Minister Chris Bishop ‘unhappy’ investigation into police breath testing taking so long

Source: Radio New Zealand

Transport Minister Chris Bishop RNZ/Marika Khabazi

The Transport Minister has told officials to hurry up and give him a full briefing on an independent analysis of police breath testing data saying he’s unhappy at how long it has taken to investigate.

RNZ revealed last year that about 130 police officers were under investigation throughout the country after 30,000 alcohol breath tests were “falsely or erroneously recorded”.

The Transport Agency (NZTA) then halted $6 million worth of funding to Police until it was satisfied Police had met their breath test targets.

In December it was revealed NZTA had commissioned an independent analysis of breath testing data to try and identify the full scale of falsely recorded tests.

Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz

An NZTA spokesperson told RNZ last week the independent analysis had now concluded.

“NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) has reviewed the findings and prepared a final report on the issue. The report has been shared with partner agencies.”

“Decisions on the release of delivery-dependent funding are expected to be made later this month, pending the receipt of feedback from partner agencies.”

RNZ asked Transport Minister Chris Bishop’s office on Wednesday for comment on the report.

His office replied he had not received the report.

In December it was revealed NZTA had commissioned an independent analysis of breath testing data. RNZ

“He will be able to provide comment in due course once he has.”

RNZ then asked if the Minister had asked for the report and whether he believed he should have been sent it at the same time it was sent to partner agencies.

In a statement, Bishop said he was awaiting a “full briefing from NZTA”.

“I have asked for that to be expedited. The issue is obviously concerning and I am unhappy at how long it has taken to investigate.”

Police were also asked for comment on the report. A spokesperson said they would “hold off commenting until NZTA has communicated the outcome of the decisions”.

RNZ earlier obtained a series of weekly reports to Bishop on the issue under the Official Information Act.

One update, from 27 October, said NZTA had identified a preferred supplier to independently analyse the breath screening test data file provided by Police.

“This independent analysis will identify whether any further irregularities (over and above any detected by NZ Police) are discernible.”

The 30,000 breath tests related to an algorithm that determined if a second test took place within 90 seconds of the first, whilst the distance between the two indicated a speed of more than 20 km/h.

In an update to Bishop on 13 October, NZTA said Police could not determine if any irregular testing was undertaken while officers were stationary.

“NZTA is supporting and encouraging NZ Police to identify what, if any, options exist for removing these limitations, and to look beyond current detection methods to ascertain the true scale of irregularities.”

Then Acting Deputy Commissioner Mike Johnson earlier told NZTA that while the algorithm had “proven effective” in identifying tests conducted while the device was in motion, “there remains limitations in detecting all forms of irregular testing, including those undertaken in specific locations”.

In an earlier statement to RNZ, Bishop reiterated the matter was “very concerning”, and said it was important that it was resolved.

“NZTA have kept me regularly updated as the work has progressed. Independent analysis is underway, and NZTA are working closely with Police. NZTA will have more to say early next year.”

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/18/minister-chris-bishop-unhappy-investigation-into-police-breath-testing-taking-so-long/

Cricket: Black Caps v Bangladesh – first one-dayer

Source: Radio New Zealand

Opener Henry Nicholls and allrounder Dean Foxcroft have scored half-centuries, as New Zealand set Bangladesh a target of 248 runs to win their first one-day encounter at Dhaka.

After winning the toss and electing to bat first, the Black Caps began their innings slowly, but Nicholls and Will Young put on 73 runs for the second wicket to build momentum. Nicholls brought up his 50 off 65 balls and was eventually caught behind off Rishad Hossein for 68.

Their progress stalled, when skipper Tom Latham and Nicholls fell in consecutive overs, but Foxcroft took up the baton, scoring his first half century for the national team, before he was bowled for Nahid Rana for 59.

Hossein, Taskin Ahmed and Shoriful Islam captured two wickets each for Bangladesh.

Black Caps ODI Squad to Bangladesh:

Tom Latham (Canterbury), Muhammad Abbas (Wellington Firebirds), Adithya Ashok (Auckland Aces), Ben Lister (Auckland Aces), Josh Clarkson (Central Stags), Dane Cleaver (Central Stags), Dean Foxcroft (Central Stags), Nick Kelly (Wellington Firebirds), Jayden Lennox (Central Stags), Henry Nicholls (Canterbury), Will O’Rourke (Canterbury), Ben Sears (Wellington Firebirds), Nathan Smith (Wellington Firebirds), Blair Tickner (Central Stags), Will Young (Central Stags)

Henry Nicholls in action for the Black Caps. Photosport

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Petrol and diesel prices up in March 2026 – Selected price indexes: March 2026 – Stats NZ news story and information release

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/04/18/petrol-and-diesel-prices-up-in-march-2026-selected-price-indexes-march-2026-stats-nz-news-story-and-information-release/

Electronic card transactions: March 2026 – Stats NZ information release

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Man linked to gang activity dies after Fiji military detention, local media report

RNZ Pacific

The Fiji Police Force has confirmed that a man who was taken in for questioning by the Republic of Fiji Military Forces in Suva has died in custody.

Fijian media are reporting that the man was a wellknown “drug lord” known to local authorities.

The man was among a group allegedly linked to gang activity who were taken in for questioning by the military on Thursday night, fijivillage.com reports.

Police spokesperson Ana Naisoro said an investigation into the incident was underway.

The incident comes amid ongoing joint operations between the police and the military.

This week, the Fijian military warned that individuals responsible for “any attempt to destabilise national security” and those who aid “individuals engaged in criminal activity” had been put on notice.

The death also comes as Fijians mourn the passing of the former President Ratu Epeli Nailatikau, who has been accorded a state funeral today.

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

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/17/man-linked-to-gang-activity-dies-after-fiji-military-detention-local-media-report/

Highlanders coach questions ‘what is a red card?’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Caleb Tangitau was knocked out cold against the Blues. Photosport

Having just sparked a superb try to bring his side back in the contest before halftime, Caleb Tangitau lay on the Eden Park deck, unconscious.

He had just copped a direct shoulder to the head, and was forced to sit out the rest of a classic contest.

While the Highlanders lost their biggest strike weapon for the rest of the game, the Blues were without the perpetrator, Zarn Sullivan, for just 10 minutes.

They went on to win a thriller 47-40.

