Protesters condemn Luxon govt for failing to condemn illegal war on Iran

Asia Pacific Report

New Zealand’s government was taken to task today for its lack of a principled stand against Israel’s Gaza genocide and the illegal and unprovoked US-Israel war on Iran.

Several speakers at a rally in the heart of Auckland expressed disappointment and anger at Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s failure to condemn the war of aggression against Iran, one of the major supporters of Palestinian self-determination and justice.

The speakers from several cultures were scathing about New Zealand’s weak stance in the rally at Te Komititanga Square with a theme of “Welfare not warfare”.

The criticism comes as US President Donald Trump is reportedly seeking a record $1.5 trillion in “defence” spending for the coming year along with massive social cutbacks, according to a White House details released yesterday, while New Zealand’s budget allows for an unprecedented NZ$12 billion four-year plan to overhaul the country’s military.

Bibi Amena, a twice-displaced refugee from Afghanistan who has experienced the devastation of war and lost family members while resisting the Soviet invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, said the illegal assassination of a high profile head of state and respected figure among Shia Muslims around the world should have been condemned.

“At the very least our government should have condemned America and Israel in the strongest words possible,” she said.

New Zealand should have distanced itself from America and Israel “and their crumbling empire”.

Helen Clark quoted
She quoted former prime minister Helen Clark who at the beginning of this war described New Zealand’s response as “a disgrace” and that it was in the country’s best interests to keep advocating for international law.

“No War With Iran” protesters in Auckland’s Te Komititanga Square today. Image: Asia Pacific Report

“New Zealand is not a mighty country, and if we trample international law and forego an independent foreign policy, we are left at the mercy of countries far bigger and far stronger than us,” Amena said.

“Let’s be loud and clear when we say that Israel and America’s war on Iran is illegal — it’s illegitimate, unprovoked and immoral.”

A Tehran-born psychology student, Ali Reza, who migrated to New Zealand in 2013, was also strongly critical of the government’s weak stance over the war.

“Some politicians seem to have trouble with their spines. Iran has many excellent spinal surgeons who could help them with that.”

Ali Reza (right) with MC Achmat Esau speaking in Te Komititanga Square today . . . “Some politicians seem to have trouble with their spines. Iran has many excellent spinal surgeons who could help them with that.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

He praised the Palestinian resistance in the face of the 76th years “brutality, occupation, mass murder and mass displacement” by Israel.

“Meanwhile, the Sudanese people were suffering through a devastating civil war caused by the UAE (United Arab Emirates) and its master Israel. The enemy’s lies set records displaying psychotic levels of manipulation and exploitation,” he said.

“The enemy renewed their specialisation in the discipline of evil wrongdoings, pioneering in numerous fields, followed by their murderous campaign in Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq and Iran, all funded by the United States.”

Choice for Aotearoa
Leeann Wahanui-Peters of the Palestine Solidarity Network Aotearoa (PSNA) called for a choice for Aotearoa — one between “the security of our whānau and the lies and profits of warmongers and their masters in Wall Street, the City of London, and the shadow bankers of Black Rock and company”.

“A choice between a home, a warm home and weapons,” she said. “A choice between a future of justice, peace and prosperity for all and a past of war and exploitation for the few.

“For decades, we have been told that the world is dangerous and that the only way to be safe is to spend more on the military.”

“This is a lie,” Wahanui-Peters said.

PSNA’s Leeann Wahanui-Peters . . . “The greatest threat to the safety of a child in Aotearoa isn’t a missile from a distant land.” Image: Asia Pacific Report

“The greatest threat to the safety of a child in Aotearoa isn’t a missile from a distant land. It is the coldness of a house their parents can’t afford to heat, or living in a car.

“It is their hunger in their stomach because their school lunch has been cut. It is the despair of a future with no jobs and no hope.”

And yet, said Wahanui-Peters, New Zealand’s “coalition regime” chose to be “fiscally irresponsible” and chose military assets ahead of the best interests of the country’s people.

A Palestinian and a Tino Rangatiratanga flag fluttering in the breeze at today’s rally in Auckland. Image: Asia Pacific Report

‘Gateway for hell’
Bibi Amena said New Zealand’s silence over Israeli crimes in Palestine “opened the gateway for hell” in Iran.

“In the past 30 days of aggression, Israeli and American bombs have slaughtered over 3000 innocent Iranian children, women and men.

“They have attacked and destroyed energy and water supplies, civilian infrastructure, oil facilities, schools and hospitals. All of these attacks are illegal under international law.

“So why has our government remained silent? Why do we allow America and Israel to commit war crime after war crime with impunity?”

Amena referenced the first day of the illegal war on Iran, an American Tomahawk missile targeting a girls’ elementary school in the city of Minab, killing more than 160 girls aged between 7 and 12.

She ended her speech with a short quote “which went viral on social media” by Professor Foad Izadi from the University of Tehran: “Iran is fighting the Epstein class of the world, that either rapes little girls, or bombs little girls.”

Organisers of the Stop Wars Aotearoa coalition said there would be a major rally with the theme “No More Wars” in Auckland’s Aotea Square and a protest march to the US Consulate next Saturday, April 11, at 2pm.

A “Boycott Israeli Apartheid” banner at the Auckland rally today. Image: Asia Pacific Report

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/05/protesters-condemn-luxon-govt-for-failing-to-condemn-illegal-war-on-iran/

Road blocked – State Highway 1 / Rongotea Road, Manawatū

Source: New Zealand Police

The intersection of State Highway 1 and Rongotea Road in Manawatū is currently blocked, as police respond to a gathering of anti-social road users.

Motorists are asked to avoid the area and take alternative routes where possible.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre. 

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/05/road-blocked-state-highway-1-rongotea-road-manawatu/

Highway reopens after Dunedin house fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

Four fire trucks had been working to put the fire out. RNZ / Rob Dixon

A stretch of State Highway One in Dunedin has reopened to one lane, after it was closed due to a house fire.

