Two studies link child ADHD diagnoses to poor performance and unhappiness at school

Source: Radio New Zealand

Clinicians are warning ADHD diagnoses might have unexpected side effects for children. AFP / Thom Leach / Science Photo Library

Clinicians are warning ADHD diagnoses might have unexpected side effects for children, after two independent studies have linked it to poor performance and unhappiness at school.

The studies involving hundreds of adolescents have independently shown those with an ADHD diagnosis tended to have worse outcomes in areas like reported happiness, academic grades, even their likelihood of self-harm.

But while some clinicians are concerned by these results, it remains true that for many people, a diagnosis brought validation and life-changing help.

Meanwhile, behavioural experts say labels and medication are far from the only solution.

The two studies, one in Irelandpublished in 2020 and one in Australia in 2022 compared children with behaviours such as hyperactivity and inattentiveness (H/I) who did have an ADHD diagnosis, to those with the same behaviours but no diagnosis.

The Australian study found diagnosed teens had a worse sense of belonging, believed in themselves less, displayed more negative social behaviours and were more likely to self-harm themselves.

Among the Irish cohort, they displayed more emotional and relationship problems, worse prosocial behaviour, and poorer self-concept.

New Zealand clinical psychologist Giselle Bahr told RNZ the results were surprising, even to the authors.

“When you compare them a few years down the track, when they’ve all become adolescents, the adolescents who have been given a formal diagnosis did worse on every measure than the children who had the same behaviours but weren’t given a diagnosis,” she said.

New Zealand clinical psychologist Giselle Bahr. Supplied

She said it was possible a diagnosis lead to children developing a negative view of themselves, or receiving different treatment from teachers and parents.

“I know that there’s also … people feel like they belong to a community, and they feel a relief and they feel like they finally have an answer, but the research shows that this happens, but so does this other process of stigmatisation.”

The Australian authors – Luise Kazda, Kevin McGeechan and Katy Bell – found a diagnosis had “significant negative associations with academic self-concept, negative social behaviours, sense of school membership, self-efficacy, and self-harm”, with no difference between boys and girls.

They wrote they had expected the inverse effect – that a diagnosis would have improved outcomes, and concluded a large, randomised clinical trial with long-term follow-up was needed.

The authors of the Irish study – Cliodhna O’Connor and Fiona McNicholas – identified no significant differences in the demographic characteristics or socio-emotional wellbeing of 9-year-olds with hyperactivity/inattention who had and who had not received a diagnosis of ADHD.

“However, by age 13, those who had held a diagnosis at 9 years showed more emotional and peer relationship problems, worse prosocial behaviour, and poorer self-concept. Further research is required to clarify the developmental pathways responsible for these effects.”

Bahr said while correlation did not equal causation, it would be unwise to ignore these studies – clinicians should be aware of the risks, and inform parents of the risk of a diagnosis having this effect.

“I think it’s really off for us to not be at least letting parents know that this is what studies have shown,” she said. “And you can see that with a study like that, some researchers aren’t going to want to explore that more.”

For her, it sat in the context evidenced already – like the immaturity bias, wherein the youngest child in the class was far more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD than the eldest.

The authors of the Australian study concluded a large, randomised clinical trial with long-term follow-up was needed. 123RF

[https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/585715/first-gp-prescriptions-for-adult-adhd-patients-issued

Changes to ADHD prescription rules] this week mean GPs can now prescribe ADHD medication for adults, meaning easier access to medication.

And of course, for many, a diagnosis could be life-changing for the better.

Kelly Cuff, who lives in Wairarapa, told RNZ she often thought about the person she could have been, had she been diagnosed and had access to medication earlier.

She said she got lucky in childhood, attending a small rural primary school in which the student-teacher ratios were small, which meant less chance for her to slip through the cracks.

But when she moved to intermediate and then high school, she said she had trouble focusing, found school work difficult, and was often sent out of the classroom on errands to stop her distracting her classmates, meaning she missed big chunks of learning time.

“I just sort of was constantly sort of confronted by my limitations, which was wildly frustrating.”

She observed other students who had a diagnosis receiving the help of a laptop and extra time during exams.

Outside of the classroom, she was making decisions in search of immediate rewards. “I was drinking when I was younger, I was making sort of questionable relationship choices,” she said.

“If I had support and if I had, at least, just the medication to sort of pause my thinking a little, I might not have taken so many sort of personal risks.”

It was not until about four years ago, finding herself struggling to focus in a new job, that she sought a diagnosis and medication. That had been life-changing, she said.

“I look at my dishes and I go, I should do those dishes. And then I stand up and I do them, and it’s not something that I have to force myself to do. I don’t have to bribe myself with treats or bully myself into doing it. There’s no guilt there.”

Wellington-based ADHD coach Jayne Fox. Supplied

Jayne Fox, a Wellington-based ADHD coach, said plenty of adults sought a diagnosis in order to have access to medication to help them focus at work, or regulate their emotions.

A diagnosis could also provide “that feeling of legitimacy” and “self-compassion”.

But it was not the only solution.

“For some people, they may already have some level of self-understanding and self-identification with those ADHD traits, and may not be seeking that validation from a doctor,” she said. “And it may be that they are quite happy to look at what strategies can support them without an actual diagnosis of ADHD.”

Her coaching played to people’s strengths, rather than putting the emphasis on where they were lacking.

Carolyn Robertson, who works with parents of children with ADHD. Supplied

Carolyn Robertson, who works with parents of children with ADHD, told RNZ some kids responded to charts, others to a rush of dopamine from doing something they love, before settling into a difficult task.

“For us, it’s more about meeting them where they’re at, and looking at tapping into what your child is interested in and can find success in, and therefore gain a better understanding of themselves, and more confidence in themselves.”

She said sometimes differences could be a strength, and tapping into what kids were excited about could be a path to a solution.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/05/two-studies-link-child-adhd-diagnoses-to-poor-performance-and-unhappiness-at-school/

The return of the property flipper

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Property flippers are back, at a rate not seen since before the global financial crisis.

A recent case in which an Auckland re-seller was ordered to pay $1 million to a couple he left out of pocket highlighted the perils of the practice.

Robert and Margaret Smallridge took their case against Paljeet Singh to the High Court in Auckland, where Justice Tracey Walker ruled in their favour.

The couple sold their Avondale home to Singh at the peak of the property market, in November 2021, for $1.925 million.

He intended to sell it on before the settlement date, but the market dropped. The couple eventually resold the property to another buyer for significantly less.

Singh was told to pay more than $750,000 in damages as well as contractual interest at 14 percent from 23 November, 2022 to the resale on 14 April, 2023, to a total of $99,604.48. He also had to pay a contractual interest on the net loss on resale at $268.01 per day from 15 April 2023 until it was paid.

Nick Goodall, head of research at property data firm Cotality, said the number of contemporaneous sales – where a property is sold to one person and then on to another at the same time – had lifted significantly last year after a sharp fall in 2023.

“There was a lift in these types of transactions last year, almost double 2024, and even more than what we saw through the Covid boom times.

“Perhaps this reflects the position of some vendors being more inclined to shift a property – given the decline of the market and weakness of the broader economy – rather than being able to hold on for a better price. Though this activity is still less prevalent than in the lead up to the Global Financial Crisis.”

The peak of this activity, according to Cotality’s data, was in 2007, but last year was the busiest year for it since then.

“It probably also speaks to the fact we’ve seen more activity at that lower end, which I suspect is going to be where more of the flipping activity happens as well,” Goodall said.

“When you look at the growth or lack of in prices that we’ve seen at the lower to middle end, where first-home buyers have been active, that hasn’t actually been as bad as perhaps the overall market has, which has been affected by the middle section of the market where the movers aren’t moving at the moment.”

He said people who made it work were selective in what they bought.

