Was the violent Sydney protest avoidable, and what can police and demonstrators learn?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Simon Bronitt, Professor of Law, University of Sydney

The police role as a “thin blue line” between public order and chaos was tested in Sydney’s CBD on Monday night.

Videos have captured the violent clashes between police and some of the thousands of protesters who gathered at the Town Hall to protest the presence of Israeli President Isaac Herzog in Australia.

One video shows a police officer repeatedly punching a man lying prone on the street, his hands pinned behind him.

New South Wales Premier Chris Minns has defended the actions of the police in Sydney, saying they faced an “impossible situation”.

No doubt, there will be investigations into the legality and reasonableness of the police response. But what’s also needed to prevent a repeat of Monday’s violence is a rethink of police training and protocols in NSW that are explicitly based on a respect for human rights, or what policing scholars call “human rights policing”.

Chaos erupting at the Sydney protest outside Town Hall as police clash with demonstrators.

‘Major event’ declaration

The NSW government declared Herzog’s visit to be a “major event” under state law. This gave police sweeping powers to issue move-on orders, close specific locations and search people in a designated area of the city. Essentially, it created a protest exclusion zone.

These laws, which exist in many jurisdictions, are typically used to ensure public order during major political and sporting events, such as Queensland’s prototype Major Events Act enacted before the 2014 G20 summit in Brisbane and the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast.

While these acts restrict otherwise lawful peaceful protests, they are limited in both time and place.

In Sydney, the NSW Supreme Court rejected a challenge to the government declaration just minutes before Monday’s protest was due to take place.

This suggested that, in the eyes of the state government and the court, public order and safety outweighed the rights of protesters, in this instance, to march through the CBD as they wished.

But the expanded legal powers of the police in these situations do not render declared public spaces “human rights-free zones”.

And public order was clearly not maintained in Sydney since the situation at Town Hall quickly devolved into violence.

So what went wrong? And how does policing need to change?

How policing in these situations can work

Policing is especially challenging in cases where two or more opposing groups seek to exercise the same rights to protest in the same public space, or the location or size of a protest raises concerns about public safety or potentially interferes with other lawful rights.

The G20 summit and Commonwealth Games in Queensland, both of which took place without significant incidents of disorder, show how this can be successfully done. These events provide a model for human rights policing – what worked well, and why.

My international review of policing the G20 summit and other major events a decade ago, conducted with two leading policing scholars, David Baker and Philip Stenning, was based on extensive empirical research. It identified several important lessons:

1) Police play a key role in upholding human rights. Balancing competing interests requires respectful dialogue between police and protest organisers and other affected community stakeholders before an event takes place

2) Framing police powers expressly within a statutory human rights framework is desirable. However, Queensland police’s own policies, practices and training were key to upholding human rights. As the public safety policy manual stated:

When possible, police will attempt to negotiate with all groups wanting to march or to use a particular space. In managing the use of public space, police will be impartial, and will use their discretion to facilitate the lawful activities of all parties

3) Policing protests also benefits from the presence of independent legal observers. They can assist in clarifying the rights and responsibilities of protesters, and help de-escalate tense situations.

Senior police officials said there had been discussions with the Palestine Action Group before Monday’s protest, in which they encouraged protesters to move to Hyde Park outside the exclusion zone.

However, there is always a risk that dialogue between police and protest organisers ahead of a demonstration does not work as planned. There can be miscommunication, mistrust and unexpected departures from agreed plans and protocol.

Large protests also attract diverse groups of people that organisers have no control over, including those who willingly engage in violent confrontations with police or opposing groups.

That said, allowing time for proper dialogue with protest organisers and community representatives can help anticipate potential flashpoints and identify the points when police will have to intervene. This dialogue can generate better understanding of:

  • when police give protesters a reasonable direction to disperse from an area

  • what constitutes a “reasonable time” to leave that area

  • what legal steps (arrest and removal) might be taken by police against those who refuse to comply

  • the range of “reasonable force” police will use to disperse crowds or arrest those who don’t comply.

Reasonable force generally depends on the situation. Above all, physical force and deployment of pepper spray must be consistent with police training and policies, and as with any coercive powers, should be used as a matter of last resort.

What needs to be done?

Proportionate and accountable policing needs to be founded in a respect for human rights to the maximum extent possible.

But it’s also important to note that human rights are rarely absolute. As a result, a person’s freedom to protest may legitimately be restricted in the interest of public safety and to safeguard the rights of others (such as using or moving freely in public spaces).

So, is human rights policing, then, practical or realistic?

NSW policymakers should examine how policing practice has changed in jurisdictions that have enacted human rights legislation (notably the United Kingdom, ACT, Victoria and Queensland).

These laws delineate when and how people’s rights to engage in peaceful public protest should be protected, and when and how far they can be restricted on public safety grounds.

The NSW government should also prioritise a reconsideration of the Human Rights Bill introduced to parliament late last year.

And learning lessons from the policing of major events in Queensland a decade ago would help move towards a more robust model of human rights policing and prevent a repeat of Monday’s violent disorder.

Professor Simon Bronitt was a member of the independent review team that reported on the operation and effectiveness of Ch19A of the Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000 (Qld) used during the 2018 Commonwealth Games. The report, tabled in the Queensland Parliament, was commissioned by the Queensland Police Service in 2018, funded by a contract with the University of Queensland. The author did not receive any salary or financial benefits from his membership of the review team.

ref. Was the violent Sydney protest avoidable, and what can police and demonstrators learn? – https://theconversation.com/was-the-violent-sydney-protest-avoidable-and-what-can-police-and-demonstrators-learn-275542

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/10/was-the-violent-sydney-protest-avoidable-and-what-can-police-and-demonstrators-learn-275542/

Cyclist dies after car crash in Upper Hutt

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ

Police say a cyclist has died following a crash with a vehicle in Upper Hutt on Tuesday.

Emergency services received a report of the crash, involving a vehicle and a cyclist, about 4pm.

The intersection of Messines Avenue and Seddul Bahr Road in Trentham were closed while the Serious Crash Unit made enquiries.

The death will be referred to the Coroner.

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/2026/02/10/cyclist-dies-after-car-crash-in-upper-hutt/

NRL: NZ Warriors name mix of experience, youth for first pre-season hit-out against Manly Sea Eagles

Source: Radio New Zealand

Warriors reserves celebrate a try by halfback Luke Hanson against Parramatta Eels. David Neilson/Photosport

Four players yet to make first-grade debuts will start for NZ Warriors in their pre-season trial against Manly Sea Eagles at Napier on Saturday.

With seven of his roster away on Māori-Indigenous All Stars duty in Rotorua the same night, coach Andrew Webster has had to dig deep into his extended group to fill a 28-man gameday squad.

Among the backs, fullback Geronimo Doyle and half Luke Hanson both helped the Warriors reserves to NSW Cup and NRL Interstate glory last season, while winger Haizyn Mellars has joined the club from the South Sydney programme.

Englishman Morgan Gannon is another newcomer, taking his place in the second row, while Kayliss Fatialofa claims an interchange spot.

Webster has also named 11 reserves, who likely get a run in the latter stages.

“We’re going to put a strong side out,” he insisted. “We’re really proud that we have a lot of representation with the all-stars game.

“I think we’re the most supported in the NRL and, if you look at all those players, they’re all in contention for round one, so this gives a lot of people opportunities to step up and take their chance.”

Haizyn Mellars at Warriors training. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

“I hope we practice things – you have emphasis on different things in a pre-season and I hope we practice that this week, but at the same time, I hope we have that balance in our game, where you still have a hard edge and we still know what our identity looks like while we’re practicing.”

Missing with the Māori team are Dallin Watene-Zelezniak, Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, Te Maire Martin, Jacob Laban and Adam Pompey, while newcomer Alofiana Khan-Pereira lines up for the Indigenous team on the wing.

Among other notables missing from action this week are co-captain Mitch Barnett and halfback Luke Metcalf (still nursing their season-ending knee injuries back to full fitness), fullback Taine Tuaupiki, centre Rocco Berry (who underwent two off-season shoulder surgeries), five-eighth Chanel Harris-Tavita and second-rower Marata Niukore.

Webster hinted he might have considered easing his veterans into the season, but the all-star absences forced his hand to bolster the line-up with the likes of Roger Tuivasa-Sheck and Kurt Capewell.

“When all those fans buy their tickets and go to the game this weekend, they will be, like, ‘Wow, this is a strong team’, rather us only playing our young guys.”

