MEDIA ADVISORY: More police for the streets in latest wing graduation

Source: New Zealand Police

Media are invited to the 393 Keven Mealamu MNZM recruit wing graduation.

What:              Graduation of the New Zealand Police 393 Recruit Wing.

Who:               For families and friends to celebrate with the newly attested police officers.

Why:               Completion and graduation from their initial training course.

Where:            Royal New Zealand Police College – Parade Ground, Porirua.

When:             Thursday 12 March at 2pm – media will need to be in place by 1.45pm.

How:               RSVP the Police Media Centre if you’re attending: media@police.govt.nz

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and the Associate Minister of Police Honourable Casey Costello will attend the ceremony with Wing Patron, Keven Mealamu – MNZM.

The 393 Wing Patron:

Keven Mealamu is a proud man of faith and family. A former All Black with over 100 test caps, he brings the values of teamwork, resilience, and discipline from rugby into business, governance, and community leadership. Keven has built and led ventures in health, wellbeing, and creative industries, while serving on boards and advisory groups that navigate complex strategic and cultural challenges.

As owner and director of FIT60HQ Gym and Protect For Life Insurance Brokers, he is passionate about helping whānau and businesses safeguard their futures, focusing on legacy, prosperity, and socially responsible decision-making.

Keven is committed to strengthening people, organisations, and communities across Aotearoa.

Keven was made a member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM) in 2016 for services to rugby.

More details about statistics, prize winners and other recruits will be shared after graduation on Thursday and a follow up Ten One story will be published later this month. 

ENDS 

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/10/media-advisory-more-police-for-the-streets-in-latest-wing-graduation/

Asian Computer Industry Online Exhibition 2026: A Global Hub for Technology Industry Collaboration

Source: Media Outreach

TAIPEI, TAIWAN – Media OutReach Newswire – 10 March 2026 – The Asian Computer Industry Online Exhibition 2026 (ACI 2026) will officially open on March 10, 2026, and run through June 30, 2026. Designed as a nearly four-month premier international trade event, the exhibition aims to connect suppliers, importers, and exporters across Asia while strengthening cross-border sourcing and global technology partnerships.

Since its launch in 2022, the exhibition has been jointly organized by AsianNet and TradeAsia (www.e-tradeasia.com). The event has supported numerous companies in expanding into overseas markets and has earned strong industry recognition for high-quality buyers, efficient matchmaking, and measurable order results.

In 2026, ACI 2026 will expand in scale and be held concurrently with leading international technology trade shows, including Embedded World, Display Week (SID), COMPUTEX TAIPEI, and ISC High Performance. By aligning with major global exhibitions, the event creates a strong time-synergy effect, enabling international buyers to efficiently compare products, evaluate suppliers, and complete procurement decisions within a concentrated timeframe. This strategic alignment enhances purchasing efficiency and maximizes cross-exhibition business opportunities.

ACI 2026 features a robust lineup of respected Taiwanese manufacturers, including industry leaders such as HIGHGRADE TECH, OKAYO ELECTRONICS, BIPOLAR ELECTRONIC, YNG WEI, YNG YUH ELECTRONIC, ESMT, GOOD OPPORTUNITY ELECTRONIC, MSTRONIC, SUN RISE EXACT, AIRWAVE TECHNOLOGIES, KING DESGIN INDUSTRIAL, CLEVER INTELLIGENCE UNITY, YO-TRONICS TECHNOLOGY, DORIS INDUSTRIAL, REUEX INDUSTRIAL, ARIOSE ELECTRONICS, UNITEX NUNG LAI BUTTON and many more. These companies will present thousands of the latest computer industry products and technologies, covering a wide array of sectors crucial to modern manufacturing and production.

Comprehensive Coverage Across the Entire Industry Chain

The Asian Computer Industry Online Exhibition 2026 brings together dozens of premium suppliers from the global computer manufacturing and electronic components sectors, showcasing over a thousand innovative products and forward-looking technologies. The exhibits are strategically structured around the core value of the industry supply chain, comprehensively covering key system-level products such as desktop computers, laptops and accessories, tablets and accessories, industrial computers and embedded systems, gaming and e-sports equipment, as well as computer software, IT, and internet services.

The ACI 2026 also highlights critical communications infrastructure, including networking equipment, wireless communication devices, telecommunications and fiber access equipment, landline and VoIP systems, and antennas. In terms of key components and supply chain solutions, the showcased products include computer components, storage and memory devices, active components, power supply units, connectors and terminals, cables and cable assemblies, wiring accessories, transformers, batteries, and charging equipment.

In addition, the ACI 2026 features monitors, computer accessories and peripherals, input devices, point-of-sale (POS) systems, printers, plotters and scanners, printer consumables and parts, as well as broadcast and professional AV equipment, audio and video components, consumer electronics accessories and components, and electronic materials and supplies.

Together, these comprehensive categories fully demonstrate the complete ecosystem of the computer industry, spanning system integration, communications infrastructure, core components, and end-use applications. Combining technological depth with product breadth, the exhibition stands as a premier international trade event for efficient business matchmaking and global market expansion among professional buyers and industry stakeholders worldwide.

ACI 2026 Online Exhibition:
https://www.etradeasia.com/online-show/43/Asian-Computer-Industry-Online-Exhibition-2026.html

Innovative Online Exhibition Model

The Asian Computer Industry Online Exhibition 2026 features dedicated online showrooms, digital catalogs, and virtual exhibition halls fully integrated with the TradeAsia platform. Buyers worldwide can browse exhibitor information, submit quotation requests, and conduct procurement evaluations in real time, thereby facilitating efficient, cost-effective, and results-driven global business connections.

Hashtag: #TradeAsia

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/10/asian-computer-industry-online-exhibition-2026-a-global-hub-for-technology-industry-collaboration/

New equipment boosts ports’ emergency access

Source: New Zealand Government

Access to New Zealand’s smaller ports will be significantly improved by the procurement of a new crane dredging barge, which will ensure vital supplies can be delivered to regional communities cut-off by natural disasters and other major emergencies.

Associate Transport Minister James Meager confirmed the Government’s $8 million Coastal Shipping Resilience Fund co-investment, while visiting Whanganui Port.

“We’ve seen how recent storms and major events like Cyclone Gabrielle significantly impact communities. In many cases the only way to deliver essential supplies is by sea, due to road and rail links being cut off,” Mr Meager says.

“However, there have been cases of vital goods unable to get into ports, including in Greymouth, Whanganui and Ōpōtiki, as the sites require dredging to ensure enough depth for ships’ access.

“It’s not easy or cost-effective for smaller ports to dredge. The current market is focused on high-volume, long-term projects, and often our smaller ports can’t afford or procure the dredging required to keep them navigable and open for business.

“That’s why we’re co-funding a purpose-built crane dredger hopper barge, specifically designed for low-cost, small-to-medium scale work. This is far more commercially viable and technically suited for smaller sites.

“The new equipment will be available for use nationwide, increasing the resilience of regional communities. It will be able to be deployed at short notice, to restore navigable depths so essential supplies can enter and communities can recover sooner.”

The equipment’s total cost is $12.9 million, with the remainder being co-funded by Northland-based marine construction company Johnson Bros Limited. It will be operational in late 2027.

“Our Government is committed to fixing the basics, like port access, and building the future by improving our country’s resilience to natural disasters. This summer’s devastating weather events have only highlighted this need further,” Mr Meager says.

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/10/new-equipment-boosts-ports-emergency-access/

Government may offer asylum to Iranian female football players, Seymour says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Iranian players saluting for the national anthem after being reprimanded for not singing in an earlier match. AFP

The New Zealand government may offer asylum to Iranian female football players in Australia who are likely to face persecution if they return to their home country.

The ABC reported that five players are currently being protected by police in Queensland after evading their team handlers at their Gold Coast accommodation.

The players, Fatemeh Pasandideh, Zahra Ghanbari, Zahra Sarbali, Atefeh Ramazanzadeh and Mona Hamoudi, refused to sing the national anthem before their opening match with South Korea at the Women’s Asian Cup earlier this month, the ABC said.

It said fears that the players would be targeted by the Iranian regime when they returned home have grown after Iranian state TV labelled them as “traitors,” the ABC said.

