

Source: Radio New Zealand

Leonard Hewgill was a resident at a 40-bedroom unit offering specialist dementia care.

A 99-year-old dementia patient died after being assaulted in his rest home bedroom by another resident suffering from dementia, a coroner has found.

Leonard Ralph Hewgill suffered a head injury in the attack at the Ryman Healthcare-run Hilda Ross Retirement Village in Hamilton and died in hospital three days later.

Coroner Louella Dunn’s report into Hewgill’s death in October 2018 was released to RNZ.

Coroner Dunn said Hewgill was a resident at Hilda Ross Special Care Unit, a 40-bedroom unit offering specialist dementia care.

He had lived there since 2017 and was well loved and regularly visited by his family, she said.

On the evening of 3 October 2018 Hewgill was attacked in his bedroom by another resident, Ike Cowley, who was then 71 years of age and was suffering from Parkinson related dementia.

Cowley entered Hewgill’s room around 8pm and Hewgill was heard telling him to leave, Coroner Dunn said.

“Subsequent to that, the emergency alarm in Leonard’s room was activated by a staff member who attended. Leonard was observed by the care worker lying on his bed in his bedroom and bleeding from his ear. Mr Cowley was found in Leonard’s bedroom standing over Leonard and he was visibly agitated,” she said.

“Mr Cowley refused to comply with care workers’ instructions and continued to be agitated and angry. He made a number of threats to Leonard including ‘I’m going to kill him’ and ‘let him die, let him die’. Leonard appeared to be unconscious but responded to assistance from care workers and told the care workers ‘he’s hitting me’.

Coroner Dunn said staff intervened in the assault and Cowley left Hewgill’s bedroom, however he remained agitated.

Despite his demeanour, care workers and staff at the unit did not take any steps to keep Cowley under their control or restrain him, and Cowley went on to assault another resident down the corridor, she said.

Hewgill was taken to Waikato Hospital and died of his injuries on 6 October.

Police investigated the assault and subsequently charged Cowley with the manslaughter of Hewgill and wounding with intent to injure, which related to the assault of the other resident the same night.

Due to Cowley’s dementia, he was found unfit to stand trial and was dealt with under the Criminal Procedure (Mentally Impaired Persons) Act 2003.

Coroner Dunn said Cowley was released and the criminal charges were stayed.

She said an inquiry was opened as Hewgill’s family advised her of their concerns regarding the care management of residents with dementia and in particular residents suffering from dementia assaulting other residents in the facility.

As part of the Coroner’s inquiry she received reports from Hilda Ross, the Health and Disability Commissioner, and independent reports from Ruth Thomas (DHB Regional Dementia Nurse Advisor) and Dr Jane Casey (Consultant Psychiatrist and Psychogeriatrician).

Coroner Dunn said Cowley was admitted to the Hilda Ross Special Care Unit in 2016. His transfer notes stated he was at risk of falls, wandering, exit seeking and absconding.

As his mental health deteriorated he had become aggressive and demanding, behaviour that was foreign to him prior to his illness, she said.

During Cowley’s time at Hilda Ross there were 54 reported incidents of challenging behaviour noted for him, including exhibited agitation and physical aggression.

A significant proportion of the incidents were targeting other residents while others targeted staff.

Coroner Dunn said Hewgill’s death revealed deficits in Hilda Ross’ processes managing residents with challenging behaviours.

This included a lack of meaningful documentation to identify a resident’s challenging behaviour in a manner where staff could readily recognise that behaviour and its triggers. She said staff were also not provided adequate information as to how to deescalate that behaviour.

“It is disappointing that Mr Cowley’s repeated acts of aggression while a resident in the SCU were not properly identified and addressed by Hilda Ross,” Coroner Dunn said.

“It seems evident from the two independent reports and the evidence provided to me that Mr Cowley was a potential risk to both residents and staff. He required a clear and comprehensive plan to ensure challenging acts could be avoided or if occurred that they could be quickly deescalated.

“I acknowledge that care of residents suffering from dementia can be challenging for organisations and their staff. However, the rates of dementia are on the rise within the aged New Zealand population. The care provided by Hilda Ross is paid care, residents are often vulnerable, and families place their trust in the residential care provider.”

Coroner Dunn’s recommendations to Ryman Healthcare included strengthening documentation processes and training programmes for team members to help them recognise and respond to resident distress.

She said the company submitted they had learnt from what happened and had improved their processes.

Ryman Healthcare chief operating officer Marsha Cadman said Ryman remained deeply saddened by Hewgill’s death.

​”After the passing of Mr Hewgill, we expressed our sincere condolences to his family and provided ongoing support to them, and to all involved, staying in close contact throughout our internal review and the subsequent Police process. Following the incident, we immediately launched an investigation, with two independent experts,” she said.

​”This resulted in changes across all our dementia care units, reinforcing our commitment to providing safe, respectful, high-quality care. All of the changes and coroner’s recommendations were implemented by 2019.

“Our commitment to upholding the safety and dignity of every resident remains unwavering.”

Coroner Dunn said Hewgill’s family were seeking a national legally enforceable policy regarding care management of aggressive residents with dementia.

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Just 21 of tens of thousands of benefit sanctions have been non-financial

Source: Radio New Zealand

The government introduced a traffic light system in 2024 and expanded it last year. RNZ / Quin Tauetau

Just 21 people have received non-financial benefit sanctions since the new traffic light scheme took effect.

That is despite the government at the time describing them as a “very fair and reasonable” way for people to receive their full benefits even when they had not been meeting their obligations.

The government introduced a traffic light system in 2024 and expanded it last year, adding non-financial sanctions for beneficiaries who fell foul of the rules.

If beneficiaries do not meet their obligations without good reason, they are moved to “orange” in the system. If they do not then get back on track within five days, they are shifted to “red”, at which point their benefit can be stopped or reduced, or they can face non-financial sanctions.

Non-financial sanctions include such things as going on a course, keeping a record of job searches, having some of their benefit put on a payment card or being sent on community work experience.

At least ten thousand sanctions have been imposed in each quarter since the rule change was introduced.

But between 1 May 2025 and 31 January this year, just 21 non-financial were imposed.

Nine were people told to go on community work experience. Three people had some of their benefit put on a money management card to limit how it could be used, six were subject to job search sanctions and three were required to upskill.

“From the get-go we knew this would be unworkable because frontline organisations know that these benefit sanctions don’t actually help people to find employment,” said Green Party spokesperson Ricardo Menendez March.

“What is worse, we know that the government has continued to put financial sanctions for tens of thousands of people each year when they’ve only been able to find 20 people to apply non-financial sanctions, which at least do not strip people of their full benefit.”

He said part of the problem was that some of the non-financial sanctions required people to take beneficiaries “basically under duress” for things like community work experience.

“Money management also requires people to be able to afford their basic expenses, such as rent. And when 50 percent of your income is put into a green card under the money management sanction, most beneficiaries won’t actually be able to make ends meet due to the policy, making the policy effectively unworkable.

“All of this shows that the minister is more interested in punishing beneficiaries and actually finding solutions that help people into employment and create jobs. This process took months, millions of dollars’ worth of money for IT changes, and it’s resulted in effectively the status quo continuing as opposed to seeing any significant changes.”

In a statement, Social Development Minister Louise Upston’s office said non-financial sanctions were an alternative and ensured there was accountability in the system for people who did not meet their obligations, “while also recognising that reducing a benefit is not the answer for everyone”.

