Whakaari / White Island volcanic alert level lowered

Source: Radio New Zealand

Whakaari / White Island on 17 March. Geonet

Volcanic alert levels for Whakaari / White Island have been lowered.

There was a minor eruption last week, raising warning levels and leaving flights at Tauranga Airport cancelled.

Earth Sciences New Zealand says new satellite data shows ash emissions could have started as early as 8 March.

Observations have now confirmed the volcanic activity is over with no further ash detected.

They also show a new thin deposit of ash over the floor of the inner crater, and some of the island’s southern side.

The volcanic alert level has been lowered back to Level 2, and the Aviation Colour Code reduced to Yellow.

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

Labour leader Chris Hipkins holds press conference over ex-wife’s allegations

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Mark Papalii

Labour leader Chris Hipkins is expected to respond to allegations made by his ex-wife at a media conference at 4.45pm today.

He arrrived back in the country from Australia on Tuesday.

The claims – which do not relate to any unlawful activity – were posted on Jade Paul’s private Facebook page on Sunday evening but were since removed.

On Monday, Hipkins said “I reject the allegations entirely and don’t intend to make any further comment.”

In response to questions from RNZ, Paul said she stood by her comments.

Hipkins and Paul married at Premier House in early 2020 and separated in 2022. They have two children.

Hipkins publicly confirmed the split in January 2023, shortly after becoming prime minister, saying they had made the decision in the best interest of their family.

Later that year, Hipkins revealed during his election night concession speech that he had a new partner, Toni Grace.

Hipkins proposed to Grace in November.

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Coroner to hold inquest into fatal stabbing on Christchurch street

Source: Radio New Zealand

From left, Nemani Tunidau, Eparama Tunidau and Laisa Waka Tunidau Supplied

An inquest into the death of a Christchurch woman – who was killed by a forensic mental health patient while walking home from work – will be held in August.

Laisa Waka Tunidau, a mother of four, was fatally stabbed in June 2022 by Zakariye Mohamed Hussein, a patient at secure mental health facility Hillmorton Hospital.

Hussein was on community leave at the time of the killing outside Tunidau’s home in Sockburn, which happened while her then 11-year-old son looked on.

He was jailed for life with a non-parole period of 13 years.

Hussein had previously served more than six years in prison for kidnapping, stabbing and intimidating multiple people across Christchurch in March 2012.

Earlier, Tunidau’s husband Nemani Tunidau told RNZ he wanted compensation for what he saw as carelessness by health agencies in the leadup to his wife’s death.

The killing prompted an inquiry into Canterbury’s Mental Health Service.

But last year Nemani Tunidau said his family had not heard from authorities for more than a year, and felt forgotten.

“It just makes me angry and feel that they don’t want to blame themselves for what has happened to my wife,” he said.

The inquest is scheduled to run for about five weeks from mid-August in the Coroner’s Court at Christchurch.

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Kārearea NZ falcon breeding in Auckland’s Hūnua Ranges

Source: Radio New Zealand

It is estimated that there are 5000-8000 native falcons (kārearea) in Aotearoa. File photo. Supplied / Paul O’Hagan

Native bush falcons are breeding at Auckland’s Hūnua Ranges after years of uncertainty about the species’ future.

It is estimated that there are 5000-8000 native falcons (kārearea) in the country. They are classified as ‘Threatened – Nationally Increasing’.

But a 40-day observation of kārearea at Hūnua this summer – commissioned by Auckland Council – led to the discovery of a breeding pair raising two fledglings.

Auckland Council spokesperson Paul Duffy said it was a significant finding.

“This study gives us the first clear evidence that kārearea are successfully breeding in the Te Ngāherehere o Kohukohunui Hūnua Ranges.

“It also shows that intensive predator management and ground-based trapping are giving this threatened species the chance to make a comeback in the Auckland region.”

Not to be mistaken with the more common swamp harrier (kāhu), which glides slowly, the smaller kārearea is New Zealand’s fastest bird, capable of high-speed pursuit through the forest canopy.

Kārearea nest on or near the ground in a simple hollow known as a ‘scrape’, leaving eggs and chicks vulnerable to predators such as cats, mustelids, pigs, and possums.

