Manhunt underway after firearms incident at Dunedin petrol station

Source: Radio New Zealand

A manhunt is underway after a firearms incident at a petrol station on Kaikorai Valley Road, in Dunedin.

Police say they are looking for a person who drove away from officers at the scene.

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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/2026/02/25/manhunt-underway-after-firearms-incident-at-dunedin-petrol-station/

New report exposes potential nitrate pollution in Southland

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Southland Regional Council report said in some places the nitrate concentrations in groundwater exceeded the New Zealand drinking water standard of 11.3 mg/L. 123RF

A report has exposed increasing nitrate contamination in Southland’s groundwater, sparking a call from Greenpeace for a nitrate emergency to be declared in the region.

The Southland Regional Council report said approximately 15,000 Southlanders could be drinking water polluted by nitrates.

It pointed to the intensification of dairy farming as a key cause of growing nitrate levels.

The report said nitrate concentrations in groundwater frequently exceeded 3.5 mg/L and in some places exceeded the New Zealand drinking water standard of 11.3 mg/L.

More than half of Southland’s domestic drinking water supply wells were estimated to have nitrate concentrations above 3.5 mg/L.

The Ministry of Health considers the current maximum acceptable value (MAV) for nitrate appropriate, although some public health experts argue the drinking water limit is too high and potentially puts people at risk of pre-term birth and bowel cancer.

Greenpeace freshwater campaigner Will Appelbe said the findings were alarming.

“It’s made clear what many of us have known for quite some time, that nitrate contamination is a real crisis in Southland and the main cause of that contamination is the intensive dairy industry,” he said.

“At a bare minimum it’s time that Environment Southland declared a nitrate emergency. Environment Canterbury declared one last year for very good reason, it’s clear that Southland has a drinking water crisis on its hands and it’s a result of nitrate contamination.”

The report said the region’s dairy boom had coincided with a decline in water quality and the region’s groundwater was vulnerable to contamination.

Between 1990 and 2022, Southland’s dairy herd increased by 1668 percent from 38,000 to 668,000 cows.

Otago University research fellow Marnie Prickett said Southland needed to reduce its dairy herd, and she was also calling for an independent inquiry into the regional council’s land-use rules.

“Southlanders need Environment Southland to chart a really robust path out of this. It can’t be tinkering around the edges it has to be driving confidently forward about what they’re going to do,” she said.

The report said 44 percent of domestic supply wells (612) and 45 percent of registered public drinking-water supplies (18) were located within areas classified as having “high vulnerability to nitrate contamination”.

“here may be approximately 1,530 people on private supplies and 13,632 on public groundwater supplies at risk of exposure to high concentrations of nitrate in drinking water,” the report said.

A graph from the Nitrogen Contamination in Southland Groundwater 2026. Supplied

Environment Southland general manager science Karen Wilson said although the report did not present new data, it brought together a range of information to give an integrated view of groundwater quality, nitrate sources, and health risks.

“This science formed the basis of the Southland Water and Land Plan, which was accepted by the Environment Court. The plan was the first step in responding to Southland’s groundwater nitrate challenges,” she said.

Federated Farmers Southland president Jason Herrick said declaring a nitrate emergency would be an overreaction and unhelpful.

“Nitrates aren’t a new issue for Southlanders at all, and it’s not just dairy, as a society and as a people we’re all responsible for our challenges that we had. This is a long-standing challenge that the community have been aware of and working on for quite some time now,” he said.

The report said 71 percent of groundwater sites had shown increasing nitrate contamination over the past two decades.

Hotspots included Balfour/Waimea Plains, Wendonside Terrace, Five Rivers/Castlerock, Edendale, Knapdale, Mabel Bush/Woodlands, Central Plains/Waimatuku, and Otahu Flat.

Southland Regional Council freshwater principal scientist Ewen Rodway said the council was working to deal with the problem.

“We’re continuing to monitor groundwater quality across the region, identifying these high-risk areas and using those to focus efforts such as focusing farm plans, and working with catchment groups to reduce nitrogen losses in those vulnerable areas,” he said.

Rodway said a decision about declaring a nitrate emergency sat with councillors.

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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/2026/02/25/new-report-exposes-potential-nitrate-pollution-in-southland/

Christchurch Hospital reaching capacity, Nurses’ Organisation says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Christchurch Hospital resourced bed occupancy reached 99 percent at one point on Wednesday. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The Nurses’ Organisation says Christchurch Hospital is reaching capacity, with some elective surgeries cancelled on Wednesday.

Allister Dietschin, a healthcare assistant and Nurses’ Organisation delegate, said the hospital was “heaving” and it had been “madness” for some days.

Earlier on Wednesday resourced bed occupancy in the hospital reached 99 percent. Dietschin said some elective surgeries had been cancelled as a result of the high demand.

He said as well as a high volume of patients, they were also short staffed.

Christchurch Hospital “often” had high volumes of patients and not enough staff. It was a problem the union had been asking for that to be addressed, Dietschin said.

He said the complexity of the patients they were dealing with was also through the roof.

“It’s diabolical really.”

Dietschin said traditionally they had less demand over summer, but that had not been the case this year. He was worried what that would mean for the colder months ahead.

“We’ve had huge demand over the summer period, and now with winter coming on, it’s just going to get even busier.”

Health New Zealand says 10 planned elective surgeries were deferred over the past two days at Christchurch Hospital due to a high number of acute trauma patients who required immediate care.

“As I am sure you will be able to appreciate, patients who require life saving care will always be prioritised,” a spokesperson said.

“We are not anticipating any further deferrals for elective surgery, and patients will be re-booked as soon as possible. To be clear this is unrelated to staffing or hospital capacity.”

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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/2026/02/25/christchurch-hospital-reaching-capacity-nurses-organisation-says/

Crown signs Deed of Settlement with Ngāti Ruapani

Source: New Zealand Government

The Crown and Ngāti Ruapani mai Waikaremoana have signed a Deed of Settlement at Tuai today, Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations Minister Paul Goldsmith says.  

“After six years of negotiations we have reached a long-awaited agreement that acknowledges the past and looks to a stronger future. 

“It is a privilege to sign the Deed and deliver the Crown apology to Ngāti Ruapani in their rohe. 

“A key feature of the settlement is the return of Crown-owned land into Te  Urewera, reflecting a central aspiration of Ngāti Ruapani to restore their connection with Te Urewera. 

“The settlement includes an agreed historical account and redress for historical breaches of the Treaty of Waitangi which caused significant harm to generations of Ngāti Ruapani.” 

The redress package includes: 

  • $24 million financial redress;
  • Undivided half share of Patunamu Forestry Ltd; 
  • 4 commercial redress and 2 cultural redress properties; and
  • Approximately 12,000 hectares of land added into Te Urewera. 

“While no settlement can fully remedy the injustices of the past, this agreement represents an important step forward. I hope it will support Ngāti Ruapani to achieve their cultural and economic aspirations for future generations to come.”

Ngāti Ruapani are based in and around south Waikaremoana. The signing of this deed concludes settlement negotiations in Te Urewera.  

A copy of the deed of settlement is available online at: Te Tari Whakatau – Ngāti Ruapani. 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/crown-signs-deed-of-settlement-with-ngati-ruapani/

Politics with Michelle Grattan: Geoffrey Watson calls for a royal commission on the CFMEU scandal

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

Victorians faces a state election late this year, with the Labor government pitching for a fourth term. A key issue will be the government’s failure to deal with thuggery and corruption in the building industry, centred on the Construction, Forestry and Maritime Employees Union (CFMEU).

After its hand was forced by years of reporting in The Age, in 2024 the federal government appointed an administrator, Mark Irving, to clean out the union’s construction sector.

An explosive report prepared for the administrator by Geoffrey Watson SC documented the union’s decline into lawlessness and how it exploited Victoria’s Big Build infrastructure program.

In a section of his report that Irving withheld, Watson – a specialist in anti-corruption law – conservatively estimated the CFMEU overcharged Victorian taxpayers A$15 billion. He concluded much of that money “poured directly into the hands of criminals and organised crime gangs”.

The Allan government has since reacted furiously to Watson’s criticism.

Watson joins us to talk about his investigation, the state government’s response – and what should happen next.

The need for a royal commission

Watson says the CFMEU hadn’t been equally corrupt across Australia, saying if you measured crime and corruption on a scale of zero to 10, “New South Wales is about a two or a three, Queensland’s about a five, and Victoria’s about 1,000. It’s insane.”

