State Highway 1 closes in both directions near Levin after two-car crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / Tim Brown

State Highway 1, north of Levin, is closed after a crash on Friday morning.

Emergency services were called to a two-vehicle crash on the stretch at Waiterere – near the intersection of Koputaroa Road – shortly before 11am.

Two people received moderate injuries.

A diversion was in place and motorists were asked to take extra car in the area.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/state-highway-1-closes-in-both-directions-near-levin-after-two-car-crash/

US-funded group sues SkyCity over Malta-based online gambling platform

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A so-far, unnamed United States-funded group is leading a class action lawsuit against SkyCity.com’s Malta-based online gambling platform, which has been operating since 2020.

In a statement to the market, casino operator SkyCity said the class action group was “seeking to test the lawfulness of the online gaming operations” operated by Europe-based Silvereye on behalf of SkyCity’s Malta subsidiary.

The class action is over gambling monies lost to SkyCity Online between February 2020 and February 2026.

SkyCity set up the Malta operations after it began losing potential earnings to overseas online operators who had been marketing gambling services to New Zealand residents.

SkyCity believed the Malta operation would allow it to legally operate a platform using the SkyCity brand, while still complying with New Zealand laws, including tax regulations and host responsibility rules which applied in New Zealand.

RNZ understands that belief is what was being tested by the class action group, who were understood to be seeking refunds for every New Zealand gambler who ever lost a bet on the Malta-based SkyCity platform, on the premise that the online platform was illegal.

SkyCity said it denied any such liability and would actively defend the proceedings.

The company said it was still reviewing the legal action and would make no further comment.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/us-funded-group-sues-skycity-over-malta-based-online-gambling-platform/

Phoenix face first away trip under interim coach

Source: Radio New Zealand

[authror:rnz_sport]

Alex Rufer has been suspended following a fifth yellow card. Kerry Marshall / www.photosport.nz

The Wellington Phoenix travel to Adelaide United on Friday night for their first away game under interim coach Chris Greenacre.

Adelaide are in good form and sit fourth on the A-League ladder with the Phoenix dead last.

However, the visitors will take heart from a win and a draw in their two previous meetings this season. Greenacre is embracing the challenge of a game at one of the loudest stadiums in the A-League.

“I’d probably rephrase it, it’s a place you want to go on a Friday night,” Greenacre said.

“I’m a big fan of Friday night football. Coopers Stadium in general has a great atmosphere, it’s often bouncing. We’re really excited by the challenge.

“You stress to the young players, these are the games you want to play in, where the crowd are close to the pitch, the atmosphere is electric, these are the environments you want to play in.”

Coach Ufuk Talay of Sydney FC and interim coach Chris Greenacre of the Phoenix greet each other during the round 19 A-League Men match between Wellington Phoenix and Sydney FC Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images

The Phoenix have been dealt a blow before the match with captain Alex Rufer suspended after picking up his fifth yellow card of the season against Sydney.

“Obviously, he’s our captain, our leader, and what he brings to a dressing room and the field, his quality as a footballer, he brings that consistency and patience.

“That will be a miss for us, but it means that the other players have to raise their game so that doesn’t become an issue.

“It’s a great opportunity for everyone grinding in together and making sure we have a positive impact.”

However, Friday will hopefully mark the return of both Tim Payne from a hamstring injury and top scorer Ifeanyi Eze from suspension.

“Tim Payne has travelled, and he’ll play a part. We’re waiting on a couple of bits with him. [Eze’s] shown a different sort of prospect to what people have seen before. His work rate for the team is absolutely phenomenal, he’s got pace to burn, the unpredictability about him makes him a difficult prospect to handle at time. He’s scored some terrific goals this year.”

Greenacre is aware of the threat Adelaide pose.

“They’re a good side, especially at home, but it’s our job to go and try and turn that crowd. It’s up to us to put in a solid performance and try and change that mentality.”

Last week’s 1-0 loss to Sydney was frustrating for Greenacre in his first game in charge following the departure of Giancarlo Italiano, but he said there were plenty of positives to take out of the performance.

“Obviously, things don’t change overnight. We reviewed the Sydney game, there were parts of the game I was really pleased with, there were other parts I know we need to improve in. In such a small timeframe, it’s important to show the players the stuff you were really pleased with, and in a simple term, you recognise the moment.

“They can see that if we do get it right, we have the opportunity to create chances. It’s just giving them confidence to do that and execute that. We’ve looked at our game plan to try and do the same against Adelaide. It’s been a quick turnaround so we haven’t had a lot of time, but that’s the cards that we’re dealt.”

The round match is scheduled to kick off at at 9.35pm NZT.