It said Ministry of Social Development staff could apply them in specific circumstances such as when someone had dependent children, when it was their first obligation failure or when they had attended an appointment with a case manager within five working days of their obligation failure.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/16/just-21-of-tens-of-thousands-of-benefit-sanctions-have-been-non-financial/

Crews fight Auckland apartment fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Firefighters are battling an apartment fire in the Auckland suburb of Albany Heights.

Fire and Emergency received multiple calls about the blaze about 5.10am on Monday.

Crews were still arriving at the scene.

There were no reports of injuries or anyone missing.

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Liam Lawson ‘didn’t quite expect’ his success at Chinese Grand Prix

Source: Radio New Zealand

Liam Lawson finished seventh place finish in the Grand Prix. MARCEL VAN DORST / AFP

New Zealand driver Liam Lawson admits to being a little surprised with his success at the Chinese Grand Prix.

Lawson had arguably his best weekend in Formula 1, capping off the weekend with a seventh place finish in the Grand Prix. It followed the same result in Saturday’s sprint race.

His haul of eight points has him ninth in the standings after two rounds.

While the hard tyres were the preferred option, Lawson had to start the main race on mediums from 14th on the grid, but soon made inroads in yet another chaotic start which included the late withdrawal of the two McLarens.

Unfortunately he lost places after he was pitted early just before the field was slowed by a safety car.

He then completed the rest of the race on his last set of hard tyres, picking up places as others faulted.

He was able to keep former team-mate Isack Hadjar at bay over the closing laps and moved up to seventh when the other Red Bull driver Max Verstappen was forced to retire his car.

Liam Lawson at the 2026 Chinese Grand Prix. FLORENT GOODEN / PHOTOSPORT

The results was Lawson’s 11th top-10 finish of his career. His best results was fifth at the 2025 Azerbaijan Grand Prix.

“I’m really happy with our result today,” the 24 year old said afterwards.

“To be honest, we didn’t quite expect it, but our pace was strong towards the end. We had a poorly timed Safety Car, and at that moment I thought our race might be over.

“It turned out to be a really enjoyable race and we managed to pull off a few overtakes. Bringing it home in P7 feels great.

“Full credit to the team from a strategy standpoint, we did everything right this weekend and securing two point finishes shows how well the team executed. “

Racing Bulls team principal Alan Permane was also chuffed with their performance over the weekend.

“To come away with a total of 8 points from a weekend where we clearly weren’t quick enough is an exceptional result for the team. It was a very well executed race.

“We were unlucky with the Safety Car as we pitted Liam the lap before, but he drove a really great race. He was under a lot of pressure at one stage from Hadjar and didn’t put a foot wrong, delivering a solid result.”

Winner Mercedes’ Italian driver Kimi Antonelli celebrates on the podium after the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix, 2026. HECTOR RETAMAL / AFP

Lawson’s team-mate Arvid Lindbard finished 12th.

Italian Kimi Antonelli scored the first win of his young Formula 1 career, heading championship-leading team-mate George Russell in a Mercedes one-two from pole position.

The 19-year-old Italian driver became the second-youngest race winner in the sport’s history, after Verstappen.

Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton finished a distant third, the seven-time world champion’s first podium since he joined Ferrari last year.

The next round is in Japan in a fortnight.

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Government’s climate change plans go to the High Court

Source: Radio New Zealand

Climate Action and the Environmental Law Initiative are asking the High Court to declare Climate Change Minister Simon Watts’ decisions unlawful. RNZ / Mark Papalii

A landmark legal case that argues the government’s plan to tackle climate change is unlawful and risky will go ahead today.

Climate advocates will argue that the government broke the law when it dismantled dozens of climate policies soon after the 2023 election, before it had consulted the public.

They also say the current plan relies too heavily on planting trees to offset greenhouse gas emissions, instead of reducing the amount of emissions the country produces in the first place.

Lawyers for Climate Action and the Environmental Law Initiative (ELI) are jointly taking the case against Climate Change Minister Simon Watts.

The organisations are asking the High Court to declare the minister’s decisions unlawful and to throw out the current emissions plan so a new, more ambitious one can be prepared.

An environmental law expert says the case is “hugely significant” and has similarities to challenges in the UK, which resulted in changes to that government’s climate plans.

Under New Zealand’s climate laws, the government must produce five-yearly emissions reductions plans, which set out how the country will meet its domestic climate targets.

At the moment, those targets are to reduce carbon dioxide and other long-lived gas emissions to net zero by 2050, and to reduce methane emissions to 14 to 24 percent below 2017 levels by the same deadline.

The methane target was originally a 24 to 47 percent reduction by 2050, but the government changed this last year in response to lobbying from the agricultural sector, which produces half of New Zealand’s methane emissions.

There are also interim targets for 2030: to halve long-lived gases from their 2005 levels, and a 10 percent reduction of methane emissions from 2017 levels.

Subsidies for electric vehicles, and a fund to help businesses electrify their coal- and gas-fired industrial processes, were among policies that the government chose to scrap in late 2023.

ELI senior legal researcher Eliza Prestidge-Oldfield said climate laws allowed the government to make changes to an emissions reduction plan, but they must consult on any changes that are more than minor or technical.

Instead, the government scrapped large parts of the plan before formally amending it.

“By the time the plan was actually amended, there were over 30 initiatives that were being consulted on where the decisions had already been made,” she said.

“What the government should have done is consulted on any amendments before it locked in those changes.”

‘Phenomenal’ reliance on pine planting

The latest emissions reduction plan, which kicked in at the start of this year, was not really an emissions reduction plan at all, Prestidge-Oldfield said.

“Instead of having arranged policies that might substantively reduce our reliance on fossil fuels, or replace sectors of the economy that currently are reliant on out that equipment with new equipment, they’ve just relied on baseline modeling and trees offsetting carbon emissions.”

The reliance on forestry planting in the plan was “quite phenomenal”.

“The reliance on forestry means that people aren’t going to be doing the other things that they can do, that are technically feasible now and may even have a good payoff, unless they’re cheaper than a forestry credit,” she said.

Relying on mostly pine plantations was “inherently risky”, she said.

“As the climate heats, the risk of them burning down is pretty significant. We’ve already seen issues with extreme weather events, windfall, forestry slash – so these are not a robust solution in and of themselves.”

Lawyers for Climate Action executive director Jessica Palairet said using trees and other types of carbon sequestration was an important part of the climate response, because it would help to remove carbon dioxide already warming the planet.

It could not simply replace reducing emissions at their source, though.

“The government shouldn’t treat reductions and removals as equivalent,” Palairet said.

“They’re different, they needed to be treated differently under the law, and we don’t think the minister even turned his mind to whether this plan of planting our way out of the climate crisis complied with international law.”

The global Paris Agreement did not explicitly state that governments must prioritise reducing emissions over removing them from the atmosphere, Palairet said.

“But there’s numerous parts … that do suggest a preferencing of reductions over forestry removals.”

States were also expected to take a precautionary approach to reducing their emissions, she said.

“So reduce emissions now, rather than keep them at high levels and leave them for future generations to deal with.”

Case is significant – environmental law expert

The hearing in Wellington will add to a growing body of climate law cases being levelled at governments around the world.

An advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice last year found that developed countries like New Zealand were expected to lead the way in making emissions reductions, and that the way was open for countries to sue each other for failing to take action.

Auckland University associate professor Vernon Rive said the latest case was “hugely significant”.

“It concerns some quite fundamental planks of the government’s policy and approach on climate mitigation,” he said.

“It tests whether from a legal perspective the policy reliance on the [emissions trading scheme] – almost to the exclusion of everything else – is a legitimate approach.”

The outcome could set a precedent for how emissions reduction plans were set, especially about the level of certainty the government needed to have that a plan could meet an emissions budget.

“I don’t think anyone expects there to be 100 percent certainty, because this involves modelling and predictions of what will happen in the future,” Rive said, “But there is an expectation of a level of certainty and robustness and credibility.”

That included what wiggle-room there was if some policies did not succeed, or something else unexpected happened.

“The government’s plan – by its own recognition – is cutting it very, very fine,” he said. “There’s a very small buffer for achieving it or not achieving it.”

New Zealand’s system of setting greenhouse gas budgets and emissions reduction plans was similar to Ireland and the UK, where governments had also faced legal challenges.

“[There have been] two significant cases in the UK where environmental interests have successfully challenged the UK government’s emissions reduction plans, or their equivalent,” Rive said.

“The court has said look, there are just too many uncertainties here involved in your plan – you need to go back and do it again, and do it properly this time.”

New Zealand’s legal system was similar to the UK’s, so he expected the courts here to take a similar approach to the law.

“Each of these cases will turn on their own facts … but this is a very credible claim.”

The hearing is expected to last three days, with a reserved decision later this year.

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The ‘gnarly and unnecessary’ fight reshaping the RSA

Source: Radio New Zealand

At the heart of the dispute is the RSA’s decision to use transitional rules allowing a new constitution to be approved by a simple majority rather than the 75 percent required under existing rules. RNZ / Nathan McKinnon

A civil war has been unfolding inside the RSA, with suspended clubs, unpaid fees, and a High Court fight exposing the deep fractures in one of New Zealand’s most historic organisations.

The Royal New Zealand Returned and Services Association is built to honour veterans and support their families, but the organisation is instead involved in a bitter internal fight that has spilled from clubrooms into the courthouse.

It comes down to money, power and a new constitution.

“It is the most unnecessary, gnarly fight that you will find in New Zealand at the moment, I believe,” says senior award-winning journalist David Fisher, who has been covering the story for the New Zealand Herald.

“It didn’t need to happen; they have all got better things to do. And those better things that they have to do are minding the welfare of the veterans that they were set up to care for.”

On one side, national body leaders; on the other, a core of five “rebel branches” with the backing of many more – “All up about a third of the 182 clubs.”

At the heart of the dispute is the RSA’s decision to use transitional rules allowing a new constitution to be approved by a simple majority rather than the 75 percent required under existing rules.

“The current state of the RSA probably goes back about three or four years ago, when Martyn Dunne came in as the leader of the organisation,” Fisher tells The Detail.

“And he, along with the team around him, at that time, felt it was really important that the RSA movement as a whole take a more proactive position on its existence and on its future.

“Buck Shelford was also involved in this. They talked about how it needed to be an end to booze barns, and it needed to be an organisation that returned to its core purpose. And that core purpose being veterans’ welfare.

“What that led to was an extraordinary restructuring of how the RSA works. Along the way, a huge number of bruised egos and an extraordinary amount of upset. A great deal of conflict between the different types of RSAs that exist out there … they were so conflicted as to what they were there for.”

You had a national body trying to modernise, he said, and local clubs fiercely protective of their independence.

The fight eventually escalated all the way to the High Court of New Zealand, where the rebel RSA branches challenged the process.

“The courtroom was packed by two groups of people representing the same individuals: the veterans,” Fisher says. “Both of them determined that they were doing the right thing and the best thing for those veterans, but absolutely unable to meet and agree on almost anything.”

Last month, the High Court finally released its ruling, rejecting the legal objection raised by the rebels, instead approving the RSA’s overhaul process, opening the door for the national body to proceed with its “controversial” reform.

The headlines that followed proved an uncomfortable moment for an institution built on unity. But Fisher says, the organisation isn’t alone.

“As tumultuous as the RSA situation is, the entire veterans’ community is a tumultuous, crazy mess. None of them agree with each other; there have to be half a dozen quite separate veterans’ groups across the country that will not share the same breathing space with each other.”

So, what happens now?

“The national office has set its course … they are very clear on where they are headed.

“The rebel alliance is tentatively working itself into a position of setting up a new veterans’ organisation that would incorporate all the old RSAs.”

Fisher says the alliance has also launched an appeal.

For many communities, the RSA is more than just a veterans’ organisation.

It is a social hub, a meeting place, a reminder of the country’s military past and the people who served.

For generations, it has been woven into the fabric of small towns and big cities across the country.

But times have changed.

The veterans of earlier wars are ageing, membership numbers have declined, and some clubs have struggled financially, forcing closures.

“So many clubs have closed over the years, and the rough estimate in value, from those closed clubs, is that they have lost about $100 million,” says Fisher.

“That is money that has just drifted away, wasted away over time as they have tried to prop up bars that are selling cheap Lion Red to people that don’t turn up, trying to maintain clubrooms that are a real point of pride for the dwindling number of RSA members that might be in a community, and they just can’t afford to keep them going.

“Those assets have just wasted away over the years – assets that really were intended to be for veterans’ welfare.”

More recently, some branches have fallen behind on capitation fees, the payments local clubs make to fund national operations and veteran services. Without that money, the organisation says its ability to advocate for and support veterans is weakened.

“That’s a difficult thing because the national office is not cheap to run. You can’t run a machine without putting fuel into the tank.

“[But] some clubs said, why give money to the national office if they can’t look after the money they already have.”

And as the country prepares to mark Anzac Day, the organisation at the heart of that remembrance finds itself fighting another internal conflict: rival poppies.

“If there is an illustration to be brought to light in this, it is the Anzac Day coming up,” says Fisher.

“The national office has ordered their poppies from the British Legion in the UK, which very oddly means that for our April commemoration, we will have a poppy that has two oak leaves and the oak leaves are pointed at 11 o’clock on an analogue clock to mark the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month.

“That’s a very incongruous thing to have for an April commemoration.

“Meanwhile, in the north, the rebel alliance has got its own poppies, which it’s having manufactured, and do not have oak leaves on them; in fact, the design of them is very New Zealand-centric.

“Now it will be who can get whose poppy on the Governor General, on the Prime Minister, on the leader of the opposition, on the minister of veterans affairs … somewhat awkward for those people too.”

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/16/the-gnarly-and-unnecessary-fight-reshaping-the-rsa/

Law change could let IRD change its interest rates more quickly

Source: Radio New Zealand

MONDAY

The proposed change would allow the commissioner of Inland Revenue to set the rate. RNZ

The government is making changes that could mean Inland Revenue is able to change its use-of-money interest rates more quickly.

The change is included in the Taxation (Annual Rates for 2025-26, Compliance Simplification, and Remedial Measures) Bill.

Use of money interest applies to overdue and underpaid tax. Since mid-January the debit rate has been 8.97 percent and the credit rate, for people who overpay tax, has been 2.25 percent.

The debit rate peaked at 10.91 percent in 2023.