That’s why Watson is backing calls for a royal commission in Victoria into the scandal.

They do need something in the nature of a royal commission in Victoria. A body which is set up with the resources, with the powers to compel evidence, the powers of a royal commission. And then you can get to the bottom of it.

But Watson says that inquiry shouldn’t be done by the state’s Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission (IBAC).

IBAC’s already got enough on its plate. It’s looking at corruption across the state of Victoria, including local government and the like. Now I’ve worked within these organisations and I know how thin their resources are spread […] IBAC would then probably need to suspend all of its important work in all of the areas where it’s looking at public sector corruption.

So no – there should be a standalone inquiry, with the powers of a royal commission. And it should be properly designed and thought through to move rapidly, and to try and see what went wrong in Victoria, and why, and how you can prevent it occurring again.

Asked about what more the federal government could do, Watson says bringing back the Australian Building and Construction Commission (ABCC) wouldn’t help.

The CFMEU was getting further out of control during the era of the ABCC. I think the Fair Work Ombudsman is doing a very good job.

[…] Also, I can assure you, recent statistics have shown that since the administration [of the CFMEU] things have been brought under control. There have been very, very few disruptions on sites which have led to prosecutions. No, I wouldn’t bring back the ABCC. I think we’re better off without it.

Counting the cost of corruption

Watson explains how he came to his estimate that CFMEU corruption had cost Victorian taxpayers $15 billion.

I used conservative numbers. $100 billion is being spent on the civil work making up the “Big Build”. So I went to the old-time civil contractors, the people who used to let the contracts in the [Australian Workers Union (AWU)] days and then who had to deal with the CFMEU.

And one after another, they said the costs exploded immediately. Nearly all of them told me it was by 30%. Some of them said 20%. Some of them said 15%. I think one said 10%.

[…] I applied that percentage increase in the cost to the “Big Build” projects after the CFMEU had pushed the AWU out. And I came up with 15%, a conservative number in the range that I’ve just given you.

That means $15 billion, taking the conservative $100 billion estimate. I don’t see what’s wrong with the figure. I might say this, since I’ve given the report, I’ve received numerous calls from people complaining that it was too conservative, people who would know […] I double-checked it by speaking privately to some people who I’ll just say were in the bureaucracy. So it wasn’t a silly number. I confirmed it time and time again.

On coming under fire for his work

On the response from the Victorian government, Watson said not a single government MP had been in touch about his investigation.

Do you know, not one Victorian politician contacted me. Everybody knew that I was conducting this investigation. Nobody spoke to me. After the report was handed out, and before they came out and attacked it, did any of them ring me and say, ‘how did you arrive at these figures, or what is going on here? Tell us, talk to us’? No, no contact at all before they launched their attack on the report and me.

Watson said he had been surprised how personal some of the government’s criticism of him had been.

I’ve been doing this anti-corruption work now for a couple of decades. It’s come at a considerable personal cost to me, both personally and financially.

[…] I’ve strong credentials in this area. But they’ve dismissed me and they’ve said ‘oh no, it’s just florid ramblings’, as though I’d made it all up. They really attacked my integrity. And as I say, it’s pretty weird that somebody would say my figures were reckless. I’ll tell you what’s reckless: dismissing them without saying why, without looking at how I calculated it, or without coming up with an alternative figure.

ref. Politics with Michelle Grattan: Geoffrey Watson calls for a royal commission on the CFMEU scandal – https://theconversation.com/politics-with-michelle-grattan-geoffrey-watson-calls-for-a-royal-commission-on-the-cfmeu-scandal-276861

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/politics-with-michelle-grattan-geoffrey-watson-calls-for-a-royal-commission-on-the-cfmeu-scandal-276861/

More than 45,000 Indigenous households lack adequate housing. Here’s what must change

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Vivienne Milligan, Honorary Professor of Housing Policy and Practice, City Futures Research Centre, UNSW Sydney

Finding and affording adequate housing is a challenge many Australians face, but few more so than First Nations people. New national research shows unmet housing need among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households is double the rate of other Australians.

Indigenous people have long been recognised as particularly at-risk of experiencing poor housing. Ensuring “appropriate and affordable” housing is one of the key outcomes under Closing the Gap.

While Australia is in the middle of major housing reform, with significant new funding committed through multiple government initiatives, it won’t be enough to change the situation for First Nations people. Our new study, released today, shows that without fundamental change, current reforms will not close the gap.

The housing gap is large — and growing

Using 2021 census data, we estimate around 45,700 low-income Indigenous households had unmet housing need. That’s about one in eight Indigenous households.

Unmet need – measured by rental affordability stress, severe overcrowding and substandard housing or homelessness – differs by place.

In urban areas, rental stress dominates. In remote communities, overcrowding and poor housing persist.

Worryingly, the problem is projected to grow significantly by 2041 both because of the growing Indigenous population and the housing crisis.

Many of these households require social housing now or in coming years. Yet social housing is flat-lining at 4% of all housing. This is a social policy failure.


Read more: 55,000 extra social housing homes are being built. But a new study shows that boom still falls short


Governance is fragmented and accountability is weak

Indigenous housing spans multiple government agencies. No single minister or agency has overall responsibility.

Under the National Agreement on Closing the Gap, reducing overcrowding is targeted, but rental stress and inadequate housing are not.

Our research found reporting on housing outcomes is imprecise and inconsistent. Accountability, particularly to Indigenous communities, is weak. Governance arrangements change frequently.

Despite endeavours to promote shared policy-making, such as the Housing Policy Partnership, governments continue to operate largely in “business as usual” mode.

If Closing the Gap is to succeed, Indigenous housing cannot remain dispersed across unaligned programs and hampered by unreliable short-term funding. A coherent national strategy and long-term investment plan is required.

The unfulfilled promise of self-determination

Over the past five years, all Australian governments have committed to shared decision-making and strengthening the Indigenous community-controlled sector.

In housing, this includes supporting a national housing peak body, the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Housing Association.

But genuine and meaningful power-sharing remains limited. In most jurisdictions, Indigenous housing organisations are very small and financially constrained.

Outside Victoria, governments have been reluctant to transfer housing title to these organisations, limiting their autonomy and capacity to leverage finance and grow.

Governments have been reluctant to transfer housing title to Indigenous-controlled organisations. Esther Zheng/Unsplash, CC BY-SA

Community-controlled services consistently deliver culturally safer and more effective outcomes in areas such as health and child protection. Housing should be no different.

Unless this sector’s scale and capacity are improved, self-determination will remain symbolic.

Another consequence of an underfunded community sector is that it’s too small to make a big impact.

We found registered Indigenous community-controlled housing organisations manage only 13% of Indigenous social housing tenancies nationally. The rest are managed by governments or mainstream community housing providers. There is currently no national growth plan.

If governments are serious about strengthening this sector, they must commit to transferring large amounts of properties over into their control. Governments should also fund these organisations to provide new housing supply and develop their workforces.

An inappropriate system

Indigenous Australians have much lower home ownership rates than other Australians, although ownership rates have steadily increased over the past two decades.

For many in Indigenous communities, housing security is less about capital gain and more about intergenerational security and protecting collectively owned land. Policy settings rarely accommodate these preferences.

Innovative ownership models – including shared equity and community land trusts – offer potential options aligned with cultural and collective ownership traditions.

But policy support for innovative solutions has not been forthcoming.

First Nations organisations must be funded to provide housing in both urban and remote areas. Aaron Bunch/AAP

And despite increased housing investment overall, there is limited transparency about how much funding reaches Indigenous households and organisations.

Operating and construction costs are higher, especially in remote areas. Maintenance needs and tenant support needs are often greater. Yet funding formulas rarely reflect these realities.

If housing programs are to meet Indigenous need equitably, funding must be explicitly calibrated to that need, not assumed to trickle down. This funding needs to allow for organisations to work in both urban and remote areas, and to support both buyers and renters.

A better way forward

Based on our research, we propose a framework for a National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Housing Strategy. This is built around four pillars:

  • strengthening governance and accountability

  • sufficient long-term investment

  • growing the Indigenous community-controlled housing sector

  • enhancing tenure security and choice.

A future strategy along these lines should be jointly developed by governments and Indigenous leaders. It would need to be anchored in legislation to ensure continuity beyond electoral cycles.

Most importantly, it must be guided by the principle articulated by the Indigenous housing leaders who oversaw our research: “our housing in our hands”.