US President Donald Trump has urged Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to grant the whole team asylum.

In a post on his social media platform, Trump said: “Australia is making a terrible humanitarian mistake by allowing the Iran National Woman’s Soccer team to be forced back to Iran, where they will most likely be killed. Don’t do it, Mr. Prime Minister, give ASYLUM. The U.S. will take them if you won’t.”

Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour. RNZ / Mark Papalii

On First Up, Deputy Prime Minister David Seymour was asked if Australia should grant the players asylum – or if New Zealand should offer it.

Seymour said the Australian government had to make that decision based on law and it didn’t help “for their cousins across the ditch to start lobbying advice at them”.

But Seymour said it was a humanitarian question.

“Any sort-of lay person would sit there and say ‘do they have a well-founded fear of persecution of they return to their home country?’ I think the common sense answer is that they do.

“Would a country like Australia, or New Zealand for that matter, want to help people in that situation? I think the answer is we would, so let’s let the Australian government work through that question according to law as they have to.

“But I think any person looking at it would come to a pretty obvious answer in their heart and mind.”

Seymour said New Zealand has done something similar for refugees/aslyum seekers in the past.

“Perhaps the New Zealand government will do something like that today.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/10/government-may-offer-asylum-to-iranian-female-football-players-seymour-says/

Suzie Bates, Sophie Devine return for White Ferns series against South Africa

Source: Radio New Zealand

Suzie Bates (R) and Sophie Devine (L) of New Zealand celebrate their win over Pakistan at the 2024 T20 World Cup in UAE. PHOTOSPORT

Former captain Sophie Devine along with veteran batter Suzie Bates return to the White Ferns squad for this month’s T20 series against South Africa.

Devine, Bates, Georgia Plimmer and Flora Devonshire were all unavailable for the current series against Zimbabwe which finishes on Wednesday.

Bates has recovered from a quad injury, Devonshire a broken finger and Plimmer a shoulder injury.

The five match series, which includes double headers with the Black Caps and Proteas, starts in Mount Maunganui on Sunday.

Devine is set to make her return to the side for the first time since the World Cup in India in October, as the White Ferns continue their preparation to defend their title at the T20 World Cup in England later this year.

New Zealand is ranked fourth in T20 cricket with South Africa fifth.

Head Coach Ben Sawyer said the injection of Bates and Devine’s experience could only do good things for the team.

“Their quality on the field really does speak for itself but what they bring to the group culturally is really important for us as a team. I’m looking forward to having them mix in with some of the newer members of the squad.”

New Zealand’s Georgia Plimmer bats DJ Mills / PHOTOSPORT

Sawyer expressed his excitement at having Plimmer available again.

“Her role at the top of the order is a key one and it’ll be great to have her back as we continue to build toward that World Cup later in the year.”

The squad features 15 players, with Auckland Hearts’ Bree Illing and Otago Sparks’ Polly Inglis making way for Devonshire and Canterbury Magicians’ Lea Tahuhu after the first two T20Is.

White Ferns T20 Squad v South Africa

Melie Kerr (C) – Wellington Blaze

Suzie Bates – Otago Sparks

Sophie Devine – Wellington Blaze

Flora Devonshire** – Central Hinds

Izzy Gaze – Auckland Hearts

Maddy Green – Auckland Hearts

Brooke Halliday – Auckland Hearts

Bree Illing* – Auckland Hearts

Polly Inglis* – Otago Sparks

Jess Kerr – Wellington Blaze

Rosemary Mair – Central Hinds

Nensi Patel – Northern Brave

Georgia Plimmer – Wellington Blaze

Izzy Sharp – Canterbury Magicians

Lea Tahuhu** – Canterbury Magicians

*first two T20s only

**last three T20s only

Schedule

Sunday 15 March, 1st T20I’s, Bay Oval

Tuesday 17 March, 2nd T20I’s, Seddon Park

Friday 20 March, 3rd T20I’s,Eden Park

Sunday 22 March, 4th T20I’s, Hnry Stadium (Wgtn)

Wednesday 25 March, 5th T20I’s, Hagley Oval

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/10/suzie-bates-sophie-devine-return-for-white-ferns-series-against-south-africa/

Corey Peters sixth in Super-G at Winter Games

Source: Radio New Zealand

Corey Peters at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympics. © Photosport 2026 Jeff Crowe / Photosport

New Zealand paralympian Corey Peters has finished sixth in the men’s Super-G sitting at the Paralympic Winter Games in Italy.

Competing in soft snow conditions, Peters produced a solid run to record 1:15.42, but ultimately the Beijing 2022 silver medallist finished short of a podium repeat.

The 42-year-old finished fifth in the downhill earlier in the programme.

Jeroen Kampschreur of the Netherlands bounced back from the disappointment of registering a DNF in the downhill to take gold in a time of 1:13.08.

Defending champion Jesper Pedersen of Norway, who claimed gold in the downhill two days earlier, took silver in 1:13.80, with Andrew Kurka of the USA clinching bronze a further 0.15 seconds adrift.

“It was a good run with minimal mistakes, but I just didn’t attack it like the podium guys did and I got a little wide on some turns where I could have tightened the line a bit more,” Peters said afterwards.

“The conditions again were really soft and I could feel through some of the turns that the ski was wanting to break away in that sugary, slushy snow.”

Peters, who is competing at his fourth Paralympic Winter Games, turns his attention to the Men’s Giant Slalom Sitting – his final event at Milano Cortina 2026 – which takes place on Friday 13 March.

“The downhill and Super-G are my favourite events but coming off a podium finish at my last World Cup in Veysonnaz, Switzerland before the Games, a medal is not off the cards. It’s just a matter of going out there, enjoying the moment and skiing as hard as I can.”

Peters claimed men’s giant slalom silver on his Paralympic Winter Games debut in Sochi 2014. He added downhill bronze at PyeongChang 2018 before winning downhill gold and super-G silver at Beijing 2022.

Adam Hall opens his games with the men’s giant slalom standing on Friday.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/10/corey-peters-sixth-in-super-g-at-winter-games/

China Telecom Concludes MWC 2026 with Outstanding Success

Source: Media Outreach

BARCELONA, SPAIN – Media OutReach Newswire – 9 March 2026 – From March 2 to 5, the 2026 Mobile World Congress (MWC) was grandly held in Barcelona, Spain. China Telecom attended the Congress with two high-profile keynote speeches, an immersive interactive exhibition booth, and a Low-Altitude Economy Launch Event, presenting a panoramic showcase of its strategic vision and innovative achievements in transforming into a key promoter in the AI era. Having also won multiple prestigious international awards in the telecommunications field, China Telecom earned wide attention and high recognition from international operators, ecosystem partners, and global media with its hard-core technological strength and open, collaborative spirit.

China Telecom MWC 2026

Two Keynote Speeches Set the Tone: Charting a New Vision for Transformation in the AI Era

On March 2, China Telecom President Liu Guiqing attended the Congress opening ceremony and delivered a keynote speech entitled “The Transformation of a Large Telco to a Key Promoter in AI Era.” Liu Guiqing stated that China Telecom is fully embracing AI and advancing its corporate strategy toward the “Cloudification, Digital Transformation and AI for Good” upgrade, consistently placing technological innovation at the core of its corporate strategy and driving the company’s transformation from a traditional telecommunications operator into a technology-oriented enterprise.

At the Congress, Liu Guiqing put forward five key judgements on the direction of operator development in the AI era: First, 6G standard innovation and network deployment must fully account for the rapid development of AI. Second, cloud-network integration will play an ever greater role in the AI era. Third, AI security governance will become a mandatory topic for global operators, and is also a watershed defining the strength of operational and service capabilities in the intelligent era. Fourth, computing-power and electricity coordination capability will become the key to the sustainable development of intelligent computing infrastructure. Fifth, the flourishing development of AI applications requires operators to open up and cooperate with greater force.

On March 3, Liu Guiqing attended the World Broadband Association (WBBA) Broadband Development Congress and delivered a keynote speech entitled “From Connectivity to Intelligence: A New Era for Cloud-Network Broadband.” Liu Guiqing noted that AI is fully advancing into the Agentic AI stage — characterized by autonomous execution and intelligent collaboration — heralding the dawn of an Agentic Internet. How to accurately seize the transformational opportunities driven by Agentic AI has become a shared challenge for telecommunications operators worldwide.