The Warriors’ first line-up of the year is:

1. Geronimo Doyle, 2. Haizyn Mellars, 3. Ali Leiataua, 4. Leka Halasima, 5. Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, 6. Luke Hanson, 7. Tanah Boyd, 8. Demitric Vaimauga, 9. Wayde Egan, 10. Jackson Ford, 11. Kurt Capewell, 12. Morgan Gannon, 13. Erin Clark

Interchange: 14. Sam Healey, 15. Tanner Stowers-Smith, 16. Eddie Ieremia-Toeava, 17. Kayliss Fatialofa

Englishman Morgan Gannon will line up in the second row against Manly Sea Eagles. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Reserves: 18. Makai Tafua, 20. Motu Pasikala, 21. Rodney Tuipulotu-Vea, 22. Jack Thompson, 23. Caelys-Paul Putoko, 24. Daeon Amituanai, 25. Sio Kali, 26. Paea Sikuvea, 27. Brandon Norris, 28. Harry Inch, 29. Harry Tauafiafi-Iutoi

Meanwhile, the Manly line-up has more of an experimental appearance, with hooker Brandon Wakeham and second-rower Corey Waddell named co-captains, and teenagers Joey Walsh and Onitoni Large combining in the halves, where club legend Daly Cherry Evans will be missing for the first time since 2011.

After 352 games for the Sea Eagles, Cherry Evans, 36, has switched to Sydney Roosters for 2026.

The Manly line-up is:

1. Blake Metcalfe, 2. Blake Wilson, 3. Clayton Faulalo, 4. Josh Feledy, 5. Navren Willett, 6. Onitoni Large, 7. Joey Walsh, 8. Sione Laiafi, 9. Brandon Wakeham, 10. Paul Bryan, 11. Jackson-Levi Shereb-Schmidt, 12. Corey Waddell, 13. Caleb Navale

Interchange: 14. Zaidas Muagututia, 15. Hugo Hart, 16. Viliami Fifita, 17. Kylan Mafoa

Reserves: 18. Tyler Melrose, 19. Andrew Johansson, 20. Benjamin Keene-O’Keefe

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/2026/02/10/nrl-nz-warriors-name-mix-of-experience-youth-for-first-pre-season-hit-out-against-manly-sea-eagles/

Politics with Michelle Grattan: Tony Barry on why a new Liberal leader isn’t a quick fix

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

The federal Opposition is in dire straits. Sunday’s disastrous Newspoll had the Liberals on 15% primary vote, with the Nationals at 3% – well below One Nation on 27%.

Despite the Coalition reuniting over the weekend, it’s yet to provide any answers about how it will win back key groups of voters, from Gen Z and Millennials, to urban voters in general.

Sussan Ley’s leadership appears terminal, with Angus Taylor readying for an imminent challenge.

But as Tony Barry explains on today’s podcast, a new leader alone won’t solve the Liberals’ problems, which run much deeper and mostly predate Ley’s leadership.

Barry is a former senior Liberal staffer and now director of the consultancy firm Redbridge, which does extensive polling and other political research.

On what focus groups are saying about the Liberal Party, Barry says “they just kind of laugh”.

There is substantive brand damage and they don’t take the party seriously. And the reason for that, of course, is because at the moment the Coalition is full of very unserious people.

On Taylor’s expected leadership challenge, Barry says just a change in personality at the top won’t be enough to lift the party’s “almost rock bottom” position.

The problem for the Liberal Party and the Coalition generally […] is they need to get their primary vote into the 40s. Now, in real terms, you’re talking about 3.4–3.5 million voters, give or take a couple of 100,000, extra […] Now, that is a phenomenal amount out of an electoral roll of around 18 million. So will one personality be able to win those three and a half million votes? Unlikely.

[…] If there is a change of leadership, it’s only going to be a success in the medium term if they can shape an economic narrative, perhaps put out some economic reform. And give people some hope that the Coalition does have an economic plan.

On what the Coalition should do to improve its situation, Barry says taking risks and a bold economic agenda are the only options.

I saw an interview with [former prime minister] John Howard […] where he encouraged some bold policy development. And one suggestion he had was to increase the GST rate, but offset that revenue gain with significant income tax cuts.

Because if the Coalition is to appeal to that Gen Z and millennial cohort – which they need to […] they’re polling catastrophically in that group – then having a policy prescription which lets them keep more of their income […] I think is an opportunity for the Coalition to increase their primary vote.

Barry says fewer than one in five (19%) of Australians now nominate the Coalition as the best party to manage the economy – traditionally one of the Coalition’s strong suits.

You go back to the Howard and Costello government and they had a very strong equity lead on that question. And the foundation of all their success was actually on economic management. Because […] in most years, there were income tax cuts. There was significant wage growth. And these were the things that Howard and Costello leveraged to keep on getting re-elected.

On the rising One Nation vote, Barry says there’s been a “hostile takeover” from One Nation poaching Coalition votes, based on a deep frustration with the status quo. He says many voters “want to empower One Nation to shake things up”.

We asked voters “Which of the following statements best represents your view about the political system? Minor change, major change, it doesn’t need any change, or “burn it all down?” 15% of voters said “burn it down”.

45% of voters said a more moderate […] “the system requires major change”. So that gives you a mindset of where a lot of the voters are at […]

Amongst One Nation voters, which we had at 27% [of the total], 83% of those who said they were intending to vote for One Nation said “burn it all down”.

[…] That sort of frustration is manifesting itself in Pauline Hanson and Barnaby Joyce, who [voters] see as vehicles to really shake it all up, instead of this sort of almost sort of paper shuffling […] policy offerings that they’re getting from the major parties at the moment.

So as a veteran observer of federal politics, does Barry believe the next Liberal prime minister is in the Parliament today?

I think it’s quite possible. But it’s going to require an internal mindset change, not just from the Liberal Party but the Coalition as a whole, where they do make the internal trade-offs that are necessary to make themselves competitive again.

At the moment, we’re just seeing too many individuals who are […] trying to find points for internal difference, rather than [finding] that common ground […] I think it’s less about the personality and more about the focus of the party as a whole.

Michelle Grattan 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. Politics with Michelle Grattan: Tony Barry on why a new Liberal leader isn’t a quick fix – https://theconversation.com/politics-with-michelle-grattan-tony-barry-on-why-a-new-liberal-leader-isnt-a-quick-fix-275547

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/10/politics-with-michelle-grattan-tony-barry-on-why-a-new-liberal-leader-isnt-a-quick-fix-275547/

Far North community residents arm themselves with sticks in fear of roaming dogs

Source: Radio New Zealand

A generic image of a mixed-breed dog. Unsplash / Michael Anfang

Residents in the Far North community of Ahipara are arming themselves with sticks to protect against roaming dogs in their neighbourhood.

Local father Tyrone Biddle and his young daughters witnessed a pack of dogs attacking another neighbourhood dog last week.

“At first it looked like they were just playing, and then just within seconds it just turned to something like just really violent. So five of those dogs turned on one dog and just started mauling her,” he told Checkpoint.

“My four-year-old, I recall her just screaming and crying, because the dog that was getting mauled was a dog that was known to us. So my four-year-old screaming out this dog’s name, my seven-year-old just screaming ‘stop, stop’.”

In a statement, Far North District Council’s Hilary Sumpter said it had received 1087 reports of roaming dogs across the district at large during the last financial year, with 396 impounded.

Biddle said many parents in Ahipara were scared to let their kids walk to school on their own, and some residents had taken to arming themselves.

“This is the first time we’ve kind of seen that pack mentality kind of take effect, but my girls have been chased previously by dogs, people now walk around our community with weapons, with sticks, because they’re too scared to kind of go walking without one,” he said.

“There’s a school at the end of Ahipara that a lot of the tamariki go to, parents don’t let them walk or ride to school because of fear of all these dogs.”

Biddle said it wasn’t fair for residents to feel unsafe.

“This can’t be out of our control. This can’t be a situation in which we are kind of prisoners [in] our own community and can’t just go for a walk or let our kids experience the outdoors,” he said.

“This isn’t an anti-dog thing. This is just anti-irresponsible owners, people that choose to have dogs but don’t choose the responsibility of what comes with owning the dog.”

He criticised the council for what he viewed as a reactive approach.

“When I called the council about these dogs, they said, ‘yeah, we’re aware of these dogs.’ So if you’re aware of these dogs, what is it that you’re waiting for? What is currently happening is just not good enough for our community,” Biddle said.

“I’m just scared that the worst case scenario is that this thing getting mauled is not a dog and it’s one of our tamariki or our kaumātua or whoever it might be, because that is where I see this going.”

Sumpter said the council was taking proactive actions to prevent future issues.

“The council is currently working with the SPCA on a programme to provide dog de-sexing services in high-need communities,” she said.

“We are also actively following up on lapsed registrations. About 800 infringements have been issued district-wide in last two weeks for non-registration. Getting more dogs registered and on record means we can identify owners when their dogs are picked up. More infringements will be issued in coming weeks.”

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/2026/02/10/far-north-community-residents-arm-themselves-with-sticks-in-fear-of-roaming-dogs/

‘Just not fair’: Manawatū parents using savings and loans for school buses

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. 123rf.com

  • Manawatū community starts user-pays school bus after cancellation of ministry-funded service.
  • Parents and guardians take loans and use savings to pay for it.
  • Ministry has cancelled 13 services after a review it says is routine.

Manawatū parents and caregivers are dipping into their savings and even taking out loans to fund a bus service to get their children to school.

