Police launch homicide investifation after man found dead in house fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ

Police have launched a homicide investigation after a person was found dead in a house fire in Rangataua last week.

Fire and Emergency New Zealand were alerted to a house fire on Kaha Street at 6.40pm on Thursday.

Detective Senior Sergeant Varnia Allan said a man was found deceased during a scene examination the next day.

He was 62-year-old John Alan Seymour from Rangataua.

Today, police confirmed the fire appeared to be deliberately lit and Seymour’s death was “of a suspicious nature”.

After emergency services were notified of the fire, a two-vehicle crash on State Highway 49 was reported to police.

Jason Savage, 35, died in the crash.

Police have since confirmed the vehicle and Savage were connected to the Kaha Street address.

“While a homicide investigation is under way, Police would like to reassure the community that we are working to identify those responsible,” Allan said.

Anyone with information which they believe could assist in police enquiries was encouraged to make a report through 105, referencing file number 260417/7386.

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Public ‘strongly advised’ against searching for missing Karori man Philip Sutton themselves

Source: Radio New Zealand

Samuel Rillstone

Wellington police have called for people not to take matters into their own hands after the search for missing Karori man Philip Sutton was suspended yesterday.

But locals said volunteers had been searching the area and had located a bag and an article of clothing this afternoon.

Sutton was reported missing at 7.15am on Monday after floodwaters surged through a South Karori Road address in the early hours of the morning.

The sudden flooding heavily damaged a small studio Sutton was staying in and left the area submerged in silt and strewn with fallen trees and debris.

Shortly before 5pm today, Inspector Fleur de Bes said the police search for Sutton was unable to continue due to safety concerns.

“The search is now due to recommence on Wednesday, as the stream water levels drop and weather conditions improve.

“Today, police focused on establishing areas of interest to be searched tomorrow – these areas are significantly damaged, leaving multiple hazards including the stability of the stream, variable water levels, and debris.

“Police strongly advise against members of the community searching themselves due to the many hazards there may be at this time. Unstable ground, flood waters and poor communications may divert necessary resources from this significant operation if anyone gets into trouble.”

Samuel Rillstone

De Bes said police staff would be joined be joined by multiple specialists including canyon search and rescue, dive squad, search dogs and drones when searching resumed and that Sutton’s family had been informed.

“They are understandably very concerned but would like to thank the public for all their support,” de Bes said.

Ahead of the police statement some people in the area had responded to a post on social media calling for volunteers to search for the missing man.

“The family would be very grateful for willing and able volunteers if you are interested,” it said.

“It is important to use the daylight we have – in case Philip is lying somewhere unable to walk we are keen to look while it is daylight. His car that is usually parked in front of the studio was gone in the morning, his family think that he tried to get away in his car in the night when the waters were rising.

“Who can volunteer, and what times are people available?” the post read.

A local – who did not want to be named – said three people searching downstream from where Sutton was staying had found a bag and a mudsoaked article of clothing.

Samuel Rillstone

They said the searchers were told to take the items to members of Sutton’s family but “they could have been anyone’s”.

The local said the searchers had not entered the still-flooded stream and stopped moving through the area when they would have had to enter private property to continue.

“We’ve put our safety first and these people did the same. We’ve been keeping an eye out but it’s pretty horrific down there,” they said.

The local said they were aware that Sutton was staying in the small studio on the property but said had little contact with him and described him as “a very private man”.

Wellington City councillor Ray Chung was also on South Karori Road today.

He said he’d been in contact with the people who made the post and understood they were friends of Sutton’s sister.

NZ Police/Supplied

Chung said it was important for people who wished to help, to work with police.

“I don’t want people going into the water or getting lost and causing even more problems,” he said.

Chung said he understood that the organisers were concerned that not enough was being done to find Sutton.

“They’re very concerned that if they leave it for another day before people go out and search for him that it lessens his chance of survival out there. They were very concerned that he was out there somewhere and no one was out there looking for him or trying to help,” Chung said.

Quinn Wright worked in construction and lived a little further down the stream from the address where Sutton was staying.

Samuel Rillstone

He said he was heading to work on Monday morning when he came across the heavily flooded section of South Karori Road.

“We took the gear back home and brought the digger down to start clearing the mess.

“We just cleared the bulk of the big stuff off the road so the vehicles could get through and just freed up the blockages under the culvert so the water could start flowing across the road.”

He said the sudden deluge which surged down from the Long Gully catchment and tore the small building open came as a complete surprise.

“We’ve had far worse storms in Wellington and this area’s never been touched. It’s the worst bit of weather I’ve ever seen in the area but I was surprised that it flooded so badly,” Wright said.