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TVNZ sees sharp drop in half-year profit on back of revenue decline

Source: Radio New Zealand

TVNZ’s headquarters in Auckland. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

TVNZ has posted a sharply lower half-year profit as revenue slumped in a tough advertising market, and on a one-off accounting write-down.

The state-owned broadcaster’s profit for the six months ended December 2025 was $2.4 million, compared to $53m a year ago.

Revenue fell 12 percent to $134m, driven by a sharp fall in advertising income, which TVNZ said reflected the broader economic environment.

The company recorded a $28.5m write-down in the value of its assets, largely in programme rights.

TVNZ said it offset the impact of lower revenue by investing in digital advertising and by managing its costs.

It said digital advertising continued to grow, with digital accounting for more than 30 percent of total advertising revenue.

“We can now tell the difference between someone streaming alone and a household watching together, which means we see the true scale of our digital audience,” chief executive Jodi O’Donnell said.

2026 would be “a defining year” for the media company.

“We’re investing now to ensure TVNZ is the place New Zealanders choose first for the news, entertainment and sport they love,” she said.

“That comes with planned short-term costs, but we’re confident in the long-term value these changes will create for New Zealand audiences and advertisers.”

TVNZ expected to deliver a dividend of $1.6m to the Crown, compared to $3.1m in the 2025 financial year.

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Move over Womad, metal fans are taking over the Bowl

Source: Radio New Zealand

Taranaki music fans are being urged to forget the disappointment of Womad taking a break and instead pull on a black T-shirt, a pair of skinny jeans and get ready to rock.

Full Metal Orchestra – which marries heavy rock with a live orchestra – is headed to the Bowl of Brooklands this weekend in a stark contrast to the three-day world music festival.

Shihad frontman Jon Toogood is one of the headliners at Full Metal Orchestra which also includes Phil Rudd of AC/DC, a host of guest vocalists and live sets from acts such as Devilskin and Blindspott.

Shihad’s Jon Toogood.

Supplied

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The businesses failing most frequently and what can you do to avoid joining them

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Business failures are forecast to continue, even as the economy grinds to recovery.

Centrix said this week that liquidation numbers were up 16 percent year-on-year.

Simplicity chief economist Shamubeel Eaqub has compiled data from the NZ Gazette, which shows that in the year to February, 30 percent of businesses that were wound up were in construction.

Another 15 percent were in accommodation and food services, and 10 percent were rental, hiring and real estate.

Security and safety businesses had the highest proportion of businesses failing with a wind-up rate of nearly seven per 1000 enterprises. That was followed closely by accommodation and food services.

“[Security] is quite a small sector, most of them are security companies, a few road safety businesses… There are a lot of small operators.

“Really the story is in the big ones, the construction and hospitality … that’s where things are really tough.”

Construction businesses were being wound up at a rate of about four per 1000.

Inland Revenue is often cited as a factor in the increasing rate of liquidations. After a quiet couple of years during the pandemic, it has stepped up activity sharply to pull in overdue tax.

Eaqub’s data showed that, at 70 percent of windup applications, Inland Revenue’s share was the same as it had been in 2016.

“I think it’s the [increase] that’s caught people rather than the fact that you’ve broken the law by not paying your taxes and you should be caught. I think some of the writing tends to be a bit sympathetic towards these dodgy businesses not paying their taxes. I have no sympathy for them… you can’t trade while insolvent. If you can’t pay your taxes, you’re insolvent.”

He said in previous downturns it had taken quite a long time for the rate of business closures to slow.

“It takes about 12 months after the economy cycle recovers before the business closures start to come down. That’s because that transition point in the recovery is quite challenging for a lot of businesses. They’re already going into it with relatively low cash reserves, people are desperate.

“They take on a lot more work than they can do in pricing that’s not accurate with costs increasing … This period can catch a lot of people out in the construction industry in particular.

“This is probably the riskiest period for the sector because they can see the recovery and then make decisions, they make rush decisions at this point in time then catch them later on… a period of economic recovery doesn’t mean that it is going to turn around straight away… there’s still this pressure businesses should be really aware of and make sure they’ve got a good close eye on their finances, they’re pricing up jobs correctly, they’ve got the future supply of work.

“This is when people start to move as well – in a lot of smaller businesses, you lose one or two staff, that might be half or three-quarters of your workforce.

“It’s all of those things that happen at the beginning of an economic cycle that can be quite frightening.”

Eaqub said it was notable that some lenders were taking action against businesses.

Bizcap, which describes itself as “New Zealand’s most open-minded lender” has applied to wind up eight businesses this year alone.

Keaton Pronk, a licensed insolvency practitioner at McDonald Vague, said it was unusual that a lender would do that rather than relying on security it would normally hold against its loans.