This comes after some school buses that used to run into Palmerston North were axed as a result of a Ministry of Education review into more than 250 routes nationwide.

One high school reports that 300 of its students are affected by the changes.

‘Just not fair’

Rongotea is one of the areas affected by the changes, where high school students have a 15-minute ride into Palmerston North.

Families now have to pay for the bus that was previously free for decades.

Nikita Walker has helped lead efforts to organise the user-pays service for children, at a cost of more than $500 a term per child.

“I’ve had to ask family members to help me come up with funds to pay for my daughter’s term pass because we are a one-income family and we just can’t pull that off, and I don’t see it being able to be pulled off for future terms,” she said.

“It’s causing hardship for a lot of us and it’s just not fair.”

The ministry has reviewed routes to ensure compliance with its policies, including that students must go to their closest school.

Since then it has cancelled 13 services, including the one that used to run from Rongotea and Tangimoana into Palmerston North, which fell foul of these rules but had been in place for as long as residents can recall.

Walker’s daughter Jasmine would be eligible for a bus to Manawatū College in Foxton, rather than Palmerston North Girls’ High School, where she attends – but she said changing schools with her two senior years remaining was not an option.

“I honestly wouldn’t go. I really would not go. Honestly, I’d probably just get homeschooled.”

Nikita said while about 30 students caught the user-pays bus, not everyone could afford it.

“They are currently stuck between a rock and a hard place.

“Some of them are managing to do carpooling. I’ve had families reach out to me that are saying, ‘Well, we might actually have to quit our jobs and relocate’, and sell their homes because they just can’t manage this.”

Loans and savings pay for service

Other parents and guardians in Rongotea have found ways to pay for the bus, for now at least.

“My boss is actually paying for it. I actually have to pay that back otherwise my daughter wouldn’t be going to school because I cannot afford that, being a single-income family.” said Stacey Monks.

“At the moment I’ve had to go into my savings to get the teenager who’s at [Palmerston North school] QEC, just for the term, to get him to school,” said a Rongotea grandmother, who asked not to be named.

“We’ve already started saving for next term because that’s another bill that has to be there, but at this time of the year you’ve got a high school uniform that needs to be paid for and you’ve got devices and stationery and all the rest of it. It’s just a cost that’s just unfair for our rural communities,” said Jess Greene, who is also leading the charge to stand up for affected families.

Review is routine – ministry

Ministry group manager, school transport, James Meffan said reviewing school bus routes was routine, as the location and number of eligible students constantly changed.

Last year it looked at 265 routes, out of more than 1400.

As well as the 13 cancelled routes it added 13 new ones, merged 23, lengthened 73 and shortened 114.

Meffan said it would put on buses in places such as Rongotea if enough students were enrolled at their closest school.

The ministry did not review bus routes with the intention of saving money.

School ponders user-pays buses

At Palmerston North Boys’ High School, rector David Bovey said more than 300 students were affected by the changes, and the school was thinking of putting on its own user-pays services.

“A number of young men who were due to come here in year nine this year, who are from surrounding areas, decided not to because they can’t get in here on the bus,” he said.

“We’ve had some of the senior boys who have been trying to make their own way here, but it’s been a real issue for a number of parents. We had a couple of boys who couldn’t start on time, at the same time as everyone else, because they had to organise transport.”

Education Minister Erica Stanford said bus routes weren’t for her to decide.

“The school bus rules and regulations have been in place for over 100 years and have never been changed and at some point in the future we’ll need to take a look at them, but it is an operational job for the ministry so ministers don’t get involved.”

For now, parents such as Nikita Walker were hoping the ministry does a U-turn – something that has happened before, when services were under threat in the 1990s.

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/2026/02/10/just-not-fair-manawatu-parents-using-savings-and-loans-for-school-buses/

Unpacking Bad Bunny’s Superbowl show – an alternative joyful vision for America

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Consuelo Martinez Reyes, Senior Lecturer in Spanish and Latin American Studies, Macquarie University

EPA/John G. Mabanglo

Puerto Rican singer Bad Bunny (Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio) made history this weekend as the first Superbowl halftime headliner to sing only in Spanish – that too at a moment when the United States is facing a hostile anti-immigration climate.

The show’s message of love and togetherness has reverberated across countries and cultures. It is also chock-full of symbolism and messaging that represents an alternative America to the one taking shape under Donald Trump.

Bad Bunny performed in the halftime show of the Super Bowl between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks.
Chris Torres/EPA

A fiesta celebrating Puerto Rican culture

The performance took place in a noticeably Puerto Rican setting. Fresh coconuts and piragua (snow cone) carts led the way to domino players and boxers (Puerto Rico is the world’s largest contributor of boxing champions per capita).

Bad Bunny opened with the viral hit Tití me preguntó (Tití asked me). He walks through a crew wearing costumes typical of Puerto Rican peasants, with traditional straw pava hats and humble string ropes for belts.

This sugarcane field set is a nod to an important aspect of Caribbean history, wherein sugarcane plantations represent a shared history of slavery. At the same time, sugarcanes signify an immediate link to land, hard work, national identity, and Puerto Rico’s agricultural roots.

The nation’s sugarcane industry was aggressively changed under Operation Bootstrap, a series of economic projects pushed by the US federal government from around 1947. This encouraged the establishment of factories, and private and foreign investment, to the detriment of the island’s economy and infrastructure. It provoked mass unemployment and migration to the US and, by the 1950s, had forever changed Puerto Ricans’ way of life.

While some audiences criticised the choice to sing the songs Tití me preguntó and Yo perreo sola (I twerk alone), due to their sexual lyrics, others lauded their inclusion as a form of LGBTQIA+ inclusivity. These were followed by the party-pleasers Safaera, Eoo, Party and Voy a llevarte pa PR.

Lady Gaga made a surprise appearance, singing a salsa-style version of her hit song Die with a Smile, atop a stage replica of the famous El Morro fortress in San Juan.

Gaga wore a light blue dress of the same shade that once featured in Puerto Rico’s original flag. This flag, however, was banned in 1948 under an American gag law (which ended in 1957) that tried to stifle the island’s independence movement.

During Gaga’s song, the scene of a live wedding (yes, the couple actually got married) cements Benito’s message of togetherness.

A bride and groom had their wedding held live onstage.
AP Photo/Frank Franklin II

A show loaded with symbolism

Apart from matching the wedding theme, the prominence of white clothing in the show reflects a reality of Caribbean daily life, wherein white was often worn to combat the harsh heat.

It also recalls various attire customarily worn in local music genres such as bomba and plena, as well as in Afro-Cuban religious traditions such as santería.

Benito’s own white shirt is emblazoned with the name “Ocasio” and the number 64. This is an homage to his late-uncle, who was born in 1964. The tribute offers a tender lesson on Spanish naming customs, as well as the cultural importance of family.

At one point, we see Benito hand his recently-won Grammy trophy (his album Debí Tirar Más Fotos was the first-ever Spanish-language album to win Album of The Year) to kid actor Lincoln Fox. Viewers were quick to point out Fox’s resemblance to Liam Conejos, the five-year-old boy whose detention by ICE agents last month caused national outrage.

Ricky Martin sang the heavily political track Lo que le pasó a Hawaii (What happened to Hawaii). This song pleads for Puerto Rico to not share a similar fate to Hawaii – the last state to join the union, at the cost of significant cultural loss, land, language and tradition.

Martin is framed by sparks coming from electrical poles in the background. They symbolise Puerto Rico’s poor electrical infrastructure, which was worsened in the aftermath of hurricanes María and Irma in 2017, and the electrical grid’s privatisation in 2021.

The show closes on a lighter note, with songs that highlight Puerto Ricanness. The track Café con Ron (Coffee with rum) takes the audience back to island customs, and the opening cañaveral (sugarcane fields).

Meanwhile, DtMF/Debí tirar más fotos (I should have taken more photos) evokes nostalgia for the past, and serves as a reminder of intercontinental unity.

Behind the crowd of pleneros (Puerto Rican drum players), a background screen reads: “The only thing more powerful than hate is love” – a direct challenge to the the anti-immigration policies currently permeating the US.

Benito track list also pays tribute to iconic reggaeton predecessors, with the inclusion of tracks by Tego Calderón, and Daddy Yankee’s 2004 hit Gasolina, among others.

Freedom in the face of oppression

President Donald Trump described the event as “one of the worst, EVER!” and a “slap in the face” to the US. I never thought I would agree with Trump, but a slap in the face it was – one that reminded us all of the fabric of what constitutes American culture.

Bad Bunny’s performance not only provided visibility to the significant Latinx/Latine population that holds the US together. It also served as evidence that accommodating to Anglo culture is no longer a requirement to fit in – especially not for the younger generations.

The halftime show served as a source of pride for Latine people around the world.
John G. Mabanglo/EPA

As Bad Bunny pronounced the famous line “God Bless America” – going on to list multiple countries and territories, including Puerto Rico – he imparts a lesson all Spanish-speakers have been given at least once in our lives. For us, “America” is not limited to the land that lies between Canada and Mexico, but rather extends across continents.