“You might find a property that’s been on the market for a while. It’s going to be experienced people and maybe they understand where a vendor might want a quicker sale in terms of moving on, but they can open up a different market to sell that on once they get to a certain state.”

He said it would happen less frequently when the market was soft, but there would still be buyers making it work on some properties.

But the Auckland case showed it did not always succeed.

“If the market’s not going so well, the economy’s not going so well, the buyers just aren’t there, they’re not seeing value on the property you’ve got, whatever it might be… It’s certainly not foolproof or faultless, but there’s probably always opportunities for this type of activity to continue,” Goodall said.

‘Lazy investors’

Property investment coach Steve Goodey said there were a number of “buyers’ advocates” in the market who would find properties that appeared to be a good deal and sell them on to investors with a small margin.

“I’ve done quite a few contemporaneous settlements in the last few months – four in December and two in January.

“There’s an investor market out there that doesn’t really know how cheap you can actually buy stuff at the moment, so if you’re a professional buyer and negotiator and can find equity, a discount or a high-yielding property, it’s not terribly hard to pass it on for a moderate fee.

“There are lots of lazy investors out there who don’t mind taking something off someone if the numbers make sense.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/05/the-return-of-the-property-flipper/

‘Everyday living is just so hard’: Families going into debt to pay for school uniforms

Source: Radio New Zealand

An Auckland grandmother looking after two of her mokopuna says she went into debt with their school to pay for uniforms and fees.

Fiona Marks recently moved to secure a bigger state house, which also meant a new school and new uniforms to buy for grandchildren under her long-term care.

Then there was footwear, yet another cost.

“You’ve got to have two different sets of shoes because they are in the high school side of the kura so they need their normal school shoes but when they get dressed into their number one uniform, when they’re representing the kura whether its powhiri or whatever, they have to have dress shoes.”

Fiona Marks has two mokopuna in her care. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Her grandchildren wore blazers, shirts and ties as part of their school uniform.

“It’s around $700 for one child.”

Otago University research showed secondary school uniforms could cost anywhere from $250 to about $1000.

Charities and politicians are calling on school boards to keep the price of uniforms in check.

Last year, more than 38,000 hardship payments were granted to help parents with school expenses, including uniforms, totalling $11 million.

Marks said it was hard to keep up – she needed a grant from Work and Income (WINZ) to pay off debt owed to the children’s previous school.

“Last year I ended up, with the school trips, the uniforms and everything for the whole year, I ended up still owing the school around $500 at the end of the year.”

The debt parents and guardians owe schools was unknown – both the Ministry of Education and School Boards Association said they did not keep such data.

Marks receives an invalids benefit and two unsupported child benefits which, after household expenses, left $160 a week for food.

“Everyday living is just so hard and my grandson is coming up 15 in April, I mean he eats like a horse so it’s just constant in the cupboard. He can have dinner then he’s back in the cupboard.”

Trophies at Marks’ home. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Her granddaughter was at high school and said her Nan did an amazing job providing for them.

A teenager, she also worried about the cost of school uniforms.

She did not have the exact uniform required for Monday – and did not end up going to school.

Variety sponsors Fiona Marks’ two grandchildren and chief executive Susan Glasgow said moving to a new area could put huge pressure on families.

The charity recently helped a father to pay for his children’s third school uniform after he moved the family out of transitional housing.

“When they were moved to a third transitional house, they were moved to a third school requiring yet another uniform and they couldn’t borrow any more money from WINZ so they came to us,” Glasgow said.

“He was in tears at our door asking for our help so we provided the funding for him to get a school uniform for his children.”

Variety chief executive Susan Glasgow. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

She said some families were forced to move if they were in temporary housing.

“That’s the reality of the situation, families are being moved so they require more than one school uniform. It’s really hard for many members of our community.”

This year Variety had recorded a 16 percent increase in requests for help to pay for school uniforms and fees.

Glasgow said it would help if schools allowed generic school uniform basics to be bought anywhere.

“One of the things that schools might consider is this notion that they have in Britain of the uniform uniform, where a family or a child is only expected to have a maximum of three branded items.”

Variety sponsored more than 7000 children and there were 3000 on its waitlist.

Fiona Marks. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Now in her 60s, Marks had looked after grandchildren off and on since she was in her 40s and has had custody of two for over a decade.

“I am enjoing life with my grandchildren but I should be able to be sitting in my home just relaxing doing what I want to do without responsibilities of grandchildren, but I wouldn’t give them up for anything.”

Even so, she would like the government to do more to support grandparents looking after their mokopuna.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/05/everyday-living-is-just-so-hard-families-going-into-debt-to-pay-for-school-uniforms/

What are the best fish and chip shop sides?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Fish and chips are an essential feature of any Kiwi summer. That first bite – flaky terakihi, gurnard, hoki or snapper encased in crisp batter with a huge handful of golden chips is practically a seasonal rite of passage.

But while we argue passionately about batter styles, chip colour and the tastiest species, what about those unsung heroes playing best supporting roles?

To find out, we conducted some highly unscientific (but extremely earnest) research, ringing chippys around the country to see what flies out the door alongside our fish. And according to the ‘data’, these are the six sides New Zealanders love the most.

Fish and chips.

Unsplash

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/05/what-are-the-best-fish-and-chip-shop-sides/

Snow, speed, and surveillance at the Winter Olympics

Source: Radio New Zealand

Zoi Sadowski-Synnott of New Zealand competes in the Women’s Snowboard Big Air on day two of the X Games Aspen 2026. Michael Reaves/ Getty Images via AFP

This year, the most contested “ice” at the Winter Olympics isn’t on the rink – it’s US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

For Kiwis, the Winter Olympics no longer feels like we’re on the outside looking in.

RNZ First Up presenter and sport reporter Nathan Rarere says New Zealand has a great team of 17 for the Italian games which start on Friday.

In a Games that has long been dominated by Northern Hemisphere countries – specifically, Norway – our young snow athletes are really starting to make their mark. And that should add excitement to what has long been a thrilling spectator event.

Today on The Detail, Winter Olympics tragic Rarere talks about the highlights, the anticipated wins, and the controversies of the Games.

And before the world’s spotlight has even reached the Italian snow, a different kind of ICE has secured a part in the 2026 Winter Olympics story, dominating headlines, causing anger, and a chilling unrest.

The focus is meant to be on tomorrow’s opening ceremony, but away from the slopes, controversy has followed reports of ICE agents operating around Olympic infrastructure to support American security operations during the 19-day-long Games, hosted in Milan and Cortina.

“This is a militia that kills… of course they’re not welcome in Milan,” the city’s mayor, Beppe Sala, was quick to tell an Italian broadcaster.

An ICE spokesperson responded by saying that “all security operations remain under Italian authority”.

But still, hundreds of protestors took to Italian streets at the weekend, arguing it risks chilling effects – on athletes, spectators, and media – particularly those travelling on complex visas or from politically sensitive regions.

Rarere, a long-time Winter Games follower who covered the most recent Summer Olympics in Paris, tells The Detail that while the locals aren’t happy about the arrival of ICE agents, teams have been known to send security with their athletes in the past.

“When I did Paris [in 2024] … the security was incredible, I had never seen so many actual soldiers,” he says.

“And on the Champs Élysées, I think it was the second to last day, I saw a group of about 12 of them coming along, all the mirrored glasses and what-have-you, and then there was a guy walking along and then up goes the finger to the earpiece and there was a nod, and then they all turned and follow, and they completely enveloped him and demanded to have a look in his bags.

“The security everywhere was massive, even coming in from the airport… my cab driver was so excited, he said ‘the German police are doing the motorway, they are the best, you watch them’, and they were just right up to cars – vans in particular, they were very worried about vans, they would bang on the side of them…. so, security is always massive at these Games.

“I don’t think America really needed to send their own. I don’t understand why they did. I don’t think the rest of the world understands either, and I know from the Europeans, they were like ‘hey, we have it covered, we are fine’.”

