Statement following sentencing of Daniel James Work

Source: New Zealand Police

Attribute to Detective Senior Sergeant Phil Taylor:

Police acknowledge the sentence handed down to Daniel James Work in the Whanganui High Court today.

The 39-year-old has been sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum non parole period of 10 years, 6 months after pleading guilty to the murder of Albert Coe in Ohingaiti on 21 January 2024. 

No sentence will bring back Albie or lessen the deep hurt his loved ones have felt since his death, but this a positive outcome for the community.

Police would like to thank everyone that assisted throughout the case, and to bring this matter to justice.

Police will not be making further comment.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/01/statement-following-sentencing-of-daniel-james-work/

Trump underestimated Iran’s resilience. Now there is only one way out of the war

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Amin Saikal, Emeritus Professor of Middle Eastern Studies, Australian National University; The University of Western Australia; Victoria University

For all their claims of military success in their war with Iran, the United States and Israel have yet to clearly define their rationale for starting the conflict, their goals and their exit strategy.

With the Iranian regime having mounted a robust response, the Middle East has been plunged into an unnecessary confrontation with no end in sight.

When US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu started this war a month ago, they didn’t have a clear understanding of the nature of the Iranian regime and its defensive capability.

They didn’t expect Tehran to counter their offensives with an unprecedented level of preparedness, striking US bases across the Persian Gulf and hitting Israel hard.

Nor did they anticipate Tehran would close the Strait of Hormuz, partially or fully, to cause a shortage of oil and gas with severe consequences for the global economy.

Driven by an embrace of military power, they acted on a belief that American and Israeli might from the air and sea would force the Islamic government to quickly capitulate, enabling the Iranian people to instigate a favourable regime change – something that has not transpired.

With a military victory now looking increasingly elusive, Trump will need to pivot to a diplomatic solution – and force Netanyahu to comply.

Why Iran has proven so resilient

Prior to the war, the Islamic government was under enormous domestic pressure and international criticism for its suppression of widespread public protests that left thousands of Iranians dead.

The regime was also struggling to come to terms with Israel’s degradation of its regional affiliates, Hamas and Hezbollah in particular, not to mention the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s dictatorship in Syria.

While distrustful of Trump, it felt compelled to enter into negotiations with the US once more for a viable settlement of its controversial nuclear program. In late February, the chief mediator, the Omani foreign minister, said a deal was within reach.

When the US and Israel attacked instead, it gave the Islamic government a different sort of opportunity: it could demonstrate the resilience it had spent decades building.

Iran’s system of authority, governance and security was structured to withstand the loss of its leaders and commanders. The regime had shown this in the 1980s in the face of stiff internal opposition, the eight-year war with Iraq, US efforts to contain it and regional hostility.

The Islamic government has also managed to survive despite its theocratic impositions, frequent public uprisings and domestic and foreign policy shortfalls. The reasons for this include:

  • the belief of many Shia Muslims in revolutionary Islamism

  • its combination of ideological rigidity and pragmatic flexibility, and

  • a dedicated and entrenched security, intelligence and administrative apparatus whose survival is dependent on the regime’s survival.

While many Iranians have wanted to see the back of the Islamic government, most are still very proud of their cultural and civilisational heritage. They don’t like to see Iran being subjected to outside aggression, destruction and humiliation.

An Iranian man holds a cartoon of US President Donald Trump in Tehran. Abedin Taherkenareh/EPA

A war of endurance

This explains why many Iranians have rallied around the flag, as they have historically done against outside aggression.

Knowing it cannot match the firepower of the US and Israel, the Islamic government has shown ingenuity in creating a “mosaic defence” strategy of asymmetrical warfare. This entails adapting and responding to US military weaknesses (for instance, by targeting US bases in Persian Gulf countries with drones and missiles) and decentralising its command structure so leaders can quickly be replaced when they are killed.

The regime has been assisted by Russia and China with supplies of dual-use technologies and revenue from oil imports. Russia has also reportedly been giving Iran intelligence on the location of US assets in the region.

And although Iran’s regional affiliates have been degraded, they are still capable of backing the Islamic Republic in the conflict. Both Hezbollah and the Yemeni Houthis have entered the war by targeting Israel. The Houthis may also attempt to disrupt shipping through the Red Sea.

In short, the Iranian government is resolved to deny the US and Israel a victory at all costs. Given this, the conflict has become a war of endurance.

A deal is the only way out

How long the US, Israel and Iran stay in the fight is a matter of conjecture. However, as the situation stands, the space for a diplomatic resolution has very much tightened. Iran has not shown a desire to back down, and the US and Israel are not united in their goals.

Trump may eventually settle for a deal on Iran’s nuclear program and a potential reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, given the costs of the war and his falling poll numbers in a year of mid-term elections.

But Netanyahu seems adamant in his pursuit. He wants to destroy the Islamic government and weaken the Iranian state as a regional actor.

What is increasingly clear is the war is unlikely to end by military means. The only way forward is a negotiated settlement. The onus will therefore fall on Trump to pull Netanyahu into line and take the lead on trying to strike a deal.

Some analysts have already concluded that no matter how the war ends, Iran is prevailing.

ref. Trump underestimated Iran’s resilience. Now there is only one way out of the war – https://theconversation.com/trump-underestimated-irans-resilience-now-there-is-only-one-way-out-of-the-war-279667

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/01/trump-underestimated-irans-resilience-now-there-is-only-one-way-out-of-the-war-279667/

Should the parliament decide if Australia goes to war?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nicole Townsend, Lecturer in War Studies, UNSW Sydney

As the war in Iran heads into its second month, the conflict has escalated rapidly. The effects are being felt around the world, and there is no clear sign of it ending.

So far, the Australian government has said it will not commit troops to the conflict.

But if it were to take such a step in the future, what would that involve?

Australian involvement in the conflict

Iran responded to US-Israeli airstrikes by lashing out against its regional neighbours in the Gulf. Gulf states requested military assistance to defend against Iranian attacks, and the Albanese government agreed to provide air-to-air missiles, a surveillance aircraft, and 85 supporting personnel.

The government has carefully emphasised the defensive character of its commitment, in line with the right to collective self-defence outlined in Article 51 of the UN Charter.

Still, legal experts have pointed out that the distinction between defensive and offensive operations means little. Australia is involved in the conflict, even if it does not partake in offensive operations against Iran.


Read more: Australia is sending an aircraft and personnel to the Middle East. Does this mean we are entering the war?


But if we do go to war, how does it happen?

If the Australian government decides to commit troops to the war, it will not need to consult parliament before doing so.

Australia’s war powers provisions are quite detailed. But, simply put, there are two key documents that determine who exercises war powers in Australia.

The first is the Constitution, which gives war powers to the governor-general as commander-in-chief of the Australian Defence Force (ADF).

The second is the Defence Act 1903, which gives the defence minister the power to direct the ADF.

In both, war powers are the prerogative of the executive, the branch of government that puts the law into action. The executive comprises the king (who is represented by the governor-general), the prime minister, and their ministers.

In practice, the National Security Committee of Cabinet (NSC) specifically exercises this power. The NSC deals with the “highest-priority, highest-risk and most strategic national security matters of the day”.

NSC decisions do not need to be endorsed by the broader Cabinet, and the executive is not required to consult parliament first. It must, however, inform parliament and facilitate debate as early as possible.

The process is similar in other Commonwealth nations, including New Zealand and Canada.

The situation in the United States is different. The US constitution gives Congress the power to declare war, but the president is commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Essentially, Congress initiates war, and the president directs the armed forces once authorised by Congress.

In practice, many presidents have deployed troops without Congress’ approval, including in the Korean and Vietnam Wars. This led Congress to pass the War Powers Resolution in 1973 to curb presidential war powers. Presidents continued to commit troops without congressional approval, and Congress has proven less willing or able to assert authority in these situations.

Responding to the current conflict, Congress debated President Donald Trump’s authority to attack Iran, but efforts by Democrats and some Republicans failed, as they had in the aftermath of recent US operations in Venezuela.

Proposals for reform in Australia

Since 1985, numerous bills have been introduced in the Senate. All sought to limit executive war powers by requiring parliamentary approval to deploy the ADF in war or warlike operations. None succeeded.

While Defence Minister Richard Marles ordered a parliamentary inquiry into war powers in 2022, he told the committee the decision to commit troops to war was “within the prerogative powers of the executive” and should remain so. Ultimately, the inquiry affirmed the executive authority of prime minister and Cabinet to decide on matters of war. It also rejected the introduction of a parliamentary veto.

This has not stopped the Greens from again calling for war powers reform amid the Iran conflict.

The Greens want the execution of war powers to be contingent on a vote in both houses of parliament – and they say public opinion is on their side. So, what do Australians think about the issue?