The unbalanced scales left Highlanders coach Jamie Joseph questioning the call.

“Moments like that really count. We get a guy knocked out, so what’s a red card? If that’s not a red card what is? Last week it was a tip tackle, so I was like ‘what is a yellow card?’ And this week it’s ‘what is a red card?’ Really it’s just getting my head around these decisions that are working against us but I’ll be asking those questions.”

In a chaotic final few minutes, the Highlanders very nearly pulled off a miraculous comeback.

“That’s the frustrating part, Caleb has consistently been one of our top three players, losing that player for 40 minutes isn’t good for a team on the ladder where we are.”

Joseph believes that Tangitau would have thrived during the broken and frantic nature of the last 10 minutes.

‘We need everybody playing the whole 80 minutes. He can change a game, that moment he created that try came from nothing and look at this game how it ended up, that sort of rugby environment would have been perfect for a player like Tangitau.”

No word yet on how Tangitau is doing.

“It didn’t look good.”

Joseph did express great admiration for how his men came back from 47-26 down with less than 10 minutes to play.

“They are gritty men, to find a way to keep on going is really important for a rugby team.”

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Neoliberalism caused two fractures in the world – why Iran’s resistance is so vital

ANALYSIS: By Prabhat Patnaik

It is the people of the Global South, not governments, who must resist this subversion of the concepts of the “nation’ and of non-alignment.

The Indian government’s position on the US-Israeli war against Iran shows an unbelievable degree of pusillanimity.

India attended the recent meeting of about 50 countries called by the United Kingdom where Iran was strongly criticised for closing the Strait of Hormuz, but not a word was uttered against the US-Israeli aggression on Iran.

Likewise, India was one of the sponsors of a resolution at the UN General Assembly which criticised Iran for attacking other countries in the Gulf (though Iran was attacking only the American military bases located in those countries). Yet again, not a word was uttered in that resolution condemning the US-Israeli aggression on Iran.

It is also noteworthy that India took several days before expressing any grief over the assassination Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and several weeks before expressing any shock over the brutal killing of 175 innocent schoolgirls in Minab.

Such pusillanimity, however, is not confined to India: as many as 135 countries were co-sponsors of the dishonest and duplicitous UNGA resolution mentioned above, afraid that they would otherwise offend the Americans.

In fact, apart from a handful of countries in the entire world, none has had the gumption to condemn unambiguously the blatantly illegal and immoral war unleashed by the US-Israeli combine against Iran.

Extreme concern
This is a matter for extreme concern, for the attack on Iran abrogates the concept of sovereignty of nations that had been the core concept in the struggle for decolonisation and had underlain the entire post-colonial order. It destroys, in other words, the very rationale for decolonisation.

This pusillanimity on the part of Third World countries is also a matter of great puzzlement. After all, these are countries that have had long and arduous anti-colonial struggles to achieve the status of independent and sovereign states; how can they remain silent when this very sovereignty is being violated in the case of a fellow Third World state by the armed might of US imperialism?

The answer to this question, no doubt complex, must nonetheless incorporate recognition of at least two fractures that neoliberalism has introduced into our world. One is the fracturing of the concept of the “nation” whose coming into being had been accomplished by the anti-colonial struggle.

This concept of the “nation” had differed fundamentally from the European concept that had developed in the wake of the Westphalian Peace Treaties in at least three ways: first, it was inclusive and did not identify any “enemy within”; second, unlike European nationalism it shunned any imperial ambitions of its own, in the sense of having designs over the resources of distant lands; and third, it did not apotheosise the nation as standing above the people whose “duty” supposedly was to serve it.

The coming into being of this inclusive concept of the “nation” was in turn a reflection of the fact that the anti-colonial struggle was a multi-class struggle; and the dirigiste economic regime that was erected after independence, though it promoted capitalist development, also sought to put curbs on rampant capitalism in the name of achieving “national” development.

This was in the interests of preserving its multi-class support base, which even the monopoly capitalists were not averse to at that time, since they had wanted a trajectory of development where the state exercised relative autonomy vis-a-vis imperialism. The existence of a large public sector was a part of this trajectory.

Further, the policy of non-alignment pursued by these dirigiste regimes had complemented this quest for development in relative autonomy from imperialism. Michal Kalecki, the Polish Marxist economist, had erred in calling such regimes “intermediate regimes” and suggesting that the middle classes held decisive power in such regimes; but he had been right in identifying state capitalism (public sector) and non-alignment as the two most distinctive features of these regimes.

Monopoly bourgeoisie
With globalisation of capital, however, things changed. The domestic monopoly bourgeoisie integrated itself with globalised capital and abandoned its agenda of pursuing a development trajectory that was relatively autonomous of the metropolis.

Sections of the upper professional and bureaucratic segments of society, keen to send their children to study and settle down in the metropolis, joined in as supporters of the neoliberal regime that emerged under the aegis of this globalised capital.

The landed rich too sought their fortunes within this new neoliberal order, which not only promoted rampant unrestrained capitalism, but came down heavily against workers, peasants, agricultural labourers, petty producers and the lower salariat. A schism was effected within the class alliance that had been forged in the course of the anti-colonial struggle.

It was no longer the “nation” against the metropolis that was in focus, but big capital including multinational capital against those social groups which stood in the way of instituting rapid “development” defined exclusively in terms of GDP growth-rates.

The interest of big capital was, by a sleight of hand, identified as “national interest”, and the duty of all classes was to promote it.

This shift in the meaning of the term “nation” meant in effect a fracturing of the “nation” whose coming into being was the desideratum of the anti-colonial struggle. Freedom of the “nation” from imperialist domination, far from being the over-riding objective, was no longer even a desired or a relevant objective for the government within a neoliberal setting.

This is the first instance of “fracturing” referred to above. Because of this fracturing, the criterion on the basis of which the government of a neoliberal regime takes decisions is not whether a particular stance defends national sovereignty, but whether it promotes the material interests of big capital which are considered identical with those of the “nation” in its new meaning.

Deafening silences
Siding with the US-Israeli alliance appears, on balance, more advantageous than standing with Iran, the victim of aggression, from the point of view of the interests of big capital in countries of the Global South. This would go some way to explain the deafening silences, mentioned earlier, in the UNGA and other resolutions.