Sports not politics

He says the focus should be on the athletes and their performances, not the politics.

This year’s Games, he says, will be spread across two distinct hosts: the fashion capital of Milan and the dramatic peaks of Cortina d’Ampezzo in the Italian Dolomites. It will be “visually stunning”.

For New Zealand athletes the road to get there is always longer than most – geographically, financially, and often psychologically.

Rarere says competing isn’t just about medals. It’s about legitimacy – proving New Zealand belongs in winter sports’ biggest arena.

“From a New Zealand point of view, these games are all about where we stand in the world now, in these sports, because we have made massive strides.”

He says, “Possibly, we have three medals coming our way, which will be massive.”

“That’s if [alpine skier] Alice Robinson can recapture her form, if [free ski halfpipe athlete] Ben Harrington can keep his as well, and if [women’s snowboard slopestyle and Big Air athlete] Zoi Sadowski-Synnott can keep hers as well, I think those are the three medallists.”

It should be noted that Kiwi gold medal Olympian Nico Porteous won’t compete at the Games; he walked away from competitive free skiing last year, retiring at age 23.

Rarere did point out that the difference between winning an Olympic medal in ski jumping or being disqualified this year could come down to a tiny piece of fabric.

In an unusual cheating scandal, it’s been discovered that the cold temperature on the ski jump ramp has an indirect effect on aerodynamics.

Dubbed the “crotch-enlarging scandal” or even “Penisgate”, the controversy centres on Norwegian team officials who were caught illegally modifying athletes’ suits to gain an aerodynamic edge, specifically by enlarging the crotch area for extra lift and distance.

“They can jump an extra five to six metres… that’s the difference.”

Regulators have now added new measures to ensure all competitors play by the same rules after the scandal rocked the sport.

All up, about 2800 of the world’s best athletes will participate in the 2026 Winter Games, which run until February 22.

The Winter Paralympic Games will be from March 6-15.

Ski mountaineering will make its Olympic debut, featuring three events – men’s and women’s sprints, and a mixed relay.

Skeleton will also feature a mixed team event for the first time in the Games’ history, while separate men’s and women’s doubles events will be held in luge, replacing the open doubles event.

The alpine skiing mixed team parallel event has been removed, with the men and women set to compete at separate resorts.

But the question hanging over these Games isn’t just who will win.

It’s whether the Olympics can still be a place where the hardest part of the journey begins at the start gate – not at passport control.

Check out how to listen to and follow The Detail here.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/05/snow-speed-and-surveillance-at-the-winter-olympics/

Leaders encourage Māori to vote in upcoming election as Waitangi draws near

Source: Radio New Zealand

A pōwhiri for Te Arikinui Kuiini nga wai hono i te po and the Kiingitanga at Waitangi. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

With the immenent arrival of government politicians at Waitangi, Māori leaders are encouraging Māori to register and vote in the upcoming election.

Politicians from all parties, including Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, will be welcomed to the Waitangi Treaty Grounds around 11am on Thursday.

Waikato-Tainui executive chair and Iwi Chairs Forum member Tukoroirangi Morgan said Māori needed to be participants in democracy rather than bystanders.

“There 255,000 thousand people, registered voters who are aged between 30 and 18, and they are ready to go. But there are also thousands and thousands of our young ones who haven’t registered and the onus is on our people and our leaders to get out and their grandchildren and our communities, vote.”

Politicians from all parties will be welcomed to the Waitangi Treaty Grounds around 11am on Thursday. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

The National Iwi Chairs Forum met with the prime minister on Wednesday, and with the leader of the opposition, Chris Hipkins, the day before that.

Luxon called the talks with the forum “positive and constructive”.

Morgan said the message to the prime minister was that treaty settlements are sacrosanct and should not be meddled with.

“Even despite the fact that there are changes to the RMA (Resource Management Act) and other pieces of legislation you cannot compromise or minimise treaty settlements they are sacrosanct.

“And even the pathway to those who haven’t settled should also be protected.”

Te Arikinui Kuiini nga wai hono i te po (C) and the Kiingitanga are welcomed at Waitangi. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

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Milano Cortina Winter Olympics – what you need to know

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ Winter Olympic selections Alice Robinson, Zoi Sadowski-Synnott, Luca Harrington, Fin Melville Ives, Cam Melville Ives, Ben Barclay and Ruby Star Andrews. James Allan/Photosport

2026 Winter Olympics

6-22 February

Milano and Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy

Live blog updates on RNZ Sport

History

The inaugural Olympic Games were created by Frenchman Baron Pierre de Coubertin in 1894, inspired by the ancient Greek Olympics held at Olympia.

The first summer games were held at Athens 1896 and the winter version was introduced at Chamonix 1924. The five original sports consisted of bobsleigh, curling, ice hockey, Nordic skiing (military patrol, cross-country skiing, Nordic combined and ski jumping) and skating (figure and speed).

Like the Summer Olympics, the winter event is held every four years and, until 1992, they held in the same year. In 1994, the Winter Olympics skipped out of sequence and are now held between summer games.

Historically, Norway has been the most successful nation in terms of medals, with 148 gold, 134 silver and 123 bronze, 405 in total, with United States next (114 gold/330 total) and Germany (105 gold/267 total).

‘Miracle on Ice’

Perhaps the most famous Winter Olympics event was the men’s ice hockey clash between USA and Soviet Union at Lake Placid 1980.

Played against a political backdrop of the long-running Cold War and the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which would later spark a boycott of the summer games at Moscow, this clash between the hardened Soviet pros and US amateurs would become the subject of two documentaries and two movies.

US President Donald Trump hosts the 1980 USA ice hockey team at the Oval Office. ANNA MONEYMAKER/AFP

The Soviet Union had won five of the previous six gold medals and were favourites to win again, with a team consisting of essentially fulltime athletes at a time when the Olympics still had an amateur-only policy.

They also beat the Americans 10-3 in an exhibition game in the lead-up to the Olympics, but during the medal rounds at Lake Placid, USA turned the tables for a 4-3 victory. Under the round-robin format, the home team still needed a win over Finland to secure gold and trailled 2-1 after two of the three periods.

They scored three unanswered goals in the final period to win, while the Soviets overwhelmed Sweden 9-2 for silver.

Winter Kiwis

Assembling a team for the Winter Games has historically been difficult for a nation better know for its maritime legacy. The Games have never been staged in the southern hemisphere, which means NZ athletes have also had to compete out of season.

New Zealand first appeared at Oslo 1952 – the sixth Winter Olympics – where we were represented by alpine skiers Herbert Franklin, Bill Hunt and Annette Johnson.

Annelise Coberger at the Albertville 1992 Winter Olympics. Photosport

Teams were made up exclusively of skiers until Calgary 1988, when New Zealand first fielded teams in the two-man and four-man bobsleigh.

Skier Annelise Coberger claimed our first medal, when she finished second in the women’s slalom at Albertville 1992, and she would remain our only medallist for quarter of a century, until snowboarder Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (women’s big air) and freestyle skier Nico Porteous (men’s halfpipe) won bronze on the same day at Pyeongchang 2018.

At 16 years 353 days, Sadowski-Synnott became New Zealand’s youngest-ever Olympic medallist, eclipsing swimmer Danyon Loader (17 years 100 days), but she later lost that distinction to Porteous (16 years 91 days).

Both returned four years later at Beijing to win gold – Sadowski-Synnott in slopestyle and Porteous in halfpipe, while ZSS also took silver in big air.

New Zealand now has two Winter Olympic golds, two silver and two bronze.

Milano Cortina 2026

The joint Italian bid was awarded hosting rights, beating out another joint proposal by Stockholm and Are (Sweden) in 2019.