Liu Guiqing emphasized that China Telecom is willing to join hands with WBBA and all industry stakeholders, with Agentic AI as the core engine, to drive the iterative upgrade of new digital information infrastructure. Three proposals were put forward: First, to strengthen technological innovation in collaboration with WBBA, leading the transformation of new digital information infrastructure. Second, to deepen industrial cooperation through WBBA, expanding the value of new digital information infrastructure. Third, to leverage WBBA to bridge the global digital and intelligent divide, elevate the standard of global cloud-network services, lower the threshold for applying intelligent technologies, and ensure the dividends of Agentic AI development benefit a broader population.

Multiple Awards, Crowning Honours: International Recognition Sets a New Benchmark

On March 4, at the Global Mobile Awards (GLOMO Awards) — widely regarded as the “Oscars of the mobile communications industry” — China Telecom claimed an impressive haul of four accolades. The EasyOn 5G-A-RobotNet solution, developed jointly with ZTE, won the “Best Private Network Solution Award”; the direct-to-high-orbit satellite connectivity project for mobile phones, co-developed with Huawei, won the “Best Non-Terrestrial Network Solution Award”; the “Green Pepper Programme” in Lancang County, Pu’er, jointly submitted with the YouCheng Foundation and Huawei, won the “Best Mobile Innovation for Enhancing the Lives of Children and Young People Award”; and the “5G-A Empowering a New Model of Wireless Concert Livestreaming” project, developed together with ZTE and other industry partners, won the “Best Event Activation Award.” The multiple awards won underscore China Telecom’s comprehensive strength across technological innovation, social responsibility, and commercial application.

During the Congress, the GSMA Foundry Awards Ceremony was held with great fanfare. Three innovative proposals jointly developed by China Telecom with Huawei and ZTE stood out from the competition, capturing a total of four awards across two categories of the Foundry Excellence Awards 2026 and the GSMA Foundry Innovation GLOMO Award. Specifically, the “Mobile Network for Thriving AI” project, developed jointly with Huawei, received the Intelligent Networks & AI-Driven Infrastructure Award under the GSMA Foundry Excellence Awards; the “5G-Advanced Facilitates Multi-Robot Collaboration” solution, co-developed with ZTE, won the GSMA Foundry “Enterprise Innovation & New Revenue Models” award; and the “Relieving the Pressure on Physicians” solution has claimed both the GSMA Foundry “Cross-Cutting Excellence” Award and the GSMA Foundry Innovation GLOMO Award, demonstrating China Telecom’s globally leading capabilities in the convergence of 5G-A and AI technologies for industry applications.

One Exhibition Booth, One Launch Event: Co-Drawing a New Vision of Intelligence in the AI Era

During this year’s MWC, China Telecom’s exhibition booth was meticulously arranged under the theme “Embracing the Intelligent Era with New AI Infra.” From the stunning debut of the Xirang 2.0 “Triless Three-Independence Architecture,” to the “Xing Xiao Chen Intelligent Agent”‘s multi-task intent understanding and central control capabilities; from the quantum infrastructure covering over 40 major cities across China, to the panoramic vision of a low-altitude intelligent network and satellite communications spanning “air, space, ground, and sea” — China Telecom showcased four major infrastructure pillars, namely “AI + Intelligent Cloud,” “AI + Quantum,” “AI + Low-Altitude,” and “AI + Satellite Communications,” outlining the foundation of the intelligent era with a forward-looking vision and attracting numerous senior executives and professionals from international operators for in-depth exchanges.

On March 2, China Telecom Unmanned Technology held a Low-Altitude Economy Launch Event, unveiling China Telecom’s AI-powered “1+1+4+N” Low-Altitude Economy Capability System to the world. Leveraging key technologies including 5G-Advanced (5G-A), RedCap, millimeter-wave sensing, and Integrated Sensing and Communication (ISAC), China Telecom has built an intelligent connected network with deep integration of “connectivity, sensing, computing, and platform,” forming a full-stack capability system covering low-altitude infrastructure, operational supervision, security protection, and intelligent operations. To date, the Capability System has been deployed in over 60 cities across China, generating more than 1,000 application scenarios, and has achieved application deployment in regions including West Africa, demonstrating mature large-scale rollout capabilities. The event also saw the launch of four digital platforms — Xingyun, Xingdun, Xingxun, and Xinghan — along with the “Tianqing” 5G-A RedCap Low-Altitude Module, delivering integrated and replicable system solutions to help low-altitude flight “fly safely and fly efficiently.”

Throughout the four-day exhibition, technological depth and the warmth of everyday life blended perfectly at the China Telecom booth. This year, the booth featured a dedicated AI Live TechShow, where performers presented China Telecom’s AI technologies and products woven into everyday life scenes in a lighthearted and entertaining way: the eSurf IntelliHub captured real-time footage of mischievous pets at home; the eSurf AI health & wellness companion robot precisely reminded users about their medication; the eSurf AI sports companion robot dog danced in time to the music… Every performance drew crowds of visitors who stopped to watch.

The “AI + Chinese Opera Face-Changing” interactive experience, powered by the Xingchen Large Model and image algorithms, allowed overseas visitors to instantly complete a Chinese opera costume transformation. Exquisite gifts given out on site — including Xing Xiao Chen magnetic snap figurines and panda blind box plushies — proved enormously popular with Congress attendees. This cross-language beauty of AI came with a very real sense of “something to take home,” leaving everyone with wonderful memories.

During the exhibition, mainstream media, industry media, and overseas outlets provided comprehensive coverage of the China Telecom booth through livestreaming, exclusive interviews, articles, and other formats, sparking extensive attention and discussion, with related topics trending continuously. On March 3, well-known media hosts took up position at the China Telecom booth and launched a global “Exhibition Exploration” livestream, offering tens of millions of online viewers an immersive, first-person experience of the cutting-edge technologies, igniting wave after wave of online buzz. China Telecom’s AI products and technological capabilities successfully achieved breakthrough viral reach well beyond the industry.

This MWC 2026 journey was not only a vivid demonstration of China Telecom’s transformation into a key promoter in the AI era, but also a profound dialogue with global partners on technology and development. Standing at the forefront of the intelligent era, China Telecom will continue to deepen its “Cloudification, Digital Transformation and AI for Good” strategy, responding to the questions of the times with forward-looking technological innovation, and moving forward hand in hand with partners in an open and mutually beneficial spirit, jointly ushering in a brighter new era of AI.

https://www.chinatelecomglobal.com/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/3679513
https://x.com/chinateleglobal
https://www.facebook.com/chinatelecomglobal
Wechat: 中国电信国际

Hashtag: #ChinaTelecom #MWC2026 #AI #DigitalTransformation

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/china-telecom-concludes-mwc-2026-with-outstanding-success/

Rugby: Injury-hit Black Ferns Sevens outlast Australia in Vancouver thriller

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s women’s team celebrate with the trophy after defeating Australia to win the HSBC SVNS Vancouver rugby sevens tournament. AFP / DON MACKINNON

An injury-depleted Black Ferns Sevens side pulled off a hard fought victory over Australia in the Vancouver Sevens final on Monday.

Reduced to just three players on their reserves bench with Braxton Sorensen-McGee, Jazmin Felix-Hotham and Manaia Nuku unavailable, the odds were stacked against the Black Ferns, who have got the better of Australia in three of their four previous title clashes during the series.

Leading 12-5 at halftime, New Zealand appeared to be running out of steam as the Aussies reeled them in level the scores at 17-17 with a couple of minutes left on the clock before a late try Alena Saili sealed the victory for the Black Ferns.

Player of the match Jorja Miller was the crucial point of difference between the two teams.

Miller scored one and set up a second in a full-throttle final as the Black Ferns Sevens held off Australia maintain their perfect winning record in Vancouver.

Miller said the adversity faced by the team during the tournament made the win more meaningful.