There is also a second “fracture” brought about by the neoliberal regime. While the neoliberal regime is “sold” to the Global South as ushering in export-led growth that would bring about a higher GDP growth-rate for all countries compared with the earlier dirigiste regime, this claim is completely false.

Since the growth rate of aggregate world demand does not increase when more countries pursue an export-led growth strategy, the neoliberal regime that generalises this strategy among all countries is, in effect, forcing them to engage in Darwinian competition against one another, that is, to pursue a “beggar-thy-neighbour” strategy.

Some countries’ higher growth-rate than before under the export-led growth strategy, it follows, must be at the expense of other countries that now experience lower growth-rate than before.

Countries engaged in a race to outdo one another can scarcely be said to be “co-operating” with one another. The effect of a general pursuit of the neoliberal strategy, therefore, is a de facto abandonment of non-alignment, of a trajectory where countries of the Global South stood with one another to face up to imperialism.

Now, countries of the Global South, each obsessed with achieving higher GDP growth and hence, within the neoliberal paradigm, obsessed with drawing in larger metropolitan investment for this purpose, would rather curry favour with imperialism in order to outdo their neighbours.

This leads to a fracturing of the non-aligned movement, which is the second fracturing we mentioned earlier.

The silence of most countries of the Global South in the face of the US-Israeli aggression on Iran, which may appear puzzling at first sight, is not so puzzling after all.

Subverting both ‘nation’, ‘non-alignment’
Neoliberalism has been at work for quite some time in subverting both the concept of the nation and the concept of non-alignment, abandoning the anti-imperialist core that characterised these concepts, and substituting in their place alternative concepts that prioritise the task of currying favour with imperialism over everything else.

The outcome of this process is what we see today.

Capitalism is invariably hostile to any collective praxis against it, even if this collective praxis takes the form of just trade union action. It believes in atomising economic agents.

Neoliberal capitalism, which represents a return to unrestrained and uncontrolled capitalism once more, brings to the fore this tendency toward the atomisation of economic agents, through a break-up of the class alliance that had participated in the anti-colonial struggle, and through a subversion of the non-aligned movement that had stood for collective opposition by countries of the Global South to imperialist hegemony.

It is for the people of the Global South, not the governments currently promoting the interests of the ruling big bourgeoisie, to extend solidarity to the people of Iran. The struggle of Iran against the US-Israeli alliance is of crucial importance for recovering the sovereignty of the Global South.

Dr Prabhat Patnaik is professor emeritus, Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. The views are personal. This article is republished from Newsclick.

Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/04/17/neoliberalism-caused-two-fractures-in-the-world-why-irans-resistance-is-so-vital/

4,680 young Chinese volunteers called “Little Deer” ready for Asian Beach Games

Source: Media Outreach

SANYA, CHINA – Media OutReach Newswire – 17 April 2026 – As the 6th Asian Beach Games draws near, 4,680 youth volunteers, affectionately known as the “Little Deer” (Xiao Lu Lu), have completed their general training and are now intensively honing their foreign language skills and job-specific practical abilities in final preparation for the event.

4,680 young Chinese volunteers ready for Asian Beach Games.

Recruited from 12 universities, including Hainan University and Hainan Normal University, as well as other local organizations, the volunteers share the common nickname “Little Deer.” The name is derived from Sanya’s nickname, “Deer City,” and is meant to reflect the volunteers’ lively, warm, and friendly spirit.

“See ya in Sanya” is both the slogan of the Asian Beach Games and the guiding principle for its volunteers. Liang Zihan, a student from Hainan Tropical Ocean University, said: “Since the launch of the volunteer recruitment drive, whether it is learning about the Games, mastering multilingual communication, or taking part in scenario-based drills and emergency exercises, I have given it my all. I hope to convey Sanya’s warmth, openness, and inclusiveness to every friend who comes from afar.”

Alongside local students, the volunteer team also includes many young people from across China brought together by the Games. Wu Yujia, a sophomore at the Hospitality Institute of Sanya, is one of them. “I want to show a warm, caring, and energetic Sanya,” she said. When asked about her future plans, she did not hesitate: “I want to stay in Sanya.” In her eyes, the city’s pleasant climate and beautiful scenery have deepened her affection for it and strengthened her commitment to volunteering.

The 6th Asian Beach Games will be held in Sanya, Hainan, from April 22 to 30, 2026. Delegations from all 45 member countries and regions of the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) will take part in what is the largest and most influential beach sports event in Asia. As the first major international sporting event to be held in Hainan after the independent customs operations of the Hainan Free Trade Port, the Games are not only a celebration of Asian sport but also an important opportunity for Hainan to present an open and welcoming face to the world.

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/2026/04/17/4680-young-chinese-volunteers-called-little-deer-ready-for-asian-beach-games/

SERES’ Clifford Kang Highlights AI-Enabled Smart Mobility at the 2026 World Internet Conference Asia-Pacific Summit

Source: Media Outreach

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 17 April 2026 – Clifford Kang, Vice President of SERES Group attended the 2026 World Internet Conference (WIC) Asia-Pacific Summit in Hong Kong from 13 to 14 April, where he shared the company’s latest perspectives on how artificial intelligence is redefining intelligent electric mobility and automotive industry, and driving a broader transformation of the daily life.

The summit, hosted by the World Internet Conference and organised by the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, brought together global industry leaders to explore developments in digital and intelligent transformation.

Against this backdrop, Kang noted that artificial intelligence is accelerating a fundamental shift across industries, with mobility among the most significantly transformed sectors. AI is moving from merely functional to truly frictionless, becoming deeply embedded in every part of our lives and emerging as an inclusive force that enhances mobility, living and consumption experiences.

As this transformation accelerates, SERES continues to embed intelligence across its full value chain, from product development to manufacturing and user services, using continuous innovation to enhance user experience and strengthen its long-term competitiveness as a technology-driven new energy vehicle company.

A key milestone of SERES came in 2021, when SERES entered a cross-industry partnership with Huawei to launch the AITO brand, its premium new energy vehicle brand. At the time, the industry was facing a clear disconnect, where intelligent cars were not luxurious, while luxury cars were not intelligent. In response, AITO introduced the brand philosophy of “Intelligence Redefining Luxury”, positioning intelligence as the foundation of its premium mobility experience. The brand name itself, derived from “adding intelligence to auto”, reflects this core DNA.