It will become the first Winter Olympics hosting by two cities, but in reality, events will be spread over a variety of venues, with Milan staging ice events, and the others in clusters around Cortina, and the Valtellina and Fiemme valleys.

Cortina d’Ampezzo previously hosted the 1956 Games. Italy has now hosted three Winter Olympics, as well as the 1960 Rome summer games.

Athletes celebrate their arrival at the games village at Cortina d’Ampezzo. KOJI ITO/AFP

Events

The 2026 Winter Olympics will be contested across 16 sports and 116 medal events.

The new sport is ski mountaineering, contested in men’s and women’s sprint, and a mixed relay.

New Zealand will only be represented in three sports – snowboarding, freestyle skiing and alpine skiing.

Canadian bobsleigh team in action at Pyeongchang 2018. Tobias Hase

Alpine skiing, biathlon, bobsleigh, cross-country skiing, curling, figure skating, freestyle skiing, ice hockey, luge, Nordic combined, short-track speed skating, skeleton, ski jumping, ski mountaineering, snowboarding, speed skating

NZ team schedule

Friday, 6 February

7.30am

Men’s big air snowboard qualifying – Lyon Farrell, Rocco Jamieson, Dane Menzie

Saturday, 7 February

10.30pm

Women’s slopestyle freestyle skiing qualifying – Ruby Star Andrews, Sylvia Trotter

Sunday, 8 February

2am

Men’s slopestyle freestyle skiing qualifying – Lucas Ball, Ben Barclay, Luca Harrington

7.30am

Men’s big air snowboard final

11.30pm

Women’s downhill skiing final – Alice Robinson

Monday, 9 February

8.30am

Women’s big air snowboard qualifying – Lucia Georgalli, Zoi Sadowski-Synnott

Lucia Georgalli in action at the 2023 world junior snowboard championships. Iain McGregor/Photosport

Tuesday, 10 February

12.30am

Women’s slopestyle freestyle skiing final

7.30am

Women’s big air snowboard final

Wednesday, 11 February

12.30am

Men’s slopestyle freestyle skiing final

Thursday, 12 February

7.30am

Men’s halfpipe snowboard qualifiers – Campbell Melville Ives

11.30pm

Women’s Super-G final – Alice Robinson

Saturday, 14 February

7.30am

Men’s halfpipe snowboard final

Sunday, 15 February

7.30am

Women’s big air freestyle skiing qualifying – Ruby Star Andrews, Sylvia Trotter

10pm

Women’s giant slalom final – Alice Robinson

Monday, 16 February

7.30am

Men’s big air freestyle skiing qualifying – Lucas Ball, Ben Barclay, Luca Harrington

10.30pm

Women’s slopestyle snowboard qualifying – Lucia Georgalli, Zoi Sadowski-Synnott

Ben Barclay in action at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics. Simon Bruty/OIS

Tuesday, 17 February

2am

Men’s slopestyle snowboard qualifying – Lyon Farrell, Rocco Jamieson, Dane Menzie

7.30am

Women’s big air freestyle skiing final

Wednesday, 18 February

1am

Women’s slopestyle snowboard final

7.30am

Men’s big air freestyle skiing final

Thursday, 19 February

12.30am

Men’s slopestyle snowboard final

10.30pm

Men’s halfpipe freestyle skiing qualifying – Luke Harold, Ben Harrington, Finley Melville Ives, Gustav Lagnavsky

Friday, 20 February

7.30am

Women’s halfpipe freestyle skiing qualifying – Mischa Thomas

Saturday, 21 February

7.30am

Men’s halfpipe freestyle skiing final

Sunday, 22 February

7.30am

Women’s halfpipe freestyle skiing final

Kiwi medal hopes

Zoi Sadowski-Synnott enters these games as reigning champion in slopestyle and a big air medallist at the last two Winter Olympics.

She took some time off in 2024, but returned last year to win her third world crown and fifth X Games title at slopestyle, and tuned up for the Olympics with second at the X Games last month.

Zoi Sadowski-Synnott celebrates her slopestyle gold medal at Beijing 2022. AFP

Despite Porteous’ retirement from competition, New Zealand still has a freestyle skiing halfpipe medal contender in Finley Melville Ives, who won the world championship at Engadin last year and underscored his form with X Games gold last month.

He also currently leads the FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup halfpipe standings with victories at Secret Garden in December and Aspen in January.

Big air exponent Luca Harrington is another worth watching in freestyle skiing, with three podium finishes in as many events on the World Cup. He briefly led the standings after finishing second at Beijing in December, but now trails American Troy Podmilsak on a countback.

He is also reigning world champion.

Alice Robinson in World Cup skiing at St Moritz. FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP

Alpine skier Alice Robinson has also been in hot form on the World Cup circuit, with three wins and two other podiums across giant slalom and super-giant slalom. She currently sits second on the super-G rankings and fourth on overall prizemoney for the season.

Robinson finished second in giant slalom at last year’s world championships.

Event descriptions

Alpine skiing – the traditional form of skiing and one of the original Winter Olympics sports. Contested over downhill, slalom, giant slalom and super-giant slalom (Super-G).

Downhill is the fastest of the disciplines, reaching speeds of up to 130km/h, as athletes assume aerodynamic positions for maximum velocity.

Slalom involves skiing between poles or gates, which are spaced closer than the other alpine events, requiring tighter turns. Men traditionally negotiate 55-75 gates, women 40-60.

Giant slalom has poles set wider apart and Super-G is wider still, although it is regarded as a speed event, as opposed to slalom and giant slalom, which are more technical.

Super-G and downhill competition consists of just one run each, while slalom and giant slalom are contested over two runs for a combined time.

Snowboarding – contested across slopestyle, big air, halfpipe, parallel slalom and snowboard cross, although the Kiwis are only entered in the first three.

Slopestyle sees athletes travel down a course of obstacles, including rails, jumps and other features, with points awarded for amplitude, originality and qualify of tricks.

Big air is an extreme version of slopestyle, with bigger jumps and more hangtime to perform tricks, but bigger landings.

Luca Harrington competes in the freestyle skiing big air final at the Beijing World Cup. JU HUANZONG / AFP

As the name suggests, halfpipe is contested on a course with steep curved walls, with athletes using the walls to gain height and perform tricks.

Big air consists of three runs, with the best two counting towards final placings. Halfpipe also has three runs, but only the best counts, as with slopestyle.

Freestyle skiing – contested over aerials, moguls, cross, halfpipe, slopestyle and big air, although New Zealand only has entries in halfpipe, slopestyle and big air. Basically the same format as snowboarding.

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Super Rugby Pacific preview: Highlanders

Source: Radio New Zealand

Super Rugby Pacific is back after a real return to form last year, with the competition kicking off in Dunedin on 13 February. As usual, each team has gone through an eventful off season, so today we’re checking in on the Highlanders.

Overview

Jamie Joseph Coach of the Highlanders © Photosport Ltd 2025 www.photosport.nz

The Highlanders certainly started last season well, winning two out of their first three games, but then fell off a cliff and only managed one more victory in the next 10. That meant they finished outside the playoffs in a very disappointing 10th spot. Right now the most pressing concern is if they’ll have a coach for much longer, with Jamie Joseph now strongly linked to the vacant All Blacks job.

The Good

Fabian Holland of New Zealand Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

There’s certainly enough talent in this side to trouble the other teams with the likes of Finn Hurley, Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens and Caleb Tangitau, while Fabian Holland now brings his experience as an All Black back to pass on to fresh players.

Once again, they’ve gone outside the box with recruitment, bringing in Pumas hard man Tomas Lavanini and All Blacks Sevens rep Andrew Knewstubb, while Stanley Solomon has massive potential after having two seasons in the NZ Under 20s.