Fire and Emergency were called to the blaze on Great King Street North just after 6pm on Saturday evening.

Four fire trucks were sent to the scene and the road was closed between Union Street West and St David Street.

There were no reports of injuries and an investigator will be heading to the property.

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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/2026/04/04/highway-reopens-after-dunedin-house-fire/

Super Rugby Pacific – Chiefs v NSW Waratahs

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the Super Rugby Pacific action, as the Chiefs take on NSW Waratahs from FMG Stadium in Waikato.

Kickoff is at 7.05pm.

Leroy Carter claims the ball for the Chiefs against Waratahs. DJ Mills/Photosport

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The Pogues co-founder: ‘We’re the last proper London punk band’

Source: Radio New Zealand

It’s both brilliant and validating that UK band The Pogues are beloved by so many international fans, says Spider Stacy, who now replaces Shane McGowan – a hard-drinking poet, who died in 2023 – as the band’s frontman.

Every time he’s anywhere near an Australian or a New Zealander though, Stacy finds his sentences start sounding like questions.

“It’s like an earworm and I can’t shake it,” he tells RNZ’s Saturday Morning. “I hope it doesn’t come across like I’m sort of making fun, because I’m not.”

The Pogues performing in 2025.

Supplied

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/04/the-pogues-co-founder-were-the-last-proper-london-punk-band/

Dunedin house fire closes State Highway 1

Source: Radio New Zealand

Four fire trucks had been working to put the fire out. RNZ / Rob Dixon

Crews were at the scene of a house fire in Dunedin that closed State Highway One, through the city.

Fire and Emergency were called to the blaze on Great King Street North just after 6pm on Saturday evening.

Four fire trucks had been working to put it out and there were no reports of injuries.

A fire investigator had been notified.

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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/2026/04/04/dunedin-house-fire-closes-state-highway-1/

AM Edition: Top 10 Business Articles on LiveNews.co.nz for April 4, 2026 – Full Text

AM Edition: Here are the top 10 business articles on LiveNews.co.nz for April 4, 2026 – Full Text

Easter Sunday trading rules ‘confusing’, need overhaul, EMA says

April 4, 2026

Source: Radio New Zealand

Small grocery shops are one of the few stores that can be exempt to shop shutdowns over Easter (file image). MARK PAPALII / RNZ

A business association says Easter Sunday trading rules are confusing and need an overhaul.

Restrictions on alcohol sales have just been eased, so that venues that could already open over Easter can now sell alcohol to customers without the requirement they buy a meal.

Employers and Manufacturers Association (EMA) head of advocacy Alan McDonald told RNZ now was a good time to look at the Shop Trading Hours Act as well.

“Obviously they’ve eased up some of the alcohol laws to clarify them because they were very complex – the Easter ones are just as complex.

“It’s been time to look at them for a long time,” he added.

Easter Sunday was not a statutory public holiday and retailers should be able to decide for themselves whether they open on that day, McDonald said.

A 2016 change to the Shop Trading Hours Act also meant city and district councils could create their own Easter Sunday shopping policies for their respective territories, adding to the confusion, he said.

“You get all sorts of anomalies. Queenstown for example, I think, opens, Rotorua doesn’t. Parts of Parnell in Auckland are allowed to open, but other parts of Auckland aren’t allowed to open.

“You just end up with a multitude of confusing options.”

There are three types of exemption to the shop shutdowns:

  • Tourist resorts such as Taupō and Queenstown on Easter Sunday only
  • Places where the local council has said shops can open on Easter Sunday only
  • Certain kinds of shops (limited to “small grocery shops”, service stations, takeaways, bars, cafes, duty-free stores, “shops providing services” (and not selling things), real estate agencies, pharmacies, garden centres (only on Easter Sunday), public transport terminals, souvenir shops and exhibitions “devoted entirely or primarily to agriculture, art, industry and science”).

The rules needed to be standardised, McDonald said.

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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/2026/04/04/easter-sunday-trading-rules-confusing-need-overhaul-ema-says/

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Cricket: White Ferns v South Africa Women – third and final ODI

Source: Radio New Zealand

Maddy Green has scored an unbeaten 141 runs to guide the White Ferns home by 66 runs in the deciding one-day international against South Africa at the Basin Reserve.

Green hit a career-best 141 off 128 balls, despite cramping late in her innings, marking her third ODI century. Brooke Halliday also made an impressive contribution of 98 runs.

The pair led a remarkable recovery. after a disastrous start, when the White Ferns were just 3/3.

Green and Halliday’s 211-run partnership is now the highest for the fourth wicket in ODIs for New Zealand, surpassing the previous record of 172 set by Amy Satterthwaite and Melie Kerr.

New Zealand were 98/3 at the halfway mark.

The Proteas looked promising early in their batting innings, with captain Laura Wolvaardt and Tazmin Brits compiling 68 runs for the opening wicket. Woolward and Annerie Dercksen put on 77 more for the second, before the batting order began to collapse, losing 6/59 through the middle.

Pace bowler Rosemay Mair produced her first ODI five-wicket bag with 5/50, including the final scalp of Ayanda Hlubi with almost four overs remaining.

Follow the live action here:

Maddy Green celebrates a century against South Africa. Kerry Marshall/Photosport

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/04/cricket-white-ferns-v-south-africa-women-third-and-final-odi/

Live: Super Rugby Pacific – Chiefs v NSW Waratahs

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the Super Rugby Pacific action, as the Chiefs take on NSW Waratahs from FMG Stadium in Waikato.

Kickoff is at 7.05pm.

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/2026/04/04/live-super-rugby-pacific-chiefs-v-nsw-waratahs/

Anti-bottom trawling long distance swimmer breaks world record, arrives in Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jono Ridler swims the final metres to arrive in Wellington on Saturday afternoon, after an almost 1400km swim from North Cape. RNZ/ Anya Fielding

Ultra-marathon open-water swimmer Jono Ridler has completed his record-breaking odyssey down the east coast of the North Island, calling New Zealanders to unite against bottom trawling, and been met by crowds of supporters.

