Man accused of murdering Gurjit Singh ‘lied to police and left evidence at scene’, Crown alleges

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rajinder has been accused of murdering Gurjit Singh in Dunedin in January last year. RNZ

The man accused of murdering Dunedin’s Gurjit Singh lied to police and left DNA evidence at the scene, the Crown has alleged.

The man, known only as Rajinder, is on trial at the High Court for murdering Singh, who was found dead on the lawn of his home in January last year after being stabbed more than 40 times.

Rajinder’s defence lawyer maintained his client had no reason to kill Singh and there was no animosity between the men.

In closing arguments, prosecutor Richard Smith said the jury could not be left with any uncertainty about his guilt.

He said a forensic expert had testified that blood samples taken in and around Singh’s home were 500,000 million times more likely to be Rajinder’s than a random person.

“His blood and hair in the scene. His hair in the victim’s hands, his injury and the thumb of the glove left at the scene. Him buying a murder kit. Him saying he didn’t even know where the victim lived yet here he is searching out a route to the victim’s house on the night of the murder,” he said.

“Apply your common sense, it’s not rocket science.”

Rajinder lied to police about how he cut his hand, changing his story from a chainsaw accident to a bike crash, Smith said.

Smith said the wound was instead consistent with a sharp object like a knife or glass, not the sharp rock Rajinder claimed was to blame when he tried to pop a wheelie on his bike and the front tyre came off.

A doctor had raised serious doubts about the wound, saying there was no grazing, no bruising and no abrasions from an apparent fall onto gravel, he said.

Smith said Rajinder again lied to the police when he was asked about other injuries and did not refer to “impressive bruising” on his abdomen and bruising on his hip.

The violent attack happened shortly before Singh’s wife was due to arrive from India to live with him – the same woman who rejected a proposal from Rajinder.

Smith said that rejection, as well as Singh rejecting Rajinder’s plan to marry his sister, was motive for murder.

Smith described the attack as brutal and violent, saying the person who committed the murder knew him and was determined to kill him, chasing him out of his own home.

Rajinder bought gloves from Bunnings and a knife and neck gaiter from Hunting and Fishing the day before the murder but did not tell police during his interview, he said.

Smith said the thumb of the glove was found at the scene, where it appeared to have been detached during the attack.

He said Rajinder also lied when he told police that he did not know when Singh lived, despite searching multiple times for the man’s address on his phone about a month before the attack and again that night.

The search included plotting out directions to Singh’s house that went along back roads where he would be less likely to be seen, he said.

Rajinder told police that he always took his wife to Mosgiel for driving lessons but Smith said her phone only showed her going there on the day before and on the day of Singh’s death.

Instead of a late driving lesson, the Crown suggested he went there to create an alibi or dispose of evidence after murdering Gurjit Singh.

The defence would deliver its closing remarks on Tuesday afternoon.

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Principal of school at centre of mouldy school lunch fiasco hurt by David Seymour’s comments

Source: Radio New Zealand

The school recalled the lunches, but some had already been eaten by students. Supplied

The principal of a school which served up a contaminated meal from the government’s free school lunches programmes says she’s hurt by David Seymour’s comments against her.

The School Lunch Collective told RNZ it was investigating a “food quality issue” after mouldy mince was served up to students at Haeata Community Campus on Monday.

The Collective represents Compass Group, which was contracted to provide government-funded lunches for the Christchurch school.

David Seymour, who is the Associate Education Minister, spoke to First Up about the lunches on Tuesday morning, and accused the school’s principal Peggy Burrows, of being a “media frequent flyer”.

“It will be investigated but I also note this particular principal is a frequent flyer in the media complaining about quite a range of government policies… I think people need that context.”

In response, Burrows said she refused to get involved in a public stoush but added: “I am an educationist, not a politician. I am here to advocate for this community”.

“I must admit I was a little bit hurt to be described in that matter from a person who holds a significant portfolio in education and is, at the moment, the deputy prime minister,” she said.

“I don’t think I’ve ever met Mr Seymour personally or had a conversation with him.”

Haeata Community Campus cafe staff member Elise Darbyshire (left) and principal Peggy Burrows (right). ADAM BURNS / RNZ

MPI involved

The Ministry of Primary Industries (MPI), confirmed it would carry out checks of lunches at the school on Tuesday.

Food safety said it was working with the Ministry of Education and the National Public Health Service to establish the facts.

It said there was no evidence of any wider food safety issue at this stage.

Child unwell

The mother of a girl who ate one of the mouldy lunches said shew as “appalled” by the situation and her daughter was now unwell.

Rebecca Mckenzie, told Morning Report, her 12-year-old daughter Aurora, ate one of the meals on Monday and was now unwell.

“She is not looking good at the moment. She has a very queasy tummy and a temperature of 39, looking really quite sick, I’ll be ringing my doctor once it’s open.”

Mckenzie said her daughter had eaten just over half of the meal before throwing it out.

“She said her one didn’t look mouldy but it tasted very disgusting. She said it looked very undercooked which is quite normal with what they get served there.

“We rely on these meals and to have this is absolutely appalling, but unfortunately David Seymour wanted to cut the budget back and give us these not so nice meals.”

Earlier this year, the principal of the Christchurch school asked to get out of a contract with Compass Group following several weeks of problems and “disappointing” service, but this was denied by the government.

Compass Group was not included on a list of providers chosen by the government to provide school lunches in 2026.

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Police to audit internet use of every senior officer after Jevon McSkimming scandal

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police will be auditing internet usage of the most senior police officers in the country over the last 12 months, starting with the Police Commissioner, RNZ can reveal.

It comes as Commissioner Richard Chambers says he’s asked for a “closer look” at the Independent Police Conduct Authority’s (IPCA) scathing report released last month to see whether there’s anything from a “criminal liability perspective”.

Chambers sat down with RNZ on Tuesday to discuss his first-year in the job.

RNZ recently reported that 17 staff are