“I am so proud of this team, I’m so honoured to wear this black jersey. We’ve had a few girls go down this weekend … it means a lot more to us than just rugby,” the

And, on International Women’s Day she remembered who had inspired her. “When I was younger I was looking up to the greats, amazing players like Portia and Sarah Hirini.

“I hope that, as a team, we can inspire young girls and young boys to play rugby.”

USA beat France in the third-place play-off to end a nine-tournament wait for a podium finish, while Canada got the home crowd on their feet as they claimed fifth, and Japan claimed seventh at the end of an end-to-end play-off against Great Britain.

In the men’s draw, South Africa toppled Spain to take out the title.

South Africa beat and Spain 38-12 in the men’s final.

The All Blacks Sevens failed to reach the semifinal stage after losing to both of the eventual finalists during pool play.

The series now heads to New York for the next weekend’s tournament.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/rugby-injury-hit-black-ferns-sevens-outlast-australia-in-vancouver-thriller/

Taihoro reborn: Team NZ launches upgraded AC75 ahead of America’s Cup defence

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emirates Team New Zealand’s new AC75 sailing on Auckland’s Hauraki Gulf James Somerset

Team New Zealand’s boat Taihoro is officially out of the shed and ready to hit the water ahead of next year’s America’s Cup.

The team relaunched their AC75 at their Wynyard Point base in Auckland on Monday, a milestone in a campaign that is focussed on securing a historic fourth consecutive victory in Naples in 2027.

While Taihoro is the same vessel that dominated the waters of Barcelona, it has undergone a significant refit to meet the new 38th America’s Cup rules.

Team New Zealand chief executive officer Grant Dalton said “to outsiders, there may not be a huge amount that is apparently different”.

“From the outside it looks similar.”

Under strict cost-containment measures, teams are restricted to their legacy hulls used in the last Cup.

To remain compliant, Team New Zealand’s designers worked within razor-thin margins, limited to three specific modification categories:

  • Cockpit Reconfiguration: Extensive work to transition the deck layout for the new crew requirements.
  • Structural Rebuilds: The team was permitted to rebuild up to 4sqm of the hull using the same shape but different materials, allowing for localised strengthening or weight optimisation.
  • Functional Rebates: Modifications were made to add rebates to maximize aerodynamic efficiency.

Team New Zealand’s head of design Dan Bernasconi said despite the same hulls being used again, the rules still allow for some significant technological developments and improvements in the AC75’s.

“The hulls have always been one of the most noticeable features on an America’s Cup yacht, but because the hulls spend so much time out of the water, there is actually not that much difference in the performance of hulls, maybe five seconds around the race course across all of the boats in Barcelona.

“So the class rule and design parameters still allow for important gains and difference in performance from the foils, sails and control systems for example. As with every iteration of the same class of boat, there is no doubt the racing will be a lot closer this time around between all teams.

“So, as always, winning will be a massive challenge for the whole team.”

Team New Zealand first unveiled Taihoro ahead of the 2024 America’s Cup in Barcelona. LLUIS GENE / AFP

Chief operating officer Kevin Shoebridge also expected a step up in performance.

“Internally, our philosophy is to always drive innovation and technology, so we think Taihoro ‘2.0’ will be a great step on from what we saw in Barcelona.” .

The most radical visual transformation lies in the crew pod on either side of the AC75.

The cyclors, who used leg power to provide hydraulic pressure have been retired as per the Protocol. In their place sits a standardised battery system for use across all teams.

This high-capacity battery is now the primary source of power for the yacht’s complex foil and sail control systems.

This technological leap has direct consequences for the crew, moving the challenge from physical exertion to digital discipline, as sailors must manage finite battery limits throughout the race.

Crew sizes have shrunk from eight down to five.

With an odd number of crew, roles are becoming more fluid, or roles like flight control and sail trimming may be further consolidated.

Skipper Nathan Outteridge said there is a lot of anticipation around what the roles of the five sailors will be.

“When you look across all of the teams, the question is who will be in the different positions.

“For us, we have a fresh new team which is an exciting mix of young talent and experience so what that eventually looks like in July next year we don’t know right now. That’s part of what the next block sailing Taihoro is about.”

One certainty in the coming days is Olympic gold and silver medallist Jo Aleh is set to become the first woman to crew an AC75 as a new rule introduced to extend the pathways beyond the AC40’s and Women’s America’s Cup to the America’s Cup itself.

A notable addition to the new layout is a dedicated guest racer pod, designed to allow a non-crew member to experience the raw G-forces of an AC75 at full flight, a feature not seen since the days of the version 5 IACC boats in 2007.

Team New Zealand will be utilising the guest racer spot throughout their sailing block in Auckland over the coming weeks.

The relaunch ceremony was centred around the cultural traditions that have come to define the team’s identity with Iwi Manaaki Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei presiding over the event, blessing Taihoro once again.

The blessing reconnected the vessel with its name, meaning “to move swiftly as the sea between both sky and earth”.

Aucklanders and America’s Cup followers will not have to wait long to see the Taihoro in action.

With the AC75 ready to go sailing, the first seen in the 38th America’s Cup cycle, the team will begin an intensive testing block immediately. Over the coming weeks, Taihoro will be a regular fixture on the Hauraki Gulf, flying across the water as the crew acclimates to the new dynamics of the freshly evolved AC75 before the team refocuses on AC40 racing at the first Preliminary Regatta in Cagliari, Sardinia in May.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/taihoro-reborn-team-nz-launches-upgraded-ac75-ahead-of-americas-cup-defence/

‘What’s going on?’: Kiwi cricketer Brett Randell on the five-ball blitz that created history

Source: Radio New Zealand

Central Stags paceman Brett Randell captured global headlines after becoming the first player to claim a triple hat-trick in the 254-year history of first class cricket. www.photosport.nz

After taking his fifth wicket in five balls, a perplexed Brett Randell looked to his teammates for an explanation.

“What was going on? I don’t think anyone knew what was going on. We were coming into the huddle after each of the wickets and their reactions were the same as mine, just ‘what’s going on?’”

The Central Districts bowler rewrote the record books on Sunday after becoming the first player to claim a triple hat-trick in the 254-year history of first class cricket.

He achieved the feat during a Plunket Shield match against Northern Districts at McLean Park in Napier.

“It’s a once in a lifetime thing and I’m just going to try and stay grounded and go into next game, just trying to emulate the same plans, but recognising that the same thing’s probably not going to happen again,” Randell said.

The accomplishment had still not fully sunk in for Randell.

“It was pretty crazy. I still can’t really believe it, I don’t think I will for a while.”

He described a surreal feeling as the wickets kept tumbling. Randell’s dismissals read bowled, bowled, caught behind, caught at slip, bowled.

“I was just trying to stay level headed and just keep putting the ball in the same area because it was clearly working. That was about it really, couldn’t believe what was happening, but still trying to stay in the same area that I had been doing for the previous few balls.

“We talk about not really not searching for wickets. So I was just trying to put the ball in the same area because it had got wickets already. So I just thought, why not? I’m just going to keep trying to put it in the same area and see what happens.

“I managed to snaffle another couple. Then the couple in the over after that as well, I was just trying to do the same thing.”

As for his favourite, he said they were all “pretty good”.

“I think the first one I was quite happy with because of the balls proceeding it, I had a plan come to fruition. Then they just kept coming off. So I’d say all of them are pretty equal.”

Commenters online attempted to take the gloss off the feat, questioning whether or not the third wicket was legitimate.

“I thought it hit glove initially. I spoke to Joe (Carter) this morning and he said he would have gone up as well, but he was pretty adamant that he didn’t hit it.

“I mean, at the end of the day, the umpire put his finger up and that’s all there is to it.”

Having captured global headlines, Randell said he was simply trying to enjoy the moment.

“The messages from family and friends have been crazy. Everyone just can’t really believe it. From friends all around the world as well that I’ve played cricket with – it was a really special moment.”

A veteran of the first-class scene, Randell, who represented New Zealand at under-19 level, made his debut for Northern Districts in 2017. He said he still had ambitions of a Black Caps’ call-up.

“I’ve moved around quite a bit, those sorts of selections or recognition will come or they won’t. At the end of the day, I’m just trying to put out some good performances for the Stags and be the best cricketer and best person I can be.”