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Update: Rangataua house fire and fatal crash

Source: New Zealand Police

Attribute to Detective Senior Sergeant Varnia Allan, Whanganui Response Officer in Charge:

Whanganui Police have launched a homicide investigation after a person was found deceased following a house fire in Rangataua, last week.

On Thursday 16 April, Fire and Emergency New Zealand were alerted to a house fire on Kaha Street, and during the scene examination the following day, a man was found deceased.

He was John Alan Seymour, 62, from Rangataua.

Police are working to establish what exactly has occurred at the Kaha Street address, however, we can confirm that the fire appears to be deliberately lit and that Mr Seymour’s death is of a suspicious nature.

Not long after emergency services were notified of the well-involved fire, Police were notified of a two-vehicle crash on State Highway 49, where a man has died.

He was Jason Savage, 35, from Rangataua.

Police can confirm the vehicle, and the deceased are connected to the Kaha Street address.

While a homicide investigation is under way, Police would like to reassure the community that we are working to identify those responsible.

Anyone with information which they believe may assist in our enquiries is encouraged to make a report through 105, referencing file number 260417/7386.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

Blood Cancer New Zealand says country not keeping up with treatments internationally

Source: Radio New Zealand

Annual deaths from blood cancer in Aotearoa have risen by nearly 40 percent since 2008. 123RF

A charity campaigning for blood cancer patients has argued the country isn’t keeping up with treatments available internationally.

Blood Cancer New Zealand has a released a new report into the experience of blood cancer patients and healthcare workers in Aotearoa

The report looked at national data and the experiences of 744 patients and carers, and 85 healthcare professionals.

Around 27,000 New Zealanders are living with the disease and more than 3000 are diagnosed each year.

The report identified gaps in treatment compared to countries with a comparable demographic and health system – such as Australia, where many more blood cancer medicines are funded.

It found that while blood cancer is now New Zealand’s third leading cause of cancer death, the country still lacks a coordinated national focus on blood cancer care.

Annual deaths from blood cancer in Aotearoa have risen by nearly 40 percent since 2008.

The report said advances in diagnostics and treatment have transformed outcomes for patients over the past two decades, from the early use of chemotherapy to immunotherapies and cellular therapies that harness patients’ own immune systems to destroy cancer cells.

However, it said these therapies remain unavailable in New Zealand, and patients here are faced with significant personal costs and reduced survival rates.

When data on all types of blood cancers in New Zealand are combined, it doesn’t show an improvement in age-standardised mortality over the past 15 years, the report said.

The report highlighted that Australia’s five year survival rate for several types of blood cancers are higher than New Zealand – including Leukaemia (66.4 percent compared with 57.7 percent in NZ), Hodgkin Lymphoma (88.6 percent compared with 80.2 percent in NZ), and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (77.4 percent compared with 68.4 in NZ).

The report also raises other constraints, including workforce shortages in haematology and specialist roles, limited diagnostic capability, infrastructure gaps for delivering advanced therapies and barriers to medicines and clinical trials.

Blood Cancer NZ is calling for the country to form a national Blood Cancer taskforce to coordinate efforts across medicines access, workforce, research and policy settings.

The report is being launched at an event on Tuesday, which will be attended by patients, healthcare professionals and the health minister Simeon Brown.

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Rahui in place at Auckland’s Shelly Beach as search continues for missing man

Source: Radio New Zealand

Shelly Beach is in the Kaipara Harbour. (File photo).

A rahui is in place at a North Auckland beach as police and coastguards continue their search for a man who went missing on Sunday afternoon.

Emergency services were called to Shelly Beach about 1pm, after a man went into the water and failed to return.

Coastguard Kaipara said in a social media post that a rahui was placed on the Shelly Beach area by local iwi and hapu.

It said the Royal New Zealand Navy’s hydrographic team was also helping with the search.

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NRL: Chanel Harris-Tavita named for 100th NZ Warriors appearance against Dolphins

Source: Radio New Zealand

Chanel Harris-Tavita scores a try for the Warriors against Sydney Roosters. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

Five-eighth Chanel Harris-Tavita has been confirmed for his 100th NZ Warriors appearance, while Taine Tuaupiki will return to fullback against the Dolphins in Wellington on Saturday.

Harris-Tavita, 27, made his club debut in 2019 against Gold Coast Titans, but ruptured a testicle in 2022 and took a hiatus from the game the following season, as he travelled the world.

He returned to the Warriors in 2024 and seems to have cemented ownership of the No.6 jersey with a series of outstanding performances this year, including a try double in the opening win against Sydney Roosters, a powerful defensive display against Melbourne Story and another key try against the Titans last weekend.