What do Australians think?

A national poll by Essential Research in April 2023 found 90% of those surveyed thought parliamentary approval should be required to go to war. This is the figure the Greens have cited in their current bid for reform.

Last year, the War Studies Research Group asked Australians what they thought about war powers as part of a larger national survey on public attitudes towards the ADF. The survey involved 1,500 people and was conducted from late February to early March 2025 as part of our work to measure public attitudes towards the ADF.

Overall, 76% of respondents agreed the government should always be required to consult parliament before committing the ADF to war. Of those, 37% strongly agreed, while less than 5% disagreed.

Notably, the survey indicated a remarkable consensus across Australia. 70% or more of almost all demographic cohorts supported parliamentary involvement. This included gender, age, location, income, education, military background, and nationality.

Majority agreement also held across political preference lines, with highest approval levels among respondents who voted Labor (81%) and Independent (82%).

Where to from here?

Despite the Greens’ efforts and broad public support for war powers reform, the major parties have favoured the status quo and will continue to do so.

As Labor Senator Raffaele Ciccone informed the Senate last week:

The Albanese government supports the continuation of current arrangements that govern the deployment of the Australian Defence Force to overseas engagements.

While the government remains committed to keeping the parliament updated on matters of war, it is unlikely war powers reform will occur.

ref. Should the parliament decide if Australia goes to war? – https://theconversation.com/should-the-parliament-decide-if-australia-goes-to-war-279446

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/01/should-the-parliament-decide-if-australia-goes-to-war-279446/

Karla Epiha sentenced after running over child on pedestrian crossing

Source: Radio New Zealand

Karla Epiha was sentenced in Christchurch District Court after earlier pleading guilty to two counts of careless driving causing injury. Anna Sargent / RNZ

A woman who ran over a child on a Christchurch pedestrian crossing broke down in court as she was sentenced for careless driving.

The boy was critically injured and it took 10 people to lift Karla Epiha’s car off the 8-year-old on 24 May, 2025.

Judge Mark Callaghan sentenced Epiha to 12 months’ intensive supervision and disqualified her from driving for 10 months.

Epiha earlier pleaded guilty to two counts of careless driving causing injury – one for hitting the boy and the other relating to a woman.

The summary of facts said the 8-year-old boy, a 35-year-old woman and a 5-year-old boy pulling a 3-year-old boy in a trolley were crossing Hereford Street under a green pedestrian light.

Epiha turned onto the street and drove her car into the older boy, the woman and the trolley.

The 8-year-old landed on the car’s bonnet before falling backwards onto the road. The vehicle continued to move forward and stopped on him, leaving him trapped underneath.

“Ten members of the public were required to lift the vehicle,” Judge Callaghan said. “He suffered a fractured pelvis, fractured ribs and a head wound which required a skin graft.”

The woman was hit by the front of the vehicle and fell to the side of the car. She suffered a concussion and a split head.

Epiha claimed she had only seen the 5-year-old boy crossing the road when she turned.

She was visibly emotional during her sentencing in the Christchurch District Court on Wednesday, at times dabbing her eyes with tissues.

Judge Callaghan read a victim impact statement from the 35-year-old woman, who said her emotional and physical health had been significantly affected by the crash.

“The concussion has created vertigo, which has now settled; it’s also created regular migraines, which are still happening,” Callaghan said.

“She has ongoing neck pain. Since the crash she has difficulty with flashing lights and the wound on her head has been very slow to heal. She’s lost her ability to pick up things, particularly her child.

“She’s having difficulty remembering things and feels like she has ‘baby brain’ again. She has been diagnosed with moderate depression, she has become more isolated with a developed fear of walking anywhere.”

The woman’s 5-year-old son, who witnessed the crash, now had significant fears about crossing the road and had been hypervigilant with safety, he said.

Judge Callaghan said Epiha was not paying attention when she was driving.

“Your counsel has said that the carelessness is at the low level of the scale. I don’t agree. The carelessness here is at least at a moderate level – it’s not one where you accelerated harshly or at speed, but you just didn’t check,” he said.

“The two pedestrians that you collided with were entitled to be on the crossing, they had the green light and you failed to check, and your lack of attention in my view places it in that moderate category.”

The judge accepted Epiha was genuinely remorseful for the crash.

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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/2026/04/01/karla-epiha-sentenced-after-running-over-child-on-pedestrian-crossing/

How museums can remember war while honouring civilian trauma and resistance

COMMENTARY: By Audrey van Ryn

Museums around the world present the story of war in different ways. The Imperial War Museum in London includes military history, the Holocaust, women’s roles in the two world wars, wartime artwork and the political issues of the time.

This museum records both civilian and military experiences, looking at the impact of war on people’s lives. Its Crimes Against Humanity section has a continuous film about genocide and ethnic violence in our time.

The Dutch Resistance Museum in Amsterdam focuses on the Dutch experience during the occupation of the Netherlands by Nazi Germany during World War Two, and features personal stories of those who lived during that period.

National museums in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh musealise the memory of the 1947 Partition in different, selective ways, with oral history, survivor testimonies, and personal artefacts to document the displacement and trauma of the subcontinent’s division.

How does our own war museum remember war?

Visitors to Auckland’s War Memorial Museum find that the top floor is dedicated to the memory of New Zealand soldiers killed in World Wars One and Two.

The WWI Hall of Memories contains a sanctuary, used for commemoration. In this space are medals and badges of units in which men and women from the Auckland Province served, and British badges that acknowledge those who joined British units.

Roll of honour
In the WWII Hall of Memories, carved into marble is the permanent roll of honour of men and women from the Auckland Province who died in both World Wars, and in Korea, Malaya, Borneo and Vietnam.

The Scars on the Heart exhibition covers New Zealand’s civil wars of the 1840s and 1860s, the Anglo-Boer War, the First and Second World Wars, the Asian wars and New Zealand’s involvement in United Nations peacekeeping missions. Items on display include letters, diaries, photos, clothing and firearms.

There is a recreation of a bivouac shelter at Gallipoli and a Western Front trench from WWI.

Nagasaki bomb victims in 1945 . . . vital evidence of civilian war trauma now no longer on display at Auckland Museum. Image: Screenshot

This year, the greatest number of active armed conflicts since the end of the Second World War is taking place. The Doomsday Clock was set at 85 seconds to midnight on January 27 — the closest it has ever been to midnight.

Funding for nuclear weapons programmes is increasing and the New START treaty, the nuclear arms reduction treaty between the United States and Russia has expired, with US President Donald Trump having no interest in renewing arms limitation agreements.

Remembering the destructive and tragic consequences of war should be central to the role of museums in their telling of stories about war. However, unfortunately, around the same time as the recent removal of asbestos from the museum, some of these vital stories have been removed.

They include evidence of civilian war trauma installed in the 1990s by then head curator Lieutenant-Colonel Chris Pugsley to show impacts of war on civilians. Another removal has been the 1968 “Letter from a Vietnam Hospital” by the New Zealand surgeon and surgical team leader in Vietnam, Dr Peter Eccles-Smith, and a photo of a woman and a child who were victims of the Nagasaki atomic bomb in 1945.

No record of NZ nuclear protests
There is also no longer any text or photos showing New Zealand’s official protests against French nuclear testing at Moruroa Atoll in the South Pacific.

In addition to the reinstatement of these particular items, a more encompassing telling of stories about war at Auckland Museum than at present could include the portrayal of New Zealand’s resistance to international wars, the work of civilian and army medical personnel, photos of injured soldiers and civilians, photos and placards of anti-war demonstrators, stories of conscientious objectors, portrayals of victims of the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and photos and stories about the nuclear-free movement in NZ and the Pacific, including the fateful journey of Greenpeace’s Rainbow Warrior across Oceania into Auckland Harbour.

Auckland Museum’s 2025 plan included “Enabling commemoration opportunities to reflect the community while exploring themes of conflict and peace; and commitment to broadening our commemorative narrative to be inclusive of diverse experiences and events relevant to our communities.”

This year is 30 years since the International Court of Justice declared that the threat or use of nuclear weapons would generally contradict international law. Next year, 2027, will be the 40th anniversary of NZ’s nuclear-free legislation, a fitting time for Auckland Museum to launch an exhibition that could include NZ’s official and civil society opposition to nuclear weapons.

Veteran peace activists hope to forge a constructive working relationship with Auckland Museum to help portray people’s experience of war more fully, and create a peace gallery to tell the story of NZ’s peace history.