The gap in Indigenous housing outcomes will close only when their housing is treated as a national priority – and when Indigenous people are entrusted with shaping its future.

ref. More than 45,000 Indigenous households lack adequate housing. Here’s what must change – https://theconversation.com/more-than-45-000-indigenous-households-lack-adequate-housing-heres-what-must-change-276626

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/more-than-45-000-indigenous-households-lack-adequate-housing-heres-what-must-change-276626/

More hospitality and tourism workers report harassment, bullying at work

Source: Radio New Zealand

A third of those surveyed said they planned to quit in the next year. Unsplash / Amie Johnson

More than a third of hospitality and tourism workers say they have been pressured into working while sick, not taking holidays or going without other minimum protections.

More than a third reported harassment or bullying at work with customers being the main culprits, according to a study commissioned by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

Almost 1000 workers in the sectors were surveyed and results showed many workers enjoyed and were passionate about what they did but increasing numbers did not think they were paid fairly and more than a third of workers planned to quit in the next year.

The two industries differed with about 40 percent of hospitality workers planning to leave compared to 31 percent for tourism workers.

More than half of workers earned below the living wage at the time of $28.95 with only 48 percent feeling they were paid fairly, down from 57 percent in 2024.

About one in 12 workers reported being paid below the minimum wage.

Tourism workers said they had greater access to training, better career opportunities and more supportive pathways for development – 69 percent compared to 58 percent of hospitality workers.

The study concluded many workers did not appear to leave the industry because they disliked the work but because conditions no longer appealed.

“Low pay, long or unsustainable hours and limited career progression are the strongest drivers of exit even among workers who enjoy hospitality and tourism,” the report said.

Indicators of burnout remained high with two thirds of workers reporting they felt tired due to their work and about 43 percent reported feelings of hopelessness associated with working with customers.

But worker commitment, skill confidence and workplace dignity were strong.

“Hospitality and tourism are not constrained by worker motivation but by the conditions that enable sustained participation,” the report said.

“Retention and productivity are shaped by progression, training quality, pay adequacy, workplace dignity and safety, not by individual resilience or passion alone.”

The study recommended employers should encourage workers to remain in the industries by offering more training initiatives, pay progression and career development, and setting clear expectations for customer behaviour with zero tolerance for abuse.

Employers not doing enough to protect their employees – researcher

AUT and lead researcher, Professor David Williamson told Checkpoint the survey had been undertaken for the last five years and it was worrying to see that the rates of negative experiences in the workforce were increasing.

The percentage of those surveyed who reported bullying and harassment was 35 percent this year up from 23 percent the year before, he said.

The study found that last year in about half of the cases where hospitality and tourism workers were harassed or bullied customers were the perpetrators, that’s up from 26 percent in 2024.

Williamson said workers were having to deal with physically or verbally abusive customers, as well as drunk customers.

Asked why the figures had become worse, Williamson said it was important to look at the background of bullying and harassment in the sector.

Many staff working in hospitality were young and often it was their first job which made it difficult for them to deal with poor customer behaviour, he said.

“I think perhaps as well we’re seeing the result of Covid and economic pressure resulting in perhaps customers being more abusive than they have been pre-Covid.”

The survey indicated that employers were not doing enough to protect their employees, he said.

“When we look at the qualitative comments coming back from employees they’re talking about not being protected, not being supported, and again we can see the link to younger managers who either themselves haven’t been trained effectively or who are just too young to really know how to deal with those situations.”

When asked why they intended leaving hospitality, survey respondents gave bullying and harassment and low pay as the top two reasons, he said.

“It’s the combination between not being paid enough to put up with a very difficult work situation.”

The report had made a number of recommendations, he said.

“It’s about capturing that early career retention, making sure you’re addressing the young workers who are coming in that you’re training your managers so you have a safe working environment, that they’re not being harassed, that you’re training them well, that you’re also linking promotion opportunities to that training so as you become more skilled you can see a career progression and you know setting zero tolerance abuse standards across the whole industry so this will not be tolerated from customers or co-workers.”

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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/2026/02/25/more-hospitality-and-tourism-workers-report-harassment-bullying-at-work/

Live: White Ferns v Zimbabwe – first Twenty20 International at Hamilton

Source: Radio New Zealand

Brooke Halliday. AFP

Follow every ball below:

The White Ferns host Zimbabwe in their Twenty20 International series-opener in Hamilton on Wednesday.

New Zealand will play the tourists in three T20 matches – all in Waikato – before the three-match ODI series gets underway in Dunedin on 5 March.

Uncapped duo Nensi Patel and Kayley Knight have been called up to the New Zealand squad for the white-ball home series.

Meanwhile, experienced allrounder Suzie Bates and offspinner Eden were not considered due to injuries.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/live-white-ferns-v-zimbabwe-first-twenty20-international-at-hamilton/

First Responders – Springvale fire

Source: Fire and Emergency New Zealand

Fire and Emergency New Zealand firefighters are working to contain a large grass fire at Springvale, near Clyde in Central Otago this evening which is threatening properties.
Thirteen crews from around the area are responding supported by four helicopters. Another five crews are on their way.
Fire and Emergency is also working alongside Police to support evacuations of impacted properties.
The fire is emitting a lot of smoke which is drifting towards Alexandra. If you are in the vicinity of the smoke, please stay inside and keep windows closed.
The public is also being warned to take extra care while undertaking any hot works in the area, for example welding, grinding and lawn mowing, as a large number of resources are responding to the fire at Springvale.
Fire and Emergency also asks the public to please stay away from the area so firefighters can do their job to contain the fire.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/first-responders-springvale-fire/

New Zealand Golf Open: All you need to know

Source: Radio New Zealand

Australian Ryan Peake is back to defend his New Zealand Open golf title, he won at Millbrook Resort in 2025. © Mogie Adamchik 2025

The format, the contenders, the history, the ambassadors, plenty of highlights ahead of golf’s New Zealand Open.

The tournament

New Zealand Golf Open, 26 February – 1 March 2026.

Millbrook Resort, Queenstown.

It’s that time of the year, where 156 professionals, and the same number of amateurs, flood into Queenstown for what will be the 105th New Zealand Golf Open. The tournament will feature the same format as previous years, with play on both courses at Millbrook Resort. All players will split their first two rounds on Coronet 18 (designed by Scott Macpherson and Greg Turner) and Remarkables 18 (designed by Sir Bob Charles). The top 60 plus ties will play the final two rounds over the weekend.

The total purse of the tournament is once again NZ$2 million, with the winner taking home approximately $360,000 and earning a spot at The Open Championship at Royal Birkdale in mid-July. The forecast is for rain/showers for day one and cloudy skies for the remaining three days, with temperatures hovering between 16 to 20 degrees.

History

Our national open has a rich history. It was first played in 1907, when amateur Arthur Duncan won in Napier. Some famous names have triumphed down the years, including two of Australia’s finest players. Peter Thomson won it nine times, including three times in a row between 1959-1961, and Kel Nagel, who won six titles, also winning three in a row, 1967-1969. In the 1980s, American Corey Pavin, was a well-known name, to twice win the title. He would go on to win the US Open in 1995.

And, plenty of great New Zealand players have won the title, including major winners Sir Bob Charles (four times) and Michael Campbell (who won in 2000). Michael Hendry was the last New Zealand winner in 2017.

Tiger Woods (R) with caddie Steve Williams, at the New Zealand Open in 2002. PHOTOSPORT

Arguably the most famous New Zealand Open though was in 2002 at Paraparaumu Beach, when Tiger Woods came to New Zealand. That edition of the tournament was won by Australian Craig Parry. In recent years, Australians have dominated the winners’ list, with West Australian Ryan Peake the defending champion. Seven other former New Zealand Open winners are also competing.

Local hopes

Twenty-eight New Zealanders will feature this year. While our highest ranked player Ryan Fox, isn’t here due to his PGA Tour commitments, our two players on the DP World Tour, Daniel Hillier and Kazuma Kobori, are competing. Hillier, in particular, has made big strides in recent times, and is arguably the best hope for local success. His world ranking is exactly 100, after making a cracking start to the year. He’s had three top 10 finishes in his last five tournaments (Australian Open, Dubai Invitational, Bahrain Championship), and is fifth on the order of merit.