He said, across January and February there had been 228 winding up applications, of which 157 were from Inland Revenue, 48 were one-off creditors and 23 were creditors with multiple applications.

The Financial Markets Authority also took action against a group of related entities.

A spokesperson for the Financial Services Federation said it was likely that no security was being held against those loans or not enough to cover the debt.

Bizcap did not respond to a request for comment.

Centrix said there were signs of improvement in seven of 19 industry sectors, particularly agriculture, wholesale trade, and information media and telecommunications services.

What can you do?

Frank Witowski, a Business Mentors New Zealand mentor told Nine to Noon this week that people should act quickly if they were in trouble.

Many businesses did not keep a close enough eye on their spending, he said, and waiting too long to ask for help.

“I would say see an accountant and go through your books to see what spending you’ve got. Sometimes people don’t look for help, they try to sort it themselves and it doesn’t always work.”

He said it might be possible for businesses to add other services or products to stand out, or look for ways AI could offer efficiencies.

Cutting prices was unlikely to help, he said. “Price cutting has been going on for so long now. If you don’t have the revenue you need, you’re gradually going down and down, It’s good for buyers to get discounts left, right and centre but for businesses they eventually can’t run it any further.”

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Why ‘digital price tags’ at the supermarket are causing concerns

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The increasing use of digital price tags could allow supermarkets to use AI algorithms and ‘dynamic pricing’ where prices change in real time, a competition researcher says.

The government’s amendment to the Commerce Act, included increasing the Commerce Commission’s powers in combating predatory pricing , clarifying merger processes, and modernising the rules around new technologies, including AI.

University of Sydney researcher Lisa Asher says legislation should block the use of dynamic pricing in supermarkets.

She told Nine to Noon supermarkets in the United States were using data about customers to change pricing in online shopping.

Asher says legislation planned for New Zealand does not go far enough to stop the same happening here.

Woolworths New Zealand says it does use electronic shelf labelling in almost all stores, but it does not use dynamic or any personalisation in pricing.

“ESL is about more accurately displaying the prices we advertise. Instead of changing thousands of paper tickets every week across our 185 stores, we can update prices using ESL,” the company said in a statement. .

“We do not use dynamic pricing. We do not have any personalisation in our pricing.”

supermarket price errors supplied

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Guns N’ Roses add New Zealand show to world tour

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rock icons Guns N’ Roses have added an Australian and New Zealand leg to their 2026 world tour.

Kiwi fans will score the very last show of the tour at Auckland’s Eden Park Stadium on 17 December.

Eden Park chief executive Nick Sautner said at the time it was a “truly historic announcement”.

“This concert will be a true celebration of a new post-Covid-19 era, providing much-needed entertainment and economic benefit to Auckland.”

Guns N’ Roses’ three-hour-plus show promises fan favourites alongside bangers dusted-off from their lengthy back catalogue.

Guns N’ Roses are made up of Axl Rose on vocals and keys, Duff McKagan on bass, Slash on lead guitar, Dizzy Reed and Melissa Reese on keys, Richard Fortus on rhythm guitar and Isaac Carpenter on drums.

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High Court upholds decision voiding Papatoetoe local election

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Simon Rogers

A High Court judge in Auckland has upheld a District Court ruling that voided the outcome of the 2025 local body election in Papatoetoe.

High Court Justice Jane Anderson reserved her decision in February after hearing a petition filed by the Papatoetoe Ōtara Action Team, which won all four seats on the Local Board subdivision.

A new election will be held in Papatoetoe, with voting opening on 9 March.

Papatoetoe Ōtara Action Team candidates (from left) Kushma Nair, Sandeep Saini, Kunal Bhalla and Paramjeet Singh RNZ / Blessen Tom

In February, Ben Keith, legal counsel representing the winning candidates, called Manukau District Court Judge Richard McIlraith’s decision in December “neither fair, nor sound”.

Simon Mitchell, representing the Labour candidates in the local body election, described the voting irregularities as “significant”.

Twenty candidates have since thrown their hat into the ring to contest the new Papatoetoe subdivision election that has been organised following the District Court ruling in December.

Voting opens on 9 March and closes at midday on 9 April, with ballots sent by post to all eligible voters.

Labour candidates contesting the 2026 Papatoetoe local body election (from left) Avinash Kaur Dhaliwal, Lehopoaome Vi Hausia, Raj Pardeep Singh and Ashraf Choudhary RNZ / Blessen Tom

In December, Judge McIlraith ruled that voting irregularities materially affected the result of the Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board election, declaring it void.

At a preliminary hearing, Judge McIlraith ordered five ballot boxes containing votes from the electorate to be scrutinised.