Audrey van Ryn is a peace activist and writer. In 2009, she created the Auckland Peace Heritage Walk on behalf of the United Nations Association of NZ. She is currently secretary of Community Groups Feeding the Homeless.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/01/how-museums-can-remember-war-while-honouring-civilian-trauma-and-resistance/

Ingdan, Inc. Announces 2025 Annual Results

Source: Media Outreach

Ingdan Posts Landmark Full-Year Results with 50.1% Revenue Growth, Backed by Robust AI Chip Demand and Expanding Proprietary Product Portfolio

Highlights of the Annual Results for the Year Ended December 31, 2025:

  • Robust Revenue Growth: Group revenue surged by 50.1% year-on-year to RMB15,206.7 million, driven by heightened demand for AI computing power and a strategic expansion into high-growth AI application markets.
  • Strong Profitability: Gross profit increased by 24.1% to RMB1,104.2 million. Net profit was approximately RMB310.2 million, up 13.4%; profit attributable to equity shareholders of the Company grew by a robust 13.1% to RMB214.8 million, demonstrating effective monetization of its platform and operational efficiency.
  • Building on the substantial investments made in large-scale AI computing power and proprietary products in 2025, the Company is confident that its revenue growth trajectory will accelerate in 2026.

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 1 April 2026 – Ingdan, Inc. (“Ingdan” or the “Company,” Stock Code: 400.HK; together with its subsidiaries, the “Group”), an innovative technology services platform group, today announced its audited consolidated results for the year ended December 31, 2025 (“2025” or “the Year”). The results reflect a landmark year of performance, further cementing the Company’s position at the core of the AI industry value chain. The Group serves as an ecosystem services platform anchored in AI chips, with a strategic focus on AI computing power centers and AI smart terminals. The Company is dedicated to building an AI industry connector with broad industrial linkages. Its core positioning is to bridge upstream AI chip technology with the needs of downstream innovation enterprises. The Group has established deep partnerships with world-leading chip manufacturers including NVIDIA, Xilinx, Intel, AMD, and SanDisk. Leveraging chip distribution as its gateway, the Group provides customers with an integrated, full-chain service covering technology solutions, supply chain services, technical training, and after-sales operation and maintenance — connecting the ecosystem service chain from chip supply to end-application deployment, and empowering the industrialization of AI technology.

2025 Full Year Financial Highlights

Benefiting from continued robust AI computing power demand and a significant uptick in chip requirements across AI technology-related industries, the Group’s revenue for the year reached approximately RMB15,206.7 million, comprising 62.6% from technology solutions, 37.0% from distribution business, and 0.4% from proprietary products — representing a year-on-year increase of approximately 50.1% from RMB10,129.1 million in 2024. The Group’s gross profit was approximately RMB1,104.2 million, up 24.1% year-on-year. Operating profit was approximately RMB532.4 million, up 24.4% year-on-year. Net profit after tax was approximately RMB310.2 million, up 13.4% year-on-year. Profit attributable to equity shareholders of the Company was approximately RMB214.8 million, up 13.1% year-on-year.

As at December 31, 2025, the Group’s cash and bank balances (including pledged deposits) amounted to RMB1,264.3 million, bank loans stood at RMB2,628.0 million. The total number of issued ordinary shares was 1,644,262,732 shares, with basic weighted average shares of 1,582,928,000 shares.

Deepening AI Computing Power Supply Chain: Comtech Continuously Empowering Industry Innovation

In the current strategic growth phase of the global semiconductor industry, the synergistic evolution of AI, cloud computing, and IoT technologies — combined with breakthroughs in humanoid robotics — is driving exponential growth in global computing power demand. This trend is not only spurring iterative demand for high-performance computing chips such as GPUs and ASICs, but also accelerating technological upgrades across the entire industry chain, including high-speed storage chips and intelligent networking equipment.

Against this backdrop, the Group’s core business unit, Comtech (“Comtech”) — a technology services platform for the chip industry — serves as a core supplier in the AI computing power supply chain, and is deeply engaged in the development of global computing power networks, with its service coverage spanning data centers, AI servers, AI switches, optical modules, and a wide range of AI application sectors. Comtech collaborates closely with leading global chip manufacturers, acting as an authorized distributor for over 80 core suppliers, including NVIDIA, Xilinx, Intel, AMD, and SanDisk, and many leading domestic chipmakers.

Leveraging years of deep market expertise, Comtech has accumulated extensive technical experience and industrial resources, enabling it to provide chip application solutions and supply chain management services to tens of thousands of downstream clients. Utilizing proprietary AI technologies, large language models (LLMs), and specialized knowledge bases, Comtech delivers intelligent and automated solutions in chip selection, hardware design, software development, and system integration, significantly enhancing product performance and reliability.

Comtech’s proprietary product line is entering a new era of AI acceleration. The Company holds multiple proprietary intellectual property rights in AI chip applications and intelligent supply chain, including an intelligent algorithm library, industry-specific large language models, an intelligent hardware design platform, an adaptive system architecture, and a broad portfolio of innovative technology patents. Its subsidiary, Kepler Lab, has successfully developed SOM-level proprietary products based on core chips including NVIDIA Jetson and Xilinx FPGA. Benchmarked against international advanced standards, these domestically developed AI edge computing products have achieved mass shipments to customers including customs authorities and banks, and are being actively expanded into emerging sectors such as robotics, medical devices, and autonomous driving. With high gross margins and a customer base that naturally overlaps with the Company’s traditional distribution business, this proprietary product line is poised to establish a second growth curve — marking the Company’s strategic transformation from a supply chain service provider to a technology value-added service provider, and opening compelling new possibilities for the Group’s long-term value creation.

As at December 31, 2025, Comtech’s adjusted distribution cost (“ADC”) inventory amounted to approximately RMB772.0 million. For the year ended December 31, 2025, ADC inventory turnover for Comtech was approximately 21 days.

Ingdan Technology Accelerates Strategic Positioning: AI Servers and Talent Development Advancing in Tandem

AI Computing Center Business: Precisely Capturing Domestic Computing Power Demand

In view of accelerating global AI technological advancement and sustained growth in domestic computing power demand, universities, medical schools, and research institutions have an increasingly urgent need for self-controllable, high-performance AI computing power. The Group’s intelligent computing power technology and services platform Ingdan Technology (“Ingdan Technology”), is capitalizing on the import-substitution opportunity by strategically deploying its AI server business and making large-scale investments in AIDC (AI Data Center) computing power center operations and proprietary product development.

Through deep collaboration with Huawei and leveraging the Ascend 910 chip, Ingdan Technology has launched the DeepSeek all-in-one workstation to precisely address the core computing power needs of scientific researchers. The DeepSeek all-in-one workstation features stable computing performance, robust data security, and full technological autonomy — achieving a distinctive competitive advantage through the combination of leading manufacturer endorsement and customized services.

Ingdan Academy: Talent Development Surges More Than Fourfold, Supporting National Semiconductor Strategy

Leveraging the Group’s extensive resources and technological expertise in the chip industry, Ingdan Academy introduces world-leading chip application technologies and is dedicated to developing talent in chip application and AI. To date, Ingdan Academy has cumulatively trained over 9,000 chip application engineers — surpassing the previous milestone of 2,000 by more than fourfold — serving over 1,200 enterprises and supplying a large number of high-quality professionals to the chip and AI industries. Through continuous talent training and technical support, Ingdan Academy is working to help Shenzhen become a global center for chip application and AI, contributing to the development of the nation’s semiconductor industry.

Chief Executive Officer’s Outlook

Mr. Jeffrey Kang, Chairmanand CEO of Ingdan, Inc., commented: 2025 has been a year of profound milestone significance in the Company’s development journey. Building on the substantial investments made in large-scale AI computing power and proprietary products throughout 2025, we are confident that our revenue growth trajectory will accelerate in 2026.The astonishing growth in AI computing power demand has fully validated the Group’s forward-looking strategic positioning across the AI chip application value chain.Looking ahead, we anticipate significant performance improvement driven by robust and sustained growth in demand for AI chips, GPUs, and storage networking chips. Supported by a robust bank financing framework, we expect sales to major customers to grow substantially — injecting powerful momentum into the Group’s exceptional performance growth in 2026 and laying a solid foundation.

We are full of confidence in the Group’s future development, and we extend our sincere gratitude to every shareholder, customer, and business partner for their continued trust and support.”

Cautionary Statement

The information contained herein has not been independently verified. No representation, warranty or undertaking, express or implied, is made as to, and no reliance should be placed on, the fairness, accuracy, completeness or correctness of the information or the opinions contained herein by the Company or any of its affiliates, advisers or representatives. The information contained herein should be considered in the context of the circumstances prevailing at the time and is subject to change without notice. The Company does not undertake to update the information contained herein to reflect events or circumstances occurring after the date hereof.