The Bad

Tamaiti Williams scores the winning try during the Crusaders v Highlanders, Super Rugby Pacific match, Apollo Projects Stadium, Christchurch. Joseph Johnson/ActionPress

The Highlanders once again will be praying for no serious injuries as their depth will be ruthlessly exposed. They’ve already suffered one major blow, losing halfback Dylan Pledger for the season, also like Moana Pasifika they need results to shed the tag of simply being a place for players to sign before they move on to bigger and better things.

That may well be the case for Joseph soon though, which will leave the Highlanders with their second in-season coaching change in five years.

Big boots to fill

Folau Fakatava on attack against the Brumbies in round four of Super Rugby Pacific at Forsyth Barr Stadium in Dunedin. Photosport

Folau Fakatava was probably thinking he’d be in a tight race with Pledger for the starting halfback spot, now he’s facing the possibility of having to do it all himself. With Sam Gilbert gone, Fakatava is now easily the most experienced player in the backline, so plenty will be riding on him to be the general.

What makes Highlanders fans different

Highlanders v Crusaders, round 12 of the Super Rugby Pacific competition at Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin. Michael Thomas

They’re mostly students, which gives Forsyth Barr Stadium the most unique atmosphere when they’re there and a very different one when they go home for the holidays. ‘The Zoo’ is the only place where the music keeps going throughout the game, and while a lot of the track choices seem pretty old fashioned, it seems to be the most direct connection rugby has with a Gen Z fanbase right now.

Big games

They have the Crusaders twice in the first five rounds, so the Highlanders can gain some serious confidence if they can jag a win in one of them. Three out of the last five weeks should be targeted as wins against Moana, the Drua and the Waratahs, before a tough last couple against the Chiefs and Hurricanes.

Highlanders 2026 squad

Props: Angus Ta’avao, Daniel Lienert-Brown, Ethan de Groot, Josh Bartlett, Saula Ma’u, Sosefo Kautai

Hookers: Henry Bell, Jack Taylor, Soane Vikena

Locks: Fabian Holland, Mitch Dunshea, Tai Cribb, Tomas Lavanini, Will Stodart

Loose forwards: Hugh Renton, Nikora Broughton, Oliver Haig, Sean Withy, Te Kamaka Howden, Veveni Lasaqa

Halfbacks: Adam Lennox, Folau Fakatava

First fives: Andrew Knewstubb, Cameron Millar, Taine Robinson

Midfield: Jake Te Hiwi, Josh Whaanga, Reesjan Pasitoa, Tanielu Tele’a, Timoci Tavatavanawai

Outside backs: Caleb Tangitau, Finn Hurley, Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens, Jona Nareki, Jonah Lowe, Stanley Solomon, Xavier Tito-Harris

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Rugby: Wallaby weighs in on World Cup opener

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wallabies fullback Tom Wright said the decision was always going to divide opinion. PHOTOSPORT

The news that the Wallabies will be kicking off the World Cup against tournament newcomers Hong Kong China was met with a collective groan across the rugby world.

While the team’s inclusion marks a significant expansion of the sport as just the second Asian country to appear, fans couldn’t help but feel an opportunity had been missed.

From a showpiece perspective, a blockbuster match-up between two of the world’s most storied rugby rivals appeared a gimme.

Alas, organisers have opted to save the All Blacks vs Australia clash for week two in Sydney.

Wallabies fullback Tom Wright said the decision was always going to divide opinion.

“Oh, it’s hard, right? Do they want to put the fireworks at the start and then maybe it’s lesser spectacle for the next two? I don’t know what their thinking was. We all know that we were going to be playing those three sides anyway, so when we play them you could make a case for it being better, worse or the same, whatever order it ended up being in.”

The Brumbies flyer did feel for the Western Australian supporters.

“What I do know is a lot of friends and family that get to see the Wallabies versus All Blacks game in Sydney were pretty happy. But all the people that live in Perth that wanted to see that first game as well will also be disappointed. You can never really appease everyone.”

Wright also weighed in on the drama surrounding Scott Robertson’s sacking as All Black coach.

“You’ve given the word drama to me, it’s part of the game, right? I’ve had less than a handful of interactions with Scott as a coach and as a man. Shared a really nice conversation with him last year and he was lovely to me, gave me his time. He’s not the first coach to go, and I’m assuming he won’t be the last coach to go. But sad to see him go after a short stint, he’s a good man.”

Though still a long way out, Wright felt Australia would be competitive on home soil as they looked to lift their first World Cup since 1999.

“It’s not long ago it feels like the Lions tour was upon us and that came and went pretty quickly after such a big build-up, the atmosphere and it lived up to every sort of hype and expectation that I had for it. The experience is something I’ll never forget and now the sort of attention turns to Super Rugby and laying a foundation into the World Cup.”

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Coalition and opposition MPs face Waitangi crowds

Source: Radio New Zealand

A pōwhiri for Te Arikinui Kuiini nga wai hono i te po and the Kiingitanga at Waitangi. Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Coalition and opposition MPs will face the Waitangi crowds on Thursday morning, making their election year pitch after being officially welcomed to the Treaty Grounds.

The past few years at Waitangi have delivered political fireworks and MPs bracing for, if not necessarily expecting, a reprise when politicians are welcomed with a pōwhiri from about 11am.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, who was absent from the Treaty Grounds last year, promised to bring a message of unity.

After meeting with Māori leaders at the Iwi Chairs Forum on Wednesday, he said they were “aligned” on issues like localism, devolution and lifting Māori outcomes in health, education and law and order.

“Got a lot of work to do, but we’re making some good progress on a number of areas we want to continue to accelerate.”

PM Christopher Luxon (C), with Finance Minister Nicola Willis (L) and Māori Crown Relations Minister Tama Potaka (R) at Waitangi. Screengrab

While there may be tensions in Crown-Māori relations, he said he was focused on finding and building on common ground.

He rejected Labour leader Chris Hipkins’ claims the government was anti-Treaty and therefore anti-Māori.

Hipkins, who committed to rolling back the Regulatory Standards Bill and ending the review of Treaty clauses, argued the government did not understand the consequences of its actions.

“They’re actually opening up a whole lot of areas that previously had been settled, and they’re opening up the Crown to a whole lot of additional potential legal challenges in doing so, and they’re just not being upfront with people about that.”

He said his speech at Waitangi would be future-focused.

“Creating a New Zealand where everybody can thrive, where we focus on bringing people together to address the challenges that face our country. I’ll be talking a bit about the fact I want to create a New Zealand where young people want to stay and create their futures.”

Green co-leader Marama Davidson – who stood alongside Hipkins in a show of unity on Tuesday – said the party was in Waitangi to make clear that Te Tiriti o Waitangi was an important part of creating an Aotearoa that people deserved.

“Te Tiriti is unity. I’ve been up here for the week now and even already we can see the hou kainga, the hosts here, they’re just about looking after people, keeping people safe, hoping that people have a good time, enjoy themselves – and that this is what Te Tiriti is all about.

“We’ve seen that come through … more and more people are showing us the leadership on the ground. It’s time for politicians to act.”

Hipkins expected the coalition parties to be in for a rough ride, saying New Zealand First deputy Shane Jones’ questioning of the reasons behind senior MP Peeni Henare’s resignation was an attempt to distract from 24 hours that were “probably not going to turn out very well for them”.

Jones said he would give as good as he got.

“If anyone thinks they’re going to serve invective up to the Matua and not get return fire, turn your cameras on tomorrow,” he said.

“There’s quite a lot of volatility happening in Māori politics at the moment, but as I said in my speech, we’re here to affirm. The governor said he iwi tahi tātou, together we are one people … sadly the day is blighted by performative antics year after year, but this year we’re going to make sure that Kiwis bear in mind this is our national day.”

It’s a safe bet ACT leader David Seymour will again provoke a reaction. He told RNZ he was expecting the usual spectrum of views.

“There’ll be those who don’t want to engage and are quite rude, there’ll be those who are very grateful that the ACT party’s message and voice is included in the day,” he said.