Seventy-nine voting papers were subsequently identified during examination as having been cast without the rightful voter’s knowledge.

Papatoetoe was the only Auckland electorate to record a significant rise in turnout in the latest local body election.

While other Auckland areas saw turnout drop, voting numbers in Papatoetoe increased by more than 7 percent.

All four seats went to first-time candidates from the Papatoetoe Ōtara Action Team.

The Ōtara-Papatoetoe Local Board has two subdivisions, with the Ōtara having three seats and Papatoetoe four.

None of the previous local board members of the Papatoetoe subdivision were re-elected.

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Nine to Noon live: Why ‘digital price tags’ at the supermarket are causing concerns

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The increasing use of digital price tags could allow supermarkets to use AI algorithms and ‘dynamic pricing’ where prices change in real time, a competition researcher says.

The Government’s amendment to the Commerce Act, included increasing the Commerce Commission’s powers in combating predatory pricing , clarifying merger processes, and modernising the rules around new technologies, including AI.

But University of Sydney researcher Lisa Asher said while there was some positive moves in the bill, it would not address the use of AI algorithms for pricing. She said that could lead to price collusion and dynamic pricing.

You can hear more from Asher on Nine to Noon.

supermarket price errors supplied

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‘Who’s quick and who’s not’: Lawson says Australian GP crucial

Source: Radio New Zealand

Liam Lawson. photosport

New Zealand driver Liam Lawson says practice and qualifying sessions for the Australian Grand Prix will answer a host of questions about the 2026 Formula 1 pecking order.

Wheels will spin for the first time this season on Friday afternoon (2.30pm NZT) at the first of three practice sessions in Melbourne – where the eyes of the motor racing world will be closely glued.

Uncertainty surrounds who the drivers and teams to beat will be, given an enormous overhaul to car specifications from last season.

A wet start for the 2025 Australian Formula One Grand Prix at Albert Park in Melbourne. James Ross / www.photosport.nz

New mandated power units place more emphasis on battery power and have made the off-season a perplexing one for team designers, with several drivers emerging unimpressed with the changes during testing in Bahrain.

Racing Bulls driver Lawson said it was genuinely difficult to tell who in the 22-strong field will be fastest this season but expected it won’t take long to get answers on the inner-city Albert Park Circuit.

“Obviously we have no idea in testing what everybody is doing so it’ll be this weekend where we exactly find out where we sit. You probably figure out pretty quickly who’s quick and who’s not,” he said.

“It’s a lot of unknowns right now. It’s exciting to see what these new cars bring to the sport but for us it’s definitely a different feeling to when I came in last year.”

In 2025, Lawson arrived in Melbourne as the second Red Bulls driver, very much the junior alongside Max Verstappen.

Liam Lawson of Red Bull Racing greets fan on arrival at the Albert Park Circuit in Melbourne, Victoria. JOEL CARRETT / Photosport

This time, the 24-year-old Kiwi is the senior driver, with 18-year-old Arvid Lindblad handed a debut in the second car.

Lawson offered some words of advice to the young Briton.

“Finding time for yourself and making sure you’re focused.

“Once you’re in Formula 1, it’s all of you guys (media) and all the noise that’s around the sport that is probably a new thing that you’re not used to.”

British driver Arvid Lindblad, competing in New Zealand in 2025. Alan Lee / www.photosport.nz

Given the refreshed nature of the cars, Lawson said there is the opportunity for a mid-rank team like Racing Bulls to upset bigger rivals.

“In a year like this, there’s definitely potential for something like that,” he said.

“Even reliability-wise, it’s the early part of the season. It’s very important to have a car that is lasting the race and operating as we want it to.

“But the faster you are, the better you’re going to score.”

Qualifying is on Saturday evening, ahead of Sunday’s race (5pm NZT).

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New Zealand prices of ‘anything attached to fuel’ will rise, logistics boss warns

Source: Radio New Zealand

The increased price of fuel will see prices increase at the pump, Don Braid says. RNZ / Dan Cook

Oil costs are contributing to “off the charts” freight prices and it is only a matter of time before it flows on to consumers, a logistics boss says.

The war in Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz, a vital shipping route carrying about 20 percent of the world’s oil and gas.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment said, as of Sunday, New Zealand had 25 days’ supply of diesel in country and 29 days more on its way.

Mainfreight managing director Don Braid told Morning Report that New Zealanders could expect price increases to petrol, diesel, freight and international travel in coming weeks.

He said he expected to see an impact in fuel pricing soon which would flow through to freight, passenger air travel and anything that has fuel attached to it.

There had been significant disruptions to air and sea freight, he said.