This document is not intended to provide, and you should not rely upon it for, a complete or comprehensive analysis of the Company’s financial or operating condition or prospects. Neither the Company nor any of its affiliates, advisers or representatives shall have any liability whatsoever (in negligence or otherwise) for any loss howsoever arising from any use of this document or its contents or otherwise arising in connection therewith.

This document may contain forward-looking statements that reflect the Company’s current intentions, beliefs and expectations regarding future events as of the dates indicated herein. Such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and are based on numerous assumptions regarding the Company’s present and future business strategies and the environment in which the Company will operate in the future, and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. In light of these risks, uncertainties and assumptions, actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. The Company and its affiliates, advisers and representatives undertake no obligation and make no commitment to update any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances occurring after the relevant date.

https://ingdangroup.com/

Hashtag: #Comtech #Ingdan #AI #IC #Chips #humanoid #Intel #AMD #Sandisk #NVIDIA #Tech #RevenueGrowth #TechGrowth #AIInvestment #ProprietaryProducts #KeplerLab #Comtech #IngdanTechnology #IngdanAcademy #AIAcceleration #TechTransformation

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/2026/04/01/ingdan-inc-announces-2025-annual-results/

Man after arrested after pizza aggravated robbery

Source: New Zealand Police

A late-night drive-thru run has foiled one offender, after allegedly committing an aggravated robbery at another fast food outlet earlier in the night.

Auckland City Police responded to a pizza restaurant on Sandringham Road at around 10.15pm on Tuesday.

“A person has entered the store, armed with a machete, threatening the staff working and forcing them into a cooler room,” acting Detective Senior Sergeant Ian Lambarth says.

“The store’s till was stolen before the offender left the store.

“Police were contacted a short time later and a Police camera operator identified a stolen VW Golf leaving the area.”

Fortunately, no one at the store suffered any physical injuries.

A Police unit later sighted this VW sitting in a drive-thru in Māngere.

Acting Detective Senior Sergeant Lambarth says the vehicle was successfully spiked as it exited the drive-thru.

“The Golf has taken off at speed towards State Highway 1, and the vehicle has travelled south towards Papakura.”

The Golf was spiked a second time as it exited the motorway network.

“It came to a stop on Beach Road as all four tyres had been spiked, and both occupants were arrested without incident.”

The 21-year-old man driving the vehicle has been charged with aggravated robbery, failing to stop and receiving stolen property.

He will appear in the Auckland District Court today.

The 17-year-old male passenger will be referred to Youth Aid over the incident.

“I’d like to acknowledge all the staff involved in responding to last night’s aggravated robbery, and our colleagues in Counties Manukau who sighted our wanted vehicle,” acting Detective Senior Sergeant Lambarth says.

ENDS. 

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/04/01/man-after-arrested-after-pizza-aggravated-robbery/

The offender’s new clothes

Source: New Zealand Police

An Auckland man’s elaborate getaway plan changing his appearance was just a case of the emperor’s new clothes.

The offender’s efforts resulted in further offences being committed, all playing out on camera, and ending in a trip to court today.

Police had been responding to a burglary at a Birkenhead venue just after 4pm on Tuesday.

“The venue was closed to the public at the time, but a man allegedly entered, taking money from a till and a knife,” acting Detective Inspector Megan Goldie says.

“A staff member was allegedly threatened with the knife as the offender exited.”

The man continued walking on Recreation Drive, allegedly entering another business nearby.

“He soon emerged wearing an orthopaedic boot and removing items of clothing to change his appearance.

“But Police were watching, and units soon caught up with him at a nearby bus stop,” acting Detective Inspector Goldie says.

The 30-year-old man was arrested and faces two burglary charges and a charge of aggravated assault.

He will appear in the North Shore District Court today. Police will oppose the man’s bail at this appearance.

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/04/01/the-offenders-new-clothes/

How cocaine use has skyrocketed to an all-time high in New Zealand – and why

Source: Radio New Zealand

Cocaine use in New Zealand has nearly doubled in just a year, according to new figures. 123rf

Explainer – Cocaine isn’t cheap, but its use is skyrocketing in New Zealand according to new figures. What’s driving the snowstorm?

Until relatively recently, cocaine was somewhat of a rarity in New Zealand, explained Massey University professor Chris Wilkins, leader of the drug research team at SHORE & Whariki Research Centre.

“In those times that you most associate with cocaine in the ’80s and ’90s, New Zealand really didn’t have almost any cocaine,” he said.

Our geographical and trade isolation shielded New Zealand when cocaine had its big cultural moment in those decades.

But things have changed – a global glut has now led to a surge in demand in New Zealand.

Police recently released wastewater testing figures that showed cocaine use has hit an all-time high.

The latest wastewater figures were collected between October and December 2025, and testing sites cover up to 77 percent of Aotearoa’s total population.

The testing calculates drug use from the concentration of each drug’s biomarker detected in the water and reflects the amount of pure drug being consumed, the National Drug Intelligence Bureau says.

The figures showed methamphetamine use continues to be high, averaging about 34.7kg per week.

But it’s cocaine that showed the biggest proportional jump of all.

“We are seen as a lucrative albeit small market” for cocaine dealers, said Sarah Helm, executive director of the New Zealand Drug Foundation.

So how much more cocaine are we using?

While cocaine use is still less overall than methamphetamine or cannabis, it’s the size of the rise that has drawn attention.

Cocaine nearly doubled in a year, rising to an estimated 9.4kg of use per week – 98 percent, or 4.7kg, above the average amount consumed the previous four quarters.

That’s a lot of cocaine.

Part of this is simply because there’s a lot more of it out there.

“From the global level, there’s been a real glut in coca production,” Wilkins said. Cocaine comes from the leaves of the coca plant and is primarily produced in South American countries like Colombia, Peru and Bolivia.

But there’s another reason for the rise.

In New Zealand, cocaine has sniffed out an image that it is somehow safer and hipper than methamphetamine or other drugs. Iconic images like Al Pacino’s cocaine kingpin in Scarface and white powder hitting the dance floors in American pop culture mostly passed Aotearoa by in the 1980s.

“It was (seen as) a very exotic drug,” Wilkins said. “Of course, it was associated with that kind of Hollywood glamour.”

“Cocaine I think at the moment is presenting itself as a kind of cleaner, healthy, more manageable drug, and that’s basically driving demand at the moment.”

Supplied / NZ Drug Foundation

NZ Police Assistant Commissioner Corrie Parnell told RNZ that there’s a “strong demand” for cocaine.

The New Zealand Drug Trends Survey is an anonymous online survey of 8883 people conducted in 2025 designed to provide an annual snapshot of drug market trends. It’s not a representative sample but it’s described as “broadly representing the demographic profile and regional population distribution” of New Zealand.

And what it’s got to say about cocaine use backs up the wastewater figures.

The number of those surveyed saying cocaine was “easy” to get jumped from 17 percent in 2018-19 to 43 percent in 2025, while the proportion of those using cocaine at least weekly increased from 6 percent to 10 percent over the same period.

Just 23 percent of respondents to the survey said they’d used cocaine in the last six months – but that’s higher than pretty much every other type of illegal drug other than cannabis (69 percent) and MDMA (35 percent), and far higher than meth (11 percent).

The Drug Use in Aotearoa 2023/24 Report released last year also backed up the steady rise – just an estimated 1kg per week of cocaine was consumed by New Zealanders in 2019, compared to the more than 9kg estimated in the new wastewater figures.

Is it because it’s cheap?

Just the opposite, actually. New Zealanders pay some of the highest prices for cocaine in the world.

The average price per gram of cocaine was $360 a gram, according to the drug trends survey, just above meth at $334/gram and far more than MDMA or ketamine.

“The growth of the cocaine market has occurred over the space of a few years and has largely occurred without significant reductions in street level pricing,” Parnell said.

“This indicates strong demand for cocaine, as dealers are able to offload increased quantities without dropping the price.”

Supplied / Massey University

Who’s using all this cocaine?

The New Zealand Drug Trends Survey carried some surprises.

Respondents who said they’d used cocaine in the past six months were overwhelmingly European (74 percent), male (66 percent) and financially pretty well off.

Seventy-nine percent of those surveyed worked full or part time, and 42 percent of them made more than $80,000 a year.

“It’s kind of like almost a sign of affluence and status in New Zealand just because it’s so exotic,” Wilkins said.

“The affluent association with cocaine kind of presents this veneer that it’s a high-end drug and that it can be used quite manageably. But if you do go to North America and Europe, there’s pretty clearly a lot of people that have problems.”

Cocaine use has particularly skyrocketed in Auckland, Wellington and the Bay of Plenty, police said.

Supplied / NZ Police

Is this just specific to New Zealand?