Daniel Hillier, while competing in Dubai in November 2025. GIUSEPPE CACACE

The Japanese born Cantabrian Kobori, also comes to Queenstown in solid form, after finishing in a tie for ninth at his last tournament, the Qatar Masters earlier this month. Ben Campbell, who plays on the LIV tour, is also back, along with the in form Steven Alker, who has won 10 times on the PGA Tour Champions. Five New Zealand amateurs are featuring, with 17-year-old Cantabrian Cooper Moore, one to watch. Moore finished runner up at the NZ PGA championship last week, at Paraparaumu Beach.

Overseas contenders

Australians dominate the field with Lucas Herbert, who finished last year’s LIV tour ranked 15th and Anthony Quayle, who plays on the DP World Tour, having solid credentials. 2025 Asian Tour Order of Merit champion, Kazuki Higa, the world number 123, is back again. He finished tied for second at last year’s New Zealand Open, alongside South African Ian Snyman, who has also returned. Wang Wei-Hsuan, from Chinese Taipei, is another to keep your eye on after three top-five finishes on the 2025 Asian Tour.

Eleven Americans are also teeing it up, including former PGA Tour winners Kevin Na, Nick Watney and Kyle Stanley. Chase Koepka, younger brother of multiple major winner Brooks, is also in the field.

The ambassadors

One of the big features of the tournament in recent years has some superstars from other sports playing as amateurs. This year, two names stand out from the pack. Kelly Slater, widely regarded as the greatest surfer of all time, is here. He is an 11-time world champion, and is teaming up with German Dominic Foos in the pro-am. Three-time grand slam tennis champion, Ash Barty, is also here. She won the French Open in 2019, Wimbledon in 2021 and the Australian Open in 2022, before retiring at the age of just 25.

Ash Barty celebrates her win at Wimbledon in 2021. PHOTOSPORT

Both Slater and Barty are handy golfers. Barty plays off a four handicap, while Slater’s been given a two handicap for the event. New Zealand sporting stars Israel Dagg, Jeff Wilson, Stephen Fleming and Tom Abercrombie are also playing, alongside former Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting and American actor Michael Pena.

Kelly Slater, American surfing legend. Supplied: Piha Pro

What they said

Ben Campbell: “There’s a couple of holes where I’m going to hit 3-wood this year. It will definitely help with the scores. Hopefully the greens get nice and fast and with some good solid rough like that, I think probably the scores won’t quite be where they have been in the last couple of years.”

Defending champion Ryan Peake on laying the 18th in practice: “I got a bit emotional walking down there. Maybe I took too many emotions in, or something like that, or I just got that realisation of how much it actually changed my life.”

Daniel Hillier, who got married on Sunday is looking forward to another big week: “It would mean the world obviously if I could cap it off with my name on the Brodie Breeze Trophy. I speak for all Kiwis. It is our childhood dream.”

Kazuma Kobori said he leans on the likes of Hillier for support: “When we are on tour, we are isolated a little bit and we move within the golfers. I’ve learned a lot from the likes of Dan over the past year. It has been good to learn from him and see what he does and what he doesn’t do as well. We have a good thing going out there. If I don’t win then it would be nice for a Kiwi to win but it is obviously not controllable. I am just going to go out there and do my job and see what happens.”

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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/2026/02/25/new-zealand-golf-open-all-you-need-to-know/

Police and Detector Dog Championships: Expert dog teams thrive in competition

Source: New Zealand Police

Hard-working dog teams from across Police, New Zealand Customs Service and Department of Corrections have been battling for the title of top dog and handler as they competed at the 51st Patrol and Detector Dog Championships this week.

This years’ event wrapped up with a prizegiving held at the Dog Training Centre in Trentham this afternoon.

The overall winner of this years’ competition was Senior Constable Aaron Senior and his dog Cole from Tasman District. 

Inspector Todd Southall says, Congratulations to Aaron and Cole for an almost clean sweep. It’s been an intense competition across three categories since Monday for all the operational dog teams.” 

“We’ve had experienced handlers in both patrol and detector categories competing this week. Consistency and confidence between handler and dog have determined who gets the points and a title.

Taking part in the Police Patrol Dog competition were six operational teams from Northland, Tāmaki Makaurau, Waikato, Tasman and Canterbury Districts.

Six narcotic detector dog teams also competed – two from Police (Northland and Tāmaki Makaurau), and two each from Customs and Corrections. 

The winning detector dog team is the formidable crew of Senior Constable Patrick Derbyshire and Ripper from Northland Police – a previous winner of the Narcotic Detector Dogs – Alan Symes Cup.

“Each of the teams start with a set of points and they’re put through a range of realistic but testing scenarios with points deducted for mistakes. The team that loses the least marks is the winner. The teams were marked on obedience, article retrieving, commands, tracking in grass, bush, operational scenarios, and criminal work, says Todd.

“All these dog teams do a fantastic job in helping keep our communities safe, says Todd.  They provide a critical frontline response, detection and prevention capability whether it’s on the street, at our borders or inside our prisons.”

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

NOTE: A more detailed story and list of all winners will be shared on Ten One next week.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/25/police-and-detector-dog-championships-expert-dog-teams-thrive-in-competition/

‘Everyone can tell you a dog war story’ – Te Puna residents battle wandering dogs

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Te Puna resident says his grandchildren no longer walk around the small seaside town for fear of aggressive, roaming dogs.

Tommy Wilson, an author and grandfather, carries a golf club following dog attacks on the east side of Te Puna, on the outskirts of Tauranga.

One woman, who did not want to speak to Checkpoint, was attacked and bitten by a dog while out walking five years ago.

There had been two other minor attacks on a person and another dog reported to council in the past six months.

Wilson raised his concerns about wandering dogs in Te Puna before a fatal dog attack in Northland last Tuesday.

Nick Monro

Mihiata Te Rore was attacked and killed by three dogs while visiting a property in Kaihu, north of Dargaville.

The 62-year-old is the fourth person killed by dogs in the past four years.

At the weekend a father was seriously injured while protecting his son from a dog attack at a property they were visiting in Christchurch. Both were hospitalised.

Last year, Auckland Council alone received almost 17,000 reports of roaming dogs and more than 1300 reports of dog attacks on people.

In Te Puna, Wilson said residents had been wrestling with an increasing number of aggressive dogs for years.

“I walk around the road with my trusty four-iron.”

Nick Monro

Wilson said he had been forced to hit dogs.

“I’ll give them a good club and with my tokotoko. I’ll smack them… yeah I actually punched a dog in the face because that was the only way to get it to back off.

“It was just coming too close and snarling, baring the teeth, not looking cool. And I’m sure everyone can tell you a dog war story in this town.”

While Checkpoint was visiting Te Puna, a big dog wandered across the rugby club field, past our cameraman and up to a nearby playground where two mums were chatting with three young children in tow.

One mum pulled a toddler close and the other – carrying a baby – gave the dog a wide berth as it wandered around the playground before eventually trotting off in the direction it had come.

It was unclear who or where the dog’s owner was.

Nick Monro

Wilson said he was not the only one to carry a weapon while out walking. He said a neighbour carried a large tokotoko (ceremonial walking stick).

“He refuses to stop walking. He’s one of the bravehearts and I see him walking all the time but he’s ready.”

Wilson worried he could only fend off one aggressive dog at a time with his golf club and feared for anyone caught unprepared.

“It’s when there’s more than one dog. That’s the problem and I’m reasonably fit even though I’m a koro, how does a little four, five, six-year-old child fend themselves off against one dog or a mother or an old kuia, a grandmother – they’ve got no show.”

Nick Monro

While there were no dogs on Te Puna Beach, where Wilson said dogs roamed in packs, there were dozens of paw prints.

“You can see, look, there’s dog prints there, dog prints there. If it’s just one set of footprints it’s okay but if you see more than a set of footprints it’s usually time to u-turn and go back and go home.”

Wilson questioned the need for aggressive dogs as he pointed out a number of known roaming dogs.

He believed they were partly owned to guard against crime.

Wilson, who grew up in Te Puna and moved back to the area to raise his children, said when they were young they “free-ranged” around the town.

However, he said it was different now and his moko did not feel safe walking alone.

He said they were driven to school – which was not the local one – and would not walk 300 metres to their local marae because they were scared.

“(There’s) usually a big bad dog sitting outside here. He’s okay for the people that live close but he’s the one that chases and bites our car tyres and our kids are totally freaked out by him – he’s huge.”

Te Puna School principal Neil Towersey said wandering dogs sometimes appeared in the playground.