“In terms of sea freight, whilst ports are operating within the area we’re not seeing any vessels transiting through there … so that’s adding time to transit and in terms of cost as well.

“Not so much as you would think for New Zealand and Australian exporters because we can rout across Asia or for that matter across the USA, it’s for that freight that has to transit via the Middle East.”

The situation it was “just a part of every day life in logistics” as they had to deal with issues such as earthquakes, wars and floods, he said.

Braid said he had already seen diesel prices lift.

“We are being told to expect further increases in terms of diesel and that will be impacting our operations around the world, unfortunately we will have to pass that through.”

The longer term worry would be if this war did not end quickly, he said.

Asked whether he had confidence in New Zealand’s fuel supply situation, Braid said the closing of Marsden Point refinery meant New Zealand had to rely on other countries.

“Jet fuel I think is 24 days that is being held currently, those are the things we wouldn’t want to see become an issue. So yes it worries us, but we’ve been able to get through all sorts of other catastrophes and events of late, so we’ll have our fingers crossed and just get on and do the job,” he said.

“We are being told by those fuel companies that we shouldn’t worry about supplies, so therefore I don’t see a need for panic but I do expect us to see an increase in pricing.”

Any price increases would flow through to freight, passenger air travel and anything that had fuel attached, he said.

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New Zealand should look overseas to address social media harm, committee lead says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Parliament’s Education and Workforce Committee has release its final report into the harm social media causes for young people online. RNZ

A leading member of the government’s inquiry into social media harm says New Zealand wants to be a ‘fast follower,’ not a leader.

Parliament’s Education and Workforce Committee has released its final report on the inquiry into the harm social media causes for young people, offering recommendations including banning under-16 year olds from social media.

The report found while New Zealand had multiple pieces of legislation related to online content regulation – such as the Harmful Digital Communications Act – there was no specific legislation regulating online platforms for user safety.

But committee acting chair National MP Carl Bates told Morning Report it was important that New Zealand followed the lead of other countries.

“We would look at what’s happening overseas, we would implement what’s working or what seems to be working, and recognise that if we follow in the footsteps of international changes it will be easier for international platforms and players to work with New Zealand in solving these problems,” he said.

All the review’s recommendations should be taken “in the context of New Zealand being a fast follower rather than trying to lead the way internationally” to try and solve some of these issues, he said.

He said the platforms themselves were offered the opportunity to give feedback.

“There was a range of feedback that came from the platforms, we heard their view on how they’re addressing to solve the online challenges that occur for both young New Zealanders and New Zealanders alike,” he said.

“However, we clearly as a committee felt that could go further and the recommendations reflect that.”

Bates said the recommendations were wide-ranging.

“The key recommendations were across a range of things, to make the point that this isn’t about solving online harm by doing one thing,” he said.

“The social media ban for under-16 year olds is part of that, but it also talked about banning ‘nudify apps’ and considering the regulation of algorithmic transparency by online platforms, establishing a national regulator.”

Those ‘nudify apps’ used AI deepfake technology to generate fake naked images of a person from a photograph or video, and were a particular concern for the committee.

“Another part is regulating deepfake technology, but it requires a flexible regulatory approach. That’s why part of the recommendations of the committee recognise that an online regulator needs to be able to be responsive to the changes in technology over time,” Bates said.

“One of the recommendations is to review the legislative framework we have in New Zealand because clearly that was created in a time that these apps and this online technology didn’t exist, so there is an absolute need to update the legislative framework.

“And the report also says regulation would send a clear signal that New Zealand is open to the beneficial uses of AI generated content, such as the cat and the piano maybe, but does not accept that being developed without a very real regard to the harm they can cause.”

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International students securing rentals without seeing them

Source: Radio New Zealand

International students are increasingly renting private apartments in central Auckland as demand for university accommodation soars. RNZ / Yiting Lin

University student Piki Wang has inspected 20 apartments in central Auckland since January, carefully checking living spaces for signs of dampness, pouring through recent utility bills to get a rough idea of monthly costs and assessing building security.

But Wang is not looking for an apartment for herself – she has been hired to inspect the property by fellow students located thousands of kilometres away in China.

Armed with smartphone gimbals and WeChat video calls, the 23-year-old works as a “proxy viewer” – part of a growing, pay-per-view microeconomy on social media platform RedNote.

Remote property inspectors such as Wang are helping to plug a housing gap that many international tertiary students are increasingly facing.

With university accommodation oversubscribed, many incoming students are pushed into a private rental market that is difficult to navigate from abroad.

Students from China face additional hurdles due to the “great firewall of China”, which makes it difficult – if not impossible – to do proper due diligence when searching for a private apartment.