Kārearea specialist Chifuyu Horikoshi, who led the field work, said the result was “incredibly encouraging”.

“Watching kārearea hunt through native forest is breathtaking; they are exceptionally fast, agile, and intelligent birds truly built for pursuit.

“Seeing them deliver prey and continue caring for their young shows this habitat is supporting their full breeding cycle.”

The survey was undertaken between December 2025 and February 2026, and was the first formal assessment of kārearea presence and breeding activity in the park.

Residents are encouraged to report sightings through citizen science platforms such as iNaturalist or eBird, and to include photographs if possible to help with identification.

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When the petrol lights come on: How NZ’s fuel escalation levels work

Source: Radio New Zealand

Despite the conflict in the Middle East and growing worries over global oil supply, New Zealand remains at the lowest level of official concern – but that could quickly change.

Motorists are being urged not to panic-buy fuel amid going concerns about rising prices, with the average 91 petrol price around country surging past $3.

The pressure on fuel priuces is being largley driven by the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, as Iran launches attacks to halt maritime traffic. The area is critical because about 20 percent of the world’s oil consumption or 20 million barrels a day, usually passes through it.

The National Fuel Plan – published in 2024 – includes details on how the country could respond to a fuel supply disruption or emergency, with four levels of concern, similar to the levels seen during the fight against Covid-19.

The plan does point out that many events could disrupt fuel supply, including compromised overseas supply, pipes being sabotaged, earthquake or a damaged road network.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) says the country is not experiencing the types of sustained supply disruption that the would lead to the emergency measures outlined in the plan, and confirmed last week that Aotearoa remains at the lowest of the four levels.

But it has convened the Fuel Sector Co-ordinating Entity (Fuel SCE), which is comprised of officials and members from key fuel companies, and “increases lines of communications with the fuel industry and oversight of fuel imports”.

The fuel escalation process in the plan includes four levels. The plan says an emergency may progress from one level to the next – due to something like a damaged pipeline that is taking longer than expected to repair – or move straight to a high level, in the case of a “sudden, major infrastructure disruption expected to last longer than a few days”.

Level 1: Minor impact on fuel sector

The country is currently at this level. Under it, there is the potential for escalating fuel supply disruption to higher levels, but “minimal current impact on fuel distribution”.

The Fuel SCE is convened to monitor the situation and start planning for potential disruption and escalation.

Fuel companies are also directed to start planning for possible disruption.

Level 2: Moderate impact on fuel sector

In this level, “most” customers are still serviced, but there is a risk of shortages to critical fuel customers.

Critical fuel customers are organisations seen as “critical to response activities and have a reliance on fuel resupply to carry out response activities”, including emergency services, the Ministry of Health, Corrections and Defence.

The Fuel SCE monitors demand levels and resupply options, and also coordinates government support “as required” for the fuel sector.

This may include air or overland vehicle transport; a range of support by NZDF, where resources are available, such as NZDF ships, drivers, engineering resources or specialist aviation resources; assistance with sourcing key international resources including barges and fuel air transport capacity; and relaxation of regulations, such as allowing night-time fuelling to increase distribution.

Fuel companies are also required to take steps to ensure critical customers are supplied and government powers may be used to enforce this.

Nick Monro / RNZ

Level 3: Major impact on fuel sector

Under level three, there is a “serious impact on fuel distribution with severe resource and capacity constraints and multi region and/or major impacts to critical customers”.

Additional measures that may come into play at this level include:

  • Opening hour restrictions (reduced hours, only open on alternate days)
  • Setting maximum purchases at point of sale – either price or volume,
  • Restricting sales into containers (to discourage hoarding), and
  • Price limits can be set at unmanned fuel retail outlets (e.g. truck stops).

There will also be critical customer prioritisation measures under level three.

“Critical fuel customers will continue to source fuel from, and be supplied by, their regular fuel suppliers until it is no longer possible or practicable to do so.”

These additional actions will be implemented and coordinated through the Fuel SCE, which will also monitor fuel companies’ compliance with any directions issued by the Minister for Energy or CDEM Controller

Level 4: Severe impact on fuel sector

At this highest level, there is a severe impact on national fuel supplies

As well as all the actions seen in lower levels, fuel companies will be required to supply only critical fuel customers and these customers can be serviced by any supplier.