Ridler began the almost 1400 kilometre slog in North Cape 90 days ago, on 5 January, and finished on Saturday afternoon at Whairepo Lagoon, on the Wellington waterfront.

The swim sets a new world record for the longest unassisted staged swim – wearing only togs, goggles and a swim cap, but no wetsuit.

Ridler partnered with marine conservation group LiveOcean, launching a petition against bottom trawling fishing, which has now been signed by more than 66,000 people.

  • Minister defends bottom trawling, despite poll showing most NZers want it banned
  • His swim included swarms of jellyfish, battling sunburn and more than 120 rest stops between his swimming shifts and community stopovers, where he stopped to rest and raise awareness.

    Ridler enters Whairepo Lagoon in Wellington, with crowds lining the way. RNZ/ Anya Fielding

    Met by cheers from supporters at the waterfront as he strode up onto land, Ridler then prepared to walk to Parliament, to emphasise the calls for change directed at the government.

    Finishing the journey was “an amazing day”, he told RNZ: “Just seeing everybody out on the boardwalk, all of the boats out today, the welcome coming into the lagoon here.

    “It’s an incredible end to what has been an incredible adventure, and I’m still kind of pinching myself a little bit with some of the moments that I’ve been able to experience today.”

    Jono Ridler (file photo) Jono Ridler / Instagram

    The swim had been “really, really hard at times”, he said, and he was glad it was done, but it had been a special time as well.

    “I think it takes a big ambition,” Ridler said of the project: “It takes some really good people to get behind you and support you”.

    New Zealand stood out for allowing bottom trawling, Ridler said.

    “[It’s] a destructive and indiscriminate method of fishing. We are currently the only country that is bottom trawling in the high seas of the South Pacific, which isn’t a good title to hold.

    The campaign calls on the government to make changes, and “a quick transition away from bottom trawling, with the first priority being an end to bottom trawling on seamounts and other vital marine ecosystems”.

    Ridler taking his first steps out of the water, to cheers from supporters. RNZ/ Anya Fielding

    “We also bottom trawl on seamounts out in the deep sea. These are very fragile ecosystems and they take centuries to be able to recover. So people should care about it if they care about ocean health generally,” he said.

    “And we’ve got 65,000 voices that agree with that and that have come behind us and signed our petition… We want to grow that as much as possible and change the way in which we take wild fish from the ocean. “

    Bottom trawling was “a very entrenched practice in New Zealand fishing, but shutting it down was doable, Ridler said.

    “And I think on the other side of that, we’ll have a healthier ocean for it.”

    Live Ocean founder Blair Tuke earlier told RNZ the feat, and Ridler’s dedication pushing himself to the limit, had resonated with New Zealanders, and the support for the project and the petition had been amazing.

    The team planned to continue gathering signatures on the petition, and to present it to the government at the end of April.

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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/2026/04/04/anti-bottom-trawling-long-distance-swimmer-breaks-world-record-arrives-in-wellington/

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for April 4, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on April 4, 2026.

French National Assembly rejects New Caledonia’s constitutional reform
By Patrick Decloitre, RNZ Pacific correspondent French Pacific desk A Constitutional Reform Bill dedicated to New Caledonia was rejected on Thursday by the French National Assembly (Lower House) without debate, by a gathering of opposition parties by a score of 190 to 107. The rejection came in the form of the endorsement of a preliminary

President Trump, don’t listen to your sycophants on Iran, this isn’t reality TV
COMMENTARY: By Robert Reich Mr Trump, may I have a word? Bad enough for you to insist — in the face of all evidence to the contrary — that you “won” the 2020 election. But it’s another thing for you to pretend — in the face of mounting deaths and injuries, ballooning expenses, and rising

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for April 3, 2026
ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on April 3, 2026.

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/04/er-report-a-roundup-of-significant-articles-on-eveningreport-nz-for-april-4-2026/

Whanganui Collegiate owner still working on fixing illegal hockey turf lease

Source: Radio New Zealand

Whanganui Collegiate. Google Maps

Whanganui Collegiate’s owner is considering the best option for replacing a lease that breaches education legislation.

The school has been paying the Whanganui Collegiate School Foundation for use of a hockey turf, even though integrated schools are not allowed to enter lease arrangements – only their owners are.

The Ministry of Education contacted the school at the start of March about the arrangement and told RNZ the matter had not yet been finalised.

Whanganui Collegiate acting headmaster, Tash Bullock, said the school had been working with its owner – the Whanganui College Board – the ministry and the owner of the hockey turf.

“The work so far has focused on clarifying options which would be consistent with the school’s integration agreement and the applicable regulations in Schedule 6 of the Education and Training Act. This work has aimed to clarify some options for the proprietors and hockey turf owner to choose from,” she said.

“The matter is currently with the proprietor to consider. All parties are confident of an appropriate and timely resolution.”

RNZ understands the school was paying $41,000 plus GST a year for use of the turf.

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Prof Carole Cusack: Who put the bunny into Easter?

Source: Radio New Zealand

A row of Chocolate Easter bunnies, at a chocolate factory in Germany that specialises in Easter products, on 26 February. AFP/ Matthias Bein

As Easter is celebrated this long weekend, have you ever wondered how the resurrection of Jesus Christ came to be celebrated alongside the Easter bunny?

University of Sydney religious studies professor Carole Cusack talked with Susie Ferguson about how a pagan festival became a Christian festival and the emergence of the Easter traditions we recognise now.

For Christians, Christmas and Easter are the two equally most significant festivals, but when they fall in the year is not based on when the events they mark happened, Cusack says.

“No-one has any idea when the events of Jesus’ life happened. The dates that the Christian church assigned to his birth, his death, his resurrection, were not accurate dates. … So we should not assume that these dates map out an actual historical life.”

