Dirt bikers ride into oncoming traffic, almost hit kids in South Auckland, police say

Source: Radio New Zealand

At one point there were 40 bikers, police say. RNZ / Dom Thomas

A group of dirt bikers in South Auckland have put lives at risk after driving into oncoming traffic, over footpaths and across fields where children were playing, say police.

A number of emergency calls were made at about 3:45pm.

Police said the Eagle helicopter and dozens of staff were diverted to try and split the group up, while police also worked with local petrol stations in case the group attempted to refuel.

At one point, there were 40 bikers, police said.

Tāmaki Makaurau Duty Operations Manager Inspector Kerry Watson said police were asking for the public’s help before someone was killed.

“We’re asking for assistance from the public so we can locate these riders as soon as possible before they kill someone or themselves.

“There are no other words – it was horrifying behaviour, and to see riders speeding across sport fields where young kids are playing… you feel ill, because if something goes wrong, someone is going to be maimed or dead.

“We are combing through CCTV footage, frame by frame, to identify those who were involved in this display of stupidity, and when we find out who they are, we’re going to have words.”

She asked anyone with dashcam or CCTV imagery that may assist to get in touch.

A 25-year-old Ōtara man faces serious charges of reckless driving and aggravated failing to stop.

Inspector Watson said the 25-year-old’s bike had been impounded, and anyone involved would also lose their bikes once caught.

“Losing your bike isn’t the worst outcome when you consider that eventually someone is going to die riding like this, or they’re going to kill an innocent person.”

Anyone with information is asked to make a report at 105.police.govt.nz or by calling 105.

Please use the reference number P065318019.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/dirt-bikers-ride-into-oncoming-traffic-almost-hit-kids-in-south-auckland-police-say/

Leaders of PNG’s Enga province plagued by violence – vow to weed out illegal guns

By Johnny Blades, RNZ Pacific bulletin editor

Political leaders in a Papua New Guinea province plagued by gun violence are making a collective stand to stop it.

There is a new sense of political will among Enga Province’s political leaders and police to come down hard on the use of illegal weapons. But they are confronted by a daunting task.

Recent research by Joe Barak of PNG’s National Research Institute has tracked the escalation of tribal and election-relate violence in PNG, particularly in the Highlands where the most frequent violent attacks are recorded.

The research shows that Enga Province had the highest number of incidents, 79 between the years 2018 and 2022, or 27.8 percent of the overall number of incidents in the Highlands region during that period.

Prime Minister James Marape this month laid out a ‘war on guns’-type plan to crack down on lawlessness in PNG by asserting the authority of the state. But all too often in Enga the authorities have been part of the problem.

Each of the past few general elections have sparked deadly fighting between supporters of rival candidates in at least two of Enga’s electorates, with fingers of blame pointed often at political leaders.

Furthermore, there’s now more high powered weapons in circulation than ever, and in many cases they are sold by the country’s security forces, police and military.

This set of issues is not confined to Enga, but this province has seen the worst of it. A massacre in an Engan village in 2024 which killed at least 49 people was shocking even for a part of the country familiar with tribal warfare.

No respect for authority
Enga’s Governor, Sir Peter Ipatas, said people in his province had taken lawlessness to another level using modern guns, with no respect for authority.

“In the past, the tribe used to take ownership and they would discuss whether to fight or not,” he explained.

“These days, you have got young people who are on drugs or whatever, causing fights, and a lot of innocent people’s lives are at risk, so we need to come up with a tough strategy to identify all these culprits.”

Prosecutions have been lacking and this needed to change, Ipatas said, adding that it required police to “actually do their job to make sure that our people who do not respect authority, who break the laws, are investigated and prosecuted properly”.

Enga Governor Sir Peter Ipatas . . . police need to “actually do their job to make sure that our people who do not respect authority, who break the laws, are investigated and prosecuted properly”. Image: RNZ

A generally poorly resourced police force has long struggled to deal with social disorder in Enga.

Also Engans have had a lot to deal with themselves in the past couple of years, including landslide disasters, political instability and displacement of communities caused by the Porgera gold mine operations. Through it all, the violence persists.

Lethal force
Early last month in Enga’s Wapenamanda district, a raid on suspected illegal firearms holders by the elite police Kumul 23 unit resulted in five people being killed.

Despite criticism about alleged deaths of innocent people in the raid, Marape was unapologetic about the use of lethal force to target illegal gunmen

He said this approach would continue because those driving violent conflict through the build-up of illegal weapons had ruined countless lives in this area.

“Wapenamanda was a peaceful district — it’s now destroyed,” the prime minister said.

However, the former commander of PNG’s Defence Force, retired Major-General Jerry Singirok, commended Enga’s political leaders for finally saying “enough is enough”.

He said they were taking ownership of their past mistakes, and showing a willingness to get their clans and tribesmen to put down their guns.

Illegal guns
However, before Enga’s violence problem can be stemmed, the build-up of illegal firearms needs to be addressed.

General Singirok has been pushing for gun reform in the country for decades. He headed a UN-backed report into gun violence in the Highlands which was published last year, finding there could be as many as 100,000 illegal weapons in circulation in the region, many of which are sold by police, military and corrections officers.

“I had a particular encounter where a tribesman showed me a pump action shotgun bought from the police force, and the young people on the street said ‘well, if you don’t have bullets, we buy [them] from the military and the police’,” Singirok said.

“So as part of the crackdown, the government must hold security forces accountable and [serve] heavy penalties on those soldiers who are moonlighting their weapons or selling their weapons or selling ammunition.

“It’s very important to cut off the supply chain of weapons and ammunition,” he said, noting that security forces needed to enforce command and control, and regularly account for use of weapons and ammunition from their armories.

PNG police . . . it is very important to “cut off the supply chain of weapons and ammunition”. Image: RNZ

The government is looking at a range of options to reduce the massive build-up of illegal firearms across the country, with Marape mentioning a possible amnesty period and a buy-back scheme.

Singirok said the major 2005 gun reform report he authored made clear that incentives are the way to go. He said communities were more likely to give up arms if they know projects that help develop health, education or other services can be established in their area as a result.

Heat on police
Both Singirok and Ipatas said they expected that having an Engan Member of Parliament as PNG’s new police minister would help combat law and order problems in the province.

The prime minister appointed one of Enga’s veteran politicians, Sir John Pundari, the MP for Kompiam-Ambum, an electorate which has suffered repeated tribal violence since the 2022 national elections.

Firstly, rather than Enga, Pundari had his sights on PNG’s capital Port Moresby, where he singled out police senior commanders, saying they need to set an example for the rest of the country by lifting the standard of policing.

“Improve your duty statements, monitor those KPIs, do audit against those KPIs. The deliverables must be visible. The outcomes must be felt. The pride of policing in this country must start from the National Capital District.”

Due to political by-election of Lagaip open, Wabag the provincial capital of Enga is put into a chaotic and a standstill situation. Image: Paul Kanda/FB

Pundari’s message may have been corporate in language, but it reflected hopes of many Papua New Guineans: for police to simply do their job.

To do their job they need to be properly resourced — that has not always been the case. It will have to be if police are to stop the fighting, the massacres and political vendettas in Enga.

Pundari is pushing for the death penalty to be brought back to deter violent crimes in the country.

PNG’s political class is sounding deadly serious about ending gun violence, but the ‘big men’ will have to lead by example.

As far as Enga is concerned, the true test of that commitment will come in next year’s general election.

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

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/01/leaders-of-pngs-enga-province-plagued-by-violence-vow-to-weed-out-illegal-guns/

Death, devastation and extreme weather test media

Source: Radio New Zealand

Bay of Plenty Times stark front page lists the names of six victims from Beachlands holiday park. Bay of Plenty Times

“I can look at our protectors – our maunga – around us and there’s huge slips gashing them,” Civil Defence incident management leader Trudy Nawhare told RNZ’s Checkpoint last Monday.