“Some of the children are terrified. I get a patter tennis bat and a cone or something noisy – go out and give it a bit of a clatter and a bang and do my best impression to scare them off and they usually take off with their tail between their legs.”

Te Puna School principal Neil Towersey. Nick Monro

He said hunting dogs were particularly intimidating for the children.

“Some of them have had bad experiences with dogs. We’ve got a little boy at the moment who’s absolutely terrified of dogs so it’s something we’re a little bit mindful of.”

Towersey said that boy had been bitten by a dog.

He said the school had taught children about dog safety and he believed the Dog Control Act “needs tightening up”.

At the town tennis courts, a German Shepherd wandered about while opposite the chapel, a dog sat and watched from afar before retreating home.

Jade, who did not want her surname used, had four dogs in her care at the town rugby field.

She said she did not live in Te Puna but went there regularly and never usually encountered aggressive dogs.

“We’ve come across some dogs that don’t look very friendly but I can call mine back and they just come straight back and I’ve never had any dog attacks or dog attack me out here so that’s promising, touch wood.

Jade said she fostered rescue dogs for a charity and the four dogs with her were not hers.

She was unsure what breeds they were.

Nick Monro

Jade said it was not a dog’s fault if it was aggressive and it was up to owners to raise and socialise their dogs responsibly.

She recommended anyone who came across an aggressive dog should not run away or show fear.

Wilson said he wanted a community effort to change attitudes, incentivise responsible dog owners and support struggling owners to provide appropriate care for their dogs.

“Let’s not leave it up to the people who don’t care. We care and we want to do something about it.

“Hey, why should the dogs have the best beach in the world? How about us? We want our beach back.”

Western Bay of Plenty councillor and Te Puna resident Graeme Elvin said there was no doubt roaming dogs were a problem in Te Puna.

However, he believed it was a localised issue and said it had to be solved by a change in behaviour.

“It isn’t solved by throwing a whole lot of money at the problem.”

Elvin said he met with the council’s dog control officers on Tuesday to discuss the concerns and was impressed with their efforts.

Nick Monro

Council general manager of regulatory services Alison Curtis declined a interview, but in a statement said during the past six months the council had received 19 complaints about roaming dogs in the area, and two complaints about dog attacks – one involving a person and one involving another dog.

She said both attacks were minor.

“Based on general observations, these numbers are low to average, compared with the rest of the district.”

Curtis said some of the complaints related to dogs roaming on the sports fields.

“In response, animal services officers visited the fields several times over a two-week period in November and December, while the fields were in use.

“As a result of these visits, one dog was impounded.”

Curtis said since then the council had only received three reports of roaming dogs in the area, which made up part of the 19.

“Council can only act on issues we are made aware of, so we ask people to please report any concerns by calling us on 0800 926 732.”

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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/2026/02/25/everyone-can-tell-you-a-dog-war-story-te-puna-residents-battle-wandering-dogs/

MediMap hack: Pharmacists implement manual system to maintain safe care levels

Source: Radio New Zealand

MediMap is used by some health providers in aged care, disability, hospice and the community to accurately record medication doses and pharmacists say it going offline has caused “significant disruption”. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

Pharmacies are falling back on their emergency back-up plans to distribute medication, and doing a lot of unpaid leg-work in the process, following the MediMap hack.

The prescription portal is used by many aged care, disability, and hospice providers to track medication, but it’s been offline since Sunday when it was discovered patient information had been changed – details like names, dates of birth, allergies, even marked some patients as deceased.

For nurses in care homes, MediMap going offline had meant a return to pen and paper, meaning it was taking a lot longer to get things done.

The same is true for pharmacists.

James Westbury, owner of Westbury Pharmacy and Unichem Kilbirnie Pharmacy in Wellington, said they supported about 5000 people in aged care, hospice and supported housing.

He said it had been “incredibly difficult” and caused “significant disruption” – with the digital system offline, pharmacists had downed tools to get a new manual system underway.

That involved going back through people’s dispensing histories and charts to make sure they were up to date, and in many cases, getting extra sign-off from a prescriber to be able to dispense medication.

“Unfortunately pharmacies get paid on dispensing, and when you’re not dispensing you’re not making money, so at the moment this is all done for the love of patient safety.”

Was it posing a risk to patient care? He said it added complexity, but it was manageable.

“The systems that we’ve got in place at the moment, I feel quite comfortable that care will be maintained at a safe level, particularly for regular prescribed and PRN [meaning, as needed] medication,” he said.

“The only real concern is where it’s short course [prescriptions] where it’s a little bit more difficult. We can still produce the data to provide safe continuity of care, it’s just a lot more challenging to get that information out – but it’s the art of the possible.”

Pharmacists had been forced to get a new manual system underway due to MediMap being offline. 123RF

Westbury said communication from MediMap had been “appalling”.

Pharmacists had been assured there was a digital backup in place should MediMap fail, called MediMap Go, he said. But that appeared to have been affected by the same hack, and was also offline, leaving pharmacists to scramble a new system into place.

Kesh Naidoo-Rauf, president of the Pharmacy Guild, said members were coping, but it had come at a bad time.

“We’re already struggling and facing workforce pressures, so it couldn’t have come at a worse time for the sector, in all honesty.”

But the priority was patient safety.

“We are trained for exactly these types of situations, so we’ve got our strong checks and balances in place to maintain safe dispensing processes. So it is still safe, but it is a lot slower.”

MediMap has declined multiple interviews with RNZ, but on Wednesday put out a statement saying it was heading to court to seek an injunction to stop anyone accessing, using, copying or sharing information from its systems.

It’s still unclear how many people have been caught up in the breach.

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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/2026/02/25/medimap-hack-pharmacists-implement-manual-system-to-maintain-safe-care-levels/

Why India joining the US alliance on AI tech is an opportunity for Australia

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Arup George, Research Manager, UNSW Sydney

India has formally joined the United States’ flagship international alliance on artificial intelligence (AI) supply chain security: “Pax Silica”. Officials from both countries signed the Pax Silica declaration on the sidelines of a major AI summit in New Delhi last week.

This initiative seeks to bring together US “allies and trusted partners” to lead the global AI race. Australia was a founding member.

While Taiwan looks set to keep dominating advanced AI chip manufacturing, it relies on a complex international supply chain, with critical aspects dominated by China.

When essential elements come from a narrow set of suppliers, even minor disruptions can ripple globally. Diversity matters. That’s why Australia and India now have an opportunity to become essential international players.

Why Washington is building an alliance

AI is rapidly becoming a foundational resource of the 21st century across manufacturing, logistics, finance, healthcare, drug discovery and defence.

The Pax Silica alliance recognises different countries play distinct and critical roles in building the tech that powers AI.

For example, advanced chip-design expertise is concentrated in the US. Key semiconductor manufacturing equipment comes from the Netherlands and Japan.

South Korea produces a small but important slice of the world’s AI computer chips. But the biggest chip maker by far is the tiny island nation of Taiwan.

Healthcare AI robots at an exhibition at the India AI Impact Summit. AP

The world’s chip factory

Taiwan produces 90% of the world’s most advanced AI chips, designed by US firms such as Nvidia, Google and AMD.

These firms overwhelmingly depend on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC). This remains the only manufacturer that can produce the world’s most cutting-edge chips at scale.

And their advantage extends beyond making chips. TSMC also possesses unique advanced packaging capabilities that integrate AI accelerators with high-bandwidth memory chips.

This is essential for achieving the tight coupling of “compute” and memory demanded by modern AI workloads. TSMC is not just dominant – it is a single-point-of-failure in the AI ecosystem.

Taiwan can’t do it alone

Despite this dominance, TSMC still relies on a global network of partners across Japan, the US, France and Germany to supply ultra-pure materials derived from mineral inputs (such as silicon, copper, tungsten, and rare-earth elements).

Among these, the rare-earth inputs are critical in polishing wafers to the near‑atomic‑scale flatness needed.

Rare-earth magnets are also indispensable in fabrication equipment that demands sub‑nanometre positioning accuracy. (A nanometre is one millionth of a millimetre.) These materials have no alternatives at present.

China has a near-total dominance in rare-earth refining, and magnet manufacturing. This significantly narrows TSMC’s options in securing these inputs. It also creates a major chokepoint within the chip supply chain.

One company – TSMC – dominates global chip manufacturing. Chiang Ying-ying/AP

Australia’s mineral strength

Australia has relatively rich rare earths deposits among other semiconductor raw materials such as silica, gallium, germanium, antimony, copper, and gold.