In the Northern Hemisphere, Easter is about the time of the equinox that marks the start of spring, as the resurrection story is about a kind of rebirth, or new life.

“In the Northern Hemisphere this is hugely important,” Cusack says, “because people are emerging from extremely cold and inhospitable winter. It’s okay now, we have heaters and air conditioning, but in prehistoric times and really right up to industrial modernity harsh winters were particularly bleak and difficult times for people, limited food supplies etc. and so the arrival of spring is a tremendous point of hope.”

When Easter was placed on the calendar by the Christian Council of Nicaea, at 325CE, the dates were chosen in relation to the natural cycles of the sun and the moon, which in that era would have mapped out the lives of human beings, she says.

Easter Sunday would take place on “the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox. This is one of the reasons why it moves… it doesn’t stay still, unlike Christmas.”

In many European counties, the word for Easter derives from the Hebrew name for the earlier Passover holiday: Pesach. But in Anglo Saxon and German areas, the word for Easter is believed to have a connection to ancient pagan religion.

Carole Cusack Alex Rieneck

“Even though we don’t have a lot of evidence from European pagan religion about goddesses or gods, or particular things that happened at the spring equinox, we do have – at least from Anglo-Saxon England and to a lesser extent Continental Germany – references to a goddess who is called Eostre, who gives our festival Easter its name in English,” Cusack says.

“We have a text from the 8th century, written by a monk called the Venerable Bede, which talks about how the month is called the Eosturmonath, the month of the goddess Eostre, and it is a month of feasting and celebration, because of the coming of spring and new life.

“So of course, Jesus is resurrected at Easter. It’s a much less naturalistic idea about new life than just the birth of lambs and chickens and so on, but it shares the same kind of significance.”

New life as a popular concept in the ancient world

Cybèle and Bevan / Unsplash

Many cultures have dying and rising god stories, Cusack says.

“They’re nearly always young men, and the resurrection of these dying and rising gods is usually associated with ideas about crops … The idea that some of these young men, they’re a bit like a seed, and when they’re buried in the ground the idea of them rising again is that they sprout or bring new life.

“The other thing I think I could say about that is that humans are defined not just by nature, the frame that we live in, but they’re defined by mortality – we die. And everybody has been interested – I think since the first sapient person ever crawled out of the cave – we have been trying to work out what it means, if it’s possible to somehow survive dying. And there are lots of different theories, ideas, about how we come up with ideas about coming back to life. But pretty much every culture expresses the idea – some have a stronger affirmation that it can happen – some are more pessimistic.”

RNZ / REECE BAKER

So did the Christian church keep the existing religious ideas and dress them up in a new way?

“The ancient world into which Christianity emerged was a place of varied cultural exchanges, and Christianity has nearly 400 years of getting established and working itself out before it is officially the religion of the Roman Empire – something that happens when Emperor Theodosius the First makes Christianity compulsory around the 380s, the 390s, so it’s the end of the Fourth Century.

“And during that time Christian theologians and church historians have been exploring Greek philosophy and merging it with more biblically or Jewish kinds of ideas. There are elements of Roman architecture and administrative structures that get absorbed by the church – it’s a real melting pot.

“I think it’s not as simple as ‘dressing up’ [existing religious holidays and ideas] – I think it was more organic, and less intentional,” Cusack says.

And Christianity’s own easter traditions and practices have continued to develop into the modern world, as Catholic and Orthodox church traditions, and then Protestant reactions against them, then increasing commercialisation and secularisation, she says.

“For a lot of people now, Easter is now a holiday, not a holy day.”

Eggs, rabbits and chocolate

Eggs were a typical ancient symbol of new life, and appear early in Christian iconography, Cusack says.

“The rabbit thing is a bit more weird because people often think that it must be ancient, but actually, the first association of a rabbit – which actually was a hare – with the ecclesiastical season of Easter, was a mention of what was called the Easter hare, in Germany in 1722.

“A guy called Georg Franck von Franckenau, who was a professor of medicine at the university of Heidelberg published a book in which he talked about this figure, the Easter hare.

“And people often say: ‘Well, what’s going on here? Why is there a connection?’ Well the first connection is very simple – rabbits and hares are believed to breed rapidly, which is very life affirming.

Georg Franck von Franckenau Public Domain

“But interestingly, something a bit stranger is that in European – especially central European – folklore, hares were often said to lay eggs, which is certainly something that doesn’t happen in nature, but people have superstitions often which are not actually scientifically true. And in the 18th century they came to be associated with hiding the coloured eggs that children hunted for in Easter egg hunts.

“And nowadays we think of an Easter egg hunt as being a hunt for chocolate eggs. But of course it was a folkloric tradition to paint eggs with beautiful designs for Easter. And it was these coloured eggs that the children typically hunted in their Easter Egg hunts.”

And painting beautiful patterns and colours onto eggs is still a typical tradition in many parts of Europe today, Cusack says.

Then, with 19th Century industrialisation, mass produced chocolate Easter treats arrived.

“There were all of the firms that were mostly run by Quaker families from England – Cadbury, Fry’s, etc – and there’s always ‘a reason for the season’, you find the promotion of treats and enjoyable things for the family at different times, and the chocolate egg and the chocolate rabbit emerge – along with the Christmas Card … but Easter cards are a thing too, particularly for Orthodox Christians.”

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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/2026/04/04/prof-carole-cusack-who-put-the-bunny-into-easter/

French National Assembly rejects New Caledonia’s constitutional reform

By Patrick Decloitre, RNZ Pacific correspondent French Pacific desk

A Constitutional Reform Bill dedicated to New Caledonia was rejected on Thursday by the French National Assembly (Lower House) without debate, by a gathering of opposition parties by a score of 190 to 107.

The rejection came in the form of the endorsement of a preliminary Bill filed by a left wing opposition, Emmanuel Tjibaou, on behalf of the GDR group (Gauche démocrate et républicaine).