Numerous apartment options are available in central Auckland. RNZ / Yiting Lin

It’s an issue that Yixin Fan, a first-year student at the University of Auckland, encountered firsthand.

“The main problem isn’t knowing what kind of house to look for, but how to find one in the first place,” Fan said.

International students typically receive official offers to attend courses and subsequent visas only a few weeks before the semester starts, which leaves many searching for private accommodation in a scramble.

Fan, 18, attempted to find accommodation through Trade Me but kept coming up against requests from prospective landlords for local credit histories, references and mandatory in-person viewings.

Locked out of inspections, Fan hired a proxy viewer – a decision he says ultimately spared him from renting a poorly ventilated converted storage space.

The barriers Fan faced in his search have expanded a remote viewer’s role beyond simple inspections.

While they are primarily hired to assess properties, Wang said offshore students often relied on her for basic guidance on how renting works in New Zealand, from application processes to setting up utilities and so forth after arrival.

The University of Auckland manages around 4500 beds for students. RNZ / Yiting Lin

University accommodation shortage

University accommodation in Auckland is in high demand, with capacity limited each year.

Auckland University of Technology manages around 900 beds.

The University of Auckland manages about 4500 beds, but international students only make up around 8 percent of residents in its first-year halls.

As demand outstrips supply, many students are locked out.

Anby Zhou, a committee member of the Chinese Postgraduate Society, said some students in China had set alarms so they could apply the moment applications opened.

However, she said, many still missed out.

Both universities state they provide housing support through websites, orientation programmes and agency referrals.

While the University of Auckland recommends its own halls for a supported transition, Auckland University of Technology supplies a non-endorsed list of off-campus apartments.

However, student advocates say these largely static resources offer limited practical guidance for offshore searches.

International students are increasingly feeling locked out of university accommodation in central Auckland. RNZ / Yiting Lin

Left without a dedicated, interactive channel to navigate the private rental market, many new arrivals either absorb the cost of transitional hotels or scour social media platforms for alternative options.

Such alternative options can easily be found on RedNote.

The social media platform’s open system allows unlicensed brokers and tenants looking to sublet a portion of their lease – many operating from overseas IP addresses – to flood the platform with listings and charge opaque fees.

Agents in New Zealand offering remote viewing services are also using the platform to find potential clients.

Fan says he was contacted by seven or eight agents during his search for accommodation, facing rental and service fees of around 780 yuan (approximately $175) per match.

Wang paid a similar 800-yuan fee to an offshore agent when securing her first Auckland apartment.

Numerous apartment options are available in central Auckland. RNZ / Yiting Lin

Dispute resolution

From time to time, incoming students who have secured private accommodation from abroad before travelling to New Zealand find an issue with the property upon arrival.

Zhou recalled cases in which offshore students signed leases based on misleading photos, only to find the properties unlivable upon arrival.

Excessive noise from neighbours and poor security are also common complaints.

In such disputes, students who have typically paid a bond to secure the property can find themselves in a bind.

The Real Estate Authority confirmed it had limited jurisdiction over domestic property managers and virtually no authority over unlicensed offshore brokers.

Students in private rental accommodation were instead advised to contact the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment’s Tenancy Services, although anyone who had signed a sub-lease arrangement also faced additional vulnerabilities.

Paul Coggan, manager of tenancy practice and stewardship at MBIE, said provisions of the Residential Tenancies Act could apply to subleases, even in cases where agreements were informal or bonds paid through overseas apps such as WeChat.

However, he said, there was a catch.

If the person who had signed the original tenancy agreement lived in the same property, those who have signed the sublease were typically classified as a “flatmate” – meaning the protections of the Residential Tenancies Act might not apply.

Numerous apartment options are available in central Auckland. RNZ / Yiting Lin

And even where tenancy regulations do apply, recovering money from landlords, property managers or fellow leaseholders is often difficult.

Landlords are legally required to lodge all bonds with Tenancy Services within 23 working days, but this step is frequently ignored by unlicensed brokers.

If a student arrives to find conditions uninhabitable, Tenancy Services says there is “no immediate way for a tenant to terminate their fixed-term tenancy”.

The only legal option was to lodge a complaint with the Tenancy Tribunal.

However, many international students are unable to wait weeks for a Tenancy Tribunal hearing, leaving them with no option but to vacate the property, forfeiting their bond entirely.

Universities acknowledge the existence of this parallel rental market, although their guidance remains focused on official options.

Auckland University of Technology said it was aware of incoming students requesting inspections by proxy and social media platforms to find accommodation.