Benito’s geography lesson closes with Seguimos aquí (We are still here) which, due to the Spanish language’s use of the present tense as future, can also be translated into “we will continue to be here”. A powerful message indeed.

Consuelo Martinez Reyes 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. Unpacking Bad Bunny’s Superbowl show – an alternative joyful vision for America – https://theconversation.com/unpacking-bad-bunnys-superbowl-show-an-alternative-joyful-vision-for-america-275545

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/10/unpacking-bad-bunnys-superbowl-show-an-alternative-joyful-vision-for-america-275545/

Australian satanic child sex abuse ring has alleged links to NZ

Source: Radio New Zealand

A police sign outside a station in Brisbane, Australia. 123RF

Police are working with Australian counterparts on an investigation into a satanic child sex abuse material ring with alleged links to New Zealand.

New South Wales police announced last week that detectives from their Sex Crimes Squad had charged a sixth man and were referring a further 145 suspects to international law enforcement agencies following an investigation into a satanic child sex abuse material ring as part of an operation called Strike Force Constantine.

Police said investigators had identified offenders from New Zealand, USA, Canada, Mexico, Europe, South America, and South East Asia.

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

RNZ asked New South Wales police for information on the New Zealand-based suspects and how many there were.

A spokesperson said any questions needed to be directed to New Zealand police.

RNZ asked police what work was being done by New Zealand officers in relation to the investigation, what co-operation there had been with overseas authorities and how many suspects were based in this country.

Detective Inspector Stuart Mills said New Zealand Police were “working with the New South Wales Police on this matter and will support them as requested”.

“We are not in a position to comment further at this time.”

New South Wales police said last week that Strike Force Constantine was established by State Crime Command’s Child Exploitation Internet Unit to investigate the online distribution of child sexual abuse involving ritualistic or satanic themes.

“During the investigation, detectives uncovered a Sydney-based paedophile network actively involved in possessing, distributing, and facilitating this material through a website administered internationally.”

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/2026/02/10/australian-satanic-child-sex-abuse-ring-has-alleged-links-to-nz/

Fatal Crash: Trentham

Source: New Zealand Police

One person has died following a crash in Trentham this afternoon.

The crash, involving a vehicle and a cyclist was reported to emergency services about 4pm.

The intersection of Messines Avenue and Seddul Bahr Road remains closed while the Serious Crash Unit continue to make enquiries.

The death will be referred to the Coroner.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/10/fatal-crash-trentham/

Taiwan’s First AI-Native Cybersecurity Company Lists on Innovation Board, Bringing Real-World AI Defense to Global Markets

Source: Media Outreach

TAIPEI, TAIWAN – Media OutReach Newswire – 10 February 2026 – CyCraft Technology Corporation (TWSE: 7823), Taiwan’s first pure-play AI-native cybersecurity company, has officially listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange Innovation Board, marking a major milestone for Asia’s emerging AI-driven security leaders.

CyCraft’s founders joined representatives from the Taiwan Stock Exchange, Yuanta Securities, auditors, and legal advisors to celebrate the company’s listing on the TWSE Innovation Board.

CyCraft is forged in one of the world’s most challenging cyber environments. Taiwan faces persistent and large-scale cyber threats from highly-motivated threat actors targeting government, semiconductor supply chains, financial systems, and critical infrastructure. Rather than theorizing about threats, CyCraft has spent years defending against them at national and industry scale.

That experience has produced real-world operational advantages global markets increasingly demand: early-warning intelligence, autonomous machine-speed defense, and field-proven AI automation that cannot be casually replicated.

As generative AI reshapes software development, many SaaS categories face commoditization through “vibe-coding.” Cybersecurity stands apart. Mission-critical defense requires real adversarial data, ultra-low latency, zero-configuration precision, continuous adaptation against sophisticated attacks, and regulatory-grade trust. These capabilities are not synthetic. AI does not replace cyber defense—it amplifies defenders who already operate in real operational environments.

CyCraft’s platform is built around three growth engines:

Enterprise Cyber Resilience.

Its flagship XCockpit AI platform operates over 600K sensors, protecting hundreds of government agencies, financial institutions, and semiconductor leaders across Asia-Pacific. The platform delivers preemptive exposure discovery, automated attack-path simulation, SEMI E187-compliant supply-chain risk mapping, and autonomous triage and response. The shift from reactive protection to preemptive resilience defines CyCraft’s core value proposition.

AI Agent & LLM Security.

As enterprises deploy LLMs and autonomous agents, CyCraft addresses a rapidly emerging risk layer. XecGuard provides ultra-low-latency AI guardrails to detect and prevent prompt injection, jailbreaks, data exfiltration, and tool misuse in real time. Paired with XecART, an automated red-teaming and evaluation platform, CyCraft delivers a scalable, cloud-based and on-prem AI gateway for secure multi-agent orchestration.

The XecGuard and XecART dashboards enable enterprise AI governance with real-time guardrails, automated red teaming, and flexible deployment via on-premises environments or cloud-based APIs.

Enterprise Cyber Resilience.

Its flagship XCockpit AI platform operates over 600K sensors, protecting hundreds of government agencies, financial institutions, and semiconductor leaders across Asia-Pacific. The platform delivers preemptive exposure discovery, automated attack-path simulation, SEMI E187-compliant supply-chain risk mapping, and autonomous triage and response. The shift from reactive protection to preemptive resilience defines CyCraft’s core value proposition.

AI Agent & LLM Security.

As enterprises deploy LLMs and autonomous agents, CyCraft addresses a rapidly emerging risk layer. XecGuard provides ultra-low-latency AI guardrails to detect and prevent prompt injection, jailbreaks, data exfiltration, and tool misuse in real time. Paired with XecART, an automated red-teaming and evaluation platform, CyCraft delivers a scalable, cloud-based and on-prem AI gateway for secure multi-agent orchestration.

The XecGuard and XecART dashboards enable enterprise AI governance with real-time guardrails, automated red teaming, and flexible deployment via on-premises environments or cloud-based APIs.

XecGuard enables enterprise AI governance with real-time guardrails and flexible deployment via on-premises environments or cloud-based APIs.

Unmanned Systems Security.

CyCraft’s XecDefend platform pioneers cyber protection and disruption capabilities for AI-driven anti-drone defense. The solution enables autonomous detection, soft-kill response, and resilient protection for unmanned aerial, maritime, and ground systems—offering software-defined defense for critical infrastructure and defense supply chains.

CyCraft’s credibility is reinforced by third-party validation, including seven appearances in Gartner research, three MITRE ATT&CK evaluations with zero-configuration and zero-latency performance, and the “Next-Big” Award from former Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen, recognizing CyCraft as the “TSMC of cybersecurity.”.

In 2025 alone, CyCraft handled multiple critical incidents for Taiwan-listed companies and completed over ten forensic investigations in support of cyber insurance engagements in Japan.

Chairman Benson Wu stated, “In Taiwan, with AI, we help secure the world. This listing accelerates our global expansion through organic growth and strategic M&A. Our goal is to surpass 50% overseas revenue by 2030 and build Asia’s most trusted AI-native cybersecurity brand.”

Disclaimer: The information contained herein does not constitute advice.

https://www.cycraft.com/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/cycraft
https://x.com/cycraft_corp

Hashtag: #CyCraft #AIsecurity #Cybersecurity #InnovationBoard #AITaiwan #GlobalExpansion

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/2026/02/10/taiwans-first-ai-native-cybersecurity-company-lists-on-innovation-board-bringing-real-world-ai-defense-to-global-markets/

Wellington sewage outflow could kill marine reserve’s kelp forest ecosystem – marine biologist

Source: Radio New Zealand

Untreated water leaked onto the capital’s south coast beaches due to the Moa Point Treatment Plant flooding and being turned off. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

A marine biologist says the impacts of Wellington’s sewage overflow on a nearby marine reserve is depressing to witness.

About 70 million litres of untreated waste is now being pumped 1.8 kilometres out into Cook Strait after the Moa Point treatment plant failed last week.

The waste is now being screened for solid items like wet wipes and sanitary items but is otherwise raw sewage.

The capital’s South Coast beaches are currently off limits because of contamination.

Dr Christopher Cornwall is a senior lecturer in Marine Biology at Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington told Checkpoint that sewage was still potentially getting out onto the area’s rocky reef ecosystems and the kelp forests around places like Taputeranga Marine Reserve and the rest of the South Coast, but also into some of the deep reefs.

“So that untreated sewage is still having ecological impacts, as to how big those impacts are we don’t really know at the moment.”

The South Coast marine reserve near where the sewage was being released was one of the best examples of marine protection in Aotearoa, he said.

“So we have things like increased numbers and sizes of pāua, koura, crayfish, we have things like a lot of fin fish species, so these will, towards the pipeline these will probably all be impacted.

“As to what those impacts are we’re not 100 percent sure, they could range from small immeasurable impacts if this sewage pumping is stopped soon or they could range to larger ecological impacts such as the mortality of that kelp forest and the abalone that lives in it, the pāua.”