Fuel prices at a BP station in Auckland’s Botany on 9 March. Prices have risen dramatically since then. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

Public help

As well as the fuel escalation process, the National Fuel Plan also notes that the public can be encouraged by the government and the fuel sector to voluntarily reduce fuel consumption.

“This can be achieved through reducing speed on open roads, car-pooling, working from home, checking tyre pressure and reducing unnecessary trips or using other transport modes.”

The plan does note that this is “only considered a practicable option when managing a long-term supply disruption where immediate stocks are not at threat”, as it could cause panic buying.

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Live: White Ferns v South Africa Proteas Women – second T20

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the cricket action as the White Ferns take on South Africa for the second of five T20s.

It comes after the White Ferns cruised to a one-sided 80-run win in the opening T20 at Mt Maunganui on Sunday.

Batting first at Bay Oval, New Zealand captain Melie Kerr and opener Georgia Plimmer piled on the runs in pursuit of a big score.

Kerr blasted 78 off 44 balls, with Plimmer scoring 63 in an impressive second-wicket partnership of 146 off 83 balls, after New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat.

The White Ferns scored 190/7 in their 20 overs, after losing wickets late in their innings.

First ball at Hamilton’s Seddon Park is at 2.45pm.

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Crash closes stretch of State Highway 1 in North Canterbury

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied / NZTA

Two people have been seriously injured after two cars collided in North Canterbury.

Emergency services were called to the crash on State Highway 1 near Domett, between Christchurch and Kaikōura, about 10.40am.

One of the cars was towing a horse float but it was unknown if any horses were inside.

St John said two ambulances, two helicopters, two operations managers and a PRIME responder were sent to the crash.

“Two patients, in serious condition, have been airlifted to Christchurch Hospital. One additional patient, in minor condition, has been transported by road to Christchurch Hospital,” St John said.

A police spokesperson said the Serious Crash Unit were advised and the road remained closed.

The New Zealand Transport Agency said drivers should expect delays and consider avoiding travel through the area.

“SCU (Serious Crash Unit) will be attending the scene and their investigations can take several hours. Consider an alternative route.”

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Shannon Mato wants to play for Kiwi Ferns at Rugby League World Cup

Source: Radio New Zealand

Shannon Mato celebrates a try for the Māori All Stars against the Australian Indigenous All Stars in Sydney, 2025. NRL PHOTOS

The Kiwi Ferns’ stocks have been boosted with Jillaroos’ 10-test cap powerhouse forward Shannon Mato’s availability after her decision change allegiance from Australia to New Zealand.

Mato, 27, wants to play for New Zealand at this year’s Rugby League World Cup.

She debuted for Australia at the 2022 World Cup in England and could not represent New Zealand as a result.

But a change this month in rugby league’s international rules allows players from Australia, New Zealand and England to switch to another of those countries to represent their heritage or homeland.

Players can now represent a nation for which they qualify through birth or if a parent or grandparent was born in that country, nrl.com reported. They can’t though represent more than one nation in a calendar year.

The Whangarei-born player lived in Upper Hutt before moving to Australia at the age of 13.

Mato said the birth of her son Charnze-Pati in October led to her decision.

“I get a bit emotional because my son is half-Samoan, half-Māori and Kiwi, so I want him to represent both of those if he was to grow up and follow that pathway,” she told nrl.com.

She is keen to play for the Kiwi Ferns in the World Cup, which is being held in Australia and Papua New Guinea in October and November.

“If I was given the opportunity I would take it in a heartbeat and I think that is because I am in a different part of my life now.”

Another rule change allows players who represent New Zealand or England and qualify for New South Wales or Queensland to be available for State of Origin.

In the men’s game this has already seen Newcastle Knights and Queensland fullback Kalyn Ponga switch allegiance to New Zealand, enabling his availability for the Kiwis at the World Cup, which will run parallel to the women’s event.

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Prime Minister Christopher Luxon refuses to say if he tried to call off Samoa matai ceremony

Source: Radio New Zealand

The furore over Christopher Luxon’s new matai title is refusing to go away, after local media in Samoa reported there was a late night phone call saying he didn’t want to go ahead with it after “too much interference on social media”.