Though he said he had shared plenty of memorable moments with the Stags, from a personal standpoint, the triple hat-trick sits alone as his finest hour on a cricket pitch.

“I don’t think there is any topping it, unless I can join a fellow teammate of mine Ajaz Patel and get 10 in an innings.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/whats-going-on-kiwi-cricketer-brett-randell-on-the-five-ball-blitz-that-created-history/

If you drink, don’t drive. It’s a decision that can save a life

Source: New Zealand Police

Canterbury Police remind motorists that drink driving is never worth the risk.

If you’re heading out to enjoy an event, a gathering, or a night with friends, plan a sober ride home for your safety, and for everyone else on the road.

Over the weekend, several well‑attended events were held across rural Canterbury, including at the Lincoln Domain on Saturday evening and in Waipara on Sunday.

Senior Sergeant Rachel Walker says Police were pleased that the events were largely trouble‑free, but that it was disappointing to see that some drivers still chose to consume alcohol and then get behind the wheel.

“These decisions put themselves, their passengers and other road users at serious risk.”

Police commend the many motorists who made the right call by arranging safe transport and driving responsibly but have seen enough when it comes to impaired driving.

“The consequences of crashes caused by alcohol or drugs are devastating,” says Senior Sergeant Walker.

“For whānau, communities and for the emergency responders who attend them.

“Our staff will continue to maintain a strong presence on the roads to educate drivers and prevent harm.

“We see the damage so we’re unapologetic about prevention.”

With several major events coming up, including Supercars, Super Rugby fixtures and two busy long weekends with Easter and ANZAC Day, Police urge everyone to plan before heading out.

“If you’re drinking or using drugs, legal or illegal, don’t drive.

“Choose a sober driver. Call a taxi. Use public transport. Stay the night.

“One decision can save a life.” 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/if-you-drink-dont-drive-its-a-decision-that-can-save-a-life/

Super Rugby Pacific: Crusaders win a ‘turning point’ for Blues

Source: Radio New Zealand

Blues winger Caleb Clarke scores a second half try during the Super Rugby Pacific – Blues v Crusaders at Eden Park, Auckland, New Zealand. Photosport

Prior to the weekend, an uncomfortable question had started to form in the Blues camp.

An increasingly one-sided rivalry against the Crusaders had the Blues begin to wonder whether a mental block had crept in when facing the perennial powerhouses.

Heading into Saturday night’s 29-13 win at Eden Park, the Blues had won just three of 23 against the Crusaders dating back to 2014.

Skipper Dalton Papali’i, playing in his first home game since bringing up his 100th cap the previous weekend against the Brumbies in Canberra, has endured a rough run against the Cantabs during his Blues’ career.

“I’ve only beaten them twice before in my career, third time tonight. So it’s always been a tough ride against them. Every team has that one team you always struggle with.”

Blues coach Vern Cotter said earlier in the week that the record against the Crusaders spoke for itself, and may have acted as a motivator for his troops.

“It was said, so I think the players said ‘we’ve had enough of that.’ I think it was more about us than the record. It was about us playing our game, imposing our game on them and you see what happens. I think that’s a real turning point for this team, knowing that when we do it right and we focus on it during the week, then put it out in the paddock.”

Papali’i said the head to head history can be given too much credence.

“You talk about that mental barrier, and in the years that we’ve played them and we’ve lost, we maybe push it a bit too much throughout the week and talk a bit too much about them.

“But the times I have beat them, we focused on ourselves. You study the other team as you always do, but then you’ve got to look within yourselves and actually find the buttons that push you to go forward.”

The All Blacks flanker said despite dropping two of three to start their campaign, the confidence did not wane.

“Tonight was no surprise, the whole week we were building and we weren’t panicking on the results, we talked our forward pack wanting to be dogs out there.

“I feel like when we have our attitude right, then we’re a team that can decide games and it’s all on us. I felt like we had the foot on the throat the whole game.

“I always think it is for a statement game as a forward pack to go against these guys.”

Elsewhere, the Hurricanes continued their dominance over the Waratahs, picking up their ninth win on the trot to shoot back up to third after the Lautoka slip.

The pace-setting Brumbies suffered their first loss, coming in dramatic and controversial fashion against the Reds.

Moana continue to look listless without Ardie Savea, with the Chiefs maintaining their unbeaten run against the bottom-placed battlers.

Jamie Joseph put the disappointment of missing out on the All Blacks job in the rear with a quality Highlanders win over the Force, with Caleb Tangitau continuing his stellar season in Dunedin.

Try of the round: Cody Vai’i’s miracle at Eden, launching himself to sensationally snag a Beauden Barrett crosskick and expertly grass it inches inside the line.

Stock rise: Highlanders flanker Veveni Lasaqa put in an absolute shift against the Force, bagging a try, three pilfers and making 17 tackles.

Stock drop: Taha Kemara was given the fullback jersey in Will Jordan’s absence, but made little impact from the back against the Blues, and was subbed at half-time.

Super Rugby standings after four rounds:

1. Brumbies

2. Chiefs

3. Hurricanes

4. Blues

5. Waratahs

6. Reds

7. Highlanders

8. Crusaders

9. Fijian Drua

10. Force

11. Moana Pasifika

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/super-rugby-pacific-crusaders-win-a-turning-point-for-blues/

How hot is too hot for football in the Pacific?

Source: Radio New Zealand

. PHOTOSPORT

Medical experts are warning sporting organisations need to do more to manage the risks of heat illness in football, after recent tournaments in the Pacific were played in extreme conditions.

During a recent World Cup qualifier, three Samoan players were struck down by heatstroke in temperatures nearing 40C, while another player in the OFC Pro League required hospitalisation after pushing his body to the limit.

Heat illness can be life-threatening in sport, and has led to deaths internationally.

Dr Mark Fulcher, chair of the Oceania Football Confederation medical commission and a doctor with Auckland FC in the OFC Pro League, has seen first-hand how dangerous it can become if risks are not properly managed.

“For some people, heat is probably a small thing. It makes them feel unpleasant, they might have a headache, they might need to go lie in an ice bath for a little while. But for some people, it’s a life-threatening condition, so it’s about having an awareness that it’s not a benign problem,” said Fulcher, who has worked in elite football for 20 years.

The Football Ferns’ first OFC Women’s World Cup qualifier against Samoa on 27 February was played in ambient temperatures in the late 30s in the Solomon Islands. It was a windless day with extreme humidity.

Samoa’s head coach Paul Ifill and Samoa’s Arianna Skeers at half-time during FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers 2027 at National Stadium Honiara. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

Immediately after the match Samoa coach Paul Ifill questioned the conditions.

“We had a lot of people really struggling with the heat, we’ve got three players with heat stroke,” Ifill said.

“I think the organisers need to look at the timing, playing at 1 o’clock I don’t think is fair to the players … I’ve got players now that won’t be able to probably play for the rest of the tournament.”

It was not just the Samoan players feeling the heat in Honiara.

Football Fern Michaela Foster said the heat was something the players and coaches considered in the game plan during the tournament which wrapped up last week.

New Zealand warmup before FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers at National Stadium Honiara. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

“It is hot, the humidity has been quite challenging … in this heat we obviously want to minimise the unnecessary running.”

Fulcher said more needed to be done to manage the risk for all athletes – and it was beyond looking at the forecast.

“Sporting organisations and the people leading the organisations need to understand that this is potentially a very serious issue.

“If you look at North America there are several people that die every year from heat illness in sport.

“If you look at the NRL, they’ve had a recent issue with a fatality that was linked to heat illnesses.

“So I think we really need to look at where are these tournaments being held, when in the day, looking at historical data around temperatures and things like that to help make those determinations. Then there needs to be very clear education of all the stakeholders about the risks of heat illness and how we can mitigate those.”

Is it too hot in the Pacific Islands to be hosting tournaments?

Samoa’s Tielua Baptista is shaded by her team mates after going down injured during FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers 2027 in Honiara. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

Fulcher believed there would be locations and times of day that it would become too hot to safely host football tournaments – and cancellations would need to be considered.

He had some concerns about recent tournaments in the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea.

“The rules and regulations that we need to have for tournaments in the Pacific are probably different to the rules and regulations that you might see in the UEFA Champions League,” he said.