“One of our whanau described it as just like a movie – or something you might see on the TV.”

She was describing the damage in Te Araroa on the East Cape. At the height of the danger, Newstalk ZB reported Civil Defence officials there telling whanau to tie their tamariki to themselves and wait for rescue from floodwaters.

The disaster-movie scenes Nawhare described also played out on TV news – from Northland, Coromandel, elsewhere in Tairawhiti and the Bay of Plenty – but in Mount Maunganui, it wasn’t just the scars of storm damage on the hillsides.

The catastrophic slip from Mauao onto Beachside Holiday Park killed six campers and became the focus of the media coverage for days.

Eyewitness Alistair McHardy gave TVNZ News chilling phone footage of a slip he filmed in the early hours of the morning. He also gave a chilling account of his own helplessness when disaster struck after 9am.

The Herald vividly described how Morrinsville teacher Lisa Maclennan also raised the alarm and saved lives – but didn’t live to tell the media about it herself.

Images of the giant slip from overhead were heavily used by the media, but perhaps the starkest image this past week was the Bay of Plenty Times front page on Monday.

It bore the names of Maclennan and five other victims on a stark black background, and a statement from Ngati Ranginui: “Those who have passed now become part of the sacred fabric of our Maunga. Their wairua will rest forever, beneath the mantle of Mauao, protected and embraced for all time.”

Pointing the finger

Along with neighbouring Ngāti Rangi and Ngāti Pūkenga, Ngāti Ranginui administers the maunga through the Mauao Trust. The prime minister thanked them all for their support of people who were displaced and traumatised – and for their help with the recovery, but on social media, the iwi were accused of contributing to the catastrophe.

Online posts that claimed the removal of non-native trees for protection of culturally significant sites contributed to the landslide were widely shared.

“It was a day of disappointment, as the prime minister had to shut down what he called racist misinformation over the role of iwi in the landslide,” said ThreeNews on Monday.

[embedded content]

“I’m aware there’s a lot of misinformation and stuff going on out there,” Prime Minister Christopher Luxon told reporters. “The people on the margins with their rhetoric – they just need to frankly keep it to themselves.”

He didn’t name names, but Cameron ‘Whale Oil’ Slater said on X that the landslides “may have been the result of co-governance of the Mount”. He alleged Māori had demanded removal of large non-native trees recently at the main slip site.

Alternative news sites online also aired claims that the deadly landslide was avoidable, and may have been sparked by the removal of stabilising trees and at the iwi’s request.

Several cited the analysis of retired civil engineer Rod Kane, who claimed to have 20 years of experience in slope stability and remediation.

“It’s now fairly evident that the Tauranga council, at the insistence of iwi in using ratepayers money, removed big trees in the area of the slip simply because they were colonial,” Kane said in his own online post. “This is where superstition, stupidity and cultural arrogance hits the brick wall.”

He went on to warn of what he called “fake tribalists” and “12th century spiritual nonsense”, encouraged by what he called “stupid governments and councils and the media”.

Clearly, it wasn’t just geotechnical evidence informing Kane’s conclusion. In a rambling interview with Counterspin Media, Kane and the host claimed the removal of “naughty racist trees” contributed to the slip – and aired concerns about inept politicians, the RMA, “uncontrolled immigration” and Te Pāti Māori “pushing for civil war”.

Broadcaster Duncan Garner was persuaded by Kane’s account, reading it aloud on his MediaWorks podcast ‘Editor In Chief’.

“Colonial trees were removed at the insistence of the owners, the local iwi, not because of science, but because they were colonial trees – despite basic geotech reality, because symbolism mattered more than stability.”

“Six people… died because human decisions altered the land in 2017,” Garner told his listeners.

News media clear up the picture

Under the headline ‘Did tree removal really trigger the Mount Maunganui landslide?’ Dr Andrew Stolter from the University of Auckland’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering told Stuff: “Not really.”

Removing trees could contribute to instability, he said, but also tree roots may not be deep enough to control a deep, fast-moving slip like that one. Extreme weather and soil conditions were the big factors, he said.

So did Professor Ewan Mason from the University of Canterbury, who told Stuff the removal of trees in 2022 and 2023 would not be the sole reason for the tragedy.

“The surface of it is riddled by past landslides, which have occurred some recently in the last couple of decades, but also some long before European settlement,” University of Auckland professor of Applied Geology Martin Brook also told the Herald Now show.

Martin Brook followed that up with an article widely republished in our media this week, in which he said that the campsite itself was built on deposits from previous slips long ago.

Mauao may have been a disaster waiting to be triggered by extreme weather, but not solely for the reasons that some non-experts claimed online.

News you can trust

Once the emergency subsides, politicians might ponder the benefit of people getting information from accountable news outlets – rather than scattergun blurts on social media, where there’s no real recourse at all for falsehoods and bad-faith opinions.

Co-incidentally, last Wednesday, ACT MP Laura McClure lodged a Member’s Bill to scrap the state-backed agency upholding standards in broadcasting, the Broadcasting Standards Authority.

“In a free country, the ultimate broadcasting standard is the judgment of the audience,” the ACT party said in its announcement of McClure’s move, which would mean broadcasters couldn’t be held to account at all.

“How do you make sure that people have some kind of news that they can loosely trust?” Newstalk ZB’s Ryan Bridge asked her.

“When something big happens, you go to a trusted source. Do you not need some regulation for that?”

“Given the fact that people are consuming media in all kinds of different places, it really is unfair for mainstream media to have to adhere to paying levies,” McClure replied. Broadcasters pay a modest $500 for each $1m in revenue annually for BSA levies.

“I do think it is important for people to have oversight and trust and accountability, and I think that we’ve got enough there.”

She didn’t mention that broadcasters themselves drew up the broadcasting standards, alongside the BSA itself, and those standards mirror their own editorial principles and guidelines. Scraping the BSA complaints system would probably mean more complaints ending up in court – a much bigger liability for broadcasters.

If McClure’s Bill is drawn from the ballot, MPs would have to decide if extending the free-for-all of the internet to broadcasting is really in the interests of New Zealanders, who mostly say they do want news they can trust, when asked in opinion surveys.

What happened – and what happens next

After last week’s tragedy, probing journalism revealed that warnings were missed at Mount Maunganui, emergency calls may have been mishandled and opportunities to save lives possibly squandered.

Under the headline [‘Should warnings have been seen?’ https://www.thepost.co.nz/nz-news/360936602/mt-maunganui-landslide-should-warnings-have-been-seen] the Weekend Post had six senior journalists on the case.

The Post‘ national affairs editor Andrea Vance concluded there was no system to escalate the response in place and critical information stayed in silos.

Last Tuesday, RNZ’s Phil Pennington revealed that, after a big storm in 2005, geotechnical engineers told Tauranga City Council buildings should not be in “run-out zones” that might be inundated in a slip, unless they had been specially protected.

The prime minister was not alone in his surprise to be told this week that landslides have killed more Kiwis in our history than any other natural hazard.

“I had no idea until this week,” Newstalk ZB host Jack Tame said on air last Monday.

“Just as Pike River was a catalyst for huge health and safety law reforms, the Mount Maunganui disaster is fast shaping up as a watershed moment for property owners and councils, when it comes to liability around the country,” Tame said.

The media will have a role in whether it is a watershed or not.

Learning the lessons and making a plan

Some of Tame’s media peers were not so hopeful.

“I’ve seen this too many times with reports into disasters,” RNZ’s Morning Report host Corin Dann said on the political panel show ‘The Whip’ last Wednesday. “They don’t get acted on properly – or they don’t get implemented or it’s taken too long… and then it drags and it gets lost in bureaucracy.”

ZB host Andrew Dickens earlier echoed that fear.