Asked whether there were any historical examples that could give some indication of what might happen, Cornwall said that during the 1950s untreated sewage went out to a kelp forest off the California coastline and “it caused long term die-off of that kelp forest”.

“In the 80s there was treated sewage that came out into that same area and it had lesser impacts.”

In New Zealand, the treated sewage had measurable impacts on the seaweed community and potentially on the pāua at a Porirua reef although that data was still being analysed, he said.

Research that had been done at Porirua showed that there was a loss of some of the forest forming brown seaweeds or big kelp which were the habitats and food for a large range of shellfish and fin fish species, he said.

People snorkeling at Taputeranga Marine Reserve in May 2022. Kristine Zipfel

Seaweed takes up nitrogen naturally but things like the sewage outfall can cause this to become elevated, he said.

“That means the seaweeds taking advantage of that excess nitrogen and it can shift the balance in that seaweed ecosystem, so essentially it’s taken up into their tissues and other nasties are also taken up into there and it can change the way that they function, for example it can cause some species that are invasive or opportunistic to increase their growth rates and out compete our native species.”

The worst case scenario, which is less likely, would be the die-off of that kelp forest ecosystem – pāua, kina, koura and the fin fish species that live in that area, he said.

“We don’t know at this point whether that will occur, it will depend on how long it takes for that sewage to actually start being treated.”

Smaller impacts are more likely, he said.

“You can get things like green tide algae, so ulva, which will start out-competing some of the natives and increase.”

That had happened in the past when there had been problems at Moa Point, he said.

If the sewage kept being pumped out it could also lead to things like harmful algal blooms, he said.

There was no way to mitigate the effects if sewage kept being pumped into the area, he said.

“The only way that we can actually mitigate this is by making sure that this doesn’t happen in the first place and then secondly I guess we need to use this as an example of why we shouldn’t be pumping our sewage out onto places like the South Coast, like the jewel in Wellington’s crown as some people have put it recently. So we really need to think about using this as an example of what we shouldn’t be doing for our wastewater management system.”

It was depressing and disheartening to see sewage pumping out so close to the Taputeranga marine reserve, he 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/2026/02/10/wellington-sewage-outflow-could-kill-marine-reserves-kelp-forest-ecosystem-marine-biologist/

Fatal crash: Wairoa

Source: New Zealand Police

One person has died following a two-vehicle crash in Wairoa this afternoon, and two other people remain in critical condition.

Emergency services received reports of the crash about 3pm.

The intersection of Black Street and Archilles Street/ State Highway 2 remains closed while the Serious Crash Unit continue to make enquiries.

The death will be referred to the Coroner.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre.

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/10/fatal-crash-wairoa-2/

Bunnings decision may open door to facial recognition surveillance free-for-all

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Margarita Vladimirova, Sessional Academic, Faculty of Law, Monash University

A seemingly minor decision handed down last week by the Administrative Review Tribunal may open the door to widespread use of facial recognition technology in shops and other privately owned spaces in Australia.

The decision held that Bunnings was entitled to an exception to some rules around the use of facial recognition technology. In particular, it said the hardware giant did not need to seek the consent of customers before using the technology on them.

The tribunal’s decision may yet be appealed to the Federal Court – but if it stands, it raises worrying questions about the future of privacy, biometric data, surveillance and consent in Australia.

What the Bunnings case is about

Between January 2019 and November 2021, Bunnings conducted a trial of facial recognition technology across at least 62 stores in Victoria and New South Wales, following an initial two-month pilot in November 2018.

The technology was integrated into in-store security cameras and captured the facial images of all individuals entering the premises. These images were then analysed to generate a searchable database of facial identifiers.

In November 2024 the Privacy Commissioner ruled that Bunnings breached the privacy of “likely hundreds of thousands” of Australians through its use of facial recognition technology.

There were five key points in the finding:

  1. customers did not consent to the collection of their facial information

  2. customers did not know their biometrics were being collected, due to signage that was unclear and sometimes missing

  3. Bunnings lacked relevant staff training on using facial recognition technology

  4. Bunnings lacked clear policy describing how they managed collected personal information, and

  5. the use of the technology was more than the “minimum, reasonably required to mitigate” organised retail crime and threatening situations.

Overall, the use of facial recognition technology on thousands of people to prevent retail crime was declared to be unproportionate. However, the commissioner acknowledged the technology’s potential to reduce violence and theft.

The tribunal decision on exception

In its review of the Privacy Commisioner’s determination, the Administrative Review Tribunal supported all the Privacy Commissioner’s findings but one: the one related to consent.

The tribunal set aside the Privacy Commissioner’s finding that Bunnings violated one of the privacy principles by collecting facial information from customers without consent, arguing that Bunnings’ actions fall under an exception to the requirement for consent.

What is the exception?

Australia’s privacy act protects personal sensitive information, including facial information. It states that such information can be collected only with consent of an individual.

However, there is a list of exceptions provided in section 16 (A).

The exception the tribunal considers applies to Bunnings is:

the entity reasonably believes that the collection, use or disclosure is necessary to lessen or prevent a serious threat to the life, health or safety of any individual, or to public health or safety.

The tribunal collected personal testimonies from Bunnings workers. It found the workers reasonably believed the technology is necessary to combat retail crime and protect staff and customers from violence, abuse and intimidation within their stores. These sometimes involved weapons, acts of physical violence or aggression, death threats or other threats of violence.

The future of biometrics and consent

This decision has consequences well beyond Bunnings. It may be crucial to the control of individuals’ biometric information in Australia.

If the decision is not appealed to the Federal Court, we may see a future in which retailers and other organisations can use biometric technologies on members of the public without consent. All they will need to justify their actions is a risk-management narrative based on personal statements.

This shift would make consent an optional constraint. It could be displaced whenever biometric surveillance is framed as efficient, preventative or protective.

The Bunnings case risks eroding the basic structure of privacy law.

Biometric data is unique, permanent and non-revocable. Yet the decision treats biometric data collection as dependent on the needs and beliefs of the entity collecting it. The choice of the individuals affected does not come into it.

Privacy law and surveillance

The circumstances of the Bunnings case seem different from what was envisioned in 1988 when the privacy laws were drafted. For example, the OAIC Guidelines of the Privacy Act 1988 focused on more severe cases:

a potentially harmful threat […] such as a threatened outbreak of infectious disease. This allows […] preventative action to stop a serious threat from escalating before it materialises.

[…] if time permits, attempts could be made to seek the consent from the relevant individuals for the collection, use or disclosure, before relying on this permitted general situation.

These guidelines considered consent to be a cornerstone of biometric collection, and not easily waived.

However, if facial recognition becomes normalised, privacy protection becomes more difficult. Data management protocols may need to be tightened, and laws may need to be changed.

The ruling lowers the threshold for more surveillance. If non-consensual biometric processing is accepted in retail, the same logic can apply to workplaces, schools and other public but privately owned spaces. Each expansion can be justified using the same language of safety, deterrence or necessity.

Most importantly, the decision reshapes the meaning of consent itself. Consent risks becoming symbolic rather than operative. It may be formally recognised in law, but practically irrelevant.

Margarita Vladimirova used to work for the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner.

ref. Bunnings decision may open door to facial recognition surveillance free-for-all – https://theconversation.com/bunnings-decision-may-open-door-to-facial-recognition-surveillance-free-for-all-275392

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/10/bunnings-decision-may-open-door-to-facial-recognition-surveillance-free-for-all-275392/

If fracking begins in the Kimberley, it could damage a sacred river

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Melissa Haswell, Professor of Health, Safety and Environment, School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology

Under the soils of the Kimberley lies one of the world’s last undeveloped large-scale reservoirs of onshore gas, according to the gas company hoping to extract it.

Last month, the Western Australian Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recommended approval for Bennett Resources, a subsidiary of Black Mountain Energy, to begin exploration by drilling 20 wells across ten sites near the Kimberley’s Martuwarra Fitzroy River and applying hydraulic fracturing (fracking).

If officially approved and results are favourable, exploration is likely just the start. The company – majority-owned by US oil and gas company Black Mountain – wants to begin full-scale production to extract an estimated 420 billion cubic metres of gas. Doing so would require hundreds or thousands of wells drilled into many aquifers, with connecting roads, gas processing plants, wastewater ponds, water treatment plants, compressor stations and new pipelines.

For the mining-friendly WA government, the economic benefits would appeal. But the EPA’s recommendation has triggered an immediate backlash from Aboriginal and environmental groups. The Office of Appeals Commissioner reports an unprecedented number of appeals have been lodged before the February 10 deadline.

As health and Indigenous knowledge experts, we have real concern about these plans. We now know much more about the harms fracking can do to the health of humans, wildlife, groundwater and rivers.

What is this project?

Black Mountain Energy has exploration rights over a 3,700 square kilometre area in the Canning Basin between Fitzroy Crossing and Derby. The exploration wells would be drilled west of Fitzroy Crossing.

Major oil and gas companies interested in this basin’s gas reservoirs have progressively pulled out due to vast infrastructure costs.