His message would be that ACT believed in an entitlement to equal rights and dignity “regardless of when our ancestors settled here”, but deflected when asked if the Treaty Principles Bill’s demise would dampen the rhetoric.

“I suspect that the temperature will drop a notch because Te Pāti Māori have turned on each other rather than the rest of New Zealand.

“There’ll be the usual angry people. What I always say to people about Waitangi is, if you’ve spent time there, don’t just go by the few seconds that make the six o’clock news.”

How Te Pati Māori is received given its months of internal turmoil will be keenly observed by all sides of politics.

A court case to resolve a dispute between the leadership and ousted MP Mariameno Kapa-Kingi is ongoing.

Kapa-Kingi will be present for the pōwhiri.

Te Pāti Māori will be present too. Its co-leaders did not respond to requests for comment.

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Tauranga mayor says it’s unlikely Mt Maunganui landslide area will remain a campsite

Source: Radio New Zealand

The cordon in Mount Maunganui following the deadly landslide is covered in tributes for the people who lost their lives. RNZ / Lauren Crimp

The Tauranga mayor said any decisions on the land immediately surrounding the fatal Mount Maunganui landslide will be months away, but feels it is unlikely that the area will remain a campsite in the future.

Six people died after a section of the maunga collapsed into a campground during the extreme weather event two weeks ago.

On Wednesday, Mayor Mahé Drysdale announced that Tauranga is moving to a “transition period” for a month, focusing on assessing damage and making plans for what reopening Mauao looks like.

The mayor said any decisions on the future of the land surrounding the landslide will require conversations with iwi, communities, and people closely affected by the tragedy.

“We’ve got a number of conversations to have with the families of those that lost loved ones, because we also want to be respectful and understand what they’d like to see,

“I think I can probably confidently say we don’t have a campground where the slip happened, we got to make some decisions around what we do with that land and how we remember this very tragic event,” he said.

Access to Mauao is restricted, and cordons remain along parts of Marine Parade and Adams Avenue, as geotechnical experts assess conditions.

Drysdale said the current focus is to mitigate risks around the Mount Maunganui landslip, so that businesses nearby can open before the Waitangi weekend.

Tauranga Mayor Mahé Drysdale. Calvin Samuel / RNZ

He said three businesses remain closed on Adams Avenue, but he’s hopeful that they can safely open by Friday.

Drysdale said shipping containers have been put in as a precaution, and more work will be done on Thursday to stabilise the land.

“By putting these mitigations in place, and this is always subject to geotechnical advice, we’re confident that we can make it safe enough that we’re happy to open that,” he said.

Drysdale said businesses have had a hard time since the tragedy, and he hopes that visitors can still come and support them during the Waitangi weekend.

“We hope that people still come down to the area and support these businesses, this was a natural disaster and no doing of themselves, but they have been caught in the crossfire, so we’re doing what we can to support them,” he said.

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‘Pretty gross’: Locals shocked as raw sewage flows into Wellington sea

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington’s Moa Point wastewater treatment plant has been shut down and staff evacuated from the site, after an equipment failure flooded multiple floors. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Some locals have described a Wellington sewage plant shutdown as gross, sad and unacceptable.

An average of around 70 million litres of untreated wastewater had been pouring into the capital’s South Coast since Wednesday morning.

The Moa Point plant’s lower floors had been completely flooded when sewage backed up in the 1.8km outfall pipe, which normally sent treated wastewater into the Cook Strait.

Wellington Water chief executive Pat Dougherty said it was critical the company understood why the pipe failed.

RNZ went out to Wellington’s South Coast on Wednesday evening.

Lyall Bay on a bright summer evening would normally have been humming with surfers out in the waves and locals on their post-work walks.

But instead, the area was deserted – the only people there were Wellington Water staff members in large fluro coats warning people about the sewage.

RNZ spoke to locals from the safety of concrete paths and carparks.

Angus was planning to go down to the water for a surf, but decided against it after looking at the water.

“I didn’t want to go there because it looked like I don’t know… toilet paper or jellyfish, so I was like I don’t really want to go in on either of those.”

Stacey said she came down to the beach to enjoy the view and that the plant breakdown was “pretty shocking” and “pretty gross”.

She held concerns about how Wellington Water managed the pipes and plants.

“Where I live Ngaio there’s water out quite a lot, so this is just sort of on top of ongoing issues that they seem to have with the infrastructure.”

Kristina said the news was horrible.

“Really unacceptable, this is a beach where you might see a lot of surfers and they are all in the water all year around,” she said.

“I think it is pretty toxic.”

Leila Martley told RNZ it was a “hugely sad” situation.

“I really feel for Wellington Water.”

She also felt for Tiaki Wai – the new organisation set to take over Wellington, the Hutt Valley and Porirua’s water operations.

“It is just an awful thing to set off with.”

Further to the east of the coast at Tarakena Bay Alishba said she was about to go swimming but was warned by a local not to get in the water.

“It is pretty gross; I don’t know how that would happen though.”

A Rahui was in place throughout the South Coast, with people told not to gather food and to keep themselves and their dogs out of the water.

Wellington Water said it was taking water samples from a wide area and was expected to provide an update later on Thursday.

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Couple sentenced in accidental bank transfer trial

Source: Radio New Zealand

Alexander and Senia Filipo sit in the dock at Auckland District Court on Tuesday. RNZ / Liu Chen

An Auckland couple who accidentally received $158,000 in a bank transfer error, spending most of the money within days, have each been sentenced to six months of community detention.

Senia Filipo, 39, and her 37-year-old husband, Alexander, were sentenced at the Auckland District Court on Tuesday.

Mistaken transfer

In January 2024, Mt Roskill pensioner Sit Bong (Andrew) Che, now 79, tried to transfer his life savings from Barclays Bank in the United Kingdom to his Westpac account in New Zealand.

However, Che missed a digit when entering his account details due to what he claimed was a “sticky keyboard” and, following the bank’s own protocols, Westpac added a zero to the suffix, which ended up sending the money to Senia Filipo’s account.

Senia received the money a couple of weeks later, withdrawing $3000 from two ATMs, paying off a loan worth about $18,694 and making two large transfers to her husband’s Westpac account on the same day, according to the summary of facts.

Two days later, she bought a car for $49,000, and then withdrew a total of $9000 on five other occasions, primarily using the money at food and retail stores.

In March, Senia made her last large purchase of $1500 at Mag and Tyre before the acquired funds had been used.

She was charged with intending to deprive Che of $158,643.88 after obtaining control over the money, irrespective of how it was obtained.

Sit Bong (Andrew) Che outside Auckland District Court in 2025. RNZ / Liu Chen

Senia told Alexander she had unexpectedly received a large sum of money in her account.

Alexander then received two payments from Senia totaling $59,000, and another $5000 on a later date.

He was charged with having been reckless as to whether the money transferred to him had been obtained by an imprisonable offence.

The couple’s charges each carried a maximum penalty of seven years in prison, with both pleading guilty.

Che only discovered that he had not received the funds in March, notifying Westpac.

Following an investigation, the bank recovered a little over $28,000.

Che made several efforts to get his money back, contacting police, the banks in New Zealand and the UK as well as the banking ombudsmen in both jurisdictions, receiving a refund in full by Barclays in May last year.

Gambling windfall implausible

Senia and Alexander Filipo claimed they thought the money was winnings from an online casino game.

However, Judge Simon Lance found the explanation implausible.

The couple failed to make further enquiries into the nature of the funds, even though Senia’s bank statement listed Barclays as the sender instead of a casino, Lance said.

The judge also noted discrepancies in the couple’s accounts, questioning why any winnings would be paid to Senia if Alexander was the person who gambled.

He also considered the way in which the large amount of money was spent.