He becomes the 32nd player to log a century of games for the Auckland club, joining current teammates Adam Pompey (123), Roger Tuivasa-Sheck (155) and Wayde Egan (128).

Coach Andrew Webster has made only one change to the line-up that started against Gold Coast, handing Tuaupiki the No.1 jersey, with Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad aggravating a neck injury, suffered against Cronulla Sharks three weeks ago.

Egan was placed on report for a high tackle last week, but escaped with a fine and will start at hooker for the Anzac clash.

Tuivasa-Sheck retains his spot at centre, but incumbent Pompey returns to the reserves, after a two-game suspension, and may yet work his way into the playing squad. Alofiana Khan-Pereira, who scored two tries against his old club last weekend, has been named on the wing.

Warriors: 1. Taine Tuaupiki, 2. Dallin Watene-Zelezniak, 3. Roger Tuivasa-Sheck, 4. Ali Leiataua, 5. Alofiana Khan-Pereira, 6. Chanel Harris-Tavita, 7. Tanah Boyd, 8. James Fisher-Harris, 9. Wayde Egan, 10. Jackson Ford, 11. Leka Halasima, 12. Kurt Capewell, 13. Erin Clark

Interchange: 14. Same Healey, 15. Mitchell Barnett, 16. Demitric Vaimauga, 17. Jacob Laban, 18. Marata Niukore, 20. Luke Hanson

Reserves: 21. Eddie Ieremia-Toeava, 22. Adam Pompey, 23. Makaia Tafua

Meanwhile, Dolphins coach Kirstian Woolf has promoted Brad Schneider into five-eighth, replacing former Warrior Kodi Nikorima, who was suspended two games for dangerous contract that left Penrith Panthers hooker Mitch Kenny with a broken leg.

Dolphins: 1. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, 2. Jamayne Isaako, 3. Jake Averillo, 4. Herbie Farnworth, 5. Selwyn Cobbo, 6. Brad Schneider, 7. Isaiya Katoa, 8. Tom Gilbert, 9. Max Plath, 10. Francis Molo, 11. Connelly Lemuelu, 12. Kulikefu Finefeuiaki, 13. Morgan Knowles

Interchange: 14. Ray Stone, 15. Thomas Flegler, 16. Felise Kaufusi, 17. Trai Fuller, 18. Lewis Symonds, 19. Tevita Naufahu

Reserves: 20. Brian Pouniu, 21. Oryn Keeley, 22. John Fineanganofo

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Analysis: Luxon puts even more pressure on himself with confidence gamble

Source: Radio New Zealand

Analysis: Without probably realising it the Prime Minister has just put more pressure than ever on himself to perform and lift his party polling.

By calling a formal motion of confidence vote in caucus on Tuesday morning, the caucus were presented with a ‘back him or dump him’ option and chose to back him.

But in backing him there is an expectation that the National Party do better, and that includes the Prime Minister.

Yet, in recent months self-reflection has been missing from Christopher Luxon’s comments – instead he’s concentrated on the party needing to do better.

New Zealand is still a country where a large number of people vote based on personalities and the popularity of a leader goes a long way to securing a party vote.

Luxon almost got to a point of reflecting on his own weaknesses in his Monday morning media round when he acknowledged not everyone would want to invite him to a barbecue.

He’s not John Key, and he seemed to have finally realised that, yet after confirming the confidence of his caucus on Tuesday he then fronted media and single-handedly blamed “speculation and rumour” and a “media soap opera” for the position he had found himself in.

There’s always room in those moments for a bit of self-deprecation and reflection, and it would have gone a long way toward acknowleding those in the caucus and wider party who have been questioning Luxon’s leadership.

Those people exist whether Luxon chooses to believe it or not, but instead of letting them know he had heard them by publicly saying he too needed to improve his personal performance, he blamed others.

By blaming the media reports he’s by extension blaming those MPs who felt they had no choice but to talk to journalists about how bad things had got.

Simeon Brown heading into the Tuesday morning caucus. RNZ / Craig McCulloch

National’s campaign chair Simeon Brown told RNZ on his way into that caucus meeting that MPs who were leaking to the media should either stop, or quit the party.

Senior MP Mark Mitchell told RNZ the caucus was a safe and comfortable place for MPs to air their concerns and be heard. He said caucus was where robust discussion could take place.

However, it’s clear some MPs haven’t felt safe to raise concerns, or have been shot down when they have. Senior whip Stuart Smith appears to be one of those people.

Multiple media outlets, including RNZ, have confirmed the reports originally published in the NZ Herald on Friday morning that Smith had unsuccessfully tried to contact Luxon ahead of Easter to speak to him about caucus concerns over his leadership, but that Luxon had effectively ghosted him.