“New Zealand continues to be an attractive market for organised criminal groups to supply drugs due to the high profit margins,” Parnell said.

“New Zealand and Australia continue to have the highest prices for illicit drugs in the world. As is the case globally, there is a large supply, consumption is high and pricing is stable.”

But cocaine is booming worldwide – the United Nations’ World Drug Report 2025 said cocaine was the world’s fastest growing illicit drug market. It said cocaine use grew from 17 million users in 2013 to 25 million users in 2023.

“Police have seen an increase in large volumes of cocaine seized” with police and Customs Service operations, Parnell said.

“The increase in supply is part of a global trend and has been driven by record levels of coca cultivation, increasingly efficient methods of cocaine production, and diversification of supply chains into New Zealand,” Helm said.

“In an unregulated black market, we are at the mercy of these global changes that can alter our drug supply very quickly.”

Cocaine traffickers are breaking into new markets across Asia and Africa, the UN report notes.

“The vicious violence and competition characterising the illicit cocaine arena, once confined to Latin America, is now spreading to Western Europe,” it said.

Global instability is “empowering organised crime groups and pushing drug use to historically high levels,” the UN noted.

“The glut of supply means that cocaine is being pushed into countries that haven’t had much presence of cocaine before,” Helm said.

Supplied / NZ Police

Is cocaine truly as dangerous as other drugs?

“New Zealand culture is kind of cocaine naive … in that it has probably an exaggerated or inflated perception as a harm-free drug and a better alternative to methamphetamine,” Wilkins said.

New Zealand has had three decades to see how methamphetamine use causes harm that is “pretty cemented in the public culture,” he said.

“It looks risk free, but there’s really serious problems with cocaine related to short-term effects in terms of agitation and violence and sometimes psychosis by heavy users, and also the longer term effects on cardiovascular health and things like that.”

Like any other drug, cocaine carries risks, Helm said.

“Cocaine carries a higher risk of addiction and harm than some other drugs that New Zealanders may be used to, like MDMA, so we are concerned that the community may be less aware about what to look out for to stay safer.

“For example, mixing cocaine and alcohol can be risky as they combine to make a substance called cocaethylene, that can put more strain on your body, particularly your heart.

“Moreover, some substances like cocaine have a ‘compulsive redosing effect’, where the person taking it has an increased urge to consume more. This, coupled with its short-lived effects, adds to the risk of addiction.”

Police said that cocaine use across sample wastewater sites in the last quarter of 2025 would equate to an estimated weekly social harm cost of $3.5 million, as calculated by the New Zealand Illicit Drug Harm Index.

People need to be informed and seek out information about the health risks, Wilkins said.

“At the moment now (cocaine) is kind of in this honeymoon phase,” meaning it’s harder to communicate any dangers in a credible way, as people often rely on information from their peers and there hasn’t been as much negative experience with cocaine here.

“In terms of harm, it’s a lot to do with how frequently you’re using and how much you’re using it,” he added.

“If you’re just using a drug once a month, once every six months, the risk of you having problems is much lower than weekly or daily use.”

People should also keep in mind what their underlying risks are, in terms of health conditions and their mental health.

How you use cocaine is also a factor in the harm it can cause, Wilkins said.

“Nasal use has physical issues, but it’s probably the low risk option, whereas smoking cocaine, of course, crack, really changed the image of cocaine in North America and other places.”

Smoking or injecting cocaine are “extremely high risks,” he said.

“If people plan to use cocaine, we’d advise visiting thelevel.org.nz for tips on how to stay safer,” Helm said.

Thirty-three kilograms of cocaine were seized at the Port of Tauranga. Supplied NZ Customs

So what is New Zealand doing about all this cocaine?

Parnell said police are focused daily on enforcement of drug laws.

“Our message to the community is that we can all play a part in reducing the social harm and misery that drugs cause by reporting any suspicious activity or information which may help us to stop those involved in these types of crimes.”

Large shipments of cocaine have been seized at ports and Operation Matata, a joint Customs/police operation, targeted a syndicate smuggling drugs through unattended baggage at Auckland Airport.

“This operation resulted in eight associates from the TwoEight Brotherhood arrested. Twenty consignments of methamphetamine and cocaine were seized, weighing 630 kilograms and 112 kilograms respectively,” Parnell said.

There have also been massive cocaine seizures intercepted in the Pacific by other nations.

French armed forces seized five tonnes of cocaine from a vessel, which was said to be bound for Australia. ABC/Facebook: Haut-commissaire de la République en Polynésie française

Parnell said police are working with many agencies and community groups to tackle the drug problem.

“One initiative to break the cycle of harm is the Resilience to Organised Crime in Communities (ROCC) programme, a collaborative, community-led initiative designed to address the social conditions that enable organised crime,” he said. “The programme recognises that enforcement alone is not enough.”

The drug foundation has also called for a “fundamental shift” in drug policies.

Helm said that current laws aren’t doing the job.

“For the past 50 years, New Zealand’s approach has been to focus heavily on banning the drug and then undertaking supply busts and criminalising people for using drugs, but this is clearly not working,” she said.

“Across every measure, this approach has been a failure – not only has drug use continued to grow and diversify, but addiction has increased, overdoses now claim three lives a week, and more new potent drugs are entering the market.

There needs to be more investment in help and harm reduction, she said, and the foundation has also issued a report calling for changes to drug laws.

“We need to learn from the evidence and stop making the same mistakes,” Helm said.

She said other countries can also lead the way.

Two decades ago, Portugal removed criminal penalties for drug use and increased their investment into health and harm reduction,” she said, as a result overdose death rates fell and pressure on the justice system eased without an increase in drug use.

“No one has all the answers on solving drug issues, but it’s very clear that our current approach is not it.”

Minister for Mental Health Matt Doocey recently told RNZ it was “incredibly important for the health system to step up and respond to the harm caused by drugs”.

The Ministry of Health has put forth a four-year action plan to reduce addiction.

Doocey said the government had no intention of liberalising drug laws.

“Our focus is on strengthening prevention, reducing overdose harm, and improving access to treatment and recovery support.”

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/2026/04/01/how-cocaine-use-has-skyrocketed-to-an-all-time-high-in-new-zealand-and-why/

Albanese to address the nation on the Middle East war and fuel crisis

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

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will address the nation at 7pm Wednesday night on the Middle East war, the fuel crisis and the government’s response to it, and what Australians can do in response.

In his pre-Easter address, which will be carried by all television channels, Albanese’s message to the public will be that it should be business-as-usual over the holiday period.

Prime ministerial addresses-to-the-nation are rare but have been used during COVID and the Global Financial Crisis.

United States President Donald Trump will address the American people on Thursday Australian time.

In a fresh government announcement in response to the fuel crisis, small businesses hit by fuel issues will get more flexibility with their tax obligations.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said businesses unable to meet their tax obligations because of fuel supply problems will be able to receive temporary relief from the Australian Taxation Office.

This will include more generous payment plans, remission of interest and penalties, and support in varying PAYG instalments where taxable income has turned down.

The tax office will also limit some compliance action for the worst affected industries. Some debt collection may also be paused.

To help small business access credit more easily and faster, the Small Business Responsible Lending Obligation exemption will be extended for another ten years.

This obligation requires lenders to make rigorous checks of borrowers’ financial situation to ensure that the loan is not unsuitable. During COVID small businesses were accorded an exemption. This was due to run out in October.

The government said the extension would “ensure small businesses aren’t slugged with additional regulatory burdens and delays when accessing loans”.

Chalmers announced the changes at a news conference with representatives of big business, small business and the banks.

Meanwhile the federal government is still waiting for the states to sort out arrangements relating to the extra GST revenue they will receive from higher fuel prices.

They agreed at national cabinet on Monday to provide some GST relief but are still working on the detail.

Chalmers told his news conference: “I’m not going to take shots at them. I’m not going to be part of a kind of unseemly brawl about this.”

“But we don’t want to see this drag out for ever. We don’t want to see the states and territories at war over this. We want to see the relief flow to motorists.”

ref. Albanese to address the nation on the Middle East war and fuel crisis – https://theconversation.com/albanese-to-address-the-nation-on-the-middle-east-war-and-fuel-crisis-279208

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/01/albanese-to-address-the-nation-on-the-middle-east-war-and-fuel-crisis-279208/

Marriott’s 2025 Cage-Free Pledge in the Spotlight as Field Visit Raises Animal Welfare and Hygiene Concerns

Source: Media Outreach

Field visit finds dead birds, eggs surrounded by faeces and fly infestations at egg farm whose operators claim to supply Marriott properties

JAKARTA, INDONESIA – Media OutReach Newswire – 1 April 2026 – Marriott International (Marriott) has yet to publicly confirm whether it has met its commitment to source 100% cage-free eggs across all global operations by the end of 2025. A field visit conducted in November 2025 to an egg farm whose operators stated they supply Marriott properties has documented conditions that raise serious animal welfare and hygiene concerns.