The “prior rejection motion” means that if the rejection motion is adopted, then it closes the current sitting on the matter and the Bill would then have to come back to the other House of Parliament, the Senate, following the “shuttle” rule.

Tjibaou, who is an indigenous Kanak pro-independence leader, is one of the two MPs representing New Caledonia in the Assembly.

French Assemblée Nationale rejects a Constitutional Bill for New Caledonia on Thursday. by 190-107. Image: Assemblée Nationale/RNZ Pacific

The text was originally tabled for a vote to be held on 1 April 2026, but this was later delayed by one day, following an announcement by Speaker Yaël Braun-Pivet.

However, on Thursday, during a sitting that only debated motives from the government and its Minister for Overseas Naïma Moutchou, the rapporteur Philippe Gosselin and representatives from all parties present, it quickly became clear that most of the opposition parties were going to support the rejection motion, and vote against the text without further debate.

The sitting only lasted 01 hour 40 minutes.

Kanak Emmanuel Tjibaou speaking at the French National Assembly during the debate on Constitutional reform Bill for New Caledonia. Image: Assemblée Nationale/RNZ Pacific

Tjibaou, speaking in support of his rejection motion, stressed that the Constitutional Bill, in his view, was “not consensual”, because his party, the FLNKS (Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front) was opposed to the text and that the Bill “did not seek to reach a compromise” between all stakeholders.

Tjibaou said this was in contradiction to the previous Matignon-Oudinot (1988) and Nouméa Accord (1998), which initiated a decolonisation process for New Caledonia.

The present Constitutional Bill derives from talks held in July 2025 and January 2026 between New Caledonia political stakeholders and the French government. This was on two occasions — in the small city of Bougival in July 2025 and later in January 2026 in Paris, at the French Presidential palace of Élysée, and the French ministry of Overseas territories in Rue Oudinot.

Hence the name of Bougival-Élysée-Oudinot (BEO) for a text and an expanded project.

The project also envisions the creation of a “State of New Caledonia”, with a correlated “New Caledonia Nationality” available to people who are already French citizens.

Other participating parties pro-France and pro-independence (two pro-independence members of FLNKS) have since split to create their own “UNI” (Union Nationale pour l’Indépendance).

They have maintained their commitment to the BEO process, including their legislative adaptation (in the form of a Constitutional Amendment and an “organic Law”, which would de facto become New Caledonia’s constitution).

Tjibaou: ‘a logic of assimilation’
But the BEO text, in August 2025, was unequivocally opposed by the FLNKS, one of the main components of the pro-independence movement.

The FLNKS later explained it saw these, as well as a planned process of transfer of more powers from Paris to Nouméa, was, in their view, just a “lure” of independence.

Tjibaou said on Thursday the text was at best “symbolic”.

“To us, this amounts to a perennial status within France… It’s a logic of assimilation… It cannot be compared to a decolonisation in accordance with the UN resolutions and the international law”, he told MPs.

He called on local elections to be held sooner than later, currently no later than 28 June 2026.

Tjibaou said it was ironic that “a pro-independence” should tell the Minister that “when our Kanak country is damaged, it is also France that is damaged”… Because “when you make decisions that are leading us to chaos, you are also jeopardising France’s place in the Pacific”, he said at the tribune.

Moutchou: ‘There is no other agreement’
Moutchou, in her reply, said the rejection of the Bill would have repercussions on New Caledonians’ everyday life.

She stressed what New Caledonians needed, after the riots of May 2024 and a severe economic downfall since, was “visibility”, especially on the part of economic stakeholders who needed stability in order to restore confidence and investment.

Minister for Overseas Naïma Moutchou speaking at France’s National Assembly Constitutional reform Bill for New Caledonia. Image: Assemblée Nationale/RNZ Pacific

“There is no other agreement. The Bougival process was approved by 5 of the 6 political parties of New Caledonia.

“Some are mentioning the absence of FLNKS. I’ve always maintained the principles of transparency, dialogue information for all. And the door was never closed”, she said.

“And the politics of the empty chair cannot dictate the future of a territory.

“So what do we do? How much longer do we have to wait… To be responsible, we move on with those who are here… Consensus does not mean unanimity, consensus is not perfection, it’s a point of equilibrium”, she replied to Tjibaou.

“And while we have this text that is not perfect, but opens a way, those who say, ‘we will wait and see later’ risk bringing us back to a confrontational situation”.

Minister for Overseas Naïma Moutchou . . . the rejection of the Bill will have “repercussions on New Caledonians’ everyday life”. Image: Assemblée Nationale/RNZ Pacific

Metzdorf’s disappointment
The other MP for New Caledonia, pro-France Nicolas Metzdorf, also took to the tribune to express disappointment.

“I don’t know what more we should do. After the 2024 riots, you asked us to find a political agreement. We did this and we made big concessions, we, the non-independentists. We did this for the good of New Caledonia.

“Then you said we had to meet again to further clarify… On Kanak identity and the self-determination process. So now we are back with two political agreements.”

“And now you are sending us back home without a debate… You know, New Caledonia may be far from Paris, but tonight, many are watching this debate on TV and they’re thinking ‘What will happen to us?”

“Many have lost their home, their work, but even worse, they have lost hope to live in peace in New Caledonia”.

“What I am asking (MPs) today is just to have the common decency to debate on this (Bill)… These agreements are being supported by the majority of New Caledonia’s political class (including the moderate pro-independence parties within the Union Nationale pour l’Indépendance), but also by the economic and business sector.”

“I’m asking for a vote on these accords and I’m asking to organise a consultation of New Caledonia’s people, because at the end of the day, we are the only legitimate ones to decide on our future.”

What now?
Following the rejection vote on Thursday, French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu said all parties that had signed the Bougival-Elysée-Oudinot Accord would meet “next week”, because this is what was agreed in case of a deadlock.

Commenting on future options, Metzdorf told French media in Paris that “all options are now on the table”.

After the National Assembly’s rejection, another possibility was to bring the text back to the Upper House (the Senate).