Luxon refused to answer questions about the reports on Tuesday, saying he wanted to move on from the issue.

The Samoan Observer reported on Tuesday morning Prime Minister Laaulialemalietoa Leuatea Schmidt said he’d received a phone call at about 3am from Samoa’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs CEO, informing him Luxon didn’t want to proceed with the bestowal of the title Tuisinavemaulumoto’otua.

Prime Minster Christopher Luxon attends a ceremony in Apia to bestow a matai title. RNZ / Giles Dexter

The report stated Schmidt was told Luxon had decided not to go ahead because of “too much interference on social media”. It also said there were discussions that continued into the night, and early Monday morning before the ceremony eventually proceeded.

Schmidt had said he’d told those involved that Samoa had prepared for the ceremony and that he’d urged Luxon not to be concerned about online criticism.

It comes after Luxon’s office denied reports that he requested to be given a matai title ahead of his visit to Samoa.

Samoa’s government had to clarify on Monday morning that neither Luxon nor his representatives had requested he be given an honour, shortly before the presentation.

Luxon’s since said it was a “miscommunication” and both he and the Samoan prime minister had moved on.

Asked on Tuesday about the Samoan Observer report, Luxon wouldn’t say if a phone call had taken place, instead saying he had “nothing further to add”.

Christopher Luxon attends a gift giving ceremony in Samoa, where he received a portrait painted by a local Methodist college. RNZ / Giles Dexter

“The prime minister issued a statement yesterday,” said Luxon, “I’m going to leave it there”.

“Again, I’m sorry guys, I’m just not going there.”

Asked if it had damaged trust between the two nations, Luxon said a very good relationship had been established through this visit, calling it a very successful trip.

Luxon said there’d been conversations around health, education and the border, and good connections made between the counterparts and cabinet ministers.

Luxon rejected the notion there was “confusion”, saying in the conversations that had occurred, “we’ve moved our conversation to things that actually matter for the Samoan people”.

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Who is Khaby Lame – the world’s most followed TikToker?

Source: Radio New Zealand

His name is Khabane Lame, but he is known worldwide as Khaby Lame. Born in Dakar, Senegal, he is the most followed content creator on TikTok.

He became famous for video clips in which he reacts to absurd “life hack” videos with a blank, slightly annoyed face, showing the hack wasn’t needed.

At the time of writing he has over 160 million followers: a world record achieved without uttering a single word. In January he sold his brand rights for nearly US$1 billion.

Khaby Lame attending the 2025 Met Gala Celebrating.

AFP/DIA DIPASUPIL

Is sitting in the car ‘self care’?

Wellbeing

But there’s another dimension to his story that the western media rarely mention: Khaby Lame is a practising Muslim and a hafiz, a Muslim devotee who has memorised the entire Quran. This after being sent to a Quranic school near Dakar at the age of 14.

The tension between the sacred body of the hafiz and the commercialisation of the influencer’s digital life makes his journey a rich case study.

For me, as a researcher of digital identity, his online career also raises questions about turning personal data into digital assets.

From the suburbs of Turin to the top of the global stage

Khaby Lame’s story reads like a modern-day myth. Not because it’s hard to believe, but because it mirrors the core narratives of digital modernity. It starts with hardship, goes through a period of creative isolation and ends with global recognition.

This is what the French thinker Roland Barthes called “mythical speech”, a story that seems natural and simple, but is actually shaped by deeper forces and structures.

In 2020, at the beginning of the Covid pandemic, Khaby Lame lost his job as a factory worker. He was stuck at home and locked down in social housing in the suburbs of Turin, Italy, where his parents had moved when he was a baby.

Out of this hardship he made a simple decision: he started filming short videos. Just 17 months later, he reached more than 100 million followers on TikTok. He was the first content creator based in Europe to reach that milestone.

His story reflects the promise often promoted by TikTok that the platform can lift anyone up. All you need, it suggests, is a mobile phone, and talent will quickly be rewarded with global fame.

This should be celebrated. But the myth of instant success also needs a closer look. Behind every viral rise lie smart decisions, hard work, and the powerful, and often unpredictable, role of the platfom’s algorithm.

TikTok account of one of the most followed people on the app, Senegalese-Italian Khaby Lame.