However, the university maintained its advice, encouraging students to “directly interact and connect with official accommodation services and property management agencies”.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/international-students-securing-rentals-without-seeing-them/

Donald Trump replaces Homeland Security chief Kristi Noem

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Ted Hesson, Reuters

Kristi Noem is being moved to a new role. TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP

One of the top officials overseeing President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown, US Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, will leave her role, US President Donald Trump said on Thursday (US time).

It’s a major staffing move that raises questions about the direction of the Republican president’s immigration agenda.

“I am pleased to announce that the Highly Respected United States Senator from the Great State of Oklahoma, Markwayne Mullin, will become the United States Secretary of Homeland Security (DHS), effective March 31, 2026,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Noem will serve as “Special envoy for The Shield of the Americas,” Trump said.

Noem, a former governor of South Dakota, became one of Trump’s most high-profile Cabinet secretaries with social media posts that portrayed immigrants in harsh terms, highlighting cases of alleged criminal offenders and using vitriolic language.

She faced criticism in January when she quickly labelled two US citizens fatally shot by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis as committing “domestic terrorism.”

Videos that emerged after the deaths undercut the assertion by Noem and other Trump officials that the two deceased – Renee Good and Alex Pretti – were violent aggressors.

The public backlash for the deaths led the Trump administration to move to a more targeted approach to immigration enforcement in Minnesota after months of sweeps through US cities that led to violent clashes with residents opposing the crackdown.

Democrats in the US House of Representatives moved to impeach Noem and at least two Republicans in Congress called for her to lose her job after the incidents.

During congressional hearings in March, Democrats and some Republicans criticized Noem for her approach to the immigration crackdown and management of DHS, including concern over a US$220 million (NZ$373m) ad campaign that heavily featured Noem.

The staffing change raises questions about whether the Trump administration could seek to intensify its mass deportation push or retreat to a more targeted approach.

Under Noem’s leadership, masked immigration agents surged into Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington, DC., scouring neighborhoods and Home Depot parking lots in search of possible immigration offenders.

The popularity of Trump’s immigration approach fell as agents detained US citizens and tear-gassed streets in an attempt to drive up deportations, which last year fell short of the administration’s goal of 1 million per year.

AFP/Kamil Krzaczynski

Strong embrace of Trump’s hardline immigration approach

While Noem, 54, served as a prominent proponent of Trump’s agenda, White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, a long-time Trump aide, controls Trump’s immigration policy.

Noem was quickly confirmed to lead the 260,000-employee Department of Homeland Security in January 2025 after Trump took office. On social media, she referred to immigrants convicted of crimes as “scumbags” even as the number of non-criminals arrested by immigration authorities rose under Trump.

She joined immigration enforcement operations on the ground in New York City and visited a maximum-security prison in El Salvador where Venezuelan immigrants deported by the Trump administration were being held without charges or access to lawyers.

The number of migrants caught trying to illegally cross the US-Mexico border plummeted under Trump’s restrictive policies, a steep drop after high levels of illegal immigration under former President Joe Biden, a Democrat.

Noem, reflecting Trump’s agenda, also took steps to cut legal immigration programmes and increase vetting. She ended several Temporary Protected Status programmes that provided work permits to hundreds of thousands of immigrants from Venezuela, Haiti and other nations, drawing legal challenges.

After an Afghan immigrant was accused of attacking National Guard members in Washington, DC, Noem said she recommended that Trump place “a full travel ban on every damn country that’s been flooding our nation with killers, leeches, and entitlement junkies.”

Critics said Noem demonised immigrants and promoted an immigration enforcement strategy that targeted non-criminal, working immigrants and families.

During Noem’s tenure, the number of deaths in immigration detention rose to a two-decade high while staff in DHS oversight offices were slashed sharply.

-Reuters

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/donald-trump-replaces-homeland-security-chief-kristi-noem/

Review: Maggie Gyllenhaal’s The Bride! falls apart

Source: Radio New Zealand

From the punctuation in the title of The Bride! you might think you’re about to see something exhilarating.

Director Maggie Gyllenhaal’s Frankenstein-inspired romance has all the parts for what should be a monster of a film: big-name lead actors who deliver, a retro creature-feature setup, a Bonnie and Clyde plot, gorgeous costumes and make-up, delightful art deco sets, a brilliant score and dance numbers.

But no matter how much its creators work to breathe a spark of life into it, the bits of its plot are so loosely stitched together it feels like it’s falling apart not longer after it arrives.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/review-maggie-gyllenhaals-the-bride-falls-apart/

A rival to the cheese roll? The story of the Hawke’s Bay meatball

Source: Radio New Zealand

This story was first published ahead of the 2025 Meatball Festival. From Friday to Sunday Hastings will host the second annual Meatball Festival. First Up spoke to the town’s chief meatball officer.