Another option (that was almost implemented a few months ago, but later abandoned) would be to bring back a process of “consultation” directly in New Caledonia in the form of a de facto referendum for or against the Bougival process.

But the sensitive issue of who is eligible to vote at local elections remains for the looming provincial elections (which would now have to be held no later than 28 June 2026).

Pro-France parties are still determined to have those restrictions changed to allow the “frozen” electoral roll to be more open, if not fully “unfrozen”.

This could be the subject of separate negotiations between New Caledonia’s opposing parties in the coming days.

This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/04/french-national-assembly-rejects-new-caledonias-constitutional-reform/

Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke skips IMF event in Washington DC, cites price of fuel

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke. Lillian Hanly

Te Pāti Māori MP and the youngest New Zealand politician, Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke, has decided against attending an International Monetary Fund event in Washington DC due to global events and the struggle for people at home to pay for fuel.

She said she was honoured to be part of the event, but “that’s not where our priorities are at the moment”.

Maipi-Clarke was invited to participate in the inaugural cohort of the Young Global Parliamentarians Initiative, bringing together 12 young legislators from around the world.

It would look at redefining the relationship between parliaments and global economic institutions.

Maipi-Clarke had planned to attend but questioned how she could travel internationally knowing communities in New Zealand “can’t even afford to get down the road” with fuel prices as they were.

“It’s exciting that we’re having these conversations around what does stabilising our economies can look like, specifically for indigenous peoples, but right now, we have to be really real with ourselves.

“It’s often that indigenous peoples are the sacrifice to global economies, whether that be their resources, their land, their whenua, and often their labour,” she said.

What was going on in Iran and around the world, and how it was impacting fuel prices made her think twice.

Instead of travelling, she hosted an event in partnership with ANZ Bank for wāhine māori who owned small businesses on how they could get better resources and grow the Māori economy.

“Before we go to that international scale, I think we need to really focus on here at home, and so that’s been a really cool kaupapa to start and ignite,” she said.

Te Pāti Māori had been calling for “urgent key necessities” to be considered by the government to intervene now.

She said the party had looked at what previous governments had done in times of crisis, suggesting things like “freezing the RUCs, reducing GST off fuel, taking tax off fuel”, and also providing free transport and subsidies for rural communities and essential workers.

“Just some short term things that we could assist with right now, rather than $50,” she said, in reference to the government’s move to provide an extra $50 a week for low-to-middle-income workers with children.

This week the government also increased mileage rates for home and community support workers.

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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/2026/04/04/hana-rawhiti-maipi-clarke-skips-imf-event-in-washington-dc-cites-price-of-fuel/

Live cricket: White Ferns v South Africa Women – third and final ODI

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the ODI cricket action as the White Ferns take on South Africa Women for their third and final ODI.

First ball is at 11am.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/04/live-cricket-white-ferns-v-south-africa-women-third-and-final-odi/

Iran searches for downed US jet crew, claims second plane hit

Source: Radio New Zealand

By AFP teams in Tehran, Jerusalem, Washington, Beirut, Dubai and Sanaa

This video grab taken on April 3, 2026, from undated UGC images shared on social media on April 1, 2026, shows thick plumes of smoke rising following airstrikes in Baharestan, in Iran’s central Isfahan province. AFP

Iranian and American forces were racing each other early Saturday to recover the crew of the first US fighter jet to go down inside Iran since the start of the war.

Tehran said it had shot down the F-15 warplane, while US media reported American special forces had rescued one of two crew members.

Iran’s military also said it downed a US A-10 ground attack aircraft in the Gulf, with US media saying the pilot was rescued.

The war erupted more than a month ago with US-Israeli strikes on Iran that killed supreme leader Ali Khamenei, triggering retaliation that spread the conflict throughout the Middle East, convulsing the global economy and impacting millions of people worldwide.

US Central Command did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the loss of the F-15, but White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said: “The president has been briefed.”

President Donald Trump told NBC the F-15 loss would not affect negotiations with Iran, saying: “No, not at all. No, it’s war.”

‘Valuable reward’

A spokesperson for the Iranian military’s central operational command said “an American hostile fighter jet in central Iranian airspace was struck and destroyed by the IRGC Aerospace Force’s advanced air defence system”.

“The jet was completely obliterated, and further searches are ongoing.”

An Iranian television reporter on a local official channel said anyone who captured a crew member alive would “receive a valuable reward”.

The US military has announced the loss of several aircraft during Iran operations, including one tanker that crashed in Iraq and three F-15s shot down by Kuwaiti friendly fire.

Fresh strikes meanwhile hit Israel, Iran, Lebanon and Gulf countries – and large blasts rocked northern Tehran, an AFP journalist said. Israel said it had launched a wave of strikes in the Iranian capital, alongside parallel attacks in Beirut.

Blown-out windows

Earlier, Israel’s military reported a new missile salvo from Iran, activating its air defences.

Strikes by all sides have increasingly targeted economic and industrial sites, raising fears of wider disruption to global energy supplies.

In the area around a bridge west of Tehran that was targeted by the United States, an AFP reporter saw a villa and residential buildings with blown-out windows – but no military installations.

According to the martyrs foundation of Alborz province, cited by the official IRNA agency, the attack killed 13 civilians and wounded dozens.

In Abu Dhabi, Iran’s neighbour across the Gulf, metal giant Emirates Global Aluminium meanwhile said it could take up to a year before it can resume full production, after its site was damaged by Iranian strikes.

Ex-FM urges deal

Writing in the US journal Foreign Affairs, Iran’s former foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, said Tehran should make a deal with Washington to end the war by offering to curb its nuclear programme and reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for sanctions relief.

Iran has virtually blocked the key waterway since the war began, where one-fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas normally passes.

Of the few ships that have managed to cross, most have had links to Iran, with 60 percent of commodity-bearing ships crossing the strait either coming from Iran or heading there, an AFP analysis of maritime data showed.