Clockwise from top left: a hen with a visible eye injury; a dead bird observed discarded outside the cage structure; flies on a surface near chicken feed troughs. Photos: Resha Juhari / INCAF / We Animals.

In 2018, Marriott committed to sourcing “100% of eggs from cage-free sources throughout the company’s global operations for all owned, managed and franchised properties by the end of 2025.”
As the deadline approached, the company issued no updates on its cage-free transition despite repeated requests. With no response forthcoming, the Indonesia Network for Compassionate Animal Farming (INCAF) and partner organisations began conducting field visits to egg farms across Asia.

Clockwise from top left: egg trays stored at floor level surrounded by excrement; accumulated waste and debris beneath the cages; the interior of the battery cage facility showing waste buildup and cobwebs across cage structures. Photos: Resha Juhari / INCAF / We Animals.

At a farm whose operators claim to supply to Marriot properties, the following conditions were documented:

  • Eggs stored directly on the floor, surrounded by dirt, feathers and excrement
  • Swarms of flies around birds and their food
  • Accumulated faeces on and underneath cages
  • Dead birds discarded around the facility
  • Birds with severe eye injuries or blindness
  • Birds crammed into dirty wire cages
  • Poor access to water
“Marriott claims to ‘Serve Our World’ as a core value. What we documented at this farm raises serious questions about how that value is being upheld in practice,” said Frank Kembuan, Director of INCAF.

The visit is part of a broader Asia-wide movement, with organisations across multiple countries working together to promote transparency and accountability in fulfilling cage-free egg commitments, including China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.
Marriott has not confirmed whether this farm is part of its current supply chain. The findings in this release are based on statements made by farm operators and field observations conducted by the campaign team. Marriott was approached to verify, respond, and engage constructively prior to publication.

Hashtag: #HelpMarriottFindAsia #AnimalWelfare #CorporateAccountability #EthicalSourcing #FoodSafety

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/2026/04/01/marriotts-2025-cage-free-pledge-in-the-spotlight-as-field-visit-raises-animal-welfare-and-hygiene-concerns/

Arrest in Fielding stabbing

Source: New Zealand Police

Please attribute the following to Detective Senior Sergeant David Thompson:

Police have arrested a man over stabbing two people in Fielding last month.

A 20-year-old man will appear in the Palmerston North District Court on Tuesday 7 April with two charges of wounding.

The arrest follows the investigation into an incident when two groups came across each other in Stafford Street. What was peaceful at the start soon disintegrated into several people fighting on the street.

It was during this those two men received stab wounds. Both have since been discharged from hospital.

It is unclear what has started this incident, but a search warrant executed at a Feilding address proved helpful to the investigation.

Detective Senior Sergeant Thompson says that today’s quick arrest was a great outcome for the Feilding community and the desire to keep their streets safe.

“It was clear when CCTV was looked at that certain elements in the two groups were hell bent on one thing, to fight each other.

“There were many members of the public nearby so it only luck that no one else was seriously injured,” said Detective Senior Sergeant Thompson.

As the matter is before the court, Police will not be making further comment.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/04/01/arrest-in-fielding-stabbing/

Fonterra settles activists’ misleading packaging lawsuit for ‘100 percent NZ grass-fed’ claims

Source: Radio New Zealand

Greenpeace Aotearoa is claiming victory against dairy giant Fonterra for misleading butter packaging it labels as “greenwashing”.

The activist group filed the lawsuit in September 2024 for logos featured on Fonterra Brands’ Anchor butter sold between December 2023 and April 2025 that said “100-percent New Zealand grass fed”.

But it argued the co-operative’s dairy cows were also fed imported supplementary feed like palm kernel expeller (PKE), produced in countries like Indonesia.

The use of the two phrases “100 percent New Zealand” and “grass-fed” in combination were found to be misleading and breached the Fair Trading Act 1986.

Fonterra has discontinued using the logo on Anchor butter packaging, however the co-operative has sold its consumer brands business Mainland Group, that Anchor sits under, to French dairy giant Lactalis.

Greenpeace spokesperson Sinéad Deighton-O'Flynn serving Fonterra with a lawsuit on 30 September, 2024.

Greenpeace spokesperson Sinéad Deighton-O’Flynn serving Fonterra with a lawsuit on 30 September, 2024. Photo: Supplied/ Greenpeace

Greenpeace spokesperson Sinéad Deighton-O’Flynn said it was a win against corporate greenwashing.

“This admission from the world’s biggest dairy exporter is a win against corporate greenwash,” she said.

“It exposes the cynicism of Fonterra and its intensive dairy model: instead of ending its links to rainforest destruction, Fonterra just slapped a misleading label on its packaging and continued business as usual.”

She said New Zealanders were getting ripped off during a cost-of-living crisis.

“We’ve been paying at times upwards of $20 a kilo for butter, while also being misled about the quality of that butter.”

But a spokesman for Fonterra said it stood by its grass-fed claims.

“However, [Fonterra] recognises that the combined use of the two phrases would have been likely to mislead some consumers and has accepted this in the settlement with Greenpeace, the details of which are confidential.”

He said the co-op’s cows were 96 percent grass-fed, including grass, grass silage, hay and forage crops like legumes and brassicas.

The two parties settled outside court on Wednesday.

Greenpeace was a staunch opponent to the use of imported feed products due to its links to deforestation, such as in Southeast Asian rainforests.

“Most New Zealanders would be horrified to know that rainforests are being destroyed, with precious wildlife pushed to the brink of extinction, to grow cheap feed for Fonterra’s oversized dairy herd. And that’s likely why Fonterra tried to hide the truth.”

A worker at a palm plantation area in Indonesia's Sumatra island. Palm kernel expeller (PKE) is a by-product of the palm oil industry.

A worker at a palm plantation area in Indonesia’s Sumatra island. Palm kernel expeller (PKE) is a by-product of the palm oil industry. Photo: AFP

Deighton-O’Flynn said PKE was a dry, gravelly feed that originated from destroyed rainforests.

“The reality is Fonterra has only changed the label. It hasn’t changed its destructive practices. Instead of greenwash tactics, Fonterra should take action to phase out palm kernel on all of its farms.”

New Zealand imported around 2 million tonnes of PKE each year largely for the dairy industry.

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/2026/04/01/fonterra-settles-activists-misleading-packaging-lawsuit-for-100-percent-nz-grass-fed-claims/

Australia is tightening the rules on children’s privacy – here’s how it will work

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tama Leaver, Professor of Internet Studies, Curtin University

Australia’s privacy laws have been woefully out of date for a long time – not fit to address the realities of the digital world.

As part of the long overdue update, the Privacy and Other Legislation Amendment Act in 2024 directed the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) to develop a code to better protect the privacy of young Australians in the digital world.

This is urgently needed. By the time a child turns 13, around 72 million pieces of data will have been collected about them.

This week, the OAIC published a draft of the Children’s Online Privacy Code, which is now open for public comment.

What’s in the code?

The code’s scope is much wider than just social media. It encompasses most online services, spaces and platforms that children use. Importantly, it also includes services that may contain children’s personal data but are used by adults.

Everything from educational platforms to infant tracking apps will be subject to the code. The best interests of the child are embedded in it, and services will be expected to interpret and implement it.

Data minimisation

This specifies children’s personal data can only be collected by online services where there’s a clear and direct purpose for that collection, and that data should only be kept while it’s necessary to perform that purpose.

Any further data collection requires explicit consent requested in a way that’s age-appropriate for the child.

This ensures platforms only request what’s actually mission critical. The onus is on services to delete that personal data as soon as it’s not needed, to help prevent children’s data being caught up in data breaches.

The right to delete

Where platforms and services hold children’s personal data, children will now have a clear and explicit right to request that data is deleted.

The “right to be forgotten” has been on privacy advocates’ wishlist for decades. It recognises individuals own their own data and should maintain control over it where possible.

Geolocation transparency

When children consent to having their geographic location tracked by digital devices and services, or their parents consent to this on their behalf for those under 15, children regardless of age will be notified when tracking services are sharing that information.

Geolocation data can be particularly tricky, even within families. While some might find location tracking helpful, others view it as intrusive surveillance.

Ensuring it’s at least transparent to children will help ensure they’re active and aware participants in these services.

Age-appropriate explanations

Saying you’ve read an app’s terms of service or privacy policies is one of the most common white lies told.