Today, that strategy has translated into scale and adoption. AITO has built a user base of more than 880,000 active users of its smart driving assistance system, with total journeys surpassing 6.6 billion kilometres.

Clifford Kang further emphasised that a great product alone is not enough, and that company need to focus on the entire lifecycle user experience. Guided by this principle, SERES has extended intelligent technologies at scale across both manufacturing and customer service to improve every touchpoint.

In manufacturing, the SERES Super Factory, operates with more than 5,000 robots, enabling 100% automation of critical processes. AI vision inspection technology ensures strict quality control of key components, ensuring high quality standards across production.

On the customer service end, SERES has built a 24/7 cloud-based safety service system powered by AI and big data, enabling a shift from reactive support to intelligent predictive service. In 2025 alone, the system delivered approximately 250,000 proactive alerts to customers. One notable example came in July last year, when AITO M9 completed the industry’s first satellite-enabled rescue operation in a remote region of China, highlighting both the practical value and human warmth of intelligent connected technologies in real-world scenarios.

Looking ahead, Clifford Kang stated that new energy vehicles are evolving into the mobile intelligent space, requiring further robust investment in research and development. In 2025 alone, SERES invested RMB 12.5 billion in R&D, representing a 77% year-on-year increase. This investment has enabled the company to develop a suite of core technologies, including the SERES MF Platform, Super Range Extender and Intelligent Safety systems. These innovations are continuously applied across SERES’ products to enhance performance and deliver better mobility experiences for users.

“Bringing eruptive technology from the laboratory to the road requires more than one company’s efforts”, Kang said. “Open collaboration is the most efficient path forward. SERES has always embraced openness and partnership. We want to work with industry partners around the world to advance the mobility sector together. Let’s build up the future where technology has the vision to lead, the precision to excel, and the warmth to care.”

Hashtag: #SERESGroup

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/2026/04/17/seres-clifford-kang-highlights-ai-enabled-smart-mobility-at-the-2026-world-internet-conference-asia-pacific-summit/

Super Rugby Pacific: Blues survive late Highlanders scare for win

Source: Radio New Zealand

Blues captain Patrick Tuipulotu in action against the Highlanders. Brett Phibbs/Photosport

The Blues have defied a comeback for the ages to hold off a heroic Highlanders finish and claim a thrilling 47-40 Super Rugby Pacific win in Auckland.

The home side looked to have sewn up the win, but the Highlanders ripped things open late in the piece and very nearly stole the victory.

Despite the scare, the Blues got the job done to move back to second spot on the ladder.

The southerners struck first from a sloppy lineout, with halfback Adam Lennox pouncing on the loose ball and sneaking through the middle of the pack, before skinning Beauden Barrett to score.

The Blues went back to back to back in reply, first Hoskins Sotutu marking his comeback with a try, followed by Anton Segner from close range.

Sam Darry went over fro a Blues’ third, before some Caleb Tangitau magic brought the Highlanders right back into the contest, but at a cost.

The rampaging winger ran 60 metres, exploded through the Blues chasing line, and linked with Tanielu Tele’a to score at the corner.

However, after sending his centre away, Tangitau was hit late and high by Zarn Sullivan, forcing both men off the park, although the latter only spent 10 minutes on the sideline, while Tangitau’s night was over.

The Blues came out of the sheds after halftime firing, with two quick tries through Bradley Slater and a second for Segner, as he stormed through some weak defence to sprint 20 metres.

Looking dead and buried, Lennox brought the ‘Landers right back in the hunt with another individual stunner.

The halfback showed beautiful footwork, as he ran from the back of the scrum, threw a dummy and stepped on the gas to give his side a sniff.

That was countered quickly, courtesy of Cole Forbes, who danced his way past several Highlanders tacklers and appeared to put the game to bed.

The visitors refused to lie down though, as replacement Finn Hurley swooped on a loose Blues pass and sent debutant Xavier Tito-Harris away.

Also on debut, Ben Ake gave the Blues more breathing space, before the Highlanders pulled two scorchers out of the bag, as Tele’a scored his second to bring it within seven.

The Highlanders heist looked on, as they hammered their way into the 22, but a knock-on quashed the miracle.

Follow the live action here:

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Waitaki residents facing 19 percent rates hike

Source: Radio New Zealand

The council said 19 percent rise would cost the average ratepayer about $13 extra a week extra – almost $700 a year. RNZ / Quin Tauetau

Waitaki’s ratepayers are looking at a 19 percent rates hike for the coming year.

Mayor Mel Tavendale is warning that will only just keep their heads above water.

The Waitaki District Council, on the border of Otago and Canterbury, said 19 percent rise would cost the average ratepayer about $13 extra a week – almost $700 a year.

Tavendale said the increase was primarily driven by increasing costs and an expensive water services capital expenditure programme.

The previous council had proposed a 7 per cent rates increase for its 14,000 ratepayers knowing that would not cover costs, she said.

The proposed 19 percent rates increase was just the bargain basement figure and as low as the council could go, Tavendale said.

Waitaki Mayor Mel Tavendale Jackie Tav

“We are really aware that we are doing this at a time when our community is already hurting so it is a tough conversation to have,” she said.

“It is one that if we could not have it – it would be fantastic. But at the end of the day you also need to do the right thing and have the brave conversations because we can’t keep going in this trajectory.”

Four of the 10 councillors voted against consulting on a 19 percent increase but only one of the four was pushing for a lower figure.

Councillor Sven Thelning was among those who thought it should be even higher and said strictly based on the financials they should be going for a 45 percent increase.

“The 19 percent is the bottom, absolute least we could do,” Thelning said.

“It risks us running into that debt cap and that’s when the money runs out and then we’re in even more trouble. So 45 percent is not good but going broke would be worse.”

Oamaru Ratepayers and Residents Association chair Ray Henderson said the council had long tried to keep rates as low as possible and that had now come back to bite current ratepayers.

Many people in the area were already struggling financially, he said.

“The Waitaki district has a much higher demographic of retired people than the rest of the country – so a lot of people living on a fixed income. So when prices keep going up and up and up, and your income only goes up about two and a half per cent when the super increases every year, you get behind. So yes it will affect them dramatically.”

The rates hike would have to be faced, Henderson said.

But he questioned where some of the council’s money was going and the size of its workforce.

North Otago Grey Power president Andrew Dunn said the options presented by the council were not very palatable.