Those unfamiliar with Hawke’s Bay’s humble meatball imagine Italian mince with red sauce. The actual description isn’t that mouth-watering, but the crumbed golden sphere filled with whipped, fatty meat offers an unexpected yet comforting morning tea delight.

Unlike its celebrated sibling, the Southland cheese roll, the Hawke’s Bay meatball has remained a local treat on the East Coast – a fact that irks me as a self-declared meatball enthusiast and a champion of its supernatural creaminess.

Growing up in Te Matau-a-Māui, a white bakery paper bag, translucent with oil, was a symbol of a trip to town and a meatball. Friends who now live abroad insist the moment they touch down on Napier’s tarmac it’s time to visit BJs bakery for a meatball.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/06/a-rival-to-the-cheese-roll-the-story-of-the-hawkes-bay-meatball/

Former MP Jackie Blue quits National to join Opportunity party

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jackie Blue has also been the Equal Employment Opportunities Commissioner. Supplied

Former MP Jackie Blue has resigned her National Party membership and joined The Opportunity Party.

Blue was a member of the cross-party People’s Select Committee on Pay Equity.

She says the government’s handling of the Equal Pay Amendment Act 2025 was her “breaking point”.

Blue will join Opportunity to mentor new leader Qiulae Wong.

She is praising Wong for having the courage to enter “the nasty business of politics”.

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/2026/03/06/former-mp-jackie-blue-quits-national-to-join-opportunity-party/

Britney Spears arrested in California

Source: Radio New Zealand

Britney Spears was arrested Wednesday night (local time), according to information from Ventura County, California authorities.

Booking information obtained by CNN shows that the pop superstar was stopped by the California Highway Patrol (CHP) around 9.30pm, was booked shortly after 3am, Thursday and later released.

CHP public information officer Ryan Ayers confirmed to CNN via phone on Thursday that Spears was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence (DUI).

Her vehicle was towed, according to the arrest information.

“This was an unfortunate incident that is completely inexcusable,” a representative for Spears told CNN in an email. “Britney is going to take the right steps and comply with the law and hopefully this can be the first step in long overdue change that needs to occur in Britney’s life. Hopefully, she can get the help and support she needs during this difficult time.”

“Her boys are going to be spending time with her,” the representative said. “Her loved ones are going to come up with an overdue needed plan to set her up for success for well being.”

It is not the first time Spears has had legal issues.

The following year she was hospitalized for a psychiatric evaluation. Her father, Jamie Spears, was subsequently granted what was initially temporary conservatorship over her assets.

That conservatorship was later extended and lasted for 13 years, prompting fans to start a “Free Britney” movement aimed at ending it.

It was terminated in 2021 and since then Spears has mainly been seen through posts on her social media accounts, often in videos of her dancing posted to Instagram. Her account was unavailable Thursday.

Spears is scheduled to appear in court on 4 May.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/06/britney-spears-arrested-in-california/

Watch: NZ woman’s brazen meth-smuggling attempt discovered at Sydney border

Source: Radio New Zealand

A New Zealander is one of two women facing an Australian court after an alleged attempt to import 38 kilograms of methamphetamine by hiding it under some towels in suitcases.

In December, an Australian and the New Zealander, both aged 35, were stopped for a targeted bag exam by Sydney border officials after arriving from Singapore, a joint statement from the Australian Border Force (ABF) and the Australian Federal Police (AFP) said.

Upon inspecting the women’s luggage, ABF officers found dozens of vacuum-sealed bags of a crystallised substance, concealed underneath a small layer of towels.

Dozens of vacuum-sealed bags were found hidden underneath towels. Supplied / Australian Federal Police

Testing returned an initial positive result for methamphetamine.

The two women were arrested and later charged with one count each of importing a commercial quantity of methamphetamine. The offence carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment.

They were due to reappear at Sydney’s Downing Centre this week.

An x-ray of the suitcases. Supplied / Australian Federal Police

ABF Superintendent Elke West said officers were attuned to emerging trends, observing passenger behaviour and “using intelligence-led targeting” to assess who or what might be a threat.

“Our ABF officers are seizing significant quantities of illicit drugs at the border, removing profits from the hands of criminals and stopping their corrupt business model in its tracks,” Supt West said.

“Organised crime groups will run the gauntlet and attempt to smuggle in their illicit goods by any means possible, and that includes exploiting young vulnerable travellers.”

AFP Detective acting Inspector Trevor Robinson said the consignment was worth “thousands of dollars in criminal profit” and stopping it prevented “immeasurable harm”.

Border officials found 38 kilograms of methamphetamine. Supplied / Australian Federal Police

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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/2026/03/06/watch-nz-womans-brazen-meth-smuggling-attempt-discovered-at-sydney-border/