Right now, however, we don’t have the domestic capability to process these. Most materials are exported to China for processing them to semiconductor-grade purity levels. This locks Australia into the lowest segment of the value chain.

Australia can partner with advanced refiners, such as Japan or South Korea, but that will only preserve Australia’s current role as a supplier.

If Australia wants to move up the value chain (that is, produce more than just the basic raw inputs), it needs to partner with a country that can help it build out a refinement pipeline together. Some parts of the process here, some somewhere else.

This is where India enters the equation.

Turning minerals into materials with India

India has large-scale speciality chemicals capability — including rare earth processing facilities. Trade agreements already enable the movement of Australian critical minerals and metals into India’s manufacturing ecosystem.

However, right now, India does not have the capability to refine raw inputs into semiconductor grade materials. To get there, other members of the alliance, such as the US and Japan, would need to transfer their purification standards and quality assurance systems.

Building semiconductor-grade refinement facilities will not be quick or cheap. Advanced chipmakers have strict quality requirements. Getting qualified to supply global chipmakers is a slow and exacting process. It can take years before materials are approved for volume supply.

Why the world will be watching

If Australia and India cooperate to set up a stable semiconductor minerals pipeline, then that won’t be just another policy initiative. It will be about whether future chip supply chains are fragile and concentrated, or diversified and resilient.

How this all plays out could shape the affordability of consumer products such as electric vehicles, the cost of renewable energy, the availability of AI-enabled devices, and broader economic security.

Pax Silica is an opportunity for Australia and India to emerge as trusted suppliers of semiconductor-grade minerals and materials – and a much-needed alternative to China.

ref. Why India joining the US alliance on AI tech is an opportunity for Australia – https://theconversation.com/why-india-joining-the-us-alliance-on-ai-tech-is-an-opportunity-for-australia-274115

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/why-india-joining-the-us-alliance-on-ai-tech-is-an-opportunity-for-australia-274115/

Cortisol ‘spikes’ are normal, so when is cortisol a real problem?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ann McCormack, Conjoint Associate Professor in Endocrinology, UNSW Sydney

You may have noticed a plethora of reels and posts on social media claiming cortisol “spikes” are harmful. Some warn against drinking coffee on an empty stomach or even doing certain exercises lest they “spike” your cortisol levels.

As an endocrinologist, I live and breathe hormones. I can reassure you cortisol spikes are not something healthy people need to fear.

In fact, cortisol rhythms – which involve some ups and some downs – are an essential part of what keeps your body well.

Remind me, what is cortisol?

Cortisol is an essential hormone that regulates our metabolism, immune system and cognitive/emotional processes.

Cortisol regulation is complex.

While cortisol release comes from your adrenal glands that sit just above your kidneys, it is under direct control by another hormone released by the pituitary gland, or “master gland” at the base of our brain.

Cortisol production follows a strong daily rhythm.

There is a sharp rise in cortisol levels in the first hour after waking up, called the “cortisol awakening response”.

This awakening response helps you feel alert. In fact, the higher this peak, the better you can cope with the physical and mental challenges for the day ahead.

A blunted cortisol awakening response (meaning they are not as high as would be ideal) is associated with poorer health.

Over the course of a day, cortisol levels fall gradually and are naturally very low in the evening, designed to bring on sleep.

Overlying this background rhythm there are regular cortisol pulses throughout the day, when your body is faced with challenges such as a tough workout, a stressful deadline or an infection.

These cortisol rises are protective. They help you stay focused, maintain your blood pressure and release more energy when needed.

So, what about coffee on an empty stomach?

Cortisol levels are affected by many factors including gender, age and genetics, as well as food, exercise, stress, light and illness.

Understanding the effect of a simple cup of coffee in the morning depends on the intricate and complex nature of these dynamics.

Importantly, there have been no randomised controlled studies comparing coffee consumption on an empty stomach to having it after food.

Certainly, coffee has been linked to a rise in cortisol levels, of up to 30% in one study, and in another even when drunk with breakfast.

However, particularly in regular coffee drinkers, the effect may be negligible.

Interestingly, it might be more about the timing of coffee drinking rather than whether it is consumed with or without food.

In the study of habitual coffee drinkers, morning caffeine intake was not shown to meaningfully disturb the cortisol rhythm, whereas drinking coffee later in the afternoon did seem to contribute to higher cortisol levels over the course of the day.

This also may have relevance to when we exercise – some studies have shown that people exercising earlier in the day have a steeper cortisol decline after waking and lower evening levels. This might mean it is easier to get to sleep.

Don’t worry about ‘spikes’

Rather than being concerned about cortisol “spikes”, it is sustained elevations over the course of a day that are linked to adverse health outcomes.

Chronic stress states (meaning persistent and extended period of exposure to one or more stressors, such as prolonged work stress or relationship difficulties) and long-term use of cortisol-like medications (such as the corticosteroid prednisone) might be problematic. They expose the body to high cortisol levels without the natural rise and fall over a 24-hour period.

Rare conditions like Cushing’s syndrome (a consequence of tumours of the pituitary or adrenal gland in most people) cause chronically elevated cortisol levels.

Although some smart watches can monitor your “stress” levels, this is done indirectly via measurement of heart rate variability – not by measurement of cortisol levels.

Measuring high cortisol levels requires sophisticated testing that might involve urine, saliva, as well as a variety of blood tests; so don’t be too worried about cortisol based on what your watch is telling you.

If you are concerned about cortisol, you should consult your doctor. If abnormalities arise, a referral to an endocrinologist may be needed.

ref. Cortisol ‘spikes’ are normal, so when is cortisol a real problem? – https://theconversation.com/cortisol-spikes-are-normal-so-when-is-cortisol-a-real-problem-267006

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/cortisol-spikes-are-normal-so-when-is-cortisol-a-real-problem-267006/

Dating apps are facilitating LGBTQ+ hate crimes. How can users stay safe?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kath Albury, Professor of Media and Communication and Associate Investigator, ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making + Society, Swinburne University of Technology

Gay and bisexual people in Australia are being targeted in violent attacks facilitated through dating and social media apps.

A recent investigation by the ABC revealed several hate crimes involving Islamic State sympathisers bashing gay and bisexual boys in Sydney, including some they had met on Wizz, which markets itself as an app for connecting young people, including minors.

This is just one of many examples. As of October 2024, Victoria Police had arrested 35 people in relation to similar incidents in which offenders had used fake profiles on Grindr and other dating apps to connect with gay men, before assaulting them.

Victoria has just established a parliamentary inquiry to investigate this spate of attacks.

So what do dating apps do to vet users? Could they be doing more? And how can users protect themselves?

What do dating apps do to protect users?

As anyone who has used a dating app will know, it’s very easy to set up an account. Generally all you need to do is to enter your email, password and date of birth. Then you’re free to make your profile and start looking for a match.

This can make it easy for offenders to set up fake profiles to target unsuspecting victims.

A number of dating apps (including Grindr) are signatories to the Australian Online Dating Code of Practice. The code commits apps to adopting a range of measures to mitigate the risks of “online-enabled harm” for users, such as prominently displaying reporting mechanisms and implementing processes to block or remove harmful content.

Wizz is not a signatory, but requires users to verify their identity by uploading a selfie, which is then assessed by AI age assurance software. Age assurance technology has well-documented shortcomings which allow some users to circumvent it. As of December 2025, Wizz has been included in Australia’s social media platform restrictions for people under 16.

In response to previous attacks, Grindr started providing pop-up safety messages for users, warning them of the risk of violence and providing tips to stay safe.

Could dating apps do more?

There have been suggestions apps should make users provide 100 points of ID to verify their profile.

But this brings with it new risks, especially for minority communities. Researchers have found that marginalised groups – including Indigenous women and LGBTQIA+ people are more likely to be targeted by technology-facilitated abuse.

As recent breaches of online chat platform Discord’s identity data have shown, these groups have good reason to distrust increased data collection and surveillance on dating platforms.

Additionally, while platforms having databases that contain the “real names” of users may make it easier for victims to report crimes after the fact, they cannot guarantee would-be violent offenders will not misrepresent themselves on the apps.

While many apps in Australia (including those that are signatories to the code of practice) already cooperate with law enforcement agencies and share relevant data if a crime is committed, there is less transparency about whether they have consulted with marginalised users – including survivors of online abuse – about what they need.