The world cup qualifiers were not the only football games being played in this part of the world with a lot resting on the results.

Round two of the new OFC Pro League was in Papua New Guinea in early February where the conditions in Port Moresby were described as extremely hot and humid.

A Solomon Kings player was hospitalised after a win over Auckland FC in PNG after pushing through in a match that took a physical toll on the players.

Fulcher said in these scenarios players could be their own worst enemy.

“Athletes are not very good at self-regulating and saying, hey, I’m feeling a bit hot. They want to push themselves and often push themselves until they fall over and they can’t do it anymore.

“The things that make them good athletes, that they’re not quitters, often mean they don’t know that they’ve got a problem until they’ve got quite a big problem.”

Auckland FC’s Liam Gillion and PNG Hekari FC’s Rex Naime at Santos National Football Stadium, Papua New Guinea. Shane Wenzlick / Phototek.nz

Fulcher compared the situation athletes at [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/sport/575322/tennis-atp-open-to-formal-heat-rule-after-string-of-retirements-in-shanghai-sauna the Australian Open in tennis, which is played annually in January and where players could be playing for hours in temperatures in the 40 degrees Celsius, to what the footballers were dealing with.

“If it was very hot in Melbourne, the medical infrastructure in Melbourne to deal with the Australian Open is extremely good, both in terms of experienced clinicians at a tournament and experienced clinicians in a large tertiary hospital.

“Whereas if you have heat illness in the Solomon Islands, I would say the infrastructure available at the ground, the infrastructure available at the hospital, the ability to then travel to a tertiary hospital or somewhere for additional care, it’s quite a different environment.”

Fulcher believed players travelling from the likes of New Zealand to the islands could do little to prepare for the conditions that included “very big temperature change and no real scope to acclimatise to that”.

“There are lots of publications that talk about protocols of training and heat chambers and these sorts of things, and there’s a small amount of adaptation you can do before you travel.

“But that requires significant resourcing, and that’s also not always available to some of these teams and players.

“So I think number one, it’s only partially effective and number two it’s logistically difficult to implement.”

What are the rules?

American Samoa’s Ayana Kirisimasi at a drinks break during FIFA Women’s World Cup Qualifiers 2027. Joshua Devenie / Phototek.nz

During the OFC Women’s World Cup qualifiers in the Solomon Islands there were drinks breaks and cooling breaks. Cooling breaks allow all players to go to their respective bench/technical area and use ice and cold towels to cool down when the mercury rises.

Governing body FIFA has also introduced three-minute hydration breaks for this year’s men’s Football World Cup in Canada, USA and Mexico.

Under the new policy, regardless of the temperature, referees will stop games 22 minutes into each half so players can rehydrate.

FIFA said this will streamline and simplify the previous rules, which required cooling breaks 30 minutes into each half when the temperature at kick-off exceeded 32 degrees Celsius.

A report published last year by Football for the Future, Common Goal and Jupiter Intelligence found 10 of the 16 venues for this year’s men’s world cup, across the three host countries, are at very high risk of extreme heat stress conditions.

Fulcher said cooling is an important strategy to try and get players to reduce their core body temperature but in “isolation they’re pretty futile”.

“The cold hard reality is often the conditions are extremely hot and cooling breaks, while they’re better than nothing, are not effective strategies.”

Over his decades involved with football and New Zealand national teams Fulcher had experimented with giving players very cold water and cold water with ice slurries during drinks breaks.

“It is very difficult to consume enough of the very cold water or ice slurries to make a meaningful difference.

“In the same way that a car with a full radiator can still overheat, players are still going to overheat despite being well hydrated.”

‘Scope to improve things’

Support staff Mark Fulcher, Wade Irvine and Roland Jeffery at Estadio Azteca for the All Whites final training session in Mexico City ahead of FIFA World Cup 2014 Intercontinental qualifying match in 2013. Andrew Cornaga / photosport.co.nz

Fulcher has been on the medical staff with New Zealand football teams that have travelled across the Pacific, Africa and “other areas where it is very, very hot”.

From what he has seen with the OFC Pro League he said the staging of the tournament itself and the preparation around the tournament by teams and officials was an improvement on what has happened in the past in the region.

“There’s still scope to improve things.

“There have been some things in these tournaments that I think have gone really well. For example, the provision of equipment to treat heat illness, circulating advice around how to manage heat illness in advance so that teams are prepared.

“These sort of things, I think, are relatively small steps, but they are definitely steps in the right direction.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/how-hot-is-too-hot-for-football-in-the-pacific/

EIT international students welcomed at Hawke’s Bay mayoral ceremony

Source: Eastern Institute of Technology

12 minutes ago

International students at Eastern Institute of Technology were officially welcomed to Hawke’s Bay at the region’s annual Mayoral Welcome ceremony.

More than 40 EIT students attended the event at Toitoi in Hastings on February 27, part of a cohort of new international students enrolled at the Hawke’s Bay campus, alongside newly arrived international students from secondary schools across the region.

International students at EIT attended a Mayoral Welcome ceremony in Hastings.

EIT Master of Nursing Science student Anne Margarette Zausa Nacar, who is originally from the Philippines, was among the student speakers.

“Coming to New Zealand has been a dream of mine. Hawke’s Bay has given me opportunities not only to grow academically, but also personally and professionally.”

The 31-year-old moved to New Zealand in July last year with her husband, and says she has experienced supportive lecturers, diverse classmates and a learning environment that values both knowledge and compassion.

“As a current postgraduate student, I’ve personally experienced how supportive and encouraging our academic environment is.”

Cultural performances from EIT students and family members included Punjabi Bhangra by Jasmine Kaur and Muskanpreet Kaur, Tai Chi by Jack Wu, and Sri Lankan Kandyan Ves dance by Lakshitha Wijekoon and Imasha Kariyawasam.

Philippa Jones, EIT Executive Director International, says: “Ensuring our students feel warmly welcomed and supported is important as they embark on a new chapter in their lives.

“For many, this journey is more than a move to a new place of study – it’s an introduction to a new culture, a new environment, and a new way of living. Fostering meaningful engagement, building deeper connections, and creating a lasting sense of belonging can help ease the transition for new international students and positively impact communities throughout the region.”

Hastings Mayor Wendy Schollum said having international students across Hawke’s Bay secondary schools and EIT is great for the region.

“International students bring outside perspectives that help us grow. It also benefits our local students and allows them to see the world without needing a passport.”

Napier City Councillor Sally Crown, who attended on behalf of Napier City Council, said it was a privilege to welcome the students.

“It is really humbling to think that so many people choose Hawke’s Bay. Having EIT here is crucial in attracting international students and then it is the community infrastructure that wraps around that as well. But it is so important economically, socially to have international students coming into our region.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/eit-international-students-welcomed-at-hawkes-bay-mayoral-ceremony/

Zero Waste – No support for disestablishing the Ministry for the Environment

Source:  Zero Waste Aotearoa (ZWA)

Zero Waste Aotearoa (ZWA) does not support disestablishing the Ministry for the Environment and bundling its environmental protection functions into the proposed MCERT Mega Ministry.

“This takes us back to an old 1970’s approach by embedding a fundamental conflict of interest into the new mega-Ministry. Environmental protection will be viewed as an internal obstacle to be managed, rather than a statutory goal to be upheld,” says Sue Coutts of Zero Waste Aotearoa.

“Clean and green is part of our national identity.  It underpins our trade and tourism industries. If we don’t have a strong champion to protect our environment we are putting our health, our economy and our future at risk.”

“Almost all of our major environmental indicators show we’re in serious trouble. Our lands, air and water are polluted, biodiversity is under extreme strain and climate goals have been abandoned.”

“Solving New Zealand’s waste, recycling, plastic and chemical pollution problems is already low on the government’s priority list, dismantling the Ministry for the Environment will cross these critical issues off the to-do list altogether.”

“Dismantling the Ministry for the Environment (MfE) is nothing less than vandalism of the public interest by a government that has shown it cares very little for the ecological systems that sustain us.”

“Climate, nature, environmental quality and health impacts need a dedicated, independent statutory voice. This helps to ensure any trade offs being made between development and production  and environmental quality and protection are rigorously analysed.”