In the first known transit by a major European shipping group since 1 March, the Maltese-flagged Kribi, belonging to the French maritime transport group CMA CGM, crossed the strait to exit the Gulf on Thursday, according to Marine Traffic data analysed by AFP.

Three other ships, including one co-owned by a Japanese company, crossed Thursday.

Iranian military spokesperson Ebrahim Zolfaghari warned that Iran would increase its own attacks on energy sites in the region in response to threats from Trump of attacks on infrastructure.

A drone attack on a refinery owned by Kuwait’s national oil company on Friday sparked fires at several of its units, state media said.

Later, an Iranian attack damaged a power and desalination complex, Kuwait’s water and electricity ministry said.

In Abu Dhabi, a gas complex shut after a fire broke out, following an attack that resulted in “falling debris” upon interception, the government media office said.

Bridge destroyed In Lebanon

The Israeli military said Friday it had struck more than 3500 targets across Lebanon in the month since fighting with Iran-backed Hezbollah began.

It added that it would attack two bridges in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa region “in order to prevent the transfer of reinforcements and military equipment”.

Lebanese state media later reported that Israel destroyed one bridge in the region.

Lebanon’s health ministry said Thursday that 1345 people had been killed – and 4040 wounded – since the start of the war.

Hezbollah has so far not announced its losses.

The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon peacekeeping force said a blast of unknown origin wounded three peacekeepers Friday, the third such incident in a week.

– AFP

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/04/iran-searches-for-downed-us-jet-crew-claims-second-plane-hit/

Easter Sunday surcharges cannot have public holiday excuse, Consumer NZ says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Many hospitality businesses add surcharges on public holidays to cover the higher wage costs. 123rf

A consumer watchdog says diners encountering surcharges over Easter should make sure businesses are not blaming a non-existent public holiday.

Many hospitality businesses add surcharges on public holidays to cover the higher wage costs.

But Consumer NZ says only Good Friday and Easter Monday are statutory holidays, so any business adding a surcharge on Sunday cannot use that as an excuse.

Chief executive Jon Duffy told RNZ businesses simply needed to be honest about the reason for the additional charge.

“They can apply a surcharge if they want to, and customers – if they decide they don’t like that surcharge – can decide that they will take their custom elsewhere.

“The rules, as they exist under the Fair Trading Act, simply say that businesses can’t mislead you about the reason for that surcharge.”

Businesses could spread their holiday wage costs across the year instead of surcharging, Duffy said.

“It’s a practice that’s crept in and become more commonplace over the years. We see it in other areas, we see massively inconsistent surcharging when it comes to payments and EFTPOS terminals all over the country.”

Businesses also need to clearly disclose the surcharge in advance, not hidden behind the counter or on a note put back in the employee toilets.

People could complain to the Commerce Commission or report businesses misrepresenting surcharges to Consumer NZ, Duffy said.

He added that he was hoping the government would follow through with its proposal to ban paywave surcharges.

The government introduced legislation last year to ban in-store card surcharges, but the bill currently languishes on Parliament’s Order Paper, four months after the Finance and Expenditure Committee published its report.

ACT has now made it clear it would not support a blanket ban, as retailers would have to push up their prices to absorb the charges, but Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson insisted nothing had changed with the legislation, and he was pausing to do more work on the policy.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/04/easter-sunday-surcharges-cannot-have-public-holiday-excuse-consumer-nz-says/

NRL: NZ Warriors v Cronulla Sharks – what you need to know

Source: Radio New Zealand

Taine Tuaupiki and Will Kennedy will square off, when NZ Warriors face Cronulla Sharks. Photosport/RNZ

NRL: NZ Warriors v Cronulla Sharks

Kickoff 4pm, Sunday, 5 April

Ocean Protect Stadium, Sydney

Live blog updates on RNZ website

Analysis: After the euphoria of a three-game winning streak to start the 2026 NRL season, NZ Warriors have tasted a dose of reality, with their first defeat against an improving Wests Tigers side.

They travel across the Tasman, hoping to regroup against a Cronulla Sharks outfit off to a 2-2 start to their campaign.

Here’s what you need to know about that meeting.

History

Cronulla enjoy a sizeable head-to-head advantage over the Warriors, winning 29 of their previous 51 meetings (56.9 percent), but the rivals have shared honours (5-5) over the past 10 encounters, dating back to September 2020.

They faced each other just once last season, with the Warriors producing a 40-10 win at Sharks Park that rated as their best performance of the campaign.

They led 12-10 at halftime, but kept the home team scoreless after the break, with Chanel Harris-Tavita grabbing a try double. Co-captain Mitch Barnett had suffered his season-ending knee injury the week before, while hooker Sam Healey made his Warriors debut against his old club, deputising for Wayde Egan.

The Sharks have the biggest win of the rivalry, prevailing 45-4 in 2012, with Todd Carney, Andrew Fifita and John Williams all scoring try doubles and Carney kicking 8/8 from the tee, along with a field goal.

The Warriors’ biggest margin was their 44-12 win in 2023, with Dallin Watene-Zelezniak scoring two tries.

Form

After a three-game winning start to their season, the Warriors suffered their first defeat at the hands of the Tigers, running up an early 10-point advantage, but losing their way before halftime, conceding three tries and momentum that they were never able to regain.

After four rounds, they had slipped to second on the competition table, behind unbeaten Penrith Panthers, and led the league in total kick metres (2650). Halfback Tanah Boyd headed try assists (8) and all kicks (73).

Tanah Boyd led the competition in try assists and kicks after four rounds. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Cronulla began their campaign with a big 50-10 win over Gold Coast Titans, but fell to Penrith and the Dolphins, before levelling their account with victory over Canberra Raiders last week.

They sit ninth on the table (2-2) and wing Sione Katoa leads the competition in tacklebreaks (34), while second-rower Billy Burns has missed most tackles (22).