At the moment the rate is set by an order in council, a process that can take up to eight weeks.

The proposed change would allow the commissioner of Inland Revenue to set the rate, based on Reserve Bank data on average floating mortgage rates, plus 2.5 percent.

Deloitte tax partner Robyn Walker said the rate for underpayment had to be set at a level that made Inland Revenue “the bank of last resort” and as unappealing to owe money to as possible.

“That said, the increasing levels of tax debt is indicating that strategy may not be effective anymore.”

Tax Traders co-founder Josh Taylor said the planned change would be a positive step.

“The current system probably takes in practice about a four-month delay for a rate reset to move through the system.

“And you can appreciate in the current world environment we’re in, where things are quite dynamic, things can change quite quickly in four months. So the rate can almost be out of date by the time it’s changed.”

He said, when there was downward pressure on rates, and Inland Revenue was slow to move, taxpayers were exposed for longer to higher charges.

“So it’s just helping to align those incentives more closely with what’s happening in the market.

“Conversely, when rates are moving upwards, it may mean that Inland Revenue is a bit slow to increase their rates.

“The bad part of that is that from a tax-based perspective, not paying your tax to IRD starts to look a little cheaper for a while, and that’s also not good. It’s also not good for the country if there’s a bit of an incentive for people to not pay their tax because not paying your tax looks like a cheaper option.”

He said tax pooling, such as offered by Tax Traders, gave people a way to avoid the Inland Revenue debit rate.

“Most people that actually underpay their tax aren’t exposed to that 8.97 percent rate because the tax pooling industry is able to provide lower cost options for people.”

Walker agreed tax pooling was a way to avoid the rates.

“Tax Pooling is a NZ-unique and innovative process whereby tax pooling intermediaries are able to essentially form a market place for taxpayers who have underpaid or overpaid their tax to buy and sell tax payments. The intermediary ensures that both parties pay or receive a fairer rate of interest. In the interim, the tax is paid over to Inland Revenue, but it sits in a pool.”

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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/2026/03/16/law-change-could-let-ird-change-its-interest-rates-more-quickly/

‘They took my whole life’: ACC spied on man with a traumatic brain injury

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jeremy Buxton’s life changed forever after a car accident left him with a traumatic brain injury. But he says the hardest battle wasn’t recovery. It was fighting the system meant to help him.

On a rainy winter night in Waikato, Jeremy Buxton wheels his barbecue into the garage to cook dinner under cover.

He lights the grill then walks away.

Minutes later, his wife Rhonda sees smoke seeping through a hole in the garage wall. She runs to the door to find the barbecue engulfed in flames.

“How we didn’t lose the house that night is beyond me,” she says.

It is not an isolated incident.

“The number of times he’s just about burnt the house down with cooking … the pots that I’ve had to throw out.”

Buxton once drove 300 kilometres a day as a delivery driver, juggling up to 100 phone calls before dinner. Now if he puts the jug on and someone knocks at the door, he forgets about it entirely.

“I’ve no retention of short-term memory.”

Nine years after a car crash left him with a traumatic brain injury, his speech still slurs. His hands tremble and he lives with constant brain fog and fatigue so crushing he rests for hours each day just to function.

But Buxton says the hardest part has not only been living with his disabilities, but the long fight for recognition with the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC).

The Buxtons are still battling ACC over how Jeremy’s injury is recorded; the grief of not getting the treatment he needed sooner; and the shock of learning the agency secretly surveilled him. He also believes the agency has breached his privacy dozens of times.

“I’ve lost all trust,” he says.

Jeremy and his wife Rhonda, taken before he suffered a traumatic brain injury in a car accident nine years ago. The pair are now separated but remain close friends. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The man he was

Before the crash, Rhonda says, Buxton was “the most amazing, fun-loving person”.

“He never argued. He was just laughing.”

At home, they were a team. If Rhonda was vacuuming, he would grab the vacuum off her. If she was cooking, he would step in beside her. He wasn’t the kind of man who came home, opened a beer and sat in front of the television.

“If you were up doing something, he was helping. If anything, he’d tell you to sit down.”

He was the main caregiver to their son, Jayden, who was just 15-months-old at the time of the accident.

Now, he’s “a completely different person,” says Rhonda.

Buxton is easily overwhelmed, noise can feel unbearable, his patience is thin.

“He’s still a wonderful dad,” says Rhonda. “But it’s really hard.”

The crash and the classification

In September 2016, Buxton was out on a delivery run when he crossed the centre line and hit an oncoming vehicle. He had to be cut from the wreckage and flown to Middlemore Hospital, where he was initially diagnosed with concussion and back and neck injuries.

Over the following weeks, his symptoms escalated. He struggled to find words. His limbs went limp at times. He was dizzy, disoriented and exhausted. For months, he slept for up to 17 hours a day.

Clinicians treating him described his condition as a moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury, yet ACC documents recorded his injury as a ‘brain injury-other’ or ‘mild traumatic brain injury’.

The distinction matters.

A mild traumatic brain injury is generally expected to resolve within weeks or months. Moderate to severe brain injuries can require long-term therapy, complex rehabilitation and ongoing support.

Early access to the right treatment is critical, says Brain Injury Waikato community education and support officer Josiah Ploeg.

“The research is really clear that the sooner treatment can be accessed for a traumatic brain injury, the better.”

Delayed treatment can lengthen recovery and lead to problems later on with things like keeping in work, managing relationships and increased mental health challenges, says Ploeg.

ACC’s classification meant Buxton was being sent to concussion programmes, despite warnings he needed much more help.

The concussion trap

A month after the crash, Jeremy’s physiotherapists emailed ACC urgently, warning he had “SIGNIFICANT issues” and needed more intensive management than they were funded to provide.

“Our staff have strung along the best they can,” one wrote after not getting a reply to an urgent request to ACC for more help three weeks earlier.

As his lawyer discovered years later, those urgent emails were read by ACC staff but never added to his file, nor acted upon.

Instead, Buxton was sent to concussion services that he says did not match his condition.

“They didn’t give me a chance to get better.

“They kept pushing me on concussion programmes that were no good to me … I couldn’t even stay awake, let alone concentrate.”

He describes the mismatch in simple terms.

“It was like I had an accident and broke my leg in 10 places, but ACC said, ‘Here’s a bandage.’”

A photo of Jeremy, his wife and children before he suffered a traumatic brain injury in a car accident nine years ago. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

ACC suspends cover

In April 2017, ACC cut Buxton’s cover and weekly compensation entirely.

The decision was based on reports it had obtained from a psychiatrist and neurologist, who concluded his ongoing symptoms were “no longer the result” of his head injury.

The letter arrived just as his GP referred him to a specialist traumatic brain injury rehabilitation centre in Auckland. ACC would no longer be paying, so the Buxtons had to pay thousands themselves for Jeremy to attend.

They also paid for their own medical report confirming Buxton’s ongoing symptoms were indeed linked to his head injury.

In March 2018, ACC reinstated his cover and back-paid his compensation but Rhonda says that year without financial support and treatment nearly broke them.

“When they booted us off, my work was amazing, they fully supported us. If it wasn’t for them we probably would have had to sell the house.”

Headway chief executive Stacey Mowbray says problems often arise when people do not recover within expected timeframes.

“The big challenge is if they go through that concussion service and they haven’t recovered.”