“Decision making will be less open and transparent, because the new mega-Ministry Chief Executive will carry the responsibility for making trade offs between environmental and development objectives. This will happen at the management level, rather than these being debated and agreed in the public and political realm. There will be fewer opportunities for scrutiny of decision making with a public interest lens or by watchdogs like the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment.”

“MfE also plays an important role in managing the Crown’s relationship with iwi regarding natural resources. The current expertise and relationships could be buried or lost in the shift to the MCERT mega ministry.”

“As importantly, resource management law is undergoing a massive overhaul. There is a lot of work to be done setting up the national standards, environmental limits and policy direction that will shape decision making in the future.”

“It makes more sense to leave MfE as it is and properly resource it to do the background work outlined in the new Planning and Environment bills. Restructuring and merging MfE into MCERT will disrupt the team and waste time, energy and resources that could be put into this critical work.”

“As the submission period closes, ZWA encourages the public to understand the negative impacts on environmental protection this will have. ZWA recommends to the select committee that the Ministry for the Environment is not included in this amalgamation, and instead is empowered to actually do the work of caring for our environment.”

Notes

Submissions are open until 4:30 pm on March 11, 2026, for the Environment (Disestablishment of Ministry for the Environment) Amendment Bill.

The Government introduced legislation to establish a Ministry for Cities, Environment, Regions and Transport (MCERT)

MCERT would formally disestablish the Ministry for the Environment. The new ministry will be established on 1 April 2026 and become operational from 1 July 2026

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/zero-waste-no-support-for-disestablishing-the-ministry-for-the-environment/

How strong is support for Christopher Luxon? We’re about to find out

Source: Radio New Zealand

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Analysis – The Prime Minister has doubled down in the wake of a horror poll on Friday, saying he is “absolutely not” considering stepping aside from the top job.

Christopher Luxon did a last-minute interview on Newstalk ZB on Friday night after a day of speculation and mounting pressure over whether he could convincingly stay on as prime minister after a new poll showed National had hit 28 percent.

He told ZB, “if there was a problem, I would be doing something about it, but we are a long way away from what we’ve seen published in a TPU poll today”.

The Taxpayers’ Union-Curia poll showed the centre-Left bloc narrowly able to govern with 61 seats to the coalition government bloc’s 59 seats.

It had Labour up slightly on 34, while the Greens, ACT, and Te Pāti Māori were all up on 10.5, 7.5 and 3 respectively.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Education Minister Erica Stanford. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

On Monday, Luxon told RNZ’s Morning Report he wasn’t going anywhere, however, he also said he didn’t ask any of his MPs over the weekend if he had their support because, “they tell me regularly and it’s just not a question that needs to be asked”.

It’s a bold prime minister who assumes the support of his entire caucus after one of his worst weeks in the job, that was bookended by his inability to articulate the government’s position on the Iran conflict last Monday and a poll showing National below the red line of 30 on Friday.

How strong that support is will be made clear when his MPs gather at Parliament on Tuesday morning for their caucus meeting.

The National Party isn’t afraid to tell a few home-truths in their caucus meetings, and Luxon may well be on the receiving end of that this week.

Beyond his caucus’ reckons, the prime minister will also need to manage the concerns of his staff.

On Friday, there were murmurings that some senior staff were increasingly frustrated by their advice being ignored by Luxon and some of the government messaging no longer being convincing.

A poll putting National in the high 20s – the second public poll saying so since October last year – isn’t by any means the end of the prime minister’s career.

It will take a few more polls saying the same thing and a clear trend developing before the pressure will really mount.

At that point it’s those in his caucus who will be turfed out of Parliament first by a worsening National result who will start agitating.

Christopher Luxon and Transport Minister Chris Bishop. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A potential result in the 20s in November will not only impact senior ministers relying on the success of the party list, such as Nicola Willis, Paul Goldsmith, and Gerry Brownlee, but will also be damaging to swing seats like Hutt South, currently held by Chris Bishop.

At the moment, all of the polling shows the party blocs in a position to govern are still neck-and-neck.

That keeps National very much still in the game.

Probably more concerning for Luxon were the favourability results from Friday’s poll showing his net favourability has fallen three points to -19, well behind Labour leader Chris Hipkins on -5.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Even New Zealand First leader Winston Peters is polling better on that score than Luxon with a score of -8, while closer to home Bishop received -14 and Erica Stanford scored -16.

MPs and ministers arriving at Parliament on Monday morning were all publicly backing Luxon, noting the poll wasn’t positive but the prime minister remained the best person to lead.

That will douse some of the speculation fire for today at least.

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/how-strong-is-support-for-christopher-luxon-were-about-to-find-out/

Cricket: Black Caps lost World Cup final in the powerplays – Santner

Source: Radio New Zealand

Black Cap Finn Allen during the T20 World Cup grand final. www.photosport.nz

The Black Caps are rueing poor performances in both powerplays in their Twenty20 World Cup loss to India – prolonging their wait for a maiden white-ball World Cup title.

Defending champions India thumped New Zealand by 96 runs in Monday morning’s (NZT) final in Ahmedabad.

Batting first, the co-hosts posted a big total of 255/5. Indian batter Sanju Samson top scored with 89 runs, with fellow opener Abhishek Sharma and No.3 Ishan Kishan both scoring half-centuries.

Despite a half-century from opener Tim Seifert, New Zealand couldn’t keep up with the required run rate. Captain Mitchell Santner scored 43 runs at the back of the innings, but it was never going to be enough, and the visitors were eventually all-out for 159.

Jasprit Bumrah took four wickets for India, which became the first team in history to win back-to-back men’s T20 World Cup titles. It’s also India’s biggest win in a T20 World Cup match.

“They showed their class again tonight with that batting performance,” Black Caps captain Mitch Santner told reporters.

“That was the tale of the day – the two powerplays. I think we were three for 40-odd and they were 90-odd for none.”

Samson and Sharma provided an explosive push and rattled up 92 runs in the six powerplay overs. In contrast, New Zealand’s top-order slipped to 52-3 inside six overs, and the chase never quite took off.

Santner said the run chase was always likely to ride on surviving the first six overs and keeping wickets for a surge later, which did not happen.

“You’re not going to win a chase in the powerplay, but you can lose one. If we pick up a couple early and squeeze the middle, maybe 220 is on. At 250, you need a lot to go your way.”

Hardik Pandya of India celebrates after winning the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup Grand Final. www.photosport.nz

New Zealand bowler Jimmy Neesham picked up three wickets in the 16th over, but the damage was done early on.

“Whether it was to be braver with yorkers or bouncers, we tried a lot of cutters into the wicket that weren’t offering much,” Santner said.

“We all know we weren’t at our best tonight, and if you’re not at your best against a very good team in a final, you get exposed.”

The Black Caps have a long history of reaching deep into tournaments but have lost multiple finals. They were one day international runners-up in 2015 and 2019, and have now become bridesmaids in two T20 World Cups.

More than 86,000 predominantly Indian supporters packed into Narendra Modi Stadium – the world’s largest cricket ground – and Santner praised the hosts’ execution.

“There was definitely a lot of pressure on India in front of so many people, and they did it outstandingly well.”

Santner told Sky Sport he was proud of his team.

“To make it this far, obviously we had some challenges throughout the tournament but at each stage we kind of got through and put on a good show, obviously tonight we were outplayed by a very good team in front of a great crowd.”

Santner said the Black Caps did a lot right to reach the final, including a very good win over South Africa in the semi-final.

“Different guys stepped up at different times throughout every stage. I think we were confronted with challenges throughout every stage and it was nice to get through, and super eights and then the semi-final, we put on a pretty good show – but I guess tonight we were outplayed, but the boys should be very proud of their work.”

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/cricket-black-caps-lost-world-cup-final-in-the-powerplays-santner/

NZ skier Alice Robinson in two-way battle for super-G title

Source: Radio New Zealand

Alice Robinson competes in the Women’s Super G event. FABRICE COFFRINI / AFP

New Zealand skier Alice Robinson has to finish at least second in the final race of the season to have any chance of claiming the overall super-G title, after placing fourth in the penultimate round in Val di Fassa.