“We’ve had this before,” he said. “Whether it’s Pike River or Cave Creek or the Wahine, after time has passed, we have a review, but by that stage, the heat has gone out of the argument.

“Maybe you should not just blindly trust your fellow citizens who say, ‘Yeah, sweet, it’s never happened before, so don’t worry about it’.”

Talkback hosts change their tune

Coincidentally, Dickens was saying that on ZB last Monday, on the third anniversary of the Auckland Anniversary Day floods. When Cyclone Gabrielle was bearing down on Hawke’s Bay and Coromandel days later, Dickens pushed back hard at talkback callers claiming the warnings were overblown and unnecessary.

The biggest names on the same radio network were also saying that. Mike Hosking, Kate Hawkesby and Kerre Woodham all condemned school closures and evacuation warnings as fear-driven overreactions.

Three years on, after the catastrophes at Mount Maunganui and Welcome Bay, Hosking was this week earnestly pondering whether this would end up changing where we build and live.

He told listeners it was a bit too soon after the tragedy for that discussion, but Woodham did have that discussion on her ZB talkback show last Tuesday, after telling her listeners the deadly landslide was “horrifying, but not unexpected”.

“In some instances, though, do we just need to acknowledge that we are no match for the power of nature, concede defeat and step away?” she asked.

Several ZB listeners got in touch to say it was too soon to ponder that sort of thing and more said the same of claims that the tragedy had been caused by climate change.

Those making that case included the prime minister.

“I’ve talked about that for years,” he told RNZ’s Morning Report on Tuesday from Mount Maunganui.

“I just think, if you’re a doubter of climate change having an impact on extreme weather events, I’d give that up, because there’s no doubt there’s that connection.”

Last weekend’s Otago Daily Times editorial was even more blunt under the headline ‘It’s climate change, stupid’. That was directed at the doubters and deniers, and not the prime minister, but this bit of the editorial was:

“Economy was mentioned 18 times in Christopher Luxon’s State of the Nation speech this week, but climate change? Not once.

“It was a speech about wanting to ensure the best possible future for Kiwis, which completely ignored the most pressing issue the same day.”

The Post editorial the same day was also unequivocal.

“If you ask why this summer’s been wetter than the golden Kiwi summers you remember, the answer is climate change. There’ll be some who say it’s too soon to talk about climate change while the search for bodies is ongoing.

“They’ll say the commentary is politicising the tragedy, but the reality is that rather than too soon – it may be too late.”

Tauranga City Council, which owns Beachside Holiday Park, has commissioned its own review of last week’s disaster and, having seen the damage up close for himself, the prime minister was persuaded to propose a wider one as well.

While arguments fade about ‘the right time’ to talk about those things, the inquiries will be done in the knowledge that what happened at Mount Maunganui and Welcome Bay could happen almost anywhere in the country at almost any time.

Journalists have already identified the issues that need to be tackled.

This week, RNZ’s Kirsty Johnston detailed a “growing gap between disaster recovery and climate preparation.”

It showed a pattern of spending heavily after disasters strike, but investing comparatively little upfront to reduce future risk, even though Treasury has highlighted this growing future fiscal liability for the Crown.

“While we still can and perhaps just still be able to afford it, we must act in unity,” The Weekend Herald editorial said.

AA Insurance’s move this week to halt new home insurance policies in Westport because of flood risk was timely.

“If we continue down the same road of reaction, then some communities will face the prospect of being abandoned, if not by its people, then by those holding the purse strings – the insurance companies and government,” the Weekend Herald said.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/death-devastation-and-extreme-weather-test-media/

Dirt bikers put lives of children at risk – Police appeal for footage

Source: New Zealand Police

The appalling behaviour of dirt bikers in South Auckland today risked the lives of children and motorists, and Police are urging the public to help before someone is killed.

A 25-year-old Ōtara man faces serious charges of reckless driving, and aggravated failing to stop, but Police are now appealing to the public for help to locate others involved.

Tāmaki Makaurau Duty Operations Manager Inspector Kerry Watson said a number of 111 calls began coming in about 3.45pm – complaints of riders pulling wheelies, covering the road and driving into oncoming traffic and over footpaths in Ōtara.

“This continued to Bastion Point near Tamaki Drive, as the number of bikers number grew to 40. Those involved were seen driving at motorway speeds across playing fields.

“We’re asking for assistance from the public so we can locate these riders as soon as possible before they kill someone, or themselves.

“There are no other words – it was horrifying behaviour, and to see riders speeding across sport fields where young kids are playing… you feel ill, because if something goes wrong, someone is going to be maimed or dead.

Members of the public have told police previously that they fear injury to their kids playing on fields when these bikers appear.

Dozens of staff, and the Eagle helicopter, were diverted to try to split the group up, while Police also worked with local petrol stations in case the group attempted to refuel. It wasn’t until 5.45pm that the riders disappeared.

“We are combing through CCTV footage, frame by frame to identify those who were involved in this display of stupidity and when we find out who they are, we’re going to have words.

“To anyone who has dashcam or CCTV imagery that may assist us with that, please tell us so we can act before someone gets hurt or killed.”

Inspector Watson said the 25-year-old’s bike had been impounded, and anyone involved will also lose their bikes once caught.

“Losing your bike isn’t the worst outcome when you consider that eventually someone is going to die riding like this, or they’re going to kill an innocent person.”

Anyone with information is asked to make a report at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update Report”, or by calling 105. Please use the reference number P065318019.

Alternatively, information can be shared anonymously through CrimeStoppers, by calling 0800 555 111.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/dirt-bikers-put-lives-of-children-at-risk-police-appeal-for-footage/

Government drops part of Border Processing Levy by 30%

Source: Radio New Zealand

Biosecurity New Zealand will also invest in new border technology and more detector dogs. Unsplash

The biosecurity part of the Border Processing Levy has dropped by 30 percent.

It has reduced from $16.92 to $12.03 for incoming air passengers.

The Border Processing Levy funds x-ray screening, detector dogs and other protections.

Biosecurity New Zealand had raised it to cover border costs and rebuild operations after Covid-19.

Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard says Biosecurity New Zealand has set aside funding for a new digital border programme. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard said those costs were now paid off, with air travel recovering faster than expected.

“It’s great to be in a position to ease costs on international travellers and Kiwis coming home, while still keeping our border safe from environmental and economic threats,” he said.

Biosecurity New Zealand will also invest in new border technology and more detector dogs.

Hoggard said it had set aside funding for a new digital border programme that would build on the introduction of the New Zealand Traveller Declaration, as well as deliver smarter passenger processing and new x-ray technology.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/government-drops-part-of-border-processing-levy-by-30/

Open Letter To Christian Political Parties – #Election2026

Source: Family First

Why ‘Christian’ parties shouldn’t expect different results, unless….

There have been many “Christian” or social-conservative parties since 2002 – including Christian Heritage NZ, United Future, Conservatives (now New Conservatives), Destiny (then Family Party, then Vision NZ, then Freedoms NZ), Leighton Baker Party, Democracy NZ, Kiwi Party, NewZeal, and others.

In 2023, there was quite a lineup of social conservative / Christian parties to choose from – NewZeal, Freedoms NZ, Democracy NZ (Matt King), New Conservatives, & Leighton Baker Party.

1.The harsh reality

Despite the optimism, the significant effort of time and expense, the passion & the utter hard slog, (and prayer!), the results were:

NewZeal 0.56%,
Freedoms NZ 0.31%,
Democracy NZ 0.24%,
New Conservatives 0.15%,
Leighton Baker Party 0.08%,

Under 40,000 votes in total.

A total of 1.34% – well short of the 5% cut-off.

Here’s the total vote for Christian parties over the past 8 elections. From the dizzying heights of 2002 when Peter Dunne “turned the worm” in the television debate for United Future, and there was a remnant of support for Christian Heritage Party (8%!) to Dunne losing his way and the vote transferring to the Conservative Party but never going beyond the 4% or thereabouts mark, and in the last three elections, never more than 2%.