On Tuesday morning ahead of the caucus vote Smith, via the prime minister’s office, provided a written statement saying he wouldn’t be at the caucus meeting due to a “longstanding personal appointment”.

Stuart Smith. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

He said he didn’t contact the Prime Minister or his office “seeking a meeting” and that he was “disappointed by recent speculative media coverage”.

Smith’s statement and denials needed to have landed on Friday if he and Luxon wanted them to be believed.

It’s not credible to wait four days to put out that statement, especially when nobody from the prime minister’s office has disputed the story in the interim.

The statement read as if it had been written by the prime minister’s office and when Brown was asked whether he or the prime minister had put pressure on Smith to make that statement, he refused to answer the question multiple times.

The relationship between the senior whip and the prime minister, and by extension his office, is pivotal. It’s Smith’s job to keep Luxon and his chief of staff abreast of caucus morale and any issues that crop up.

Luxon confirmed on Monday neither he nor his office had contacted Smith since the story broke on Friday morning, which shows the traditional closeness of that relationship doesn’t exist in this caucus.

It’s unclear whether Smith had planned to be at Parliament on Tuesday, and was told not to bother turning up – he hasn’t returned RNZ’s calls.

Smith may have lost the prime minister’s trust at this point, and if he had been at caucus he would have, as senior whip, been tasked with the job of scrutineer alongside his junior, Suze Redmayne.

That would have meant Smith would have been one of just two people to know how many in the caucus supported Luxon. In his absence party president Sylvia Wood counted the votes with Redmayne.

The next caucus vote could end up being for a replacement senior whip.

Luxon made the right call holding the vote on his leadership. His error was not doing it sooner.

The speculation around his job security has been going on for months and the party has been hurt in the polls because he didn’t stem the blood loss sooner.

Now that he’s called the vote, and won it, he is relying on his caucus backing him and keeping any concerns they have in the coming six months either to themselves, or airing them in the privacy of caucus meetings.

It’s a big gamble and if the leaks start again then Luxon has set a precedent and could find himself repeating a confidence vote before the year is out.

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters has already warned of those consequences, and he would know having seen the inner workings of the National Party for himself in a former life.

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A Golden Bay coastal estate could be the home of an ‘End of the World Library’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Westhaven Estate was formerly a luxury lodge, in Mangarākau, Tasman. The 15-bedroom property overlooks the Whanganui Inlet. NZ Sotheby’s Realty

An advertisement calling for an intellectually curious librarian or curator at a multi-million-dollar remote coastal estate in Golden Bay has sparked widespread interest.

The job? To build and furnish an “End of the World Library” at a sprawling property overlooking the Whanganui Inlet near the top of the South Island.

More specifically, entrepreneurial couple Eva and Toni Piëch, want an “intellectually curious librarian or curator” to build a collection that will help them survive if the world ends.

Eva founded medicinal cannabis clinic CannaPlus+ in 2022, while Toni, the great grandson of Porsche founder Ferdinand Porsche, co-founded electric vehicle manufacturer Piëch Automotive in 2017.

The 330-hectare property near the Whanganui Inlet in Mangarākau, Tasman, is a three-and-a-half-hour drive from Nelson.

The 15-bedroom home made of Otago schist and Tasmanian Oak was formerly a luxury retreat and was on the market for six years before it was sold last year for $20 million to the Piëch’s and became their private home.

The job, posted on the Library and Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa website, was calling for someone to curate a library collection “that would remain meaningful and useful under extreme long-term scenarios” with a focus on essential knowledge, foundational literature and practical survival.

Association chief executive, Laura Marshall, said the role wasn’t a traditional library one, it was the kind of listing occasionally seen overseas and the first time the organisation had advertised a job in a private library.

“Perhaps they’re building a bunker to hunker down because New Zealand’s such a fabulous place, or they are just really organised? Perhaps they’re going to build a fabulous garden and do everything from scratch by themselves,” she said.

Marshall previously worked in the rare book market and said she had been called upon to help build private libraries, which were often stylised, coming with a brief that might require metres of leather books and first edition classics.

“I actually think this is a fabulous idea to call upon a library professional to help build a library that’s based on substance rather than looks,” she said.

She could not say how much interest there had been in the role because applications were sent directly to Westhaven Estate.

Golden Bay journalist and author Gerard Hindmarsh, who has written extensively about the area, said the “spectacular” property encompassed 330 hectares including extensive native forest and around eight kilometres of coastline.

He visited it many times when it belonged to former owners, Monika and Bruno Stompe, who built the lodge and called the property home for 27 years.

