Two dead after Mt Aspiring helicopter crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Mt Aspiring National Park. File photo. AFP

Two people have died after a helicopter crash in Mt Aspiring National Park on Sunday morning.

Police said reports of the crash came in about 9.50am.

Maritime NZ’s Rescue Coordination centre handed responsibility for the response to police who are now at the scene.

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Helicopter crash, Mt Aspiring National Park

Source: New Zealand Police

Two people have died following a helicopter crash in Mt Aspiring National Park this morning.

Reports came in of the incident about 9.50am.

Maritime NZ’s Rescue Coordination Centre has handed responsibility for the response to Police, who are on scene now.

More information will be released when available.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

National to scrap good character assessments for sex offenders at sentencing

Source: Radio New Zealand

The National Party is promising tougher sentences for sexual offending if it’s re-elected.

Its justice spokesperson Paul Goldsmith – who is currently the Justice Minister – revealed on Sunday National would scrap good character assessments at sentencing for all sexual crimes, which meant harsher punishment.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon made the announcement at the National Party Central Conference in Hamilton.

As it stands, judges must consider testimonies from people who were willing to speak to an offender’s character and maintain that their crime was “the exception, not the rule”, Goldsmith said.

RNZ / Mark Papalii

“That might serve the interests of well-connected offenders, but it rarely serves the interests of victims,” he said.

“Under National, judges will be prohibited from treating good character as a mitigating factor at sentencing for all sexual offending.

“The result will be tougher sentences, and stopping judges from being forced to consider the public reputation of an offender when sentences for sexual offending are being handed down.”

The criminal justice system prioritises sexual violence offenders over victims “too often”, he said.

“National is fixing the basics in law and order and building a future where all New Zealanders can feel safe in their communities. Ensuring there are real consequences for crime is a critical part of that.”

Goldsmith said the policy built on previous changes which included limiting the discounts judges can apply at sentencing to 40 percent, giving sexual violence victims the power to determine whether their perpetrators receive permanent name suppression, and making stalking illegal and punishable by imprisonment.

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Live: Winston Peters to make NZ First policy announcement

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ First leader Winston Peters is due to make a policy announcement.

Peters will be speaking from Trusts Arena in West Auckland where he has been addressing a public meeting.

He is due to take questions around 2pm.

Previously, during his State of the Nation speech in March, Peters had announced his party would campaign on breaking up the Electricity Gentailers (generators and retailers).

He said the policy would ensure energy gentailers could “no longer control both the power and the price”.

The Party has also made a campaign promise to break up the country’s supermarket duopoly in a bid to lower grocery prices.

Its plan is to split Foodstuffs into two competing cooperatives and ramp up enforcement powers and fines.

Watch the livestream in the player above.

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Are hot baths or saunas better for you?

Source: Radio New Zealand

A humble hot bath may do more for your health than a session in the sauna, according to new research.

Hot water immersion triggered stronger cardiovascular and immune responses than both traditional and infrared saunas, found the University of Oregon study, suggesting a simple soak offers surprisingly powerful health benefits.

“Hot tubs may be more useful for eliciting beneficial adaptations,” Lead author Dr Jessica Atencio told Sunday Morning.

Shared sauna sessions are becoming popular as a way to relax with mates.

Supplied / Samantha Bluemel

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Live: Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith to make law and order policy announcement

Source: Radio New Zealand

Justice Minister Paul Goldsmith is due to make a law and order policy announcement.

Goldsmith is in Tamahere, Waikato, with Prime Minister Christopher Luxon where the pair have been addressing the National Party Central North Island Regional Conference.

Goldsmith and Luxon will take questions following the announcement, around 2pm.

Watch the livestream in the player above.

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New Zealand’s walking football team takes world stage in Brisbane

Source: Radio New Zealand

The 2026 International Walking Football Federation World Championships kicks off in Brisbane at the end of May. Screenshot/Youtube

New Zealand’s walking football team is expecting to punch above its weight on the world stage this month.

The 2026 International Walking Football Federation World Championships kicks off in Brisbane at the end of May and it will be New Zealand’s first time competing at the championships.

The team’s coach and manager, Neil Haines – who formerly represented New Zealand – told RNZ the walking game is six-aside, played on smaller fields, and has rolling substitutes.

Crucially, the players are aged 50 and over.

Haines said the New Zealand team of 12 began training about three weeks ago on Sundays, but will be upping that to twice a week ahead of their first match against England on May 28.

“We’re looking forward to it! And then, we playing Australia. The best part of it, we will give them a run for their money.”

Haines said it was a fantastic line-up, with teams from across Europe also competing – some of whom had been playing for at least 10 years.

He said it would be a challenge, but the team was up for it.

“We’ve just started out here in New Zealand and we feel that… like most New Zealand sport we’re going to punch above our weight.

“I hope that we can cause some surprises and the players are keen to do very well, so we are hoping we will get further than just making the numbers up.”