Well short of the 5% mark – and no likelihood of a Christian party candidate even getting a sniff at winning an electorate seat.

In the last seven elections, the vote for Christian parties has averaged less than 2.4%.

5% is the pass mark.

Some people won’t like me mentioning these facts. I don’t take great pleasure in mentioning it either.

It’s not pleasant to see, is it, after so much effort and time and resource and energy and sweat and financial investment.

Politics is a brutal sport. I’ve commentated on it for the past 21 years. It has a harsh reality to it.

2. We all agree on many things.

Currently, apart from a handful of MPs, the House of Representatives fails to represent the voice of social conservatives. Parliament has gradually become more and more socially liberal – even amongst the so-called ‘centre-right’ parties.

A Parliament that votes for:

  • one of the most extreme abortion laws in the world;
  • an anti-smacking law which criminalises good parents but does nothing to stem the flow of rotten parents killing and abusing their children;
  • a prostitution law that rewards pimps and brothels but damages vulnerable women through sexual exploitation & violence;
  • ‘same-sex’ marriage which destroys the definition and ignores an institution which protects children and strengthens natural families, and allows same-sex adoption which deliberately denies a child a mother or father;
  • a ‘conversion therapy’ law which criminalises parents, counsellors, pastors and medical professionals for affirming young people as their biological sex and criminalises the actions of adults who want to deal with unwanted sexuality and gender issues and live according to their own convictions and conscience;
  • euthanasia which threatens vulnerable people who have a terminal illness, including the disabled, elderly, depressed or anxious, and those who feel themselves to be a burden or who are under financial pressure;

is clearly not doing their job correctly, and needs new & better voices.

Even more telling is a Parliament which unanimously votes to allow gender on a birth certificate to be based on ‘self-identity’ rather than biological fact, proving just how liberal & woke the whole institution has become.

New Zealand desperately needs more social conservative voices in Parliament. We need voices in Parliament who will speak boldly and unapologetically for the unborn child; oppose radical sexuality and gender ideology, divisive critical theory, and climate alarmism targeted at young children; and protect vulnerable young people from sex rejecting procedures which lead to chemicalisation (puberty blockers) & genital mutilation.

We need voices in power who will promote and protect the institution of marriage; who will respect the role of parents rather than attempt to exclude them from important issues such as abortion and gender dysphoria; politicians who will protect the elderly and vulnerable from seeing assisted suicide as a solution.

We need voices who will seek to protect our communities from drug use & normalisation and the ‘Russian roulette’ of the flawed drug testing.

We need voices who will respect freedom of conscience for New Zealanders who oppose euthanasia, abortion, compulsory vaccination and other health-related mandates.

We need voices who will protect freedom – religious freedom, freedom of conscience, and free speech, amongst others – and who oppose ‘hate speech’ laws (which supporters never want to clearly define in advance).

[It is important to note that as a result of the last election, a few existing and new social conservatives were present in some of the political parties that made it into Parliament and we (Family First) developed a working relationship with these MPs where we could support them, provide resources and research, in order to help stiffen their spine against the onslaught that they faced in the Parliamentary environment, and to regularly pray for them. But they are in the minority.]

3. We must turn up to the debate

I believe we should applaud these minor political parties for being willing to get involved & entering the debate.

By being candidates, they are able to be at the political meetings and the meet-the-candidate meetings. They have the opportunity to promote policies which strengthen families and protect communities.

They can be seen and heard at a time when the future political policy direction of the country is being debated.

As I often say – we won’t win every battle, but we’ll definitely lose every battle that we don’t even show up to.

But how do we maximise our message most effectively?

And is it via a political party/s?

Or is it social conservative candidates in existing major parties?

Or is it social conservative lobby groups and think-tanks speaking into the public debate and providing credible research and policy?

As I said earlier, in the last seven elections, the vote for Christian parties has averaged less than 2.4%.

This leads to my key point.

4. Synergy

When I spoke at a major church leaders’ gathering in 2023 (when the last general election was held), I shared the significance of the word “synergy”.

Synergy is the cooperative working together of two or more people or organisations, when their combined effect is greater than the sum of their individual efforts.

You don’t need to be a seasoned political analyst to see that three to five parties all seeking to attract the same type of voter is going to fail.

It will simply split the vote.

In 2023, what we saw was five parties all seeking to attract a similar type of voter.

I argued at the time that it was going to fail. It would simply split – or alienate – the vote.

I truly wished I was wrong. But sadly, I was right.

This is the harsh reality of politics.

And any political party will tell you that a lack of unity is a killer. Voters don’t like disunity.

Remember how National was punished in 2020 when they went through three leaders in a very short space of time, and lots of leaks and disunity within the party. Te Pati Maori are facing the same dilemma – and it’s showing in the polls.

In fact, the only times the ‘Christian’ vote has got above or close to the 5% is when social conservative voters united in behind United Future (2002) and then the Conservative Party (2014).

Even worse, the ‘wasted vote’ will be apportioned to parties who do make it to Parliament – the very parties which are failing to represent our voice currently.

That’s not my opinion. That’s the way the system works.

In 2017, 4.4% of votes didn’t count because individual parties either couldn’t win an electorate seat or couldn’t get more than 5% of the total vote. In 2020, 8% of votes didn’t count. In 2023, 5.5% of votes didn’t count.

Watch the presentation on the wasted vote – https://youtu.be/yY1in7YpRc0

That’s a fault of the MMP system – whether we like it or not – that these votes are discarded and have no representation in our Parliament.

But – we need to understand and play by the rules.

We actually have no option but to play by the rules.

5. Heading into 2026

As Albert Einstein said,

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.”

For all these minor parties putting huge effort and resource and energy and financial investment with the desire of adding a conservative voice in Parliament, to even have a remote possibility of breaking the 5% threshold, all these minor parties need to unite – as one party and as one voice.

United, they stand as a possible option.

Possible.

Divided, they will continue to fail and fall well short.

I would challenge all these parties to come together.

Sort the leadership issues. True leadership involves putting aside their own agendas & desires for the greater good. And the greater good is unity, representation & impact.

Especially in the political sphere.

Even then it’s going to be an uphill battle. Building credibility and being seen as a viable option takes time.

Credibility is also easily lost, and even harder to rebuild.

But now is the time to unify.

Otherwise, I’ll be updating the graph to include 2026, and writing a similar McBlog in 2029.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/open-letter-to-christian-political-parties-election2026/

Adrian Rurawhe: From Rātana Pā to the Speakers Chair

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former Speaker and Labour MP Adrian Rurawhe gives his valedictory speech to MPs in Parliament. VNP / Phil Smith

With the 2026 General Election looming, Parliament has begun the ritual of farewell speeches from MPs choosing not to contest another term.

Known in parliamentary parlance as valedictory statements, the year’s first was delivered this week by former Speaker of the House Adrian Rurawhe – albeit reluctantly.

Although this parliamentary term has already seen six valedictory statements (and nearly twice as many departures), election years tend to bring a cascade of them, as MPs decide to hang their boots up. Rurawhe leaves Parliament with the honorific ‘Right Honourable’, a distinction few MPs can claim – it is now awarded only to prime ministers, speakers, chief justices and governors-general.

Despite that honorific, the former MP for Te Tai Hauāuru does not seek the limelight and did not want a valedictory. He told MPs that, when he informed his Labour caucus colleagues of his retirement, he said he would “leave quietly” and skip the speech altogether.

Former Speaker and Labour MP Adrian Rurawhe gives his valedictory speech to MPs in Parliament. VNP / Phil Smith

“I can tell you, if you want to upset 33 Labour MPs, tell them you’re not doing a valedictory speech… I don’t think I’ve ever upset so many people so quickly.”

Not one to ignore instructions from the leader, even on his way out, Rurawhe said Labour leader Chris Hipkins insisted that he deliver a valedictory speech.