“It’s a very special place, it’s got the second biggest nikau forest after the Heaphy Coast, it’s just spectacular and the limestone formations are just something else.”

He said the South Head of the Whanganui Inlet was part of the Te Tai Tapu Estates, which was purchased from the Maori in the 1880s, before being separated off into coastal farms in the 1920s.

It would be a bolt-hole for the new owners, he said, who it’s understood intend to spend half the year there and the other in Europe.

“I think that for them it’s a property they can escape the wilds of the world, really and I think to have a library that can withstand some sort of Armageddon is an expression of that.”

Hindmarsh said a local real estate agent had spoken of the increasing demand from people looking to escape the Northern Hemisphere and move to New Zealand.

That’s something Baz Macdonald, who produced the 2019 VICE documentary, Hunt for the Bunker People, had also noticed.

The documentary delved into why New Zealand was attracting wealthy millionaires and billionaires who were looking at for a bolt-hole, and whether or not they were also burying survival bunkers in some of Aotearoa’s most scenic country.

While there was little evidence of billionaire bunker construction, Macdonald said New Zealand was clearly seen as an attractive safe haven to some of the world’s most wealthy as it offered a form of “apocalypse insurance”.

“It verified that a lot of wealthy people around the world right now are definitely looking at New Zealand, thinking about New Zealand, thinking about the context of what’s happening around the world and what New Zealand might offer them if something does go wrong.

“We’re also seen as a sort of self-sustaining nation, we have the ability to grow our own food, we are stable governmentally and seen as good people, supportive people with collaborative communities.

“So there’s just a whole bunch of factors that make us seem really appealing if something were to go wrong elsewhere in the world.”

Macdonald said the concept of an end of the world library was a smart one.

“It would be a shame if a library like this went in with a particular political slant or a philosophical slant, but certainly the idea of having a collection of knowledge that would allow you to be self-sustaining, to rebuild, to know how electrical systems work and agriculture and all these sorts of things is a really important one.

“I’m not entirely sure what the merit of having your own personal version of this is, because I would hope, especially in New Zealand, that we have those resources available and as a community we would collectively bring our skills and resources to bear on solving a problem if there was some kind of collapse.”

RNZ’s attempts to contact Eva and Toni Piëch had gone unanswered.

Applications to curate the Westhhaven Estate library close on 30 April.

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Air New Zealand considering setting up aviation engineering school in Northland, MP says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kerikeri in the Bay of Islands was being considered for an aviation engineering school. (File photo) RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Air New Zealand is considering setting up an aviation engineering school in Kerikeri, Northland MP Grant McCallum says.

The MP said the company was working with high schools, local hapū Ngāti Rēhia, and aviation industry stakeholders to decide whether a vocational training school would work.

McCallum said it would be “a major shot in the arm for Northland” if it went ahead, and could help ease staff shortages in the country’s aviation sector.

He said the school would likely be built near Bay of Islands Airport, but details of the potential timeline or student numbers were not yet known.

Bay of Islands Airport in Kerikeri. (File photo) Supplied

“They want to take investment into the wider regions, rather than just the big centres. They feel there’s an opportunity to help Northland, particularly younger people who haven’t has got as many educational opportunities as people in other parts of the country.”

He said the feasibility study was considering student demand, delivery options, facilities, regulatory requirements and employment pathways.

It would go ahead only if a viable, sustainable and appropriately governed model could be found, McCallum said.

Northland MP Grant McCallum. (File photo) RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Air New Zealand chief executive Nikhil Ravishankar was in Kerikeri on Sunday to discuss the proposal.

The proposal comes amid a major shakeup of vocational training in Northland.

NorthTec, the region’s biggest training provider, had been cutting jobs and courses as it tried to become financially viable.

NorthTec is the region’s biggest training provider. (File photo) RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Last week the government announced funding of $34.7 million to help NorthTec move from its present Raumanga campus to a proposed Whangārei Knowledge Education and Arts Hub in the central city, subject to a successful business case.

Last year Northland’s biggest hospitality training provider, QRC Te Tai Tokerau, shut down in Paihia after a decade of operation.

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As it happened: Highway washed out, flights cancelled as rain, wind hit Wellington, Wairarapa

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington and Wairarapa have spent the night under a red heavy rain warning, with downpours expected to continue.

Wellington was hit by widespread, damaging floods and landslides overnight on Sunday.

Authorities are urging lower North Island residents to stay off the roads and evacuate if they feel unsafe as the rain continues.

MetService said with continued rain over several days there was a possible threat to life from dangerous river conditions, significant flooding and slips.

See what happened during the day in our blog below:

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