Teams

Warriors: 1. Taine Tuaupiki, 2. Dallin Watene-Zelezniak, 3. Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, 4. Adam Pompey, 5. Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, 6. Luke Metcalf, 7. Tanah Boyd, 8. James Fisher-Harris, 9. Wayde Egan, 10. Jackson Ford, 11. Leka Halasima, 12. Jacob Laban, 13. Erin Clark

Interchange: 14. Sam Healey, 15. Marata Niukore, 16. Demitric Vaimauga, 17. Tanner Stowers-Smith, 18. Chanel Harris-Tavita, 20. Eddie Ieremia-Toeava

Reserves: 21. Morgan Gannon, 22. Alofiana Khan-Pereira, 23. Ali Leiataua

Warriors coach Andrew Webster has stuck with the reshuffled starting line-up that took the field against Wests last week, with Taine Tuaupiki at fullback and Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad at centre.

Nicoll-Klokstad responded with a try double in the loss and Webster obviously values Tuaupiki’s x-factor at the back.

Barnett’s broken thumb will open an opportunity for Demitric Vaimauga, who did not take the field last week, as Webster tried to share gametime around his extended interchange.

Sharks: 1. Will Kennedy, 2. Sione Katoa, 3. Jesse Ramien, 4. KL Iro, 5. Sam Stonestreet, 6. Braydon Trindall, 7. Nicho Hynes, 8. Addin Fonua-Blake, 9. Blayke Brailey, 10. Tony Rudolf, 11. Billy Burns, 12. Teig Wilton, 13. Jesse Colquhoun

Interchange: 14. Sione Talakai, 15. Tom Hazelton, 16. Oregon Kaufusi, 17. Braden Uele, 18. Mawene Hiroti, 19. Hohepa Puru

Reserves: 20. Jayden Berrell, 21. Michael Gabrael, 22. Briton Nikora

Sharks coach Craig Ftizgibbon retains the same starters that beat Canberra Raiders last week, but brings Taranaki-born Mawene Hiroti onto the interchange, with Kiwis star Briton Nikora lurking

among the reserves, nursing a broken nose.

Player to watch

Does this feel like a game you circle for an Addin Fonua-Blake grudge match?

The imposing front-rower has won Dally M Prop of the Year for three consecutive years, including two as a Warrior, and letting him off his contract early still hurts. His clash with replacement James Fisher-Harris should be key to the outcome of this encounter.

It didn’t seem that long ago Addin Fonua-Blake was wearing a Warriors jersey. NRL Photos / www.photosport.nz

Kiwi player to watch

If he’s anywhere near fit, you’d think second-rower Briton Nikora will be promoted into the playing line-up.

He’s a potential gamewinner and has already put his hand up for Origin, while keeping his Kiwis eligibility under new rules.

They said it

“We weren’t overreactive in there, we’re not happy, we’re very frustrated. We missed the mark tonight, we know that, but we know what we’ve got to work on… it’s clear already for us.”

Warriors coach Andrew Webster reflects on Tigers loss

“Those kicks he’s producing at the moment, he practices those during the week, so it’s no fluke that they’re coming off in the game. I think his defensive workrate has been great and he’s really found his own in the side.”

Sharks hooker Blayke Brailey assesses half Braydon Trindall’s performance this season

What will happen

The Warriors need to regroup after their loss to Wests Tigers and must do so without their skipper. They’ve done it before and Metcalf will be better for last week’s run.

Warriors by five.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/04/nrl-nz-warriors-v-cronulla-sharks-what-you-need-to-know/

Parkrun: the growing phenomenon getting people walking and running

Source: Radio New Zealand

Parkrun’s philosophy is to create a healthier community with free volunteer-led, 5km runs or walks in open spaces every weekend around the world. Simon Watts / PHOTOSPORT

It may have started out as a small group enjoying a jog, but Parkrun has now got people around the world buzzing.

Every Saturday morning more than 10,000 people take part in an organised walk or run somewhere in New Zealand known as Parkrun.

It is a growing phenomenon that has captured the interest of those that previously may never have thought about taking to the streets or parks.

Parkrun originated in Britain in 2004 and is now in 25 countries involving more than 3000 events and close to 12 million registered participants.

Scarborough Parkrun supplied / Scarborough Parkrun Facebook

Parkrun’s philosophy is to create a healthier community with free volunteer-led, 5km runs or walks in open spaces every weekend around the world.

New Zealand’s first Parkrun was held in the Hutt Valley in 2012, but now there are almost 70 locations.

Darren de Groot is a former member of the Johnsonville-based Olympic Harriers running and walking club – who now walks, runs and volunteers for Parkrun most Saturdays in Christchurch.

“With Parkrun it’s all about community, participation, personal achievement and camaraderie.

Since being involved as a volunteer for the past seven years de Groot has encouraged a number of people to give it a go.

“I tell them it’s not a race, it’s about progression and personal achievement and next thing they’re at Parkrun and they’ve completed 20 of them.”

De Groot said the interest is growing and participants are spreading the word.

“If you don’t know about Parkrun, you’re not in the bubble.”

Parkrunners get hooked and the organisation marks milestones for the number of events completed while many others attempt to run every Parkrun in their region or in the country.

Participants only need to register once and can compete at any event nation-wide. Supplied / barry guy

Joanne Lowe, a retired Wellington teacher, is not in that league just yet.

Lowe has been Parkrunning for just over a year and heads to the Wellington waterfront most Saturday’s with family and neighbourhood friends.

“I love exercising outdoors, I love the waterfront, it is so vibrant at that time of the morning and you just feel part of the city. No one cares what you’re doing, you’re just part of a group.”

She said she likes that it provides a social opportunity and that she can mix jogging with walking and is now just a couple of runs away from reaching her milestone of 25 events.

Lowe admitted she was one of the slowest in the Waitangi group.

“There is a volunteer tail-walker so you never feel like you are the last person … I like that.”

Participants only need to register once and can compete at any event nation-wide.

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