After completing a concussion service, some people can find themselves in “a little bit of a black hole” while waiting for approvals for further support.

“This is what we are hearing from our community as a problem. They often feel lost. There’s a lot of unknown, a lot of anxiety … and unfortunately, some people in that period can regress.”

“Possible false claim”

Concerned by ACC’s initial decision to stop cover, the Buxtons requested Jeremy’s full ACC file.

What they found in the box of documents that arrived shocked them – and the fallout still haunts Buxton today.

While he was sleeping up to 17 hours a day in the months after his accident, the documents revealed that ACC suspected he might be faking his injuries.

The allegation came from within ACC.

Internal documents described the case as a “possible false claim”, noting he was in a “better financial position” on weekly compensation than in his job as a casual delivery driver.

The couple learnt that in December 2016, an ACC investigator had sat outside their home, watching and recording Buxton’s movements.

Surveillance notes recorded Buxton “cleaning or cooking on the barbeque”, noting the exact clothes he was wearing.

Another entry describes him carrying a carton in the garage, though it’s not certain it’s Buxton because it’s dark.

Several pages of the report, including photos taken of the couple by ACC, were redacted.

ACC closed the investigation in March 2017, finding nothing to warrant further investigation, but its report did not officially exonerate him. It was only after Buxton complained in 2023 that ACC told him it had found no fraud or wrongdoing on his behalf.

Buxton says learning he had been watched felt – and still feels – like a violation.

“It feels like a home invasion,” he says. “When somebody has followed and watched you, you don’t feel safe.”

In its response to his 2023 complaint, ACC did apologise for stress the investigation caused him, adding it had followed normal processes and policies in his case. Buxton thinks ACC doesn’t really understand the impact its investigation had on him. He wants an acknowledgment of this, and a more formal apology.

“That would make me feel safe.”

RNZ asked ACC what its threshold and policies were for surveilling clients suspected of fraud. It replied saying it would respond to RNZ’s questions as an Official Information Act request, which can take about a month or longer.

Buxton says the knowledge that someone has followed and watched you “feels like a home invasion”. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

Investigation disclosure

When Jeremy requested his full ACC file, a copy of what was released to him was stored on the agency’s case management system, meaning staff with access to his file could see the investigation report.

It’s understood such reports are typically locked away in a separate part of ACC’s records system. But this appears not to have been the case for Buxton.

Buxton believes the presence of this material may have influenced how some case managers treated him.

ACC disputes that characterisation.

In a statement, the agency said it could not disclose what information initially prompted the investigation but it has an obligation to examine any allegations that someone may be receiving support they are not entitled to.

A copy of the investigation material was put on Buxton’s file after it was given to him as a record of this disclosure. The description of the material did not indicate it contained investigation material, ACC said.

But there are discrepancies in how it has handled the information.

When Buxton complained about the investigation material being visible on his claim file, ACC initially told him the report had not been placed there.

Months later, it admitted it was on his file, and withdrew its earlier finding.

Buxton lodged another complaint, asking why he had been given incorrect information. That complaint remains unresolved.

‘World of grey’

Dedicated fraud investigation units operate across several government departments. The Ministry for Social Development handled more than 6000 cases and secured 45 prosecutions last financial year, according to its annual report.

Information about ACC’s unit, including its policies, are harder to come by, says lawyer and advocate Warren Forster.

“They operate in a world of grey. It’s definitely part of an exit strategy that ACC uses, and they’re currently ramping up that exit strategy.”

In the past, ACC’s Integrity Services unit has had KPIs and Return on Investment measures.

In 2018/19, the unit was expected to save the agency $8 for every dollar it spent, saving about $45 million.

ACC says questions about the unit’s current targets will be answered under the OIA.

It appears the unit may be in line for expansion, as the agency looks to cut programmes and the number of long-term claimants.

Buxton’s investigation reflects a more traditional model of fraud detection where people come under scrutiny following tip-offs.

But a recent independent review of ACC’s performance suggests its moves to a more sophisticated system.

It found the unit’s team of 22 full time staff lacked capacity to properly address fraud and recommends introducing real-time monitoring to analyse claims, payments and billing from providers to detect suspicious patterns earlier.

ACC lawyer and advocate Warren Forster says spying on ACC clients is not common but it can be “very problematic”. RNZ / Ian Telfer

Forster says the number of ACC clients who end up being surveilled is “pretty low”, but they can be “very problematic.”

“I had a client who was being surveilled. They were following him around with private investigators.”

When he raised his concerns with his psychiatrist he was told he was delusional, only to find out later he was actually being followed.

Another former client, a sexual abuse survivor, discovered a private investigator hired by ACC had been looking in her windows, Forster claims.

“You can imagine the impact of that on a person.”

Forster believes ACC needs to be more open about its investigations and the impact it can have on vulnerable clients.

“Particularly with people who are distressed or who have traumatic brain injuries or PTSD.  To send someone around to follow them, creates an incredible amount of distress.”

There needs to be a system where treatment providers are alerted if patients are being investigated, he says.

“ACC needs to have a way to respond appropriately, because otherwise we’re just causing further harm.”

The coding dispute

In 2018, Buxton’s lawyer at the time wrote to ACC asking it to correct the classification of his injury to clinicians’ diagnoses of a moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury.

The letter was not answered. Bogged down by managing Jeremy’s injuries while caring for a toddler, the Buxtons didn’t chase it up for several years.

In February 2024, ACC admitted its internal coding was limited but reassured him this did not disadvantage him in any way.

Buxton disagrees.

“When I go to treatment providers, they see ‘brain injury – other’ so they say they can’t help me for my moderate brain injury,” he says. “So I’m trapped.”

The current classifications of mild, moderate and severe don’t always reflect how a person recovers, says Mowbray.

Overseas, a rethink is already underway.

The United States is among the first countries to move away from relying solely on the Glasgow Coma Scale – the standard tool used for more than five decades – and adopt a new classification framework known as the CBI-M, which Mowbray says better reflects the complexities and variabilities of brain injury.

The new system, which has yet to be formally adopted by clinicians in New Zealand, moves from categorising injuries as mild, moderate or severe to more of a scale.

“It’s quite an exciting development, acknowledging that maybe the way it was measured in the past doesn’t work for us now with [what] we know about brain injury recovery,” says Mowbray.

“It would allow us to acknowledge that every concussion, every brain injury is different, that every single one will follow a different path, a different timeframe for recovery.”

ACC and Health New Zealand both say they are closely monitoring medical developments in this area.

If adopted it could make a huge difference to the growing number of traumatic brain injuries.

New Zealand research published last year called brain injuries the ‘silent epidemic’, representing the greatest contributor to death and disability of all trauma-related injuries.

It found ACC brain injury claims rose by 48 percent to 53,731 between 2017 and 2023, compared to 9 percent population growth over the same period.

The lawyer’s investigation, and ACC’s response

In December 2025, Buxton’s lawyer wrote to ACC alleging at least 30 privacy breaches, including unrecorded access to his file and missing documents – the early physiotherapy warnings among them.

The failure to act on early warnings has been “extremely costly for Jeremy,” she wrote, while inaccuracies and disclosure of investigation material had caused “profound anxiety, lack of sense of safety and loss of trust.”

As well as a formal apology for the surveillance, Buxton is also seeking out-of-scope payment for the harm caused, and is considering legal action over the privacy breaches.