Riccardo Milani / Hans Lucas / Hans Lucas via AFP

Comic tradition

What sets Khaby Lame apart from almost all the creators before him is the semiotic system (of signs and symbols) he invented – or rather reactivated. He brought back an old comic tradition.

Many compare him to British comedy actor Charlie Chaplin. Others see echoes of US comedian Buster Keaton. Both were masters of Hollywood’s silent slapstick comedy.

Khaby Lame revives the codes of 1930s Hollywood silent comedy cinema: mime, meaningful glances, no dialogue, and burlesque sketches (short theatrical scenes) that convey messages. But the Chaplin connection ends there, as the two men inhabit their bodies in radically different ways.

Chaplin’s films carry emotional weight, driven by social and political themes. His character, the tramp, is a poor wanderer pushing back against an unfair industrial world.

Khaby Lame’s style is closer to Keaton’s. He says nothing. He simply shows how unnecessary and complicated these internet quick fixes are. His absolute impassivity in the face of the absurd is what Keaton perfected with his famous “great stone face”.

But while the comic structure is similar, their relationship to their bodies is not. Throughout his life, Keaton remained completely indifferent to religion or metaphysics in any form. Khaby Lame is the opposite. He is a hafiz. The separation of his digital identity from his physical person is notable.

Wordless humour allowed him to build a global audience because there are no language barriers, just as silent film stars like Charlie Chaplin became global icons a century ago.

TikTok’s algorithm favours content that anyone can understand instantly. Chaplin needed a movie theatre, Khaby Lame needs only a phone and an algorithm. The mechanics are similar. The way it spreads has completely changed.

Digital identity

In January 2026, Khaby Lame’s carefully crafted expressive persona took on a new status. It became a financial asset. He sold his company, Step Distinctive Limited, for US$975 million to Rich Sparkle, a publicly traded company based in Hong Kong. The agreement includes the transfer of rights to use his image, voice and behavioural models to create an artificial intelligence-powered digital twin.

This digital twin will produce multilingual content, including material for advertising and promotions. Companies will be able to run commercials in several countries without Khaby being physically present. According to Rich Sparkle, this could help generate over US$4 billion in annual sales, especially through livestream e-commerce (a format already dominant in Asia), broadcast simultaneously around the world.

This transaction marks a turning point. Digital identity no longer merely represents a person. It becomes an asset that can be separated from the individual who created it. Now, a creator is no longer a brand ambassador, but a brand in its own right. In theory, Khaby Lame’s digital being is now legally separate from Khaby Lame himself.

The digital twin is, in this sense, the Buster Keaton body that digital platform capitalism has always dreamed of – impassive, reproducible, available across all time zones.

Signature gesture

Khaby Lame’s signature gesture is to place both palms open and turned upward. This seems simple and easy to understand, a light and humorous sign of of disbelief. But the gesture carries deeper meanings.

In Islamic tradition, as in many African cultures, this same gesture is linked to dua, the act of raising one’s hand in supplication to God. What millions of viewers read as a comic signature is also a spiritual practice.

Yet Khaby Lame’s digital double is not simply an image. It can act in his name. It can speak with his voice. It can repeat his familiar gestures. This is no longer simple representation. It is a form of transferring his way of expressing himself onto a digital system.

The same open hands, the same expressive gaze, the same voice that once recited the suras of the Quran in a school in Dakar are now the attributes of a commercial transaction valued at nearly a billion dollars.

There is an ethical question in handing over his active identity to financial markets.

An ethical question

For many young Africans, especially in Senegal, Khaby Lame embodies the possibility that digital spaces are territories where Africans can succeed, where the hierarchies inherited from colonial history can, at least symbolically, be overturned.

But the deal raises a difficult question: what does it mean to sell your digital self in a world where Black and African bodies have been used and profited from for centuries without consent and fair compensation?

Is this a win or a new form of exploitation? Can the financial benefits balance the transfer of his identity?

More African creators are building global audiences every year. That means these questions will become harder to ignore. Who owns a creator’s digital twin once it’s sold? Who set the rules for its use?

Khaby Lame is not just a social media success story. He is a revelation of the future and, perhaps unwittingly, a pioneer.

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