“I will deliver a speech, but I did not write a speech, so whatever comes out of my mouth… and there are plenty of stories I could tell, just [about] the people sitting in this room.”

Rurawhe held the Te Tai Hauāuru seat from 2014-23, when he chose not to stand as an electorate MP again. That decision came from the presumption that, if he retained the role of Speaker, he would not be able to serve the electorate to the extent he felt he should, particularly given its size, diversity and the number of iwi.

“Te Tai Hauāuru is vast – it’s the biggest electorate in the North Island. It’s as big as Taiwan.

“It’s diverse. It has an urban area, Porirua.

“It has provincial cities like Palmerston North, Whanganui, New Plymouth. It has rural towns and a lot of farming areas.

“Within there, there is also a diverse range of iwi that I got to engage with.”

Rurawhe then proceeded to recite the very long list of iwi within Te Tai Hauāuru.

Adrian Rurawhe is installed as Speaker of the House. VNP / Phil Smith

As is probably the case with most MPs who have gone on to presiding roles, Rurawhe never had a stint in the Speaker’s Chair on his bingo card. Nevertheless, that’s where his party felt his composure, amiability and leadership experience could best be utilised.

Speaking on Wednesday evening, he reflected on redefining political success beyond Cabinet.

“Of course, we all want to be Ministers, but not everyone can be and there are valuable roles outside of that as well. If you’re a true team player, you will do whatever is the best for your party.

“I’m not just talking about my party, but it’s probably a good lesson for everyone to learn, because you never actually know where [these roles] might lead to. I certainly didn’t.”

“I pinch myself almost every day and, you know, wonder how this guy from Rātana Pā gets to be the Speaker of this House.”

Calm humility is a fixture of the Rurawhe brand. His long reluctance to engage in politicking earned respect and goodwill across the House, particularly during his time as Speaker. His predecessor and successor, by comparison, have more adversarial histories.

While some departing MPs use their final speech to burn bridges, Rurawhe chose to acknowledge political opponents that he had worked with in his decade or so as an MP.

“I also want to mention the National Party MPs that I got on really well with, actually.

Ian McKelvie – now, I knew Ian before I came into Parliament. He was so easy to work with, and we could have really good discussions and do the best for our respective electorates.

“Louise Upston – I really enjoyed working with Louise. I remember that we co-hosted the South Waikato event – actually, from Tokoroa – down here at Parliament.

“That was an excellent kaupapa to be involved with.

“I worked with Jonathan Young on the Waitara Lands Act and there’s Barbara Kuriger in Taranaki-King Country, who is the Deputy Speaker.”

Former Speaker and Labour MP Adrian Rurawhe hugs National Party minister Louise Upston after his valedictory speech VNP / Phil Smith

Rurawhe went on to name and thank the many people who worked in his parliamentary and electorate offices, along with the parliamentary staff who supported him during his tenure as Speaker.

Rurawhe’s formal final day at Parliament will be Waitangi Day, after which Hamilton-based unionist Georgie Dansey will replace him for the remainder of the sitting year.

Expect to see a steady stream of farewells, as the election nears closer. To date, Celia Wade-Brown (Greens), Paulo Garcia (National), Maureen Pugh (National), and Judith Collins (National) have also already announced 2026 departures.

You can listen to the audio version of this story by clicking the link near the top of the page. Additionally, you can watch the full valedictory speech on Parliament’s website.

RNZ’s The House, with insights into Parliament, legislation and issues, is made with funding from Parliament’s Office of the Clerk.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/adrian-rurawhe-from-ratana-pa-to-the-speakers-chair/

English cricketer Harry Brook admits lying about Wellington nightclub incident

Source: Radio New Zealand

Harry Brook speaks after England’s loss to the Black Caps in Wellington, the day after he was hit by a nightclub bouncer. Photosport

England whiteball captain Harry Brook has admitted he lied about being on his own, when he was hit by a nightclub bouncer in Wellington on their New Zealand tour in November.

Brook, 26, told media last week he was alone, when he went to a nightclub on the night of 1 November, the eve of their one-day match against New Zealand in the capital.

He has now acknowledged other team-mates were present at the nightclub.

The Daily Telegraph had reported Brook, Jacob Bethell and Josh Tongue were at the nightclub.

“I accept responsibility for my actions in Wellington and acknowledge others were present that evening,” Brook said.

“I regret my previous comments and my intention was to protect my teammates from being drawn into a situation that arose as a result of my own decisions.

“I have apologised and will continue to reflect on the matter. This has been a challenging period in my career, but one from which I am learning.

“I recognise I have more to learn regarding the off-field responsibilities that come with leadership and captaincy. I remain committed to developing in this area, and to improving both personally and professionally.”

The New Zealand tour was Brook’s first as captain of England’s whiteball side. They lost the match in Wellington.

Brook was fined £30,000 (NZ$70,000) and given a final warning, after he reported the incident to team management, but that only came to light publicly about two months later, after the Ashes series, which Australia won 4-1.

In an interview with BBC Sport last week, Brook said some players had gone with him to get some food in Wellington.

Harry Brook in action for England against the Black Caps. PHOTOSPORT

“I took it upon myself to go out for a few more and I was on my own there. I shouldn’t have been there.

“I was trying to get into a club and the bouncer just clocked me, unfortunately. I wouldn’t say I was absolutely leathered – I’d had one too many drinks.”

The Daily Telegraph reported the cricket regulator was preparing a report, after receiving paperwork on Brook, Bethell and Tongue from the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) last week. It said Bethell and Tongue had also already been fined by the ECB.

The regulator was able to fine or suspend players for disciplinary offences.

When he apologised to the England team and fans last week, Brook rejected suggestions the side had a drinking culture.

There had been criticism on the Ashes tour, when a video surfaced of opener Ben Duckett apparently drunk during the team’s mid-tour break in Noosa.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/english-cricketer-harry-brook-admits-lying-about-wellington-nightclub-incident/

One dead following Matamata crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pretoria Gordon / RNZ

One person has died following a two-vehicle crash on Puketutu Road, near Matamata.

Police were called to the crash between Matai Road and Buckland Road at about 12.15pm Sunday.

The road was closed, while the Serious Crash Unit conducted a scene examination, and it has now been re-opened.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/one-dead-following-matamata-crash/

‘Food is one of the most delightful things that we’ve created’ – Yotam Ottolenghi

Source: Radio New Zealand

Yotam Ottolenghi has cooked for the great and the good – but that cuts no ice with his most demanding diners at home.

The Israeli-born British chef, who lives in London with husband Karl Allen and their two sons, told RNZ’s Culture 101 that it was challenging to discover that his children preferred simple food.

“You just want them to be these sophisticated creatures with amazing palates right from the get-go, and the reality just hits you in the face every time because that’s just not how they are.

“I know some kids are like that, but I think most kids are not like that. They need to take their time, they need to go on this journey, and I think we should just let them go on the journey of discovery because I think that’s just human nature.”

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/food-is-one-of-the-most-delightful-things-that-weve-created-yotam-ottolenghi/

Fatal crash, Puketutu Road, Matamata

Source: New Zealand Police

One person has died following a serious crash on Puketutu Road this afternoon.

Emergency services were called to two-vehicle crash about 12.15pm.

Sadly, one person has died.

The road was closed while the Serious Crash Unit conducted a scene examination and it has now been reopened.

Enquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

ENDS 

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/fatal-crash-puketutu-road-matamata/

Mount Maunganui landslide: recovery stood down, all victims identified, cordons still in place

Source: Radio New Zealand

One week on, people reflect at a memorial site for the six people who died in a landslide at Mount Maunganui. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

Police have officially stood down all recovery operations at Mount Maunganui, following a fatal landslide last month.