That’s mostly because these are long, impenetrable, almost unreadable documents. When children are asked to consent to share their data, the code specifies the explanation for this request must be understandable and age-appropriate. If the request is aimed at a child who might be ten, the explanation needs to be clear to the average ten-year-old.

This is vital. Not only does it allow children to make better choices, it also increases their digital literacy as they make meaningful choices about their own data.

As part of this, deceptive design elements that might trick children into sharing personal data are explicitly not allowed.

We can expect pushback from big tech

There will undoubtedly be considerable pushback from big technology platforms about the scope of the code. It seeks to disrupt business as usual, and requires that children’s data is only collected for specific purposes, with explicit consent, and retained for as little time as possible.

That’s the opposite of the “grab and keep as much data for as long as possible” logic that drives most tech companies and platforms today. Big data is still imagined to be the big oil of the digital world. Private, personal data is among its most valued forms. Artificial intelligence companies are even more thirsty for that personal data to train their systems.

We’ll need more digital literacy

For children under 15, the code relies on parental consent. That consent is visible to children, which is important in keeping them informed. However, there’s work to do to equip every parent with the tech literacy they need to make informed choices with their children.

In some cases, children don’t easily have a parent or carer to turn to. For children in the most at-risk and challenging situations, there may be difficulties in ensuring that the consent process really can work in children’s best interest.

In our Manifesto for a Better Children’s Internet, colleagues and I from the ARC Centre of Excellence for the Digital Child offer a roadmap for an internet better aligned with children’s needs and experiences.

Crucially, we argue there should be more focus on protecting children within the digital environment, rather than from it.

Maximising children’s opportunities in the digital world means trying to make as many digital spaces available to them, while ensuring those spaces are designed to be as safe and age appropriate as possible.

The Children’s Online Privacy Code is set to make an important contribution in achieving that aim. It recognises children’s right to participation as much as their right to protection.

What happens next?

The OAIC has launched a Privacy for Kids website, which offers age-appropriate explanations of the code for children and adults.

It provides a variety of tools and age-appropriate resources to allow children and adults to offer their thoughts on the draft code. That consultation is open until June 5 this year.

After responding to the public consultation, the final version of the code must go live by December 10 2026.

ref. Australia is tightening the rules on children’s privacy – here’s how it will work – https://theconversation.com/australia-is-tightening-the-rules-on-childrens-privacy-heres-how-it-will-work-279661

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/01/australia-is-tightening-the-rules-on-childrens-privacy-heres-how-it-will-work-279661/

Alpha males, Harry Styles, and going mad with desire: what to watch in April

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Damien O’Meara, Lecturer, School of Media and Communication, RMIT University

This month’s streaming slate is packed with bold, conversation-starting TV, from an expose of the toxic manosphere, to a Netflix comedy featuring a very horny Rachel Weisz. If you’re feeling nostalgic, there’s even an old classic from French New Wave filmmaker Agnès Varda. So settle in and get watching!

Homebodies

SBS On Demand

When Nora (Claudia Karvan) breaks her leg, her son Darcy (Luke Wiltshire) – a trans man – returns home to see her for the first time since he came out. It doesn’t take long before Darcy realises there’s another presence in his childhood home: a ghost of his younger pre-transition self, Dee (Jazi Hall).

Homebodies gives space for an exploration of the challenging, interpersonal relationship between Darcy and his mother through the haunting of an unresolved rift. Refreshingly, this is done without Darcy ever doubting his understanding and acceptance of himself.

[embedded content]

Dee is a haunting of something left behind. This includes some obvious aspects: she uses Darcy’s deadname and she/her pronouns. But Dee also represents a version of Darcy where his existence was not yet a consideration. In the moments where he clashes with Nora, it seems like Dee is a manifestation of what his mother wants him to be.

In some ways that feels true, but Dee is also part of a past Darcy is not acknowledging. Dee is not just a dramatic foil to allow for the exposition of how Darcy came to this place in his life. Rather, he is sharing that journey with who he was before it started.

The value of such conversations stems from the authenticity behind the story. From writer and director AP Pobjoy, Homebodies strikes an effective balance in its specificity, while feeling like a story audiences will be able to connect with in big or small ways.

– Damien O’Meara


Read more: Homebodies: bold TV about a trans man, his mother and the conversations they never had


Vladimir

Netflix

The new Netflix limited series Vladimir centres on erotic desire. It’s a story about “limerence”, a psychological state first identified by American psychologist Dorothy Tennov, in which a person’s thoughts and fantasies become dominated by another, and are accompanied by an overwhelming, obsessive desire for that feeling to be returned.

Rachel Weisz plays M, an English professor who develops an intense fixation on a newly arrived colleague, the self-consciously handsome Vladimir (Leo Woodall). M comes across as disturbingly shallow until it becomes clear her fixation has incapacitated her. As the show unfolds, it seems her imagined intimacy with Vladimir might be more enthralling than reality could deliver.

[embedded content]

M’s husband John (John Slattery), also a professor, is suspended for sexual misconduct involving students. When pressured to say what she thinks, M dismisses the opportunity to support the young exploited women, instead saying “it was another time”. This refrain of providing generational justifications and avoiding accountability is emphasised throughout the series.

M divulges directly to the camera (in one of many instances of breaking the fourth wall) that middle age has rendered her invisible. However, despite menopausal asides about chin hair, she is too beautiful for us to believe this. It’s more likely her students no longer connect with her outdated ideas.

This adaptation of Julia May Jonas’s provocative 2022 debut novel Vladimir is likely to divide audiences, but its discomfort is compelling and original. I highly recommend it.

– Lisa French

Harry Styles. One Night in Manchester

Netflix

The “one night only” music performance is relatively new for streamers like Netflix, but quite an established format for its broadcast predecessors; think Elvis’ 68 Comeback Special, for example. And like Elvis, Styles is a master of mainstream pop music, perfectly pitched at an intersectional audience and dripping with charisma.

From his One Direction roots in the early 2010s, to becoming a fully fledged solo icon, One Night In Manchester showcases Styles’ latest album Kiss All The Time, Disco Occasionally. It’s a huge event for parent record company Columbia Records (owned by Sony Music Entertainment).

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One Night is staged to bring Styles’ multi-stadium persona back to a relatively small audience, providing intimacy and immediacy for those watching at home. The performance is supported by incredible musicians such as the House Gospel Choir. And unlike the ’68 leather-clad Presley, Styles himself appears relatively understated – save for some delightful (if not daggy) dancing and swift movements from lead singer to piano, guitar and synth.

The audience in the room play a vital part too. Their singalongs to Aperture and Dance No More make these new songs sound like canon, while close-ups of fans embracing older hits such as Sign Of The Times remind us how good music can continue to connect us.

– Liz Giuffre

Scarpetta

Prime Video

Chief medical examiner Dr Kay Scarpetta first emerged in Patricia Cornwell’s 1990 debut novel Postmortem, and has appeared in nearly 30 books since then. So it’s no surprise Prime Video’s decision to adapt the mystery-thriller series for TV has been eagerly awaited by fans. Unfortunately, Scarpetta is muddled at best – and a hot mess at worst.

The series unfolds over two timelines. In the present day, Scarpetta (Nicole Kidman) is called to a crime scene where the naked body of a female victim is bound and displayed. Flashbacks to 30 years earlier reveal a young Scarpetta (Rosy McEwen) on the hunt for a serial killer with a similar modus operandi. The suggestion that she may have got the wrong man back in 1998 threatens to blow up her career.

The ethical implications of this are never properly explored, however, as the series focuses instead on the fraught dynamics of Scarpetta’s present-day family. These include her vodka-swilling, histrionic sister Dorothy (Jamie Lee Curtis), tech-genius niece Lucy and, quite bafflingly, a chatbot imitating Lucy’s dead wife.

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Careening between soapy family drama and police procedural, Scarpetta suffers from serious bloat. And despite its bizarre AI subplot, it is curiously dated especially in its treatment of gender politics: the misogyny the young Scarpetta navigates is significantly diluted, while the series’ treatment of female victims recalls the sensationalism of pre-#metoo shows such as Law & Order: SVU.

The 90s might be having a revival, but Scarpetta’s failings suggest some things are best left in the past.

– Rachel Williamson

Vagabond

Mubi

I was delighted to see Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi, or “without roof or law”) return to MUBI as part of its ongoing Agnès Varda collection. Having only seen the film once, years ago, I was eager to rewatch one of Varda’s (countless) masterpieces. Like earlier titles such as Cleo from 5 to 7 (Cléo de 5 à 7) and Le Bonheur, Vagabond is a daring display of narrative filmmaking.

True to Varda’s distinctive style, the film probes the limits of cinematic storytelling. Infusing documentary elements – such as testimonial-like sequences and cleverly placed fourth wall breaks – Vagabond stitches together the story of Mona, a rebellious young drifter who, in the film’s opening sequence, is discovered frozen to death in a ditch.