The 19 percent hike was unreasonable, he said.

Kevin Malcolm, deputy chair of the Otago Regional council and a Waitaki district resident, said the proposed increase revealed wider issues with local government and why amalgamation of Otago’s six district councils was needed.

“You can’t control the price of steel or the price of equipment to build a bridge, or what ever you are doing, but you can control the duplication we have within our system,” he said

“We simply don’t need chief executive and six planning teams and six leadership teams to run Otago.”

The council is putting together information on the proposed rates increase and it will go out to the public for feedback in the coming weeks.

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Northland driver John Le Noel sentenced for death of cyclist Matthew Howard at Ōkaihau

Source: Radio New Zealand

The tragedy re-ignited calls for speed bumps on Settlers Way, Ōkaihau’s main street. Supplied

A judge has described a Northland man’s driving in the moments before a high-speed, hit-and-run crash that killed a teenage cyclist as “a recipe for disaster”.

John Le Noel, 28, was sentenced on Friday in the Kaikohe District Court over the death last year of 19-year-old Matthew Howard on the street outside his home.

He was jailed for 33 months and disqualified from driving for two-and-a-half years.

The court was told CCTV captured Le Noel as his car crossed the centre-line on State Highway 1, before turning into Settlers Way, the main street of Ōkaihau, just after 10pm on 28 January, 2025.

Crash analysis showed Le Noel’s car was travelling at up to 117km/h in the 50km/h zone when Howard was hit.

The teen suffered horrific injuries and died shortly afterwards.

The car was extensively damaged, including a large hole punched through the windscreen.

The court was told Le Noel kept driving, stopped some distance away, saw people gathering at the crash scene, then drove to Horeke, where he abandoned the car.

He was identified by CCTV and picked up by police the following day, charged with dangerous driving causing death and failing to stop to ascertain injury.

Judge Michelle Howard-Sager said aggravating factors included the the tragic loss of a life and the sustained period of bad driving.

“His speed also causes me significant concern,” she said. “He was travelling between 107-117km/h in a 50km/h zone.

“That is over double the speed limit and means that any ability Mr Le Noel might have had to avoid Matthew was taken away, because of such dangerous driving. It was a recipe for disaster.”

In fact, Judge Howard-Sager said Le Noel should not have been driving at all.

He had a restricted driver’s licence, which meant he should not have been driving unaccompanied after 10pm, and was not licensed to drive a manual vehicle.

The car had been without a Warrant of Fitness since 2019, the rear tyres were below minimum tread requirements and the registration had been put on hold.

The judge said Le Noel’s failure to stop was another major concern, given that it must have been obvious someone was seriously injured.

Even after he was identified and despite media publicity, he did not come forward, until police went knocking at his parents’ home.

John Le Noel was sentenced to 33 months’ jail at the Kaikohe District Court. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Judge Howard-Sager said Howard’s death had a “profound effect” on his family.

Those who saw his body after the crash also suffered significant trauma, she said.

Defence lawyer Doug Blaikie said Le Noel was remorseful, traumatised and continued to have nightmares.

“I dare say he will carry this for the rest of his life.”

However, Blaikie said Howard himself was “substantially the cause of the accident and the outcome”.

He was wearing dark clothing and riding a bike at night with no reflectors, and while Le Noel was driving at speed and close to centre-line, he was on the correct side of the road.

Moments before the crash, Howard crossed the centre-line onto the wrong side, for reasons no-one would ever know.

Those factors meant Le Noel was entitled to a “substantial discount” on any prison term. That was rejected by Judge Howard-Sager.

She said, if Le Noel had not been travelling at such a high speed in residential area, he might have avoided Howard – “or at the very least the consequences may not have been so severe”.

“Speed limits, particularly in residential areas, are there for very good reason… because people may be on the roads when they are not expected. I do not accept that Matthew is primarily responsible for this accident.”

Earlier, prosecutor Eilish O’Connor read a victim impact statement from Howard’s father’s partner. She described the teen as “gentle, quiet and kind”.

He adored his new baby niece and, while not naturally academic, he was starting to find his way in life.

She felt “angry and sickened”, when she learnt Le Noel had been driving at more than double the speed limit, because that meant the crash had been entirely preventable.

“You took Matthew from us forever, now there’s just an empty space where his light used to be.”

Ten members of Howard’s family were in court, as were Le Noel’s parents and some of his relatives.

After sentencing, Matthew Howard’s mother, Kelly Howard, told RNZ her son was “the most wonderful person”.

“He was love, he was light, he cared about everybody. He would never hurt a soul.

“Now’s he free, and he wants everybody to be love and light too.”

The tragedy shook the small, close-knit town and re-ignited long-standing calls for speed bumps on Settlers Way.

The town’s broad main street has two schools, cafes, shops and many cyclists, due to its key location on the Twin Coast Cycle Trail.

A petition on change.org, calling on the Far North District Council to expedite the installation of speed bumps, gathered 448 signatures.

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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/2026/04/17/northland-driver-john-le-noel-sentenced-for-death-of-cyclist-matthew-howard-at-okaihau/

Live: Super Rugby Pacific – NSW Waratahs v Moana Pasifika

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the Super Rugby Pacific action, as NSW Waratahs host Moana Pasifika at Allianz Stadium.

Moana Pasifika are chasing their first win since February, with heavy defeats plaguing their 2026 season.

They travel to Sydney to take on Waratahs side that have won just one of their last five games.

Kickoff is at 9.35pm.

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Liam Swiggs / RNZ

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/17/live-super-rugby-pacific-nsw-waratahs-v-moana-pasifika/

Taicang Day in Munich: Celebrating 18 Years of Sino-German Industrial Innovation

Source: Media Outreach

MUNICH, GERMANY – Media OutReach Newswire – 17 April 2026 – The 18th edition of “Taicang Day” successfully convened at the BMW Welt Auditorium on April 16, marking nearly two decades of continuous economic and cultural exchange between the Chinese port city and Germany’s industrial heartland. The event attracted nearly 300 political and business leaders to explore new paths for bilateral collaboration. Since its inception in Stuttgart in 2008, “Taicang Day” has evolved from a simple investment briefing into a multi-dimensional platform integrating technology, education, and sports.