However, Bumble Inc.’s Bumble, Badoo, and Fruitz apps do partner with survivor-led digital organisation Chayn to provide access to free online trauma-support.

How can LGBTIQ+ users protect themselves on these apps?

As this shows, most current initiatives focus on responding to online-enabled harm, not prevention. Online platforms also don’t possess tools to moderate people’s conduct once they meet offline.

LGBTQIA+ health organisations have created tipsheets to help users stay safe when using dating apps.

For example, it’s advised to have a short video call with a person you intend to meet in real life in order to help you confirm their identity. This is especially important as perpetrators of hate crimes can create profiles that seem legitimate.

There are also guidelines for checking in with friends such as sharing your location with a trusted friend when you go to meet a new person, and reporting abuse to the police or Crimestoppers.

It is important to emphasise that members of minority communities are not responsible for hate crimes, and individual risk mitigation can never be foolproof.

Recent Australian history demonstrates that where discrimination and exclusion of LGBTQIA+ people is normalised in public life, offenders are empowered to rationalise and normalise violence.


If this article has raised issues for you, or if you’re concerned about someone you know, call Lifeline on 13 11 14.

For information and advice about family and intimate partner violence contact 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732). If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, contact 000.

ref. Dating apps are facilitating LGBTQ+ hate crimes. How can users stay safe? – https://theconversation.com/dating-apps-are-facilitating-lgbtq-hate-crimes-how-can-users-stay-safe-276862

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/25/dating-apps-are-facilitating-lgbtq-hate-crimes-how-can-users-stay-safe-276862/

Super Rugby Preview: Australia top the table, a century for Dalton Papali’i, rematch of ’25 final

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Brumbies and Waratahs both sit above the kiwi sides after two rounds of Super Rugby. Jeremy Ward / www.photosport.nz

After two rounds, the Aussies lead the pack.

The Brumbies and Waratahs are setting the pace with New Zealand-based sides occupying spots three to eight.

The lowest placed of those six sides was the defending champion Crusaders.

For the first time since the turn of the century, the Brumbies came to the Christchurch fortress and left victorious.

It leaves the traditional powerhouses with no wins from their first two games, and things don’t get any easier as they head to Hamilton to play the unbeaten Chiefs. It’s been a brutal beginning for Jonno Gibbs’ men, who face a third consecutive derby to kick off their campaign.

The Highlanders head across the Tasman to Brisbane after their heartbreaking loss to the Chiefs in Dunedin.

Following their captivating rise in 2025, and a stunning round one win over the Drua, it’s been a rough week for Moana Pasifika. Having been soundly beaten in the capital at the hands of the Hurricanes, Moana returned home to the news that once again they would not be playing in the Pacific Islands in 2026. They get their first home game against the Force, who are searching for their first wins of the season.

The Hurricanes, meanwhile, will enter the Lautoka cauldron against the Drua, who return to the fortress which was breached in round one after being whacked by the Waratahs last weekend.

The Blues round out the weekend’s action as their Australian tour continues in Canberra after a gutsy win in Perth, with skipper Daltan Papali’i to raise his bat in his 100th Super Rugby appearance.

Selection notes

The Hurricanes are churning through their first five stocks, with Callum Harkin handed the ten jersey for the trip to Fiji. Wallaby midfielder Lalakai Foketi will earn his first cap with the Chiefs from the bench, while All Black Wallace Sititi returns and Xavier Roe plays his 50th. Sam Darry returns for the Blues after sitting out round two with a concussion, while Moana prop Abraham Pole becomes just the second player from Moana Pasifika to notch fifty caps.

Injury ward

Chiefs hooker Brodie McAlister is out of action with a hand injury and should be back by round five.

The Hurricanes have a full casualty ward with Brett Cameron awaiting a specialist review, Du’Plessis Kirifi a week away with a calf complaint, and Ruben Love still recovering from an ankle injury.

The Blues are also without several frontliners from their pack, with Cameron Christie, Joshua Fusitu’a and Patrick Tuipulotu all sidelined.

Finn Hurley remains unavailable for the Highlanders, still another six weeks from a return. Cullen Grace’s return is unknown as he battles a knee injury, while All Black hooker Codie Taylor also has no timeline on when he will be back.

Team lists

Moana vs Force

Kick-off: 7:05pm Friday February 27

Navigation Homes Stadium, Pukekohe

Live blog updates on RNZ

Moana:

1. Tito Tuipulotu. 2. Millennium Sanerivi. 3. Chris Apoua. 4. Tom Savage. 5. Allan Craig. 6. Miracle Faiilagi captain. 7. Semisi Paea. 8. Semisi Tupou Ta’eiloa. 9. Jonathan Taumateine. 10. Patrick Pellegrini. 11. Solomon Alaimalo. 12. Ngani Laumape. 13. Lalomilo Lalomilo. 14. Tevita Ofa. 15. Glen Vaihu.

Impact: 16. Samiuela Moli. 17. Abraham Pole 50th Super Rugby cap. 18. Lolani Faleiva. 19. Ola Tauelangi. 20. Tupou Afungia (debut.) 21. Melani Matavao. 22. Jackson Garden-Bachop. 23. Tevita Latu (debut).

“It’s only a loss if you don’t learn from it. We don’t have time to dwell on mistakes. It’s just about us getting better each week, trusting our game, and making sure we play what we train.” – Moana Pasifika coach Tana Umaga

Reds vs Highlanders

Kick-off: 9:35pm Friday February 27

Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane

Live blog updates on RNZ

Highlanders

1. Ethan de Groot. 2. Jack Taylor. 3. Rohan Wingham. 4. Will Stodart. 5. Mitch Dunshea. 6. Te Kamaka Howden. 7. Sean Withy (cc) 8. Lucas Casey. 9. Adam Lennox. 10. Cameron Millar. 11. Jona Nareki. 12. Timoci Tavatavanawai (cc) 13. Jonah Lowe. 14. Caleb Tangitau. 15. Jacob Ratumaitavuki-Kneepkens.

Bench: 16. Soane Vikena. 17. Daniel Lienert-Brown. 18. Sosefo Kautai. 19. Oliver Haig. 20. Veveni Lasaqa. 21. Folau Fakatava. 22. Reesjan Pasitoa. 23. Tanielu Tele’a.

“We’re working hard on the small details that will help us deliver a more complete 80‑minute performance. We’ll need that level of accuracy and intensity if we’re going to get the job done on Friday.” – Highlanders coach Jamie Joseph

Drua vs Hurricanes

4:35pm Kickoff Saturday 28 February 2026

Churchill Park, Lautoka

Live blog updates on RNZ

Hurricanes:

1. Pouri Rakete-Stones 2. Asafo Aumua (vc) 3. Tevita Mafileo 4. Hugo Plummer 5. Warner Dearns 6. Devan Flanders 7. Peter Lakai 8. Brayden Iose 9. Cam Roigard 10. Callum Harkin 11. Fehi Fineanganofo 12. Jordie Barrett (c) 13. Billy Proctor 14. Bailyn Sullivan 15. Josh Moorby

Bench: 16. Jacob Devery 17. Xavier Numia 18. Siale Lauaki 19. Isaia Walker-Leawere 20. Brad Shields 21. Ereatara Enari 22. Lucas Cashmore (debut) 23. Ngane Punivai

“We’re looking forward to the challenge. We know what we’re walking into with their home record, certainly in Lautoka and it being a day game.” Hurricanes coach Clark Laidlaw.

Chiefs vs Crusaders

Kick-off: 7:05pm Saturday 28 February 2026

FMG Stadium Waikato, Hamilton

Live blog updates on RNZ

Chiefs:

1. Jared Proffit 2. Samisoni Taukei’aho 3. George Dyer 4. Josh Lord 5. Tupou Vaa’i (vc) 6. Simon Parker 7. Kaylum Boshier 8. Luke Jacobson (c) 9. Xavier Roe 10. Josh Jacomb 11. Leroy Carter 12. Quinn Tupaea (vc) 13. Daniel Rona 14. Emoni Narawa 15. Etene Nanai-Seturo

Bench: 16. Tyrone Thompson 17. Benet Kumeroa 18. Reuben O’Neill 19. Samipeni Finau 20. Wallace Sititi 21. Te Toiroa Tahuriorangi 22. Tepaea Cook-Savage 23. Lalakai Foketi

“We’ve got a healthy squad, so that helps with the consistency in selections, but the players are making it really tough to pick the team – which is great.” – Chiefs coach Jonno Gibbs

Crusaders:

1. Tamaiti Williams. 2. George Bell. 3. Fletcher Newell. 4. Antonio Shalfoon. 5. Jamie Hannah. 6. Dom Gardiner. 7. Ethan Blackadder. 8. Christian Lio-Willie. 9. Noah Hotham. 10. Taha Kemara. 11. Sevu Reece. 12. David Havili (c) 13. Leicester Fainga’anuku. 14. Chay Fihaki. 15. Will Jordan.