But Black Mountain Energy appears determined. The company first announced its plans in 2020 but encountered difficulties raising funding. It’s not guaranteed to proceed even with state backing, as the federal government has to sign off too.

If these first wells go ahead, fracking rigs will drill down 2–5km into the rock, before shifting into horizontal mode. Then, the rigs force megalitres of fresh water, sand and chemicals under high pressure into the rock layers to fracture them. This allows methane gas contaminated with toxic gases, including benzene and toluene, to be collected at the surface. Millions of litres of contaminated salty wastewater are also produced and must be managed. The process is repeated up to 70 times per well.

Some of the wells will be drilled within 2km of important tributaries of the Martuwarra Fitzroy River system.

Most gas would be exported, which would likely require a new pipeline to Karratha, almost 1,000km away.

Proposed exploration wells would be within two kilometres of Mount Hardman Creek, a tributary of Martuwarra Fitzroy River.
Martin Pritchard/Environs Kimberley, CC BY-NC-ND

How was this assessed?

The moratorium on fracking in WA was only lifted in 2018, following a state Inquiry into Hydraulic Fracturing. The government stated 20 protections would be in place before fracking would be allowed, but only half of these are complete.

The WA government points to the fact fracking is banned in 98% of the state. But the 2% where it isn’t banned covers parts of the breathtaking and culturally rich Kimberley region.

In considering this exploration project, the state EPA found the harm to the environment, culture and human health to be “unlikely” or “insignificant”.

But an independent federal scientific committee on onshore gas and coal found there were risks to threatened species from ecological disturbance and possible chemical contamination.

Since 2018, the evidence base of the environmental, physical and spiritual health risks around fracking have advanced significantly through documentation of Aboriginal knowledge and Western scientific research.

Threats to a sacred river

For the Kimberley’s First Nations groups, the waters of the Martuwarra Fitzroy River System lie at the heart of their spirituality.

Aboriginal people consider the Martuwarra River of Life and its groundwater systems to be an ancient life force – serpent beings that bring the Kimberley vast life and landscapes.

Stories carried through generations emphasise a deep moral responsibility to protect and manage the river and its groundwater. The deeply held spiritual beliefs of the people of the Kimberley are grounded in their values, ethics and virtues as a duty of care under First Law to protect public interests, ground and surface waters of the Martuwarra Fitzroy River, and the whole living system.

The Martuwarra Fitzroy River Council (chaired by co-author Anne Poelina) and the Kimberley Land Council strongly reject both the Valhalla proposal and the EPA’s view that cultural risks from fracking and water contamination are low.

Evidence from Western scientific research

As well as adding to climate change, these projects can damage waterways and groundwater, wildlife and human health at every step, from extraction to transport to processing to liquefaction and eventual burning.

Since the 2018 fracking inquiry, the rigour and quantity of evidence showing the harms have significantly increased. There are now consistent findings of harm to people living near fracking operations in nations such as the United States, Canada and Australia.

This evidence base captures risks to water quality (through contamination and over-extraction) and air quality (including emissions of toxic gases such as benzene and toluene).

Risks to human health associated with air and water contamination include increased risk of hospitalisation for cardiovascular, respiratory and kidney diseases and some cancers, especially in children. Higher rates of birth complications and birth defects have been observed downwind and downstream of oil and gas operations.

To our knowledge, there are no studies demonstrating these risks to environment, climate and health can be reduced through regulation.

What’s next?

More than 35,000 people live in the Kimberley, and around half identify as Aboriginal. The region is extremely sensitive to climate change and its people are at heightened risk from most health issues associated with oil and gas operations.

The WA EPA recommended approval of this exploration project without fully examining the evidence. The agency excluded human health concerns due to transient and “sparse populations”.

Policymakers must heed the accumulated evidence showing clear risks of harm. To approve drilling and fracking in the Kimberley is to approve a process we now know does damage to many things we care about, from human health to wildlife to culture to sacred rivers.

Black Mountain Energy was approached for comment but did not respond before deadline.

Melissa Haswell is affiliated with the Climate and Health Alliance, Doctors for the Environment Australia and the Public Health Association of Australia.

Anne Poelina is affiliated with Martuwarra Fitzroy River Council and receives funding from Martuwarra Fitzroy River Council.

David Shearman 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. If fracking begins in the Kimberley, it could damage a sacred river – https://theconversation.com/if-fracking-begins-in-the-kimberley-it-could-damage-a-sacred-river-274631

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/10/if-fracking-begins-in-the-kimberley-it-could-damage-a-sacred-river-274631/

How delays in Australia’s switch to clean energy are hurting workers

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Darryn Snell, Associate professor, School of Management, RMIT University

Australia is still dragging its feet on decarbonising the economy. Last September, the Albanese government committed to a 62–70% reduction in carbon emissions by 2035 and net zero by 2050. However, only one month later, the government conceded it would fall just shy of its 2030 target and likely miss net zero without significant changes.

Delays to the construction of renewable energy projects around the country means coal-fired power stations scheduled for closure have had their operations extended. The many reasons for Australia’s slow progress on decarbonisation are well documented, and include a lack of transmission lines, poor federal coordination, and uncertainty over the lifetime of coal-fired power stations. But the implications of these delays for workers has been largely overlooked.

In our recent book, we analyse numerous reports and studies that forecast the clean energy transition will stimulate a jobs boom. In these predictions, new green career opportunities will mean workers who lose their jobs in fossil fuel sectors can take advantage of new job opportunities in a “just transition” — one in which no-one is left behind.

But are these claims true? Our research shows many of new renewable energy jobs are short-term and insecure: they are heavily focused on the construction and installation phase of projects, rather than long-term operations. The delays in the energy transition presents additional challenges for workers and their communities.

Old coal power plants are becoming unsafe

Coal-fired power generation still contributes 45% of Australia’s total electricity generation. Many of the roughly 15 remaining coal-fired power stations are ageing and becoming increasingly unreliable.

Recent research published by Reliability Watch found these power plants have suffered a combined 119 breakdowns over the six months to September 2025, and were unable to meet their generation commitments 22% of the time. For workers employed in these power stations it means their workplaces are becoming less safe to work in.

Queensland’s Callide Power Stations has suffered a series of serious incidents in recent years, including a generator unit explosion and cooling tower collapse in which workers’ lives were put at serious risk.

Similarly, Victoria’s 1970s-era Yallourn W Power Station has suffered a series of major breakdowns. In June 2025, a large section of an air duct crashed down onto scaffolding used for ongoing maintenance work. Luckily no workers were in the vicinity at the time. The plant is scheduled to close in 2028.

With delays in renewable energy coming online, state governments have had to extend the operational life of some ageing generators, such as the Eraring plant in New South Wales. Unions, quite rightly, are raising concerns about how worker safety can be maintained until closure.

Promised careers put on hold

To remain competitive in the job market, workers at coal plants slated to close have been encouraged to become more employable by gaining sustainability and environmental skills. Authorities have encouraged education and training providers to meet the workforce needs of the new “green” economy.

Universities and TAFE institutes have responded by developing new programs to provide qualifications in emerging occupations such as green construction, battery manufacturing, green steel, hydrogen production and offshore wind. The Clean Energy Council has even developed a careers guide for people interested in new clean energy jobs.

The problem is, the new jobs may not arrive in time. Workers who will lose their jobs when Yallourn closes have been encouraged to reskill to work in the offshore wind industry.

Unfortunately, ongoing delays in offshore wind developments means it’s unlikely there will be any local jobs in offshore wind when the power station closes in two years’ time. For energy regions, the uncertainty surrounding new renewable energy projects places them at risk of becoming “left-behind places” with high unemployment and socio-economic disadvantage.

In an earlier Conversation article, we pointed out workers in offshore oil and gas are also facing uncertainty, but decommissioning work could provide important job opportunities. Coordination of transition strategies at federal and state level will be vital in assisting both these groups of workers.

The environmental justification for accelerating Australia’s decarbonisation efforts is unquestionable. However, the tens of thousands of workers who will be relied on to deliver this transition must not be overlooked. They must be a primary consideration in any real “just” transition.

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. How delays in Australia’s switch to clean energy are hurting workers – https://theconversation.com/how-delays-in-australias-switch-to-clean-energy-are-hurting-workers-272818

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/10/how-delays-in-australias-switch-to-clean-energy-are-hurting-workers-272818/

As beautiful as they were powerful: Jon Kudelka’s political cartoons were made with true conviction

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Stephanie Brookes, Senior Lecturer, School of Media, Film and Journalism, Monash University

The media and cartooning world shifted mightily between Jon Kudelka’s earliest contributions to The Mercury in Hobart in the early 1990s and to his last regular gig at The Saturday Paper, before the diagnosis and treatment of his glioblastoma sparked retirement in April 2025.

In contributions to these publications, and The Australian and The Age, Kudelka’s cartoons have been published for readers across the political spectrum, resisting the polarisation of the contemporary Australian media.