The event featured a distinguished lineup of speakers who shared their insights on deepening cooperation. Gudrun Weidmann, Director for Internationalization at the Bavarian Ministry of Economic Affairs; Zhai Qian, Minister Counselor of the Chinese Embassy in Germany; Chen Xiaodong, Deputy Director of the Jiangsu Provincial Department of Commerce; Dr. Christian Scharpf, Deputy Mayor of Munich and Head of the Department of Labor and Economic Affairs, and Michaela Schenk, Chair of the Foreign Trade Committee of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry for Munich and Upper Bavaria, delivered opening remarks. The proceedings were moderated by Stefan Geiger, Chairman of the China-Western Bavaria Business and Cultural Association.

18th Taicang Day in Munich

Chen Gao, Secretary of the CPC Taicang Municipal Committee, delivered a keynote address titled “Green, Innovation, and Integration: Establishing a Model for Sino-German Cooperation.” In his speech, Chen drew a poetic parallel between Munich and Taicang’s home region of Suzhou, describing both as paragons of the perfect fusion between tradition and modernity where cutting-edge technology and modern industry coexist harmoniously with rich cultural heritage.

Reflecting on 33 years of deep engagement with Germany, Chen emphasized that Taicang’s bilateral cooperation has reached a historic turning point, transitioning from merely attracting foreign capital to fostering two-way investment, and from industrial supply-chain support to the co-creation of a complete industrial ecosystem. The Secretary highlighted three flagship Taicang projects recently included in the official achievement list of the high-level Sino-German summit—the Schaeffler Humanoid Robot Digital Factory, the Sino-German Taicang Zero-Carbon Park, and the Taicang Rhine-Neckar Innovation Center. These milestones vividly demonstrate Taicang’s momentum in pivoting toward green transformation, collaborative innovation, and deep bilateral integration. Taicang’s strategy remains built on the philosophy of long-termism, with Chen reaffirming the city’s dedication to optimizing a market-oriented, law-based, and internationalized business environment while reinforcing its brand identity as a “home away from home” for German community.

Following these addresses, the event yielded several milestone agreements aimed at facilitating practical cooperation, including the official inauguration of the VDE China representative office in Taicang and the signing of a new batch of German scientific innovation projects. To further support the internationalization of local firms, the Taicang Enterprise Overseas Service Center was officially unveiled, alongside a dedicated matchmaking session for Chinese companies expanding into global markets. Furthermore, State Grid Taicang Power Supply Company presented its latest initiatives in Green Compliance and Environmental Sustainability, a presentation that received widespread acclaim for aligning industrial power solutions with international ESG standards.

Taicang’s strategic appeal is rooted in its premier location adjacent to Shanghai and its world-class infrastructure. Situated within a 30-minute commuting radius of central Shanghai, the city offers rapid access to Hongqiao Airport in 20 minutes and Pudong International Airport in just over an hour. Its maritime gateway, the Port of Taicang, features a 12.5-meter deep-water channel and ranks 8th in China and 20th globally, with an annual throughput exceeding 10 million TEUs. This logistics network supports a robust industrial ecosystem of over 5,000 enterprises, where 70% of vehicle components can be sourced locally.

Widely recognized as the “Home of German Enterprises” in China, Taicang now hosts over 560 German firms, including 60 “hidden champion” companies. This specialized cluster represents more than 10% of all German manufacturing enterprises in China. The city’s collaborative success is further evidenced by projects mentioned above in Chen Gao’s speech such as the Schaeffler Humanoid Robot Digital Factory and the Sino-German Taicang Zero-Carbon Park, and the Taicang Rhine-Neckar Innovation Center, all of which were included in the official achievement list of the German Chancellor’s visit to China.

To support its growing international community, Taicang has developed a sophisticated service ecosystem. The city’s Foreigner Service Center integrates 73 specialized services, supported by the “Hi Taicang” card which provides foreign residents with enhanced convenience in healthcare, education, and transportation. Complemented by cultural landmarks like the Rothenburg-themed street and authentic German bakeries, Taicang has created an environment where international partners can truly root themselves for long-term success.

Hashtag: #TIZ

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/2026/04/17/taicang-day-in-munich-celebrating-18-years-of-sino-german-industrial-innovation/

Papatoetoe’s Indian community vents anger over growing anti-Indian sentiment

Source: Radio New Zealand

Members of the Indian community gather outside Papatoetoe Central School after graffiti inciting racial violence was found near the school last Saturday. RNZ / Blessen Tom

Papatoetoe’s Indian community has voiced frustration at what appears to be growing anti-Indian sentiment in Auckland at a public meeting on Friday.

The meeting was held following the discovery in Auckland of two separate incidents of graffiti inciting violence against the Indian community.

About 50 people attended the meeting organised by the Papatoetoe Ōtara Action Team, including police, politicians and members of the local Indian community.

The first piece of anti-Indian graffiti was discovered on Saturday near Papatoetoe Central School.

Police have arrested a 61-year-old Papatoetoe man on charges related to the incident on Thursday.

The accused appeared in the Manukau District Court facing two charges of intentional damage to a footpath, each carrying a maximum penalty of three months in prison or a $2000 fine.

The man also faces a charge of behaving offensively in a public place, which carries a maximum $1000 fine. He has been released on bail.

An identical message was also found inside a public toilet on Campbell Road in Royal Oak.

Jaspreet Kandhari, general secretary of the NZ Indian Business Association, said he was disturbed by the incident but also what he described as something reflecting a deeper undercurrent in society.

“Recently, I attended an event where a study on migrant and ethnic groups and their contribution was launched,” Kandhari said.

“One alarming trend was that many New Zealanders still do not like to see New Zealand as a diverse, migrant country.”

Kandhari said such attitudes were concerning – particularly for diverse communities.

South Auckland’s Indian community came together at the India Diversity Centre in Papatoetoe on Friday to voice their concerns following recent incidents. RNZ / Blessen Tom

Navtej Randhawa, who has lived in Papatoetoe for 25 years, said the community needed to step up, look inwards and help build bridges.

“Yes, there is hate, there is discrimination and there are racial issues,” Randhawa said.

“As a fourth-generation member of this community, I can say some of this feels worse.”

He said the community needed to be part of the solution.

“What are we doing to be part of the solution and help build a better society?” he asked.

“For me, one word stands out: volunteer. Contribute to the wider good of the community and you will see better outcomes.”