“They didn’t think to themselves that this can’t be right. They just went and spent it,” Judge Lance said. “[Claiming the money was a] windfall from online gambling lacks plausibility.

“It makes it hard for me to accept that the couple honestly thought the money was theirs and now they have pleaded guilty.”

The couple both applied for discharge without conviction and had sought permanent name suppression.

Acknowledging the couple did not hold any previous convictions, accepting their remorse as genuine and recognising their need to support five young children, Judge Lance sentenced each of them to a six-month community detention.

The judge refused to grant permanent name suppression as he didn’t feel the threshold for extreme hardship had been met.

In a victim impact statement, Che said he had “suffered significant financial, physical and emotional hardship over approximately 18 months”.

“The funds taken represented my retirement savings,” Che said. “During this period, I experienced severe stress, difficulty sleeping and eating, and lost over 10kg in weight.”

Che said he had been unable to make a substantial financial contribution to his son’s wedding and had become socially withdrawn.

“Justice [has] been served,” he said.

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Mt Eden prison inmate dies after court appearance

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mt Eden prison. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

An inmate has died after being transported to Mt Eden prison on his way back from court.

Corrections acting deputy commissioner men’s prisons David Pattinson confirmed in a statement to RNZ that a man had died after being transported to the prison in a First Security escort vehicle about 3pm on Wednesday.

“The court escort had returned to Mt Eden Corrections Facility after taking the prisoner to court. Upon opening the prisoner’s cell, staff have found the prisoner unresponsive. Our staff made every effort to save him, however they were unable to revive him.

“The prisoner was secured in his own cell within the van. There are no indications the death is suspicious.”

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

Pattinson said Corrections’ thoughts were with those impacted by the man’s death.

“Staff and prisoners are being provided with support, including access to Chaplains and cultural support where requested.”

Police had been notified, and had contacted the man’s next of kin.

“All deaths in custody are referred to the Coroner for investigation and determination of cause of death.

“An investigation by the independent Corrections Inspectorate will also be carried out.”

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Man charged with murder of Jillian Clark in Clutha

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

A man has been charged with murder after the death of a woman in Clutha on 23 January.

Emergency services were called to Adams Flats Road in Crichton around 6.10pm.

A woman was found deceased, and a second person was critically injured.

Police said a man has been arrested and charged with the murder after a bedside hearing on Wednesday.

“We understand this is a distressing event for the small community,” detective senior sergeant Nik Leigh said.

“Police would like to reassure residents that officers are not searching for any other people in relation to the matter.”

Friends and co-workers named the murdered woman as Jillian Clark, who worked at Clutha Vets in Milton.

John Smart said he worked with Clark for about 30 years at different branches of the veterinarian practice. He said Clark had a keen interest in sheep health and production.

“She was a highly respected vet, it’s a hell of a shock,” he said.

The tight-knit Clutha Vets team would be heartbroken, as would farmers from Taieri to Milton, Smart said.

“I know the whole community down there will be absolutely in mourning for the tragedy of losing Jillian. She was just a great lady, a great community member, and supported the farmers in particular.”

A death notice described Clark as a much-loved family member who was tragically taken.

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People collect frozen iguanas as US cold snap continues to bite

Source: Radio New Zealand

Cold-stunned as well as dead green iguanas lie in the back of a pickup truck after being collected by Redline Iguana Removal services during a cold spell on 2 February 2026, in Hollywood, Florida. AFP/JOE RAEDLE

In the US, a winter cold snap blanketing the country has created a new hobby in the usually tropical state of Florida – people there are collecting thousands of frozen iguanas.

Green iguanas were suddenly falling from trees into back gardens, becoming accidental dog toys, freaky fascinations and ice packs.

The reptiles were what locals described as “cold stunned”, not dead.

Iguanas are ectotherms, meaning their internal body temperature is affected by the weather outside.

Blake Wilkins, of Redline Iguana Removal, told the BBC the biggest issue had been the ferocious wind that amplified the cold.

“The ones that seemed to fare the best were that ones that were either in burrows, or under roofs or somehow shielded from the winds.”

Florida, which usually struggled to drop below 20 degrees, had been in single digits, effectively paralysing iguanas.

The reptiles were a pest in southern Florida, Wilkins told the BBC.

With no predators, their numbers had increased exponentially in the ten years he had been in the business.

“They’re able to reproduce extremely fast, they’re excellent diggers. They dig under sea walls causing issues,” he said.

“They get onto roofs, cause damage to them and everyone’s beautiful flowers and landscaping, so it’s a huge problem.”

Blake Wilkins and Andrew Baron, who are Redline Iguana Removal trappers, unload cold-stunned as well as dead green iguanas from the back of a pickup truck after they collected them during a cold spell on 2 February 2026, in Hollywood, Florida. AFP/JOE RAEDLE

One enterprising local took matters into his own hands, introducing lizard as a pizza topping at his restaurant.

A customer called the taste “unbelievable, it’s frog-like – hard to describe”, according to the BBC.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission would rather the picked-up iguanas were not made into a meal, but taken to collection points.

It had temporarily allowed people to pick them up without a permit, but warned people to wear protective clothing and secure iguanas in an “escape-proof cloth sack or bag”.

The Commission said members of the public could humanely kill green iguanas year-round on their property or with landowner permission.

Iguana trapper Ryan Izquierdo told the BBC he had never collected so many in a day before.

“We’ve been very careful storing and capturing the animals, ” he said.

“There are videos online of people being super disrespectful of iguanas, and although they’re invasive, they have a beating heart, so you have to respect them.”

Most of the iguanas handed over to authorities would be euthanised, but some of the frozen finds would be able to thaw out through live animal sales, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said.

But it warned the public against trying to adopt one themselves.

“Iguanas can recover from cold-stunning more quickly than you might expect and, once recovered, can act defensively, with long tails that whip and sharp teeth and claws,” its website said.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/people-collect-frozen-iguanas-as-us-cold-snap-continues-to-bite/

Sublime are coming to New Zealand for the first time

Source: Radio New Zealand

Californian ska-punk band Sublime have announced a New Zealand tour – a first for Aotearoa.

The band will kick off at Christchurch’s Wolfbrook Arena on 8 April, followed by Trusts Arena in Auckland on 10 April and finishing up at Wellington’s Brewtown on 11 April.

Formed in Long Beach, California, Sublime are one of the most influential ska-punk bands of the 1990s.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/sublime-are-coming-to-new-zealand-for-the-first-time/

Māori Queen pledges proceeds of Turangawaewae Regatta to weather-impacted communities

Source: Radio New Zealand

Layla Bailey-McDowell / RNZ

Te Arikinui Kuini Nga wai hono i te po, the Māori Queen, has pledged to give the proceeds of the annual Turangawaewae Regatta to Māori communities impacted by severe weather events.

Ngātiwai in the North, Tauranga Moana and Te Tai Rāwhiti will receive the proceeds from the annual event, which sees thousands descend on the bank of the river at Ngāruawahia every year.

Waikato-Tainui chair Tukoroirangi Morgan made the announcement on Wednesday afternoon, following a formal welcome onto the Waitangi Treaty Grounds.

Speaking to RNZ, Morgan said the regatta was a chance for the community to celebrate culture and enjoy each other’s company.

He said the century-old gathering would now be a chance to give some relief to those affected by recent flooding.

RNZ/Calvin Samuel

The announcement comes off the back of a visit by Te Arikinui to Ngāiotonga Marae, a marae belonging to Ngātiwai, whose rohe was ravaged by the weather.

Morgan said the visit was a first-hand look at the degree and the level of devastation in a tiny community tucked away on the coast.

“It’s really important that people hear the stories… the stories of rescue, of struggle. As a result of that, [Te Arikinui] was driven to make this gesture of financial support.”

“People have lost their homes, people have worried about the short-term and long-term future. The best way to help is to reach out, provide some relief and some form of support – that’s exactly what the Queen is doing.” he said.