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Backtracking from this initial encounter, Varda explores the enigma of Mona through the characters she encountered during her final weeks, crafting a fragmentary portrait of the young woman via flashbacks, memories and impressions. As other characters discuss their brief encounters with Mona, their testimonies often reveal more about social prejudices and taboos than they do about her.

Mona’s psychological interiority remains a mystery, as the viewer is only led to speculate upon the circumstances that led to her futile reality. Subverting the prominent trope of the male drifter, Varda does not sensationalise the protagonist’s circumstances. Rather, she presents both an opaque and brutal portrait of loneliness and liberty, humanism and cruelty.

– Oscar Bloomfield

Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere

Netflix

By now most of us have encountered the “manosphere” – the online ecosystem that repackages misogyny, anti-feminism and male grievance into a form of “self-improvement”.

Journalist Louis Theroux has further lifted the lid on this dangerous ideology in his new documentary, Inside the Manosphere, which exposes some of the key individuals driving this culture. In his measured and sometimes risky style, Theroux traces not only the rhetoric of so-called “high-value men”, but also the business model that sustains them. The result is both illuminating and unsettling.

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Through interviews and the influencers’ own content, we see the defence of a regressive gender hierarchy and attempts to restore it. All the while, subscription “academies” set up by leading figures convert young mens’ insecurities into income.

Running alongside the hustle narrative is a thread of conspiratorial thinking. Interviewees invoke the “matrix” as a metaphor for institutional systems trying to keep men compliant, and blind to alternative paths to power.

While the documentary doesn’t dive too deep into the real-world harms of the manosphere (on both women and young men), it does provide some important context for the rise of misogynistic attitudes in our schools and workplaces. Theroux is right to suggest we all are, in some sense, now living inside the manosphere.

– Steven Roberts


Read more: Louis Theroux’s Inside the Manosphere exposes the business model of misogyny


ref. Alpha males, Harry Styles, and going mad with desire: what to watch in April – https://theconversation.com/alpha-males-harry-styles-and-going-mad-with-desire-what-to-watch-in-april-278987

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/01/alpha-males-harry-styles-and-going-mad-with-desire-what-to-watch-in-april-278987/

Man to face court after dangerous driving incident

Source: New Zealand Police

A dangerous driver is headed to court after he drove on the wrong side of State Highway 1 at excessive speeds before crashing in Auckland overnight.

At around 3.15am, Police received multiple reports of a northbound vehicle travelling the wrong way on the Northern Motorway near Northcote.

Senior Sergeant Carl Fowlie, Waitematā North Area Response Manager, says motorway cameras observed the vehicle driving at high speeds near Oteha Valley Road, Albany.

“Police units were deployed to the area, but with the vehicle reaching speeds upwards of 160kmh, officers did not pursue.

“Units followed the vehicle at a safe distance from the correct side of the motorway,” Senior Sergeant Fowlie says.

The vehicle continued travelling north in the southbound lane on SH1, before it struck a barrier near the Puhoi on-ramp and crashed down a bank.

“Police promptly arrived on the scene and located the driver uninjured, and he was taken into custody.”

Senior Sergeant Fowlie says this incident could have ended in tragedy.

“It is extremely lucky no one was injured or killed as a result of the driver’s dangerous actions.”

A 53-year-old man has been summonsed to appear in North Shore District Court on 13 May for recklessly operating a motor vehicle.

ENDS

Frankie Le Roy/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/04/01/man-to-face-court-after-dangerous-driving-incident/

One dead after car crashes into hedge in Auckland’s Stanmore Bay

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hato Hone St John says it was notified of the incident on Vipond Road, at 10.26am today. RNZ/Nick Monro

One person has died after a single vehicle crash in Stanmore Bay, on the Whangaparāoa peninsula north of Auckland.

Hato Hone St John says it was notified of the incident on Vipond Road, at 10.26am on Wednesday.

It sent one ambulance, one operations manager and one rapid response vehicle to the scene.

Police say Vipond Road is closed between Doyly Drive and Lea Place.

The Serious Crash Unit is at the scene.

Hato Hone St John says it was notified of the incident on Vipond Road, at 10.26am today. RNZ/Nick Monro

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/2026/04/01/one-dead-after-car-crashes-into-hedge-in-aucklands-stanmore-bay/

Rule change to make ‘green’ bonds easier to use

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Financial Markets Authority has granted a class exemption for ‘green’ bonds. Wikipedia

Bond issuers will now have less paperwork to deal with when taking a so-called ‘green offer’ to market.

The Financial Markets Authority has granted a class exemption allowing bond issuers to make offers of green, social, sustainability or sustainability-linked (GSSS) bonds to forgo the full disclosure requirements.

“The exemption levels the playing field, if you like,” said Liam Mason, FMA executive director of governance, policy and strategy.

“If I have bonds listed at the moment and I want to do a second offer, they’re both vanilla bonds, then I can just do it with a simple term sheet. It’s called a cleansing notice and it’s straight to market.”

The exemption allowed the same with green, social, sustainability and sustainability-linked bonds, he said.

“If I’ve already got bonds listed and I want to offer a green bond, or I want to offer a sustainability-linked bond, I just have to set out in a simple term sheet what the sustainability projects are, how it’s going to be measured, and then it allows me to get into market quickly, which is really important in the debt markets.”

Mason said the change stemmed from talks with the finance sector as well as the FMA’s own research, which suggested burdensome disclosure requirements could be holding issuers back from offering more GSSS products.

“What we’re hearing from investors is that they want to be able to invest consistently with their values, whether it’s products that have an environmental link, whether it’s social or sustainability-linked projects that the issuer commits to as part of their offering, there’s real demand for this.

“This [change] makes it easier for these products to be offered to public investors.”

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/2026/04/01/rule-change-to-make-green-bonds-easier-to-use/

Latest fuel stock update shows overall figures down

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Unsplash

There is a slight decrease in national fuel stock across petrol, diesel and jet fuel since the last update, but “supply remains within normal levels”.

That’s according to the latest fuel stocks update, which says the change remains within expectations and shows normal patterns.

Data released on Wednesday afternoon by the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment showed that as of 11.59pm on Sunday evening, there were 58.7 days of petrol available, 52.2 days of diesel and 46.2 days of jet fuel.

The data combines the stocks that are in-country, on the water within New Zealand’s exclusive economic zone (meaning ships with fuel unloading, ships at berth yet to unload, and ships moving between ports), or on the water outside the EEZ (up to three weeks away).

There were 29.3 days of petrol, 21.6-day supply of diesel, and 22.1 days’ jet fuel in-country.

There were six ships on the water within New Zealand’s EEZ, containing 4.3 days’ petrol, 8.4 days’ diesel, and 11.4 days’ jet fuel.

A further 10 ships were on the water outside the EEZ, carrying 25.1 days’ petrol, 22.2 days’ diesel, and 12.6 days’ jet fuel.

Data released on Monday showed there was 59.3 days’ cover of petrol, 54.5 days’ cover of diesel, and 50.4 days’ cover of jet fuel.

The US and Israel’s ongoing war on Iran has caused a global fuel crisis which is now in its fifth week as Iran continues to block most shipping through the Strait of Hormuz which is used to transit about one-fifth of the world’s oil and gas.

It has hugely disrupted key supply chains and pushed Brent crude oil over $115 a barrel, pushing up prices at the pump.

In New Zealand on Wednesday morning, the Gaspy website showed the price of unleaded 98 was $3.75 a litre, diesel was $3.51, unleaded 95 was $3.63 and unleaded 91 was $3.43.

The government has a National Fuel Plan in place outlining measures that would be taken if supplies start running dry.

It has four phases and New Zealand is currently in phase one.

Phase 2 would see homes, businesses and the public sector encouraged to conserve fuel.

The higher phases are still under consultation.

Phase 3 would see fuel prioritised for life-preserving services and phase 4 would see stricter intervention in fuel distribution.

Moving up or down levels is decided by a ministerial oversight group based on fuel stocks, restrictions and supply chain data.

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/2026/04/01/latest-fuel-stock-update-shows-overall-figures-down/

Fatal crash, Stanmore Bay

Source: New Zealand Police

One person has died following a single vehicle crash in Stanmore Bay this morning.

Emergency services were called to Vipond Road, Stanmore Bay at around 10.25am.

Sadly, one person was pronounced deceased at the scene.

Vipond Road is currently closed between Doyly Drive and Lea Place.

The Serious Crash Unit is attending, and enquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

ENDS.

Frankie Le Roy/NZ Police

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/01/fatal-crash-stanmore-bay/