ACC says it acknowledges Buxton’s concerns that the injury coding and fraud investigations have impacted the support he has received from it.

“We have investigated these matters thoroughly in the past and apologised to him for his experience,” ACC’s Head of Client Recovery Matthew Goodger said in a statement.

“While we are aware these matters still feel unresolved for him, we are confident they have been appropriately addressed and there has been no impact on the support he has received from ACC, or how his claim has been managed.”

However, ACC admits it “missed” an additional personality change claim filed by Buxton’s GP in December 2024.

“We are following up on this with urgency,” said Goodger.

ACC was investigating the alleged privacy breaches raised by Buxton’s lawyer and the request for an out of scope payment.

“We will continue to look into any concerns he has and if we’ve made mistakes or fallen short in the service we have provided, we will of course apologise and take steps to put this right.”

The impact of a traumatic brain injury goes beyond the person injured. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

The ripple effect

A traumatic brain injury doesn’t just impact the individual, says Mowbray.

“It’s a whanau, community and workplace injury. It impacts everyone.

“ACC funds some amazing rehab programmes that focus on the individual. But we’d like to see more support for whanau.”

ACC’s Traumatic Brain Injury Strategy 2017-2021 highlighted the importance of peer support and support for whanau.

“It was never followed through unfortunately,” says Mowbray.

Only five of the report’s 22 actions were completed, with a further six partially completed.

ACC could not immediately say what the current status of the remaining actions was, saying it would respond to RNZ’s questions through the OIA process.

Ploeg says brain injured people often experience strong emotions and it is important these are recognised, listened to and addressed.

“Managing these emotions, these strong emotions after a brain injury, for some people, can be really challenging.”

Having supports around them that understand these symptoms is key to minimising their impact.

“It’s really important that those kinds of symptoms are listened to and understood, so that strategies and changes can be brought online.”

The cost

Jeremy and Rhonda still call themselves best friends.

But they no longer live together.

“It was Jeremy’s decision,” Rhonda says quietly, “He wanted to give me my life back.”

Caring for him while working full-time and raising their son has taken a toll. So did fighting a bureaucracy neither of them fully understood.

“They push so much on us to look after him. Yes, he’s my husband. But I’m not a nurse. I’m not a full-time caregiver. I’m sure as hell not a psychologist.

“I’m also the ex-wife now but they still leave it for me to deal with.”

Rhonda says dealing with ACC has been an “eye opener” and most New Zealanders would have no idea how difficult the system can be to navigate.

“We went into ACC with an open mind thinking ‘well, he’s had an accident, we’re going to be okay. We’re going to be looked after.’”

She says the system wore them down.

“You lose the will to fight.”

ACC ended Buxton’s vocational rehabilitation sessions in January and has offered to continue his psychologist sessions.

He says he needs these not for his brain injury, but for the stress of dealing with ACC and still-raw trauma of being surveilled by the agency.

He is now waiting to hear if his therapy sessions will be approved for this purpose.

He’s been told he needs to reduce his stress in order to help his recovery, but that’s not been easy, he says.

His body weeps with stress-induced psoriasis, which requires regular injections in hospital.

“My skin has been falling apart because of stress. I would like them [ACC] to recognise this.”

The anxiety he still feels about being investigated for fraud all those years ago is so crippling he can’t even enjoy a trip to the park with his son Jayden, who is now 10.

“Taking your child to the park should be the most joyous thing you can do,” he says.

“For me, it is a nightmare. I see people but wonder if they’re following us.”

“If they had said ‘we’re sorry this happened’, I would know we’re safe.”

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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/2026/03/16/they-took-my-whole-life-acc-spied-on-man-with-a-traumatic-brain-injury/

Formula 1: Kiwi Liam Lawson finishes seventh in Chinese Grand Prix

Source: Radio New Zealand

Liam Lawson in action during the Chinese Grand Prix. Mark Thompson/Getty Images

Kiwi Liam Lawson has taken more Formula 1 points with a seventh placing at the Chinese Grand Prix.

Qualifying 14th on the grid, Lawson took advantage of early casualties, as both McLarens – British world champion Lando Norris and Aussie Oscar Piastri – failed to make the start-line, along with Brazilian Gabriel Bortoleto and Thai Alex Albon.

Pitting early, just before a safety car gifted his rivals a cheap stop, the Racing Bulls driver had to work his way back through the field, capitalising on three other withdrawals, including former Red Bull teammate and four-time champion Max Verstappen late in the journey.

Lawson also had the satisfaction of beating Frenchman Isack Hadjar (eighth), who was promoted into the Red Bull team ahead of him, and new Racing Bulls teammate Arvid Lindblad (12th).

The performance was the 11th top-10 finish of Lawson’s career – his best finish is a fifth at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix last September.

On Saturday, he finished seventh in the sprint race around the Shanghai International Circuit for his first competition points of the season, after finishing 13th at Melbourne last week.

Italian Kimi Antonelli celebrated the first win of his Formula 1 career, heading championship-leading teammate George Russell in a Mercedes one-two from pole position.

The 19-year-old Italian driver became the second-youngest race winner in the sport’s history, after Verstappen, who took his first victory with Red Bull at 18 in 2016.

Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton finished a distant third, the seven-time world champion’s first podium since he joined Ferrari last year, with teammate Charles Leclerc fourth, after a lively battle between the two.

– RNZ/Reuters

More to come

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/15/formula-1-kiwi-liam-lawson-finishes-seventh-in-chinese-grand-prix/

Black Caps beaten by South Africa in first T20

Source: Radio New Zealand

South Africa’s Gerald Coetzee celebrates the wicket of Tom Latham. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

New Zealand have lost by seven wickets to the visitors in the first of five T20 matches at Mt Maunganui.

The Black Caps were only able to post a total of 91 after batting first, with South Africa winning with 20 balls remaining.

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Super Rugby Pacific: Moana Pasifika-Blues beef far from done

Source: Radio New Zealand

Moana Pasifika coach Tana Umaga was still not happy after losing to the Blues. Photosport

The Blues didn’t engage in the war of words, but they were merciless when it came to battle.

The Blues battered their cross-city rivals to reclaim 09 bragging rights, with an emphatic 43-7 victory in Auckland on Sunday afternoon.

Despite the one-sided scoreline and apparent one-sided feud, Moana Pasifika coach Tana Umaga stands by his scathing assessment of the franchise.

“I don’t know why we wouldn’t stand by those when it’s what’s actually happening,” he said. “Because we lost, it doesn’t detract from the fact that was the facts.”

The former All Blacks captain let loose on the Blues earlier in the week, stating they didn’t want Moana Pasifika in Auckland, and alleging they even tried to block them from playing in Northland and South Auckland.

Blues coach Vern Cotter has not responded directly to Umaga’s comments.

“That’s outside, today was just a game,” he said. “It was about the players on the paddock.

“We have a massive amount of respect for them as a team, we will take this win and just move forward.”

Blues skipper Dalton Papali’i concurred with his coach.

“Tana was a Blues man once, and I have a lot of respect for him and his players. Whatever happens up in the offices, that’s none of my concern.”

Umaga also questioned the officiating during his side’s loss, after Moana saw two tries disallowed, which would have seen them take a half-time lead.

The first saw Lalomilo Lalomilo ruled offside from a lineout, while the second was scrubbed, after interference at the scrum.