Bay of Plenty District Commander Superintendent Tim Anderson said Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) and Search and Rescue teams had stopped all work, and would leave the scene.

“The families were notified of this update yesterday evening. This completes the recovery operation.

“While police will no longer be working at the scene, technology remains in place to monitor any land movements.”

Cordons still in place

The cordon at Mount Maunganui after the landslide was covered in tributes for the people who lost their lives. RNZ / Lauren Crimp

Cordons remain in place around Adams Avenue, The Mall and Marine Parade.

Anderson said police would work with council and geotechnical experts to determine when it was safe to reduce the cordons.

“These remain in place for the safety of those who remain on the site, but also for the safety of the public.

“We expect to formally hand the scene over to Tauranga City Council in the coming days.”

Next steps

Police have said they would now support any subsequent coronial inquest into the tragedy.

WorkSafe continues to scope its involvement in the next phase of the response.

Police have signed an operational protocol for information-sharing with WorkSafe New Zealand to avoid duplication of efforts and to facilitate the next stage of inquiries.

“Police will be formally speaking to witnesses and gathering as much information that we can to assist WorkSafe,” Anderson said.

Police District Commander Superintendent Tim Anderson. RNZ

“A number of police staff from around the country will be assisting with this next phase of work.”

WorkSafe’s role would be to look into those organisations with a duty of care for people at the holiday park, and whether they met their work health and safety responsibilities.

All six victims formally identified

Superintendent Anderson said, as of Saturday night, all six victims had been formally identified.

The six victims of the Mt Maunganui landslide – Måns Loke Bernhardsson, 20, Lisa Maclennan, 50, Susan Knowles, 71, Sharon Maccanico, 15, Max Furse-Kee, 15, Jacqualine Wheeler, 71 and Jacqualine Suzanne Wheeler, 71. Supplied

“We are very relieved for the families that all their loved ones have now been returned to them.

“The last 11 days have been extremely difficult for them, waiting for their loved ones to be found and returned to them.”

Police would continue to provide ongoing wraparound support to the families of the victims.

“While we cannot take the pain away, we hope that being re-united with their loved ones can help give them some closure.

“Our family liaison officers have put in an immense amount of work to support these grieving families.

“I could not be more impressed by them in regard to their compassion, dedication and professionalism.”

Hundreds from different regions helped with operation

Anderson commended all agencies involved for their assistance during a difficult operation.

“On reflection, it has been a privilege to work alongside our colleagues, partners and volunteers for a common purpose.

“We have united to bring the families some form of closure out of this absolute tragedy.”

Police have utilised hundreds of staff from across several regions, including specialist staff over the course of this operation.

“At the peak of our operations, close to 100 police staff were assisting on a daily basis.

“We all had one goal and that was to re-unite families with their loved ones, but also to support these families through what has been an incredibly difficult time.

“I’m immensely proud of every single person who has worked tirelessly on this operation.”

A community vigil was held at Tauranga to honour those missing and the lives lost following the Mount landslide. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/mount-maunganui-landslide-recovery-stood-down-all-victims-identified-cordons-still-in-place/

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for February 1, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on February 1, 2026.

Greenland and Western hypocrisy over the rules-based international order
COMMENTARY: By John Menadue Western leaders defend the rules-based international order when it suits them, but remain largely silent as those same rules are breached by the United States and Israel. The result is a system that shields the powerful and abandons the vulnerable — most starkly in Palestine. The white men and a few

Why Trump’s new pick for Fed chair hit gold and silver markets – for good reasons
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Henry Maher, Lecturer in Politics, Department of Government and International Relations, University of Sydney Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images After months of speculation, US President Donald Trump confirmed he will be nominating Kevin Warsh as the next chair of the US Federal Reserve. The appointment has been closely watched

Protesters demand freedom for 9000+ Palestinian ‘political prisoners’ held hostage by Israel
Asia Pacific Report New Zealand protesters in Tamaki Makaurau today heralded a global demand for the freedom of thousands of Palestinians who have been unlawfully imprisoned by Israel in its illegal occupation of Palestine. Today is the Red Ribbon Campaign’s global day of solidarity for Palestinian hostages or political prisoners. It is the culmination of

Funny, tender, goofy – Catherine O’Hara lit up the screen every time she showed up
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ben McCann, Associate Professor of French Studies, Adelaide University Catherine O’Hara, the beloved actor and comedian who has died aged 71, occupied that rare position in contemporary screen culture: a comic actor, a cult figure and a mainstream star. Her work spanned more than 50 years, from

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for January 31, 2026
ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on January 31, 2026.

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/01/er-report-a-roundup-of-significant-articles-on-eveningreport-nz-for-february-1-2026/

One seriously injured in Matamata crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pretoria Gordon / RNZ

One person has been seriously injured in a two-vehicle crash on Puketutu Road, near Matamata.

Police were called to the crash between Matai Road and Buckland Road at about 12.15pm Sunday.

Emergency services were at the scene and the road was closed.

The Serious Crash Unit was notified and will examine the scene.

Motorists were advised to avoid the area and expect delays.

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

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/one-seriously-injured-in-matamata-crash/

Firm message after a tragic 48 hours, with busy roads this coming week

Source: New Zealand Police

Attribute to Inspector Sarah Thorn, District Road Policing Manager:

Southern District Police are urging all road users to slow down, stay alert and make safe choices as traffic volumes increase across the region over the coming week.

The message follows a tragic weekend, with two fatal crashes in Southern District between 7am Friday 30 January and 7am this morning [Sunday 1 February]. One of the crashes occurred in the Dunedin area, with another near Queenstown. Our staff have been busy with several other serious injury crashes that were also attended during this period.

There are quite simply too many crashes happening on our roads, and the consequences can be devastating.

Specialist police staff attend scenes like this, alongside other emergency workers. They are highly trained and skilled professionals who work in challenging and conditions. They provide critical care, secure scenes and conduct thorough investigations to understand what has happened. Their work is vital to ensure families receive the care, answers and support they deserve when faced with the death or serious injury of a loved one.

While investigations into these crashes are still in the early stages, the road safety message remains unchanged.

Wear your seatbelt, keep your speed safe, put away distractions, and never drive or ride fatigued or impaired by alcohol or drugs.

The coming days are expected to be particularly busy on Southern District roads, with Waitangi Weekend travel combined with the annual Burt Munro Challenge motorcycle festival, being held in Invercargill from 4–8 February 2026.

The Burt Munro Challenge attracts several thousand participants, spectators and visitors from across New Zealand and overseas. It will significantly increase traffic volumes throughout the wider Southern District.

To help keep people safe, Southern District Police will have dedicated Road Policing staff highly visible across the district, including the use of checkpoints and fatigue stops.

Our focus is on prevention.

We want everyone to arrive safely at their destination, enjoy the events they are travelling to, and make it home safely.

All road users, including motorcyclists, are urged to:

  • Avoid driving or riding while tired or impaired
  • Stick to posted speed limits and drive to the conditions
  • Ensure vehicles and motorcycles are roadworthy
  • Wear appropriate safety gear, including seatbelts and approved motorcycle protection.

We remind the public that small decisions can have life‑changing consequences.

Everyone has a role to play in keeping Southern District roads safe.

Police encourage anyone who witnesses illegal or unsafe driving behaviour to report it.

Call 111 if it’s happening now or is an emergency. Call 105 for non-emergencies.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/firm-message-after-a-tragic-48-hours-with-busy-roads-this-coming-week/

Greenland and Western hypocrisy over the rules-based international order

COMMENTARY: By John Menadue

Western leaders defend the rules-based international order when it suits them, but remain largely silent as those same rules are breached by the United States and Israel.

The result is a system that shields the powerful and abandons the vulnerable — most starkly in Palestine.

The white men and a few women couldn’t hide their anger over Trump threatening to take over Greenland. NATO members joined in at the horror of Trump subverting the rules-based international order (RBIO).