Former NorthTec student, tutor and director Hūhana Lyndon – now a Green MP – called the Save NorthTec Hui on Friday amid concerns for the institute’s future. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Green MP and former Ngātiwai Trust Board chief executive Huhana Lyndon told RNZ her people were grateful for the manāki.

“That announcement took my breath away.”

Lyndon said there had been ongoing support from groups all over the country, and the Queen’s announcement “demonstrates the way that we come together in times of crisis.”

Welcoming Te Arikinui onto Ngāiotonga Marae left the local “starstruck”, she said.

“Our tamariki mokopuna were there, whānau came… for myself, I’m from that rohe as well. My kainga is there and our farm was heavily impacted by the storm.”

“We’ve got significant damage and many months of work to come. So it just lifts your spirits, having that attention.”

The Turangawaewae Regatta celebrations kick off on Saturday, 21 March on the riverbank at Turangawaewae Marae.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/maori-queen-pledges-proceeds-of-turangawaewae-regatta-to-weather-impacted-communities/

Man charged with murder of woman in Clutha

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

A man has been charged with murder after the death of a woman in Clutha on 23 January.

Emergency services were called to Adams Flats Road in Crichton around 6.10pm.

A woman was found deceased, and a second person was critically injured.

Police said a man has been arrested and charged with the murder after a bedside hearing on Wednesday.

“We understand this is a distressing event for the small community,” detective senior sergeant Nik Leigh said.

“Police would like to reassure residents that officers are not searching for any other people in relation to the matter.”

Friends and co-workers named the murdered woman as Jillian Clark, who worked at Clutha Vets in Milton.

John Smart said he worked with Clark for about 30 years at different branches of the veterinarian practice. He said Clark had a keen interest in sheep health and production.

“She was a highly respected vet, it’s a hell of a shock,” he said.

The tight-knit Clutha Vets team would be heartbroken, as would farmers from Taieri to Milton, Smart said.

“I know the whole community down there will be absolutely in mourning for the tragedy of losing Jillian. She was just a great lady, a great community member, and supported the farmers in particular.”

A death notice described Clark as a much-loved family member who was tragically taken.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/man-charged-with-murder-of-woman-in-clutha/

Historic Ōpiki Bridge’s future under cloud with more repairs needed

Source: Radio New Zealand

The bridge’s cabling failed and sagged into the river after strong winds on New Year’s Eve. Supplied / Horizons Regional Council

When strong New Year’s Eve winds broke the cabling on an historic bridge, its future came under a cloud.

Sitting above the flat lands surrounding State Highway 56 in southern Manawatū, the former Ōpiki toll bridge will now dramatically change shape, as this week its decaying cables come down.

This will leave only the landmark’s pylons still standing.

Time has taken its toll on a bridge that for nearly 50 years cost some loose change to cross – saving motorists a lengthy trip.

For the second time in just over two years, the ageing structure has sagged into the water below.

And this week regional council officials announced the fix – removing the cabling, meaning the old bridge becomes less recognisable.

No one’s crossed since shortly after it closed in 1969 and its decking was removed, but thousands of people drive past what remains every week.

Toll days recalled

Spanning the view from Clive Akers’ living room window, the concrete towers and cabling of the Ōpiki bridge dominate the skyline – it’s a view that’s about to change.

Originally build for the family flax business in 1918, that industry’s collapse meant it instead became a private toll bridge over the Manawatū River until its closure in 1969, when the current highway bridge was built.

“Oh yes, there was a toll keeper,” Akers said.

The position was similar to a lighthouse keeper, in that the worker would live onsite and almost always be on call.

The toll bridge linked Manawatū to Horowhenua until its closure in 1969. Supplied / Collections of Te Manawa Museums Trust, Palmerston North

This and other parts of the bridge’s history are detailed in the book Suspended Access, written by Akers’ mother Molly two decades ago.

Akers recalled how one toll keeper was rescued by boat when the surrounding area flooded. The area still floods regularly today, which often closes the highway.

The busiest days of the week were Saturdays, when there was horse racing on.

“I remember as a teenager, when [the toll keeper] had his day off and would go to town, myself and one of my brothers or sisters would go up there and be toll keepers for half a day,” Akers said.

“We were warned of a car coming – one side there was an air pipe. When the car tyre ran over it it rang a bell in the house.”

From the other side the toll keeper would hear a car rattle the bridge’s loose boards – because a suspension bridge moves, the wooden planks couldn’t be nailed down.

In later years it cost 10 cents a trip for vehicles under three tonnes.

At night there was a barrier arm to keep vehicles out – although if a motorist was insistent on getting through, the toll keeper could charge them triple, Akers said.

While locals were happy enough to contribute to the bridge’s upkeep in exchange for quicker trips between Palmerston North and Foxton, not everyone was as impressed.

“During the 1930s the minister of public works was horrified when he came through Ōpiki and he was charged a toll to cross this bridge.

“He said, ‘Nowhere in New Zealand should there be a toll bridge.’ He told the toll keeper, ‘I’m going to have a public bridge here in the next five years.’ That never happened.”

Instead, the arrangement of a private bridge spanning the river, with public roads either side, continued for three more decades.

Akers said he was relaxed about the cabling’s removal.

“Of course, there’s not so many people now who have actually got memories of going over the bridge.

“It closed in 1969. That’s over 50 years ago.”

Clive Akers’ family built the bridge for their flax business over 100 years ago. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

Tough breaks

One of the bridge’s cables, which are said to come from Waihi’s gold mines, failed in 2023 and fell into the river.

It was fixed the next year, paid for by Horizons Regional Council, which now owns the structure, but the same cable again broke on 31 December.

The bridge has a category 1 rating from Pouhere Taonga Heritage NZ and Historic Places Trust Manawatū Horowhenua chairwoman Cindy Lilburn said it was an icon.

It was significant as New Zealand’s first private toll bridge and, when built, the country’s longest suspension bridge – about 150 metres.

“It stands alone in what’s a very flat landscape and it has a certain sort of spookiness, which has been suggested for use in films, because it rises out of the mist in the morning.

“It is such a landmark.”

Lilburn said the trust had favoured a solution to ensure the bridge’s long-term survival.

“We’d like to at least have the opportunity to talk about a long-term plan.

“The reality is suspension bridges aren’t actually that difficult to build. It requires running cabling up and over, so there is the potential solution that you could put new cabling up and over and then clip the old cabling to that.”

But with the news this week that wouldn’t happen – at least any time soon – she said the trust was saddened.

This view has greeted State Highway 56 motorists for more than 55 years, but it will soon change. RNZ / Jimmy Ellingham

The cables had contributed visually to the bridge’s status as a landmark.

“There’s a certain degree of elegance we’ve now lost,” she said.

Council general manager catchment operations Dr Jon Roygard told RNZ last week that officials were working through options to fix the latest break, while also considering a long-term solution.

Until something was done, the broken cabling remained a hazard, he said.

“It’s a stretch of the river where people can use it for jet boating or that sort of thing. I don’t think it’s a highly used area.

“We have put signs up. We really recommend caution in that area. In fact, we’d rather people weren’t in there and operating around it.”

This week, Roygard confirmed that the cabling, which was in poor condition, was coming down.

“The other cable, while it has not fallen, is in similar condition to the one currently in the river. We will remove this cable at the same time to avoid the possibility of it also falling,” he said.

“Removing both cables at the same time also helps to bring the cost of the works down.

“Doing one cable now and the other at a later date is significantly more expensive than removing both at the same time.”

He acknowledged the bridge’s history, but said the regional council also had obligations for navigational safety in the Manawatū River and for the use of public money.

Sections of the cabling would be gifted to the Historic Places Trust and the Akers family, Roygard said.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/04/historic-opiki-bridges-future-under-cloud-with-more-repairs-needed/