Bench: 16. Manumaua Letiu. 17. George Bower. 18. Seb Calder. 19. Tahlor Cahill. 20. Corey Kellow. 21. Louie Chapman. 22. James White. 23. Dallas McLeod.

We can’t focus on one element too much because we’ll end up getting stung in another area. Any team that beats the Chiefs have to have a complete performance.” – Crusaders coach Rob Penney

Brumbies vs Blues

Kick-off: 9:35pm Saturday 28 February 2026

GIO Stadium, Canberra

Live blog updates on RNZ

Blues:

1. Ofa Tu’ungafasi. 2. Kurt Eklund. 3. Marcel Renata. 4. Laghlan McWhannell. 5. Sam Darry. 6. Anton Segner. 7. Dalton Papali’i (c) 8. Hoskins Sotutu. 9. Finlay Christie. 10. Stephen Perofeta. 11. Caleb Clarke. 12. Pita Ahki. 13. AJ Lam. 14. Cole Forbes. 15. Zarn Sullivan.

Bench: 16. Bradley Slater. 17. Mason Tupaea. 18. Sam Matenga. 19. Josh Beehre. 20. Torian Barnes. 21. Taufa Funaki. 22. Xavi Taele. 23. Codemeru Vai.

“The Brumbies are well organised and have started their season well. They will be tough competitors, particularly at home, but we are up for the challenge.” – Blues coach Vern Cotter.

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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/2026/02/25/super-rugby-preview-australia-top-the-table-a-century-for-dalton-papalii-rematch-of-25-final/

MediMap hack: Pharmacists implement manuel system to maintain safe care levels

Source: Radio New Zealand

MediMap is used by some health providers in aged care, disability, hospice and the community to accurately record medication doses and pharmacists say it going offline has caused “significant disruption”. RNZ/Calvin Samuel

Pharmacies are falling back on their emergency back-up plans to distribute medication, and doing a lot of unpaid leg-work in the process, following the MediMap hack.

The prescription portal is used by many aged care, disability, and hospice providers to track medication, but it’s been offline since Sunday when it was discovered patient information had been changed – details like names, dates of birth, allergies, even marked some patients as deceased.

For nurses in care homes, MediMap going offline had meant a return to pen and paper, meaning it was taking a lot longer to get things done.

The same is true for pharmacists.

James Westbury, owner of Westbury Pharmacy and Unichem Kilbirnie Pharmacy in Wellington, said they supported about 5000 people in aged care, hospice and supported housing.

He said it had been “incredibly difficult” and caused “significant disruption” – with the digital system offline, pharmacists had downed tools to get a new manual system underway.

That involved going back through people’s dispensing histories and charts to make sure they were up to date, and in many cases, getting extra sign-off from a prescriber to be able to dispense medication.

“Unfortunately pharmacies get paid on dispensing, and when you’re not dispensing you’re not making money, so at the moment this is all done for the love of patient safety.”

Was it posing a risk to patient care? He said it added complexity, but it was manageable.

“The systems that we’ve got in place at the moment, I feel quite comfortable that care will be maintained at a safe level, particularly for regular prescribed and PRN [meaning, as needed] medication,” he said.

“The only real concern is where it’s short course [prescriptions] where it’s a little bit more difficult. We can still produce the data to provide safe continuity of care, it’s just a lot more challenging to get that information out – but it’s the art of the possible.”

Pharmacists had been forced to get a new manual system underway due to MediMap being offline. 123RF

Westbury said communication from MediMap had been “appalling”.

Pharmacists had been assured there was a digital backup in place should MediMap fail, called MediMap Go, he said. But that appeared to have been affected by the same hack, and was also offline, leaving pharmacists to scramble a new system into place.

Kesh Naidoo-Rauf, president of the Pharmacy Guild, said members were coping, but it had come at a bad time.

“We’re already struggling and facing workforce pressures, so it couldn’t have come at a worse time for the sector, in all honesty.”

But the priority was patient safety.

“We are trained for exactly these types of situations, so we’ve got our strong checks and balances in place to maintain safe dispensing processes. So it is still safe, but it is a lot slower.”

MediMap has declined multiple interviews with RNZ, but on Wednesday put out a statement saying it was heading to court to seek an injunction to stop anyone accessing, using, copying or sharing information from its systems.

It’s still unclear how many people have been caught up in the breach.

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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/2026/02/25/medimap-hack-pharmacists-implement-manuel-system-to-maintain-safe-care-levels/

Ultra-processed food marketing needs tougher regulations – researcher

Source: Radio New Zealand

A university researcher who tracks the amount of ultra-processed products and ingredients coming into New Zealand is calling for stronger regulations around marketing, especially to children.

Ultra-processed foods are not just junk food, but anything full of chemical based preservatives, emulsifiers, sweeteners like high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated fats, and artificial colours and flavours.

A US attorney is suing some of the biggest food manufacturers, accusing them of deliberately designing products to be addictive – despite the harm they are known to cause. David Chiu says with products from all companies involved in the lawsuit also available in New Zealand, it should be a worry here.

A selection of common foods considered processed to different degrees. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

In 2023, ultra-processed foods made up 23 percent of New Zealand’s imports, compared to only 7 percent in 1990, says Dr Kelly Garton from the University of Auckland.

She told Checkpoint it was time for the government to step in, because consumers were influenced in ways they could not control.

A major step would be better labelling and restrictions around packaging directed at children.

“I would love for our labels to give much clearer indication to consumers and what’s in their food. Getting rid of any of those misleading claims around healthiness or environmental friendliness, for example, as well as not allowing ultra-processed foods to have marketing packaging that’s targeting kids.”

Dr Kelly Garton RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Garton said much of the marketing was currently targeted at young people, along with their parents.

“A lot of these products will have colours, shapes, or flavours or textures that are meant to appeal to children and younger people. And so obviously that’s meant to sell more product.

“A lot of the marketing is targeted at parents. It might have a certain amount of health washing, you know, a good source of protein when maybe it’s a protein derivative that’s been added back in. not necessarily a healthy whole protein that you could be consuming otherwise.”

But marketing was only one of the reasons that ultra-processed foods were so prominent in New Zealanders diets.

“We are now reliant on these products in many ways that we can’t control, these are the products that are by and large the most available and affordable, and they’re heavily marketed to us.

“Also in terms of our social and economic circumstances, many of us, most of us are time poor. Many of us are financially constrained. We’re overly reliant on foods that are cheap, shelf stable, and very convenient. Added to that, fresh fruit and veg is absurdly expensive these days.”

RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Alongside Checkpoint, Garton examined a number of ultra-processed products to decipher the contents.

She said flavourings were often a warning sign.

“These flavours or natural colourings are put there to emulate or to mask or enhance flavours that whole foods would have. So they’re inherently manipulating our sense receptors.”

However, just because something falls under the ultra processed category did not mean it had to be avoided.

“These products would fall under the ultra-processed classification. Not all of them are going to be bad for us. Some of them, especially those that give us a lot of fibre and low in sugar, can be absolutely part of a healthy diet, especially given the constraints that we’re under these days.”

But if possible, Garton said the less processed option was always preferable.

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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/2026/02/25/ultra-processed-food-marketing-needs-tougher-regulations-researcher/

Homes evacuated in Central Otago as fire threatens properties

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

At least eight houses have been evacuated in Central Otago as a quick moving fire threatens properties.

Fire and Emergency says it was called to a large grassfire that was threatening structures in the Springvale area near Clyde before 3.30pm.

The fire was 400 metres by 400 metres initially, but a spokesperson says it’s spreading quickly.

Crews from across Central Otago and as far afield as Dunedin have been called in to fight the fire, including four helicopters.

The spokesperson says it’s unknown if any properties have been damaged at this stage and crews have also moved livestock out of paddocks that were under threat.

Fire and Emergency is working with police to close Springvale Road.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/25/homes-evacuated-in-central-otago-as-fire-threatens-properties/