Haines said he came across the sport a couple of years ago and has been promoting it through the local trust he chairs ever since.

From an initial gala day at the North Shore United Club, between 20-30 people now turn up for games twice a week on summer evenings, he said.

Haines said the game enabled men and women to continue to play a sport they loved and – although mainly about participation – players retained a competitive streak.

“Just because people are over 50, they have not lost their competitiveness and that makes it really interesting, because walking football allows the body to work without too much stress.”

Haines said it would be great if the world cup inspired more people to join.

“I’d love it if this… got people into activities where they can enjoy the company of each other, the banter, and also doing something they thought they possibly could never do again – that’s playing football on a pitch, but they’re just walking.”

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‘When you think you’re going to die, you fall in love with the world all over again’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kate Bowler was a 35-year-old academic with a young family when stage 4 colon cancer suddenly “exiled her into the land of the sick”.

“I was like, how can I be both feeling utterly broken and yet feel kind of carried by this thing that turns out to be joy?”, she tells Saturday Morning.

The Duke University professor delves into how we can discover “the one weird delight that lights up just you” in her podcast Everything Happens and the new book Joyful Anyway.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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Auckland Grammar School welcomes government’s proposed NCEA replacement

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland Grammar School Headmaster Tim O’Connor said the school was positive about the government’s changes. RNZ Insight/John Gerritsen

Auckland Grammar School has welcomed the government’s proposed replacement for NCEA, saying the planned qualification reforms are a move toward greater academic rigour and consistency across the country.

The government on Saturday released further details about the new secondary school qualification framework, which is expected to begin replacing NCEA from 2028.

Auckland Grammar became the first state school to partially abandon NCEA in 2011, introducing Cambridge International Examinations after concerns the national qualification lacked academic rigour.

The school currently offers both Cambridge and NCEA pathways for senior students. Around 60 percent of students choose the Cambridge pathway, while 40 percent remain in the NCEA stream.

Headmaster Tim O’Connor said the school was positive about the government’s changes because the new qualification would place a stronger emphasis on independent assessment and external examinations.

”It’ll become a qualification that’s predicated on independent assessment,” O’Connor said.

”Examinations will be part of the qualification process across all subjects.”

Education Minister Erica Stanford released further details about the replacement for NCEA on Saturday. RNZ/Nick Monro

O’Connor said the school believed NCEA ”was not as rigourous as it should be” and criticised what he described as inconsistent standards across the country.

”It’s certainly poorly designed from the outset,” he said.

The proposed replacement system would provide greater consistency for students nationwide, he said.

”Students from Invercargill and Tokoroa will know that they’ve learnt and been assessed against the same as students in Auckland and Wellington,” he said.

.O’Connor said the school would support the new national qualification if it proved rigourous enough in practice.

”We’d be fully supportive of the National Qualification Framework if it became rigourous enough in future years,” he said.

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Auckland’s St James Theatre owner buys neighbouring properties

Source: Radio New Zealand

Inside Auckland’s damaged St James Theatre. RNZ / Soumya Bhamidipati

The owner of Auckland’s St James Theatre has purchased two neighbouring properties on Queen Street and Lorne Street.

The heritage theatre, which opened in 1928, has been closed since a fire in 2007.

But in 2023, the government and Auckland Council each committed $15 million toward its restoration, and work is underway to reopen the theatre for its 100th anniversary in 2028.

St James Theatre owner Steve Bielby and Auckland Central MP Chlöe Swarbrick. Benjamin Brooking

St James owner, Steve Bielby, said the trust that owned St James Holdings, the Auckland Notable Properties Trust, had purchased 330-332 Queen Street and 57 Lorne Street.

He said it was a strategic decision that would make it easier to complete structural upgrades on the theatre’s south side.

“These buildings were built around 1900, and they’re hard up against the St James Theatre. So when we structurally upgrade the theatre, it will essentially destroy the building next door in an earthquake, so we have to do some works to that wall. Those works are a lot easier to do on the site than from within the St James site.”

The exterior of the St James Theatre in Auckland. RNZ / Leonard Powell

He said the purchase also presented opportunities for expansion.

“It’s essentially a full site that runs from Queen Street to Lorne Street. It makes us the majority of the block, and it’s a through-site link. There are lots of hospitality offerings that could go in there. It would be a great hotel site. There are lots of options to complement a theatre.

“It also gives the ability to do what they did at The Civic. Larger-scale, Disney-style productions like Singing in the Rain require a larger backstage, so the backstage has to be extended. We’re not planning to do it, but this gives that option if that was ever desired.”

Auckland’s St. James Theatre has been repeatedly vandalised. RNZ / Soumya Bhamidipati

He said he bought the sites, which were currently commercial premises, from a family that had owned them for more than half a century.

He said the family had been very supportive of the theatre’s restoration.

The combined rateable value of the two properties is $7.55 million, but the St James Theatre said the purchase price was confidential.

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