They were appalled at this breach of the RBIO, that Australian Foreign Minister Richard Marles and all right-thinking people in the West keep talking about.

But these very same people — including the Australian and New Zealand political elite — say precious little or nothing at all when the rules are broken by the US and Israel to attack the poor and vulnerable of this world.

Greenlanders are special, but not Palestinians.

The breaches of RBIO didn’t come with Trump. The West has been breaching the rules for decades. Trump’s rule-breaking is just more gross and explicit.

Not only are we very selective in our concerns, but we also tug the forelock in joining the US and Israel in numerous and wilful breaches of the RBIO, breaches that have brought death and misery to tens of millions of people.

With impunity the rich and powerful break the rules and punish the poor and vulnerable. Or as Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney put it, “the strong can do what they can and the weak must suffer what they must.”

And those that suffer are not white Christians or Jews but brown Muslims. No wonder our Muslim brothers and sisters believe that the system is loaded against them. They are right to feel aggrieved.

The cruellest example in the world today of breach of rules is the genocide which Israel, with the support of United States, is inflicting on the brave people of Palestine.

This is not to suggest that Mark Carney’s Davos speech is not to be welcomed and applauded. But the RBIO is selectively applied. Are Palestinians of less value than Greenlanders?

Just look at some instances of how the US has breached the RBIO.

1. Use of force without UN authorisation
Under the UN Charter, force is legal only in self-defence or with UN Security Council approval. The US has violated this rule multiple times.

Iraq (2003)

  • The invasion had no explicit UN Security Council authorisation.
  • Claims about weapons of mass destruction were false. It resulted in massive civilian casualties and long-term regional destabilisation.

Kosovo / Serbia (1999)

  • NATO bombing campaign (led by the US) proceeded without UN authorisation.

Panama (1989)

  • US invaded to arrest Manuel Noriega. It was condemned by the UN General Assembly as a violation of international law.

Syria (from 2014 onward)

  • US military presence and airstrikes occurred without Syrian consent or UN authorisation.

2. Undermining state sovereignty through regime change
The US has frequently violated the principle of non-intervention.

Latin America (1970s–1980s)

  • Chile (1973): Supported the overthrow of democratically elected President Allende
  • Nicaragua: Funded and armed the Contras, despite a ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) condemning US actions.

Afghanistan (1980s)

  • Covertly armed insurgents to weaken the Soviet-backed government, contributing to decades of instability.

Libya (2011)

  • UN authorisation was for civilian protection, not regime change. NATO operations (led by the US) went far beyond the mandate, resulting in state collapse.

3. Ignoring or rejecting international courts and legal rulings

International Court of Justice (ICJ)

  • Nicaragua vs United States (1986): ICJ ruled the US violated international law by supporting Contra rebels. The US rejected the ruling, withdrew from ICJ compulsory jurisdiction, and refused to pay reparations.

International Criminal Court (ICC)

  • The US refuses to join the ICC and passed domestic laws authorising force to free US personnel if detained by the ICC.
  • The US sanctioned ICC officials investigating US actions in Afghanistan

4. Torture, detention, and human rights violations

‘War on Terror’ practices

  • Guantánamo Bay: Indefinite detention without trial, violating habeas corpus and Geneva Conventions.
  • CIA black sites: Secret prisons involving torture (waterboarding, sleep deprivation).
  • Extraordinary rendition: Transferring suspects to countries known to practise torture.

These actions directly contradict:

  • The UN Convention Against Torture (which the US ratified).
  • International humanitarian law.

5. Violations of international humanitarian law in warfare

Civilian casualties

  • Repeated airstrikes in Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, and Syria caused high death tolls.

Use of controversial weapons

  • Cluster munitions: Used despite long-recognised humanitarian concerns (the US is not a signatory to the ban).
  • Depleted uranium munitions: Long-term health and environmental impacts.

6. Sanctions and economic coercion outside UN frameworks
The US increasingly uses unilateral sanctions, bypassing the UN.

Examples:

Iran, Venezuela, Cuba, Russia.

Sanctions often:

  • Lack UN approval and have severe humanitarian consequences.
  • Use extraterritorial enforcement, pressuring third-party states.

7. Selective application of ‘rules’
A core criticism isn’t just violations — but selectivity.

  • Condemning territorial conquest while supporting allies doing similar things.
  • Defending human rights rhetorically while shielding allies from accountability.
  • Promoting international law when convenient.

Israeli breaches of rules-based international order

1. Occupation and settlements in the West Bank

  • Under international humanitarian law (Fourth Geneva Convention), an occupying power is prohibited from transferring its civilian population into occupied territory.
  • Israel has built and expanded settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
  • These settlements are considered illegal under international law by the UN, the (ICJ).

2. Annexation of East Jerusalem

  • Israel annexed East Jerusalem after the 1967 war.
  • The UN Security Council has repeatedly declared this annexation null and void.
  • Unilateral annexation violates the principle that borders cannot be changed by force.

3. Use of force and civilian harm in Gaza

  • Israel’s military operations in Gaza have resulted in large civilian casualties and infrastructure destruction.
  • Human rights groups and UN bodies have accused Israel of disproportionate force and potential war crimes, including collective punishment (such as blockades affecting civilians).

4. Blockade of Gaza

  • Israel has maintained a land, sea, and air blockade on Gaza since 2007.
  • The UN and many legal scholars argue the blockade constitutes collective punishment, which is prohibited under international law.

5. Disregard for UN resolutions and international rulings

  • Israel has not complied with numerous UN General Assembly and Security Council resolutions, particularly on settlements and occupation.
  • It has rejected the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court (ICC) over alleged crimes in the occupied territories.

6. Unequal application of law (apartheid allegations)

  • Major human rights organisations (e.g., Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch) have accused Israel of practising apartheid due to different legal systems for Israelis and Palestinians in the same territory.

The bigger picture: Israel benefits from political protection, especially from the US, which shields it from sanctions or enforcement — creating a perception that the rules-based order is selective rather than universal.

The RBIO was designed to help protect the weak but is selectively applied by the strong. The US and Israel regularly breach the RBIO.

John Menadue is the founder and editor-in-chief of Pearls and Irritations. He was formerly Secretary of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet under Gough Whitlam and Malcolm Fraser, Ambassador to Japan, Secretary of the Department of Immigration and CEO of Qantas. For this article he has been assisted by WeChat for breaches by the US and Israel of the RBIO. He edited to shorten. Republished with permission.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/01/greenland-and-western-hypocrisy-over-the-rules-based-international-order/

Recovery operation at Mount Maunganui complete

Source: New Zealand Police

Police have this morning officially stood down all recovery operations at Mount Maunganui, following a landslide last Thursday, 22 January.

Bay of Plenty District Commander, Superintendent Tim Anderson says our Disaster Victim Identification (DVI) and Search and Rescue teams have now stopped all work and will leave the scene.

“The families were notified of this update yesterday evening.

“This completes the recovery operation. While Police will no longer be working at the scene, technology remains in place to monitor any land movements.”

Scene remains with Police, cordons still in place

Cordons remain in place around Adams Avenue, The Mall and Marine Parade.

“We are constantly working with council and geotechnical experts to determine when it is safe to reduce the cordons.

“These remain in place for the safety of those who remain on the site, but also for the safety of the public.

“We expect to formally hand the scene over to Tauranga City Council in the coming days,” says Superintendent Anderson.

Next steps

Police will now support any subsequent Coronial inquest into the tragedy.

WorkSafe is continuing to scope its involvement in the next phase of the response.

Police has signed an operational protocol for information-sharing with WorkSafe New Zealand, to avoid duplication of efforts and to facilitate the next stage of inquiries.

“Police will be formally speaking to witnesses and gathering as much information that we can to assist WorkSafe,” says Superintendent Anderson.

“A number of Police staff from around the country will be assisting with this next phase of work.”