Fellow South Auckland resident Narinder Veer Singh raised concerns about the role of social media played in spreading hate and questioned whether authorities had plans in place to address those challenges.

Naveed Hamid, chair of the Pakistan New Zealand Business Council, said ethnic communities needed to come together to push back against hate and racism.

He said migrant communities made a significant contribution to New Zealand’s economy.

“As a migrant community we are contributing around $60 billion to the New Zealand economy, which is not a small amount in a year,” he said.

Kushma Nair, a Papatoetoe subdivision local board elect, questioned why some groups were allowed to spread hate and anti-Indian rhetoric under the guise of free speech.

NZ Counties Manukau West area commander Dave Christoffersen (left), Panmure-Ōtāhuhu MP and Labour spokesperson for ethnic communities Jenny Salesa (middle) and ACT MP Parmjeet Parmar attended the meeting in Papatoetoe on Friday. RNZ / Blessen Tom

Manurewa Local Board member Marshal Walia also raised concerns about increasing reports of bullying and racism faced by members of the Indian community in South Auckland.

“We have attended many similar meetings, but my question is what are you going to do about these issues, and what are you going to tell those who are nervous about sending their children to school on Monday?” he asked.

Speaking at the meeting, Counties Manukau West area commander Dave Christoffersen said he understood the concerns that were raised.

“I feel your hurt and your fear as a result,” he said.

“This was an appalling act that has no place in our community. Police take these matters seriously and we prioritise them, as was the case in this instance. As soon as it was escalated to me, an investigator was assigned straight away.”

Christoffersen said school community police officers would be present on Monday to help reassure parents, staff and students.

“We felt that was the best police response when school returns,” he said.

“If parents, staff or students have any questions, they will see officers they are familiar with because they are already part of that school community.”

Panmure-Ōtāhuhu MP Jenny Salesa, Labour’s spokesperson for ethnic communities, said she hoped people across New Zealand would come together in support.

“It is not okay,” she said. “It is unacceptable to have this kind of hateful crime.”

Salesa said she had spoken at length with Papatoetoe Central School principal Raj Dullabh.

“He was really worried about his students. … He said 78 percent of his students are from the Indian community,” she said.

ACT MP Parmjeet Parmar urged individuals to call out anti-Indian sentiment whenever they encountered it.

“It’s very important that people don’t decide to stay quiet,” Parmar said.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/04/17/papatoetoes-indian-community-vents-anger-over-growing-anti-indian-sentiment/

GREE Unveils 130 Products at the 139th Canton Fair, with Over 80% Featuring AI and Green Energy-Saving Technologies

Source: Media Outreach

GUANGZHOU, CHINA – Media OutReach Newswire – 17 April 2026 – On April 15, the 139th China Import and Export Fair (hereinafter referred to as the “Canton Fair”) officially opened. As a leading enterprise in the manufacturing sector, Gree Electric made a grand appearance at Pavilion 4.2A under the theme “GREE, Making Better Electric Appliances,” presenting over a hundred innovative products in its largest exhibition area in Canton Fair history. Amid the global wave of green and intelligent manufacturing transformation, GREE is leveraging its hard-core independent innovation and full-industry-chain capabilities to show the world the confidence and resolve of China’s intelligent manufacturing to navigate industry cycles and lead the transformation.

GREE at the 139th China Import and Export Fair

Zhu Lei, CMO of Gree Electric, stated that Gree has participated in the Canton Fair for 31 consecutive years. This year, GREE brought 130 products to the event. Facing the global market, GREE strives to fully meet the practical needs of consumers from different regions worldwide. Notably, the majority of these products are originally manufactured in and exported from China, reflecting the dedication and ingenuity of GREE’s Chinese craftsmen.

It is reported that at this year’s Canton Fair, GREE has created a full-industry-chain exhibition space ranging from core components to scenario-based solutions. To date, buyers from over 50 countries and regions have scheduled visits and business negotiations, marking a 21% year-on-year increase.

Currently, the global home appliance industry is undergoing a dual transformation. On one hand, an energy efficiency revolution driven by the “Dual Carbon” goals makes the transition to eco-friendly refrigerants an urgent priority; on the other hand, an experience revolution spurred by consumption upgrades has made quietness, health, and smart features the core demands of users. GREE’s SilenzX series ultra-quiet air conditioners, showcased at the event, serve as a precise response to this trend. Equipped with a self-developed rotary four-cylinder compressor, the SilenzX series reduces the minimum sound pressure level of the outdoor unit to a mere 29 decibels—far below the industry average of 42 decibels. Backed by 137 invention patents, the product recently won a Gold Medal at the International Exhibition of Inventions Geneva, signaling that Chinese enterprises have shifted from being “followers” to “leaders” in the realm of comfort technology.

A deeper layer of competitiveness stems from GREE’s long-term bet on a green future. Among the products showcased at this Canton Fair, over 80% are equipped with AI, green energy-saving, and other advanced technologies. GREE has comprehensively implemented R290 eco-friendly refrigerant technology across its entire product matrix, including split units, window units, and water heaters. Furthermore, its world-first photovoltaic air conditioning system has achieved a systemic breakthrough of “zero carbon emissions, zero electricity bills, and zero waste.” The AI dynamic energy-saving technology also utilizes intelligent algorithm optimization to boost annual energy efficiency by 15.8% and reduce power consumption by 13.6%. Rather than isolated technological features, these represent comprehensive green solutions that cover the entire chain of energy production, transmission, and consumption, providing the industry with a leapfrog path from “low-carbon compliance” to “zero-carbon leadership.”

Behind this systemic innovation capability lies a full-industry-chain competitive moat forged through 35 years of independent R&D. At this Canton Fair, Gree introduced three major compressors—G-Boost, G-Storm, and G-Hyper—which have successfully overcome industry challenges such as ultra-high-temperature cooling and ultra-low-temperature heating. Its star product, the GMV 9 series, is capable of operating in an ultra-wide temperature range from -35°C to 60°C, marking GREE’s achievement of full-stack technological autonomy from core components to system integration.

Overseas buyers visit the booth of Gree

This strategic resolve is yielding substantial returns in GREE’s global layout. As one of the first Chinese home appliance companies to venture overseas, GREE has built a network covering more than 190 countries and regions. Independent brands now account for 70% of its total export volume, and this figure exceeds 85% in Belt and Road countries. This marks a highly successful, high-quality transformation from a traditional OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) model to an independent brand-led enterprise.