Robinson closed the gap on series leader Sofia Goggia but it will be a big ask to usurp the Italian at the finals in Norway on the 22nd March.

Goggia, who finished ninth in Italy on Monday morning, leads Robinson by 63 points in the race to the World Cup super-G title.

Robinson, now the only other woman who can win the super-G title, was joint fourth. Italian Elena Curtoni won her home event.

German skier Emma Aicher failed to score, leaving her 145 points behind Goggia and out of super-G title contention.

Robinson, who finished eighth at last month’s Milano Cortina Olympics, said she will throw everything at the final event.

“It was not as hard as I was expecting [today], so I could have maybe pushed a little bit harder. We’ve got one more race so I am happy to give that everything but it’s a little bit frustrating,” Robinson said.

Meanwhile, US Alpine ski great Mikaela Shiffrin boosted her overall World Cup lead with a rare super-G appearance as closest rival Aicher did not finish.

Shiffrin, who is hoping to end the season with a sixth overall Crystal Globe, finished 23rd but the eight points stretched her lead over Aicher to 125 with six races remaining across all disciplines.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/nz-skier-alice-robinson-in-two-way-battle-for-super-g-title/

Kiwi Paul Coll wins third NZ Squash Open title

Source: Radio New Zealand

Paul Coll in action at the New Zealand Open in Christchurch. photosport

Squash star Paul Coll defended his New Zealand Open title in Christchurch on Sunday, with a dominant 11-7, 11-2, 11-5 victory over Egyptian teenager Mohamad Zakaria in the final.

It’s the Kiwi’s third successive New Zealand Open triumph.

Zakaria rallied from a 4-2 deficit to lead 8-7 in the opening game, but that’s where the points ended for the two-time junior world champion.

Coll lifted his intensity and dictated terms with superior court positioning, stringing together four consecutive points to take the game 11-8.

The West Coaster held that momentum in the second game and looked to capitalise on tired legs after Zakaria’s marathon semi-final triumph less than 24 hours prior.

The world number two looked to take the ball early and seemed more comfortable in the longer rallies knowing fatigue was becoming a factor. Coll won the first eight points after the resumption, before clinching the second game 11-2 to take a commanding 2-0 lead.

There was no stopping Coll from there with the finish line in sight in front of friends and family who made the trip from the West Coast. He maintained his level, putting the hammer down to win the third game 11-5 inside seven minutes.

A “stoked” Coll said claiming the title at the Isaac Theatre Royal stage meant a lot to him.

“I’m very happy to win the NZ Squash Open for the third time. I was feeling a bit nervous, he [Zakaria] had a monster match yesterday. I knew he was going to feel tired, but I was trying to put that out of my mind and play my squash,” Coll said.

With the win Coll extended his unbeaten record to 8-0 on the Isaac Theatre Royal stage and moved to a 27-1 overall record for PSA matches held in New Zealand.

“Last year all the players left here saying how good it was and it was such a good showcase for New Zealand. I’m sure it’ll be great in Palmerston North in 2027, I’ll definitely be back to try and make it four [in a row],” Coll said.

Earlier, the Christchurch crowd was treated to a sibling rivalry in the NZ Women’s Open decider as top seed Tinne Gilles held her nerve to beat younger sister Nele 11-6, 5-11, 12-10, 11-9 in 78 minutes.

It’s the Belgian’s first New Zealand Open title, and just her second win in 11 attempts on the PSA Tour against Nele.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/kiwi-paul-coll-wins-third-nz-squash-open-title/

Concern over suitable athletics venue for 2034 NZ Commonwealth Games hosting bid

Source: Radio New Zealand

XIV Commonwealth games opening ceremony, Mount Smart Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand, 24 January 1990. Photosport

Despite its dominance of last month’s Halberg Awards, athletics looms as a possible weak link in a bid to host the 2034 Commonwealth Games.

Track and field holds pride of place in past New Zealand success at the Games, producing 136 medals, including 37 gold – both more than any other sport – since they were first held at Hamilton, Ontario, in 1930.

High jumper Hamish Kerr has helped spark a resurgence in the sport over recent years, capturing Halberg Supreme honours for his 2025 world championship victory, which followed previous success at Commonwealth Games, world indoor championships and the Paris Olympics.

It currently boasts world class performers in a wide variety of events, but Athletics NZ chief executive Cam Mitchell fears the lack of a suitable venue makes his sport an “Achilles heel”, as New Zealand prepares its case to stage the Commonwealth Games in eight years.

“One of the big challenges we have is facilities,” Mitchell told RNZ. “None of our facilities are optimal.”

New Zealand has hosted the Games three times at Auckland 1950, Christchurch 1974 and Auckland 1990. None of the athletics venues at those events are still used for that purpose.

Eden Park has since become the nation’s premier rugby site, QE2 Stadium was destroyed by the 2011 earthquake, while Mt Smart Stadium has become home for NZ Warriors and Auckland FC, with athletics relegated to what was previously the warm-up track.

“That’s a challenge around facilities that we’re working with government on,” Mitchell said. “If New Zealand wants to host the Commonwealth Games and be serious about that bid, athletics is our Achilles heel, because there’s no facility.

“We need to build a national home for athletics.”

Over the weekend, the national championships were staged at Auckland’s Trusts Stadium, which also hosted games during the 2021 Women’s Rugby World Cup.

It already has a giant grandstand down the homestraight, which was packed for Saturday’s ‘Track Stars’ showcase, but would need further work to meet Commonwealth Games spectator standards.

“It definitely resonates,” Kerr told RNZ last week. “If you look at the tracks around New Zealand, we’ve got some real world-class tracks – the surfaces, the way they’re designed and the way they’re built – but they haven’t been built with spectators in mind or high-level competitions.

“I think it will be interesting to see how Trusts Stadium works on the weekend for the nationals, because it has a good embankment and a decent-sized stand.

“As an athletics fan, the thing I’ve been a little bit disappointed with is, when there has been talk about new stadiums within the country, often they’re made to dimensions that wouldn’t accommodate a track.

“Christchurch’s new stadium is a perfect example of that.”

In recent years, the Commonwealth Games have barely survived the increased costs of staging them.

Trusts Stadium looms as a potential Commonwealth Games athletics venue. Shane Wenzlick/Photosport

Durban, South Africa, was originally awarded the 2022 Games, but struggled for finance and was eventually replaced by Birmingham, England, which moved its hosting agreement up four years to accommodate.

Bids from Kuala Lumpur, Cardiff, Calgary, Edmonton and Adelaide for 2026 were all withdrawn, also due to financial concerns.

In April 2022, the Australian state of Victoria agreed to host this year’s edition on a new regional model, with venues spread across its catchment at Geelong, Ballarat and Bendigo, rather than centred on Melbourne.

Fifteen months later, the state government terminated its host agreement. Gold Coast, London, Malaysia, Singapore and the Ghanaian capital of Accra considered stepping in, but ultimately, all declined.

As a last resort, Glasgow agreed to a reduced programme using venues from the 2014 Games.

The 2030 Games have already been awarded to Ahmedabad, India, while New Zealand has indicated interest in 2034, probably adopting the regional model.

“Commonwealth Sport will put out their timelines, which we expect will be 2027, for feasibilities, presentations and proposals to go through to them,” NZ Olympic Committee chief executive Nicki Nicol told RNZ.

“We’ve done some pre-feasibilities. and will wait to do the next round of feasibility over the next 12 months or so. It’s a bit of awaiting game still, but we’re really conscious that athletics is caught in the programme.

“We do know that Sport NZ have an infrastructure review, so everyone’s aware that we want world-class facilities to keep producing amazing athletes.

“2034 is still a while away, but there are certainly options in New Zealand to retrofit existing facilities, so we can hold the Commonwealth Games and have athletics as part of that programme.”

Nicol agreed that Trusts Stadium was probably a frontrunner.

“I’m not a geo-tech engineer, but we do expect that would be a minimum standard that we could operate a Games at,” she said.

“We could use temporary seating, because at the end of the day, we have to make sure we’ve got surfaces and conditions for the athletes to perform at that elite level.

“We look forward to working with government over the coming months.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/09/concern-over-suitable-athletics-venue-for-2034-nz-commonwealth-games-hosting-bid/