The award-winning cartoonist died in Hobart on Sunday, aged 53. Alongside the cartoons, he had a flourishing creative career evident to anyone who wandered into the Kudelka Gallery in Salamanca Place that was envisioned as a “retirement policy”.

The national conscience

If cartoonists are the persistent voice of the national conscience, then Kudelka’s was superficially quizzical but often searing in its conviction.

He turned his attention to hypocrisy, political grandstanding and manipulation; or to deep-seated social and political inequality in cartoons as beautiful as they were powerful.


Jon Kudelka

In 2016, Jackson Pollock’s Blue Poles, in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, was valued at A$350 million. Coalition Senator James Paterson – either mischievously or out of proper philistinism – suggested we might now sell the painting and bank the profit.

Kudelka’s cartoon invites you in, almost sweetly, with the classic cliché and the childish-looking “suits”. He then skewers the reductive economic thinking with the punchline and exposes the violence inherent in the system with the small but savage chainsaw. But look how beautifully, how affectionately, he copied the great artwork.

The man himself knew a lot about art, and he could really paint.

When Kudelka won his first Walkley Award in 2008 for Welcome to Brendan, the members of the judging panel pointed to the way the “wistful, beautiful drawing” has a subtle power. It offers insight into the isolation of then Opposition Leader Brendan Nelson, as he struggled to decide on a position on Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s upcoming apology to Australia’s Indigenous peoples.

A decade later, Kudelka won a second Walkley for a cartoon with a sharper edge. From the Heart calls for a visceral response, reimagining the shape of Uluru as a raised middle finger to capture response to the Turnbull government’s dismissal of the main recommendations of the Uluru Statement from the Heart.

Kudelka’s cartoons paid attention to the issues, large and small, whose many threads make up the fabric of national life. They invited readers in, while laying bare the true shape of power and influence.

On 14 October 2023, the day of the Indigenous Voice to Parliament referendum, his cartoon in The Mercury pushed back against those political slogans that played on voters’ feelings and fears rather than the facts, reminding them it wasn’t too late to inform themselves.

A willingness to think publicly

Kudelka’s contribution to Australian cartooning is larger than the cartoons he leaves behind. It lives in his willingness to think and reflect publicly about the profession: the licence editorial cartoonists are afforded to contribute meaningfully to the life of the nation, and the (mundane as well as exceptional) sacrifices this requires.

We interviewed him late last year for our research on Australian editorial cartooning. Surrounded by the Tassie-inspired artwork that fills his gallery, he reflected on his career with unusual openness, wit and warmth.


Jon Kudelka

His somewhat accidental spearheading of a cartoonists’ boycott of the 2023 Walkleys offers a powerful insight into his convictions.

In a blog post, Kudelka explained he was choosing not to enter a cartoon that year after a review of award categories failed to introduce a new category on climate reporting, and the ongoing sponsorship of the Walkleys by Ampol.

He argued:

Whether this sponsorship influences journos or not, people seeing a bunch of allegedly well informed media types hobnobbing on a fossil fuel company’s dime makes people think well they must think this isn’t so bad so maybe it isn’t (spoiler alert: it is).

Some cartoonists followed suit. Others disagreed. This sparked a range of conversations about the changing culture within cartooning and, more broadly, about the history of the awards and their founder.

Change followed: the Australian Cartoonists’ Association instituted a new award for a climate-change related cartoon; the Walkley Foundation moved both to change its sponsorship policy and distance itself from the racist views espoused by W. G. Walkley in a 1961 newspaper column.

The issue continues to frame – if not define – Kudelka’s online presence. The front page of his blog now reads:

I mostly use this blog for causing trouble with the Walkley Awards and selling calendars these days, but mostly the latter.

In April 2025, Kudelka retired after more than three decades of professional cartooning. He reflected in a wry piece for The Saturday Paper that being an Australian political cartoonist had started “feeling a bit like Sisyphus rolling a boulder up a hill every day”.

He was happier, he realised, taking his time “making things”, with the weight of the daily deadline lifted from his shoulders.

‘Not today’

Kudelka left us with two self-portrait cartoons.

In the first, the cartoonist stares into the “abyss” for inspiration as a deadline approaches.

In the second, he potters about his studio, looking for his pen.

Meanwhile, on the wall hangs a gentle phrase laced with the honesty, humour and satirical sharpness that characterised Kudelka’s creative and cartooning life: “Not today”.


Jon Kudelka

Stephanie Brookes receives funding from the Australian Research Council. She is an Associate Member of the Australian Cartoonists’ Association.

Richard Scully receives funding from the Australian Research Council. He is an Associate Member of the Australian Cartoonists’ Association.

Robert Phiddian receives funding from the Australian Research Council. He is an Associate Member of the Australian Cartoonists’ Association.

ref. As beautiful as they were powerful: Jon Kudelka’s political cartoons were made with true conviction – https://theconversation.com/as-beautiful-as-they-were-powerful-jon-kudelkas-political-cartoons-were-made-with-true-conviction-275538

Evening Report: https://eveningreport.nz/2026/02/10/as-beautiful-as-they-were-powerful-jon-kudelkas-political-cartoons-were-made-with-true-conviction-275538/

Government needs to ‘sit down and have a conversation with us’ on India trade deal – Hipkins

Source: Radio New Zealand

Labour leader Chris Hipkins. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Labour is getting closer to confirming support for the India Free Trade agreement, but says the full text has raised more questions that need answering.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Trade Minister Todd McClay announced the agreement three days before Christmas, touting wins for several industries.

During the announcement, New Zealand First leader Winston Peters revealed he would not be supporting the deal, saying it gave away too much – particularly on immigration – for too little, including dairy.

The divide between the coalition parties means National and ACT will need support from at least one opposition party to get legislation as part of the deal through Parliament.

McClay later revealed NZ First had [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/political/585343/nz-first-pulled-support-for-india-fta-before-it-was-secured-todd-mcclay-reveals expressed its disagreement before the announcement.

Labour leader Chris Hipkins on Tuesday said the party expected to write to the prime minister by the end of the week setting out conditions for Labour’s support.

“Just got to do a little bit of wordsmithing on that,” he said. “We clearly have some concerns about the potential exploitation of migrant workers, where we think the government is not doing enough, and we’re going to set out things that we want to see the government doing in that area. And I’ll set the rest of it out in due course.

“The government will need to do something that they have not yet done, which is that they’ll need to sit down and have a conversation with us rather than saying ‘this is the agreement that we have signed, you should just support it’.”

Coalition members had previously been relying on summaries provided by officials, as is usual.

Hipkins and Peters both confirmed their teams had received copies of the full text of the agreement in recent days, with Hipkins indicating that had added complications.

“We’ve got more questions now than we might have had based on the information the government gave us when they announced the deal,” he said.

He said US President Donald Trump’s tariffs had opened the path to securing the deal.

“Everything changed in India as a result of recent developments around Trump, a lot of countries suddenly got access to negotiate trade agreements that they had been really struggling to get,” he said.

He said New Zealand had come out of the process “with a deal that isn’t as good as other countries have been able to secure”.

Rather than blame the negotiators, he pointed the finger at Luxon’s public commitment to secure a deal before the 2026 election.

“Ultimately, those negotiators work within the parameters set by the government. Christopher Luxon tied their hands behind their back. When he said that he was going to secure a deal before the election come hell or high water, that immediately made their job a lot harder.”

He again expressed frustration at the process.

“They could have spoken to us through these negotiations so that we would have been fully familiar with what it is that they were signing us up to. They chose not to do that.”

McClay said the deal was being “legally scrubbed and verified”, and once that was complete “it’ll be available to not only all parties, it’ll be available to the public”.

He said he was happy to keep answering Labour’s questions.

“There is nothing pressing over the next few weeks. But I think the business committee would like to know their position soon.”

He was asked if he regretted not approaching Labour earlier, given he knew NZ First’s stance.

“We have absolutely no regrets at all in doing a trade deal with one of the most populous countries of the world, and probably the best trade deal that India has done with anybody so far. It more than levels the playing field for Kiwi exporters,” McClay said.

He could not remember Labour ever having approached National for support on the EU trade deal, he said – and rejected the idea that was because Labour had a majority, so did not need National’s support.

“In essence I think they probably did, because they didn’t put it … into law when they were a government.”

Student migration stoush

Confusion has continued to surround aspects of the deal relating to student migration.

Documents released by the government point to a handful of provisions for migration:

  • 1667 three-year work visas a year, capped at 5000 total visas at any one time. Focused on priority roles on the Green List like doctors, nurses, teachers, ICT and engineering jobs, specialised health services, traditional medicine practitioners, music teachers, chefs and yoga instructors
  • Up to 1000 places on New Zealand’s Working Holiday Scheme (ages 18-30)
  • Codifies the right for Indian students to work up to 20 hours a week (within the current policy of up to 25 hours)
  • Post-Study Work Visas: 2-year for Bachelors students graduating from a NZ institution, 3-year for STEM bachelors and masters, 4-year for PhD students

A document released by the Indian government claimed the FTA would also remove numerical caps on Indian students, but no such cap exists.