“Some pretty tough calls in general, we’ll have another look at those,” Umaga said. “There’s a bit of contention whether he was off the scrum and initiated the contact, and the one coming off the lineout, that was a tough one.”

Umaga felt the decisions were a microcosm of greater issues in Super Rugby Pacific.

“We probably have to ask ourselves the question, as a game, are we looking for reasons not to score tries? What kind of game do we want to have?”

Umaga feared over-adjudication would frustrate audiences.

“We can’t be complacent in rugby in this country,” he said. “We’ve got to do all we can to make sure the product we are putting out there is something people want to see.”

One call Umaga did not take issue with was the red card issued to halfback Augustine Pulu for his swinging arm on opposite Sam Nock.

“That did harm us, to play half an hour with 14 players, but when we had 14 men, we seemed to have a lot more urgency.”

While Moana Pasifika took confidence into the sheds at halftime – trailing by just eight – discipline continued to plague them and they were penalised right from the restart.

“We couldn’t build any positive moments,” Umaga said. “It was hard to change momentum around.”

Umaga will likely have plenty to take his mind off his beef with the Blues, confirming New Zealand Rugby had approached him about joining Dave Rennie’s All Blacks coaching group.

“I’ll figure those out after today.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/15/super-rugby-pacific-moana-pasifika-blues-beef-far-from-done/

Rugby: Moana/Blues beef far from done

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tana Umaga today confirmed that New Zealand Rugby has approached him about joining Dave Rennie’s All Blacks coaching group. Photosport

They didn’t engage in the war of words, but the Blues were merciless when it came to battle.

The Blues battered their cross-city rivals to reclaim 09 bragging rights, with an emphatic 43-7 victory in Auckland this afternoon.

Despite the one-sided scoreline, and apparent one-sided feud, Moana coach Tana Umaga stands by his scathing assessment of the franchise.

“I don’t know why we wouldn’t stand by those when it’s what’s actually happening. Because we lost, it doesn’t detract from the fact, that was the facts.”

The former All Black captain let loose on the Blues earlier in the week, stating that the Blues didn’t want Moana in Auckland, and alleging they even tried to block them from playing in Northland and South Auckland.

Blues coach Vern Cotter has not responded directly to Umaga’s comments.

“That’s outside, today was just a game, it was about the players on the paddock. We have a massive amount of respect for them as a team, we will take this win and just move forward.”

Blues skipper Dalton Papali’i concurred with his coach.

“Tana was a Blues man once. I have a lot of respect for him and his players, whatever happens up in the offices, that’s none of my concern.”

Umaga also questioned the officiating during his side’s loss after Moana saw two tries disallowed, which would have seen them take a half-time lead.

The first saw Lalomilo Lalomilo ruled offside from a lineout, while the second was scrubbed after interference at the scrum.

“Some pretty tough calls in general, we’ll have another ok at those. There’s a bit of contention whether he was off the scrum and initiated the contact, and the one coming off the lineout, that was a tough one.”

Umaga felt the decisions were a microcosm of greater issues in Super Rugby.

“We probably have to ask ourselves the question as a game, are we looking for reasons not to score tries? What kind of game do we want to have?”

Umaga feared over-adjudication would frustrate audiences.

“We can’t be complacent in rugby in this country, we’ve got to do all we can to make sure the product we are putting out there is something people want to see.”

One call which Umaga did not take issue with was the red card issued to Augustine Pulu for his swinging arm on Sam Nock.

“That did harm us, to play half an hour with 14 players, but when we had 14 men we seemed to have a lot more urgency.”

While Moana took confidence into the sheds at halftime – trailing by just eight – discipline continued to plague them, penalised right from the restart.

“We couldn’t build any positive moments, it was hard to change momentum around.”

Umaga will likely have plenty to take his mind off his beef with the Blues, confirming New Zealand Rugby has approached him about joining Dave Rennie’s All Blacks coaching group.

“I’ll figure those out after today.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/15/rugby-moana-blues-beef-far-from-done/

Unity Week helps heal scars of Christchurch mosque attack seven years later

Source: Radio New Zealand

Walk the Talk Unity March through Christchurch to commemorate the seventh anniversary of the mosque attack. RNZ/Keiller MacDuff

Hundreds of people gathered in a shady grove at the Christchurch Botanic Gardens, surrounded by bird song and the hum of cicadas, to remember one of the darkest days in the city’s history.

A formal ceremony to mark the seventh anniversary of the Christchurch mosque attacks brought together loved ones of the 51 shuhada (martyrs) killed by a white supremacist terrorist on 15 March, 2019, those injured in the attacks, first responders including representatives from Police and Hato Hone St John, members of the public and politicians.

Following a moment of silence, the names of the 51 dead were read out, interspersed with the tolling of the city’s World Peace Bell following each name.

Wreaths were later laid by dignitaries, including Mayor Phil Mauger, MPs Megan Woods and Matt Doocey, Senior Sergeant Roy Appley, who led the police communications centre on the day of the attack, and St John national youth manager Kerry Mitchell.

Many attendees gathered first at the Bridge of Remembrance, as part of the Walk the Talk for Unity event, making their way from the city centre to the gardens carrying signs and 51 prayer mats.

The Sakinah Community Trust – a not-for-profit started by seven bereaved women after the attacks – organised the Unity Week events.

Chair Dr Hamimah Ahmat said the mats represented each of those killed at prayer, but the impacts rippled across the whole community, including the families and friends of those killed, and the many injured who live with the memories every day.

“We’re not just talking about 51,” she said. “We are talking about the families of the 51, we’re talking about the friends of the 51s, the neighbours of the 51s, and then not forgetting the people who were physically injured and their families, who continue to live through and go through the memory of March 15th.”

Everyone grieves differently, Ahmat said, and would acknowledge the day in different ways.

Izzah Harron and uncle Farid Ahmed read the names of Christchurch mosque attack victims, as the Peace Bell tolls 51 times. RNZ/Keiller MacDuff

Alhamdulillah [thank God], we are thankful that, as people grieve and heal, more and more are starting to support this kaupapa and support this idea.”

Initially, non-Muslims struggled with how to express their sorrow over 15 March, because they feared it could be culturally inappropriate or disrespectful, Amhat said. The focus on unity and bringing people together was a key part of the Islamic tradition, and the group was happy to pave the way to remembering lost loved ones even from the depths of their grief.

“It wasn’t just Muslims that were directly impacted. In many different ways, everyone – the whole of New Zealand, including people of non-faith – were also affected and impacted by what happened to this beautiful country, by a person that they did not invite.”

She said the organisation’s Unity Summit conference had talked at length about how moving the nation forward would take many hands, including the hands and voices of young people.

In the future, Amhat hoped to see Unity Week events happening around the country, not just in Christchurch.

Australian activist Robert Martin was invited, alongside Melbourne imam Alla Elzokm, to take part in the Unity Summit and speak at the unity walk.

He said his visit had been deeply moving and he had been inspired by the resilience of the community, but he was taken aback at the lack of publicity surrounding the event.

“There’s nothing – signs, TV ads, radio ads, anything about the commemoration. I can’t believe there isn’t anything.

“These poor families need something they can go to, other than just a tombstone.”

Christchurch man Nicholas Witte took part in commemorative events for the first time, and it had been a pleasure and an honour.

“I’m here with other fellow members of my community. We’re Jewish, we want to express our wholehearted support for this.