WorkSafe’s role is to look into those organisations with a duty of care for people at the holiday park, and whether they were meeting their work health and safety responsibilities.

Police acknowledge formal identification of six victims

Superintendent Anderson says as of last night, all six victims had been formally identified.

“We are very relieved for the families that all their loved ones have now been returned to them.

“The last 11 days have been extremely difficult for them, waiting for their loved ones to be found and returned to them.”

Police will continue to provide ongoing wrap around support to the families of the victims.

“While we cannot take the pain away, we hope that being reunited with their loved ones can help give them some closure.

“Our family liaison officers have put in an immense amount of work to support these grieving families. I could not be more impressed by them in regard to their compassion, dedication and professionalism.”

Appreciation for hundreds of staff who worked on this operation

Superintendent Anderson says being able to complete an operation is always difficult, but commends all agencies involved for their assistance.

“On reflection, it has been a privilege to work alongside our colleagues, partners and volunteers for a common purpose.

“We have united to bring the families some form of closure out of this absolute tragedy.”

Police have utilised hundreds of staff from across several regions, including specialist staff over the course of this operation.

“At the peak of our operations, close to 100 Police staff were assisting on a daily basis.

“We all had one goal, and that was to reunite families with their loved ones, but also to support these families through what has been an incredibly difficult time.

“I’m immensely proud of every single person who has worked tirelessly on this operation.”

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/recovery-operation-at-mount-maunganui-complete/

One dead after crash near Glenorchy

Source: Radio New Zealand

(file photo) RNZ / Tom Kitchin

One person has died after a crash north of Lake Wakatipu.

Emergency services were called about 4.40am Sunday, after two vehicles collided on the Glenorchy-Routeburn Road, police said.

One person died at the scene and one was in a serious condition.

The road was still partially blocked just before 1pm Sunday, as emergency services and the Serious Crash Unit worked at the scene.

“Our thoughts and sympathies are with those involved,” they said.

“There are no available diversions and the road is partially opening when possible.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/one-dead-after-crash-near-glenorchy/

Why Trump’s new pick for Fed chair hit gold and silver markets – for good reasons

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Henry Maher, Lecturer in Politics, Department of Government and International Relations, University of Sydney

Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

After months of speculation, US President Donald Trump confirmed he will be nominating Kevin Warsh as the next chair of the US Federal Reserve. The appointment has been closely watched in the context of Trump’s ongoing conflict with the Fed and its current chairman Jerome Powell.

The immediate reaction to the announcement was a significant crash in gold and silver markets. After months of record highs and stretched valuations, spot prices for gold and silver dropped 9% and 28% respectively after the announcement. The US stock market also fell, with major indexes all reporting modest losses.

However, in the context of concerns over Trump’s interference with the Fed, the market crash can ironically be understood as an early vote of confidence in Warsh’s independence and suitability for the role.

Understanding why requires the context of Trump’s ongoing conflict with the Federal Reserve, and the importance of central bank independence to our current global financial system.

Trump’s war with the Fed

The last year has seen Trump in an unprecedented conflict with the Federal Reserve.

Trump appointed current Chairman Jerome Powell back in 2017. However, the relationship quickly soured when Powell did not cut interest rates as quickly as Trump wanted. In characteristically colourful language, Trump has since called Powell a “clown” with “some real mental problems”, adding “I’d love to fire his ass”.

The war of words descended into legal threats. Trump’s Justice Department announced an investigation into Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook over alleged fraud in historical mortgage documents. Then last month, in a shocking escalation the Justice Department opened a criminal investigation into Powell relating to overspending in renovations of the Federal Reserve offices.

Both sets of allegations are widely viewed as baseless. However, Trump has tried to use the investigation as grounds to fire Cook. The case is currently before the Supreme Court.

Powell has hit back strongly at Trump, saying the legal threats were

a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President.

Powell received support from 14 international central bank chiefs, who noted “the independence of central banks is a cornerstone of price, financial and economic stability”.

Historically, presidential interference with the Fed was a major cause of the stagflation crisis in the 1970s. More recently, both Argentina and Turkey have experienced significant financial crises caused by interference with central bank independence.

Who is Kevin Warsh?

Kevin Warsh is a former banker and Federal Reserve governor, who previously served as economic advisor to both President George W Bush and President Trump.

Originally Trump seemed likely to favour the current director of Trump’s National Economic Council, Kevin Hassett, for the job. However, Hassett was widely viewed as being too influenced by Trump, intensifying fears about Fed independence.

Warsh appears more independent and brings a reputation as an inflation “hawk”.

What is an inflation hawk?

The Federal Reserve is responsible for setting US interest rates. Put simply, lower interest rates can increase economic growth and employment, but risk creating inflation. Higher interest rates can control inflation, but at the cost of higher unemployment and lower growth.

Getting the balance right is the central role of the Federal Reserve. Central bank independence is essential to ensure this delicate task is guided by the best evidence and long-term needs of the economy, rather than the short-term political goals.

An inflation “hawk” refers to a central banker who prioritises fighting inflation, compared to a “dove” who prioritises growth and jobs.

From Warsh’s previous time at the Federal Reserve, he established a strong reputation as an inflation hawk. Even in the aftermath of the global financial crisis of 2008, Warsh was more worried about inflation than jobs.

Given Trump’s past conflict with Powell around cutting interest rates, Warsh might seem a curious choice of candidate.

More recently though, Warsh has moderated his views, echoing Trump’s criticism of the Fed and demands for lower interest rates. Whether this support will continue, or if his hawkish tendencies return leading to future conflict with Trump, remains to be seen.

The market reaction

The crash in gold and silver, and decline in stock markets, suggests investors view interest rate cuts as less likely under Warsh than alternative candidates.

Gold and silver prices typically rise in response to instability or fears of inflation.

The previous record highs were driven by many factors, including global instability, concerns over Fed independence, and a speculative bubble.

That Warsh’s appointment has triggered a market correction in precious metals means investors expect lower inflation, and greater financial stability. The US dollar trading higher also supports this view.




Read more:
Silver and gold hit record highs – then crashed. Before joining the rush, you need to know this


The credibility of the Fed is at stake

The past month has seen much discussion of the changing world order. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently decried the end of the international rules-based order and called for a break from “American hegemony”.

The global dominance of the US dollar is a crucial plank of US economic hegemony. Though Trump clearly remains sceptical of central bank independence, his appointment of Warsh suggests he recognises the importance of retaining the credibility of the US currency and Federal Reserve.

Whether that recognition can continue to temper Trump’s instinct to interfere with the setting of interest rates remains to be seen.

Henry Maher does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Why Trump’s new pick for Fed chair hit gold and silver markets – for good reasons – https://theconversation.com/why-trumps-new-pick-for-fed-chair-hit-gold-and-silver-markets-for-good-reasons-273233

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/01/why-trumps-new-pick-for-fed-chair-hit-gold-and-silver-markets-for-good-reasons-273233/

Mitch Evans clocks Formula E triumph in Miami

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealander Mitch Evans (file photo) photosport

Mitch Evans has negotiated wet weather with aplomb to win the Formula E round in Miami, while fellow-Kiwi driver Nick Cassidy has retained the series lead.

Evans kept his Jaguar in front of Porsche’s Nico Müller and Pascal Wehrlein and 17 other rivals in the 41-lap race.

Without a point in the first two rounds, Evans produced an exceptional drive from ninth on the grid, taking advantage of a number of problems besetting cars in front of him.

A clever passing move on the 27th lap took Evans past German Müller in the key moment of the race, with the New Zealander eventually winning by 3.1 seconds.

It was his 15th career win in the class.

Despite a non-score in 16th, Mexico City winner Cassidy still leads the drivers standings for Citroen, two points ahead of Wehrlein’s 38.

The next round is in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia in late February.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/01/mitch-evans-clocks-formula-e-triumph-in-miami/