International Students seeking visas need funds to be a student, and need to have been accepted to a place at a university or other learning institution, naturally limiting the number of students who can arrive.

Rules were also changed in 2022 to limit international students learning below degree level from working. It meant such students could only work in-demand sectors related to their study, based on the Green List.

While the text of the deal is still secret, McClay and Luxon have both maintained it makes no changes to the government’s ability to impose a cap at a later date.

“No, the New Zealand government, going forward, can make its own independent decisions about what it wants to do with respect to export education, what it wants to do with respect to visas, and any government can make changes to that,” Luxon said.

ACT leader David Seymour agreed.

“And I don’t believe that it’s significant if there was for the simple reason that we have never had a cap … when you restrict the quality and the price of the courses, that changes the quality of the people coming, so you can control it that way,” he said.

Peters claimed something different, however.

“There is a cap now, but the cap is controlled by the country of origin, and the parents of origin paying for the export education. This has changed, and that’s why it’s dramatically different. Our economy will be paying for the export education. So it’s not truly export education,” he said.

Hipkins said he was “still working my way through that”.

“There is conflicting advice coming from the government on that, particularly if you look at their public statements … once we understand what the government is signing us up for, then we’ll set out, set out our views on principle.”

He said Peters’ claims about the deal did not seem to line up with the official advice.

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://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/10/government-needs-to-sit-down-and-have-a-conversation-with-us-on-india-trade-deal-hipkins/

Christchurch terrorist just seeking attention with his appeal bid, survivor says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Temel Atacocugu, who was shot during the massacre at Al Noor Mosque. RNZ/Nathan Mckinnon

One of the survivors of the Christchurch terror attack says the terrorist is just seeking attention with his Court of Appeal bid.

White supremacist Brenton Tarrant is serving a life sentence without parole for the mass shootings in March 2019 and has gone to the Court of Appeal to overturn his convictions and sentence.

Temel Atacocugu, who was shot during the massacre at Al Noor Mosque, said he believed this was all for the terrorist’s entertainment and so he could get the public’s attention again.

“He doesn’t want to be forgotten, but he lost that chance. He is forgotten already. I don’t think it will make any difference to his conditions in jail after all this court case is finished,” Atacocugu said.

Atacocugu was shot nine times in the attack and said it was still challenging for him physically and mentally.

He has been watching the court hearing via livestream in Christchurch and said it was difficult to see the terrorist’s face on screen.

March 2019 massacres happened at Christchurch’s Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

“When I saw his face on the screen, flashbacks started bombarding my mind, and remembering that day. And my body reacted and was aching and my disabled arm on my left side. So it’s not easy for us to be still dealing with this court case,” he said.

The terrorist should stop with the self-pity and face what he had done like a man, Atacocugu said.

Federation of Islamic Associations chair Abdur Razzaq said the latest court appearance by the Australian terrorist followed a well-known pattern used by convicted right-wing terrorists globally to exploit legal systems in order to regain publicity, amplify their ideology and inspire online supporters.

The white supremacist was following an almost identical trajectory to the man responsible for the 2011 Norway attacks that killed 77 people, he said.

“After initially confessing guilt, the Oslo terrorist systematically exploited the Norwegian and European legal systems through repeated court actions following his 2012 conviction, including cases in 2016, 2017, and again in 2024, largely focused on alleged prison conditions. This is quite similar to the Australian 15 March terrorist who is now exploiting the NZ legal system claiming he pleaded guilty under duress by torture,” Abdur Razzaq said.

The terrorist was using the New Zealand legal system not to seek genuine redress but to re-enter the public arena, garner repeated media reporting and ensure continued visibility, he said.

The legal challenges brought societal costs to the March 15 families, who were already suffering from PTSD and large financial costs, Abdur Razzaq said.

“Unfortunately, as a society, we must confront an uncomfortable reality.”

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://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/10/christchurch-terrorist-just-seeking-attention-with-his-appeal-bid-survivor-says/

Experts say Wellington harbour water safe after sewage spill but Wellingtonians cautious

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Experts say it is safe to swim at beaches in the capital’s harbour, but Wellingtonians are taking a cautious approach.

Nearly a week ago, the Moa Point Treatment Plant started pumping raw sewage into the ocean off the south coast after it completely failed early Wednesday morning.

The following Thursday evening, the raw sewage was diverted from being dumped near the coast to a 1.8-kilometre outfall pipe.

Wellington Water had warned it may need to use the short outfall pipe if it were to rain in the city.

There was no evidence to suggest sewage was reaching the city’s inner harbour, but at Oriental Bay most people RNZ spoke to thought locals were being careful around the water.

Keita said there was nobody on the beach when normally it would be “a shocker”.

“People would be everywhere, especially this whole sand beach would be full of people.”

She would “definitely reconsider” swimming in the area despite there not being current warnings about entering the water there.

“I think everyone has their own little mindsets on it I guess you could say.”

Munroe said people would continue to be cautious until there was a fix for the sewage plant.

LAWA said people should monitor their website for the latest risk assessments for beaches people were planning to swim at.

“These predictions are based on a combination of environmental conditions such as rainfall along with the swim spot monitoring history.

“This afternoon, there are dozens of beaches in the region that are predicted to be suitable for swimming.”

Auckland University professor Karin Bryan said based on the evidence she would swim there.

“Because it is incredibly high delusion rates and I’m pretty sure that LAWA and the council is being really, really careful to make sure the advice is really sound.

“So, I would definitely trust them.”

Bryan said Cook Strait had extremely strong currents which would likely keep the inner harbour unaffected.

Calypso Science was a New Plymouth based oceanography research company, with a focus on coastal currents.

It created a model of Wellington’s south coast after the news of the Moa Point sewage plant failure.

Supplied / Calypso Science

Physical oceanographer Remy Zyngfogel told RNZ based on that work, the sewage was not seeming to flow into the inner harbour.

“I didn’t see anything near Lower Hutt, it is mainly concentrated near Lyall Bay and Ōwhiro Bay.”

Wellington Mayor Andrew Little has called for an independent inquiry into the sewage plant failure.

Separately to that, Greater Wellington Regional Council would be investigating the matter as the water regulator for the region.

“As the discharge from Moa Point is currently a live event, we are unable to comment further on the discharge or the details of our investigation.”

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/2026/02/10/experts-say-wellington-harbour-water-safe-after-sewage-spill-but-wellingtonians-cautious/

Dirt bike rider seriously injured in Whangārei crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

The latest crash came just as Northland police were highlighting the severe injuries suffered by a three-year-old boy being doubled on his father’s dirt bike. File Coopersgrl / Reddit

A dirt bike rider has been seriously injured in a crash in Whangārei, just as Northland police were warning of the dangers of joyriding on city streets.

The latest crash occurred about 5.20pm on Monday in the suburb of Raumanga, near the intersection of Otaika Road and Abbotts Way.

A car and a dirt bike were involved, with the rider suffering severe injuries.

St John Ambulance confirmed the rider had been transported to Whangārei Hospital in a serious condition.

Police said the rider was now in a stable condition and the Serious Crash Unit was investigating.

RNZ was unable to confirm if the rider was licensed or wearing a helmet, but it is understood the bike was unregistered and unwarranted.

That same day Senior Sergeant Clem Armstrong, of Northland police, had issued a stark warning about the dangers of dirt bikes on urban streets.

He said the problem was particularly bad in Kaikohe and Whangārei, but many places in Northland – and around the country – were affected.

Armstrong was especially concerned about a trend of people taking young children joyriding on city streets without helmets or protective clothing, on bikes that often had poor brakes and bald tyres.

The danger had been highlighted by the severe facial injuries suffered by a three-year-old boy in a dirt bike crash in Kaikohe.

Armstrong said the boy’s 22-year-old father had been charged with driving and child welfare offences, and was now going through the courts.

RNZ understands the child’s injuries included a broken jaw and facial lacerations.

Armstrong said the riders showed no consideration for children or other road users.

“It’s just a huge safety concern for us. I’ve seen first-hand people who have been seriously hurt, and the absolute last thing we want is for somebody to lose their life as a result of this sort of stuff,” he said.

Monday’s crash in Whangārei was on the same stretch of road – Otaika Road or State Highway 1 – where a 29-year-old man was critically injured when his dirt bike and a car collided last March.

He died later in hospital.

A Kaikohe resident, who did want to be named for fear of retribution, said he often saw people tearing up and down his street on dirt bikes – sometimes taking small children for joyrides.

Thinking about what would happen in a crash made him “deeply, deeply anxious”.

“Parents, mothers and fathers alike, will take a little, tiny baby for a ride down the street, and the child is sitting in front of them with no restraints … They have no idea what would happen if they suddenly hit something. They would just go flying like a bag of cement and have to be scraped off the road 20 metres ahead.”

The crash involving the three-year-old had not stopped people taking children for joyrides, he 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/2026/02/10/dirt-bike-rider-seriously-injured-in-whangarei-crash/