Participants walked through the Christchurch city centre carrying 51 prayer mats to remember the victims. RNZ/Keiller MacDuff

“It’s a completely authentic expression of what we believe.

“Very early on in our historic teachings, we’re told B’tselem elohim – all human beings are made in the image of God – it’s something we take completely seriously.”

Kathleen Gallagher attended to honour the lives of two lifelong friends of her sons, who were killed in the attacks.

She said the compassionate way Ōtautahi responded to the devastating attacks was the most important thing, something the world needed more than ever.

A senior adviser at Norway’s 22nd July Centre, Anne Talsnes said images of Sunday’s march were engraved in her memory.

“Walking around with those 51 mats, it will forever stay with me.”

Talsnes – whose background was in memory studies, a multidisciplinary field that examined the politics of memory, and what societies choose to remember or not – works at the centre set up four years, after the massacre carried out by Norwegian terrorist Anders Breivik in July 2011, killing 77.

There were a lot of similarities in communities that went through what our communities had gone through, she said.

Talnes said she could not yet judge how New Zealand was processing the memory of 15 March, but it stood out how the commemorations were community led and how much the faith community had taken agency over what happened to them.

“They own their own story, and they’re incredibly resilient and open-hearted.”

Norwegians had to confront many unpleasant conversations in the effort to confront the horrors of the 2011 attacks.

“We couldn’t keep just talking about the love and the unity that came out of it,” she said. “We also had to address the source and the ideology behind it, which took a long time.”

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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/2026/03/15/unity-week-helps-heal-scars-of-christchurch-mosque-attack-seven-years-later/

‘AI illiterate’: NZ at risk of being left behind as data centre plans move forward

Source: Radio New Zealand

Artist’s impression of how the data centre is to look. Datagrid / supplied

A new $3.5 billion data centre that will be built near Invercargill is being touted as the country’s first “artificial intelligence factory”, but a tech expert says New Zealand is currently “AI illiterate” and without urgent action, the country’s economic growth is at stake.

Datagrid New Zealand has received resource consent for the 78,000 square-metre data centre, which will be built in Makarewa, north of Invercargill. The company was founded by Rémi Galasso and Malcolm Dick in 2021.

“This approval is the result of years of dedication and collaboration, and we are excited about the transformative impact this project will have on Southland and New Zealand as a whole,” Galasso said.

The centre will have a dedicated substation and consume 280 megawatts of power, making it the country’s second-biggest electricity user after the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter, consuming around 6 percent of New Zealand’s total annual electricity demand.

Energy-hungry data centres are a boom industry in New Zealand, with international companies keen to reduce their climate impact by using the county’s renewable electricity.

Technology expert Mark Laurence said the term “AI factory” was coined by Jensen Huang, the chief executive of American technology company NVIDIA. It describes a data centre that was built to serve AI technology, through training and inference.

AI training involved teaching a model by feeding it datasets to learn patterns, while AI inference was the application of that knowledge.

“Take ChatGPT, for example – whenever OpenAI decides to train their next version of ChatGPT, they essentially take mountains of data, give it all to their algorithms, throw it all into a data centre and that data is processed for months and months by the AI algorithm to create the next version of ChatGPT,” Laurence said.

“Every time we use one of these AI tools, like ChatGPT or Copilot, every time we type in something and press enter, that is called inference,” he said.

ChatGPT sparked the recent artificial intelligence hype on its release in 2022. Koen van Weel / ANP MAG / ANP via AFP

Laurence runs Ten Past Tomorrow, a strategic advisory and AI training company with the aim of increasing AI literacy and capability in New Zealand.

He said demand for training and inference was increasing as more people used AI tools, with New Zealand well-positioned geographically and climatically to host data centres to do that work.

“Data centres use a lot of water and because the massive computers inside them generate so much heat, they need to be cooled down as well,” he said.

“In Invercargill, the average annual temperature is around 10C, which means they can simply cool those centres with the outside air.”

The Invercargill facility is not the first large scale data centre in New Zealand. Microsoft opened a data centre in Auckland in 2024, while Amazon Web Services (AWS) spent $7.5b building a cluster of data centres in the city.

He said to illustrate what the AI factory was capable of, once complete it would have the capacity to process around 960 million ChatGPT conversations per day, which was between 5 to 10 percent of the conversations processed by the AI chatbot globally each day.

Who benefits from the data created in these centres?

Laurence said Microsoft and AWS (Amazon) were supplying output from their centres to New Zealand organisations and the public service, but output from the Datagrid centre would instead be piped offshore through a subsea cable to serve overseas markets.

Datagrid has not said who its customers will be, or how the information its centre produces will be used.

Laurence said he wanted to see a government commitment that New Zealand was able to use and benefit from the technology that centres like the Datagrid’s AI factory were powering.

Laurence said the country was at risk of becoming “AI illiterate”, and statistics showed New Zealanders were not being trained at the rate or the capability that most developed nations around the world were in terms of being able to use AI tools, which meant the country was falling behind in its ability to keep pace with the international market.

“We’re still a nation that’s using AI to change the tone of an email and summarise long documents, while the rest of the world is pulling ahead in terms of redesigning whole workflows and injecting agentic AI at the full edge of its capability.

“It’s exciting to have the infrastructure being built, particularly when it contributes to our economy but what needs to go hand-in-hand with that is national capability training programs so that we can actually harness the outputs of this infrastructure and use it to the benefit of our people, our companies, our organisations, and ultimately our economy.”

A project years in the making

Southland Business Chamber CEO Sheree Casey said the new data centre provided an opportunity for the region to broaden its economic horizons.

“Once operational, Datagrid estimates it could generate hundreds of millions annually in data service exports and add approximately $60 million to GDP each year.”

The construction phase alone was expected to create more than 1200 skilled jobs and inject around $4b into the economy.

She said Southland had a strong foundation in traditional industries, and adding a “weightless export” sector, where the region delivers digital services globally-could be a natural complement.

The proposed Tasman Ring Network. Datagrid / supplied

Transpower said it was confident the national grid could meet the energy needs of the new data centre.

Executive general manager of grid development Matt Webb said while the centre required a big load, there was a lot of new electricity generation emerging and Transpower was responsible for facilitating a balance between the two.

He said the national grid operator had been in serious discussions with Datagrid for a year or more and a formal connection application process was now underway.

Webb said there were a number of significant Southland wind projects going through the consenting process, along with solar projects.

Transpower expected 1300MW of new projects (generation and battery storage systems) to be commissioned in 2026, increasing capacity by around 13 percent.

Webb said having a confirmed electricity load of that size gave investors confidence in renewable energy investments.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/15/ai-illiterate-nz-at-risk-of-being-left-behind-as-data-centre-plans-move-forward/

Live: Black Caps v South Africa – first T20 at Mount Maunganui

Source: Radio New Zealand

South Africa’s captain Aiden Markram (L) and David Miller (R) celebrate their win over New Zealand at the T20 World Cup. AFP

The Black Caps return home from their World Cup heartbreak in India to host South Africa in a five-match T20 series at Mt Maunganui.

Top order batters Katene Clarke and Nick Kelly are in line to make their T20 debuts during the series, as is Central Districts spinner Jayden Lennox.

First ball is at 7.15pm

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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/2026/03/15/live-black-caps-v-south-africa-first-t20-at-mount-maunganui/