From core technological breakthroughs to a green and low-carbon transition, GREE remains rooted in technology and centered on quality. Its presence at the Canton Fair serves as a vivid microcosm of the transformation and upgrading of China’s manufacturing sector, demonstrating the powerful potential and dynamic momentum of “Made in China.”

Hashtag: #GREE

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/2026/04/17/gree-unveils-130-products-at-the-139th-canton-fair-with-over-80-featuring-ai-and-green-energy-saving-technologies/

Grim warning from Trucking Association, as impact of rising fuel costs hit consumers

Source: Radio New Zealand

Some operators want permission to use bus lanes in heavy city traffic. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

NZ Trucking Association chief executive Dave Boyce warns the real cost of the current fuel shortage has not hit consumers yet, as the industry considers ways to reduce the impact on operators.

Boyce told RNZ’s Checkpoint that many operators were not able to absorb the rising fuel prices and were now starting to pass on those costs to customers.

“I don’t think the average person has felt the full effects of this yet,” he said. “They’re paying more at the pump, but a few more weeks of this and they’ll start paying more for their groceries and services.

“That will really hit home hard for a lot of people.

“Operators are running low-margin businesses, so they don’t have the ability to absorb the increase in the fuel. They’re putting a fuel adjustment factor onto their rates… and that’s having to be passed on, not only to consumers, but our exporters as well.

“When mum and dad start paying another $100-200 a week for their groceries, it will really hit home for everybody.”

Boyce was responding to calls from Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown for truck companies to operate during the night, when they had less traffic to contend with.

“The problem is a lot of the warehouses, supermarkets, shops etc just aren’t geared up to take trucks at night,” he said. “Labour is part of it, but also resource consent.

“Some of these businesses are in residential areas or areas where there are hotels around them, and they don’t want noise at night.

“There’s certainly a lot of freight moved at night and I think most transport operators are trying to do what they can to minimise trucks during the day, but I wish it was that simple.

“Driving hours are legislated at the moment and you wouldn’t want to increase the hours drivers are doing, because you have to manage fatigue and safety.”

On Friday afternoon, the average cost of diesel $3.80 per litre, a 24 percent increase over the past four weeks.

Mainfreight chief executive Don Braid told Morning Report that KiwiRail should increase its services to help reduce truck use.

He also called on Auckland Transport to allow trucks into bus lanes to avoid burning up fuel, while navigating heavy city traffic.

“I know Mainfreight do use rail a lot and are probably one of the biggest customers of rail at the moment,” Boyce said. “I can imagine his frustration, if he can’t get more trains to move his freight.

“Part of the issue is how freight moves around the country. There’s about 92,000km of road network, but only about 4000km of rail network, so rail doesn’t go everywhere that roads do, especially if you’re talking about the backbone of the NZ economy – the rural economy.

“There’s just no rail-lines into those places and you’ve got to use trucks.”

Boyce insisted the trucking industry continued to search for ways to overcome growing fuel costs.

“I wouldn’t say we’ve maxed out productivity,” he said. “Certainly, industry is in discussion with government about changes to vehicle dimensions and mass rules, trying to get some more weight on some of the trucks, so they can carry more and use less trucks to do the same role.

“I think a lot of it is prescriptive legislation, rather than legislation that’s fit for purpose. Damage to the road, yes, but a lot of it is covered with the axles and suspensions and brakes that are there at the moment.”

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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/2026/04/17/grim-warning-from-trucking-association-as-impact-of-rising-fuel-costs-hit-consumers/

Road reopened SH1 Pōkeno southbound lanes

Source: New Zealand Police


District:

Counties Manukau

State Highway 1 southbound, Pōkeno is now open following an earlier crash.

Police thank motorists for their patience as they worked at the scene.

Further delays can be expected as congestion clears.

ENDS

Jo Wilson/NZ Police

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/17/road-reopened-sh1-pokeno-southbound-lanes/

Live: Super Rugby Pacific – Blues v Highlanders

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the Super Rugby Pacific action, as the Blues host the Highlanders at Eden Park.

Both sides are coming off defeats, with the Blues humbled by the Hurricanes last week.

They return home to play a Highlanders outfit desperate to bounce back from a loss to ACT Brumbies.

Kickoff is at 7.05pm.

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Liam Swiggs / RNZ

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/17/live-super-rugby-pacific-blues-v-highlanders/

‘Very, very Kiwi’ garden wins gold at international flower show

Source: Radio New Zealand

Since her 160m2 garden went on display at the Shenzhen Greater Bay Area Flower Show, over two million people have viewed Jules Moore‘s latest horticultural creation, Ocean’s Edge.

Constructed with the help of a Chinese crew, the Auckland landscape designer’s coastal-inspired garden features stainless steel waves, a massive shell made of cement and bamboo, five giant oysters sculpted from chicken netting and plaster of Paris and oversized kina decorated with fake pearls and teal beads.

“Everything was very, very Kiwi,” she tells RNZ’s Afternoons.

Moore came up with the “very challenging” design for Ocean’s Edge with her daughter Alayna and son James, who also sings with the designer, amidst whale song, on a 10-minute audio piece to accompany the display.

“A bit like when you walk into the airport, and they have that conch shell blowing, it was that kind of very, very Kiwi audio,” Moore says.

Her thematic focus for the garden, which features purple flax, lupins and succulents, was seafood – one of New Zealand’s biggest exports to China – in response to the brief of designing “something that connects New Zealand with China”.

Constructing Ocean’s Edge, which took about 20 days, was at times challenging because of language barriers with the local crew, Moore says, but her assistant Ru Zhang saved the day.

“She was amazing. She was like the watchdog. She’d go around and sort of point out things, and she’d translate everything. If I didn’t have her, I think I would have really struggled.”

One of seven international designers competing at the Shenzhen Flower Show, Moore is especially happy that Ocean’s Edge won Best Feature Garden as well as a prestigious gold medal – her fifth at an international flower show.

This year, following the success of Ocean’s Garden, the designer is looking ahead to “something big coming up in China”.

“I’m sworn to secrecy at the moment … There’s something really special coming up probably in the next month.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/04/17/very-very-kiwi-garden-wins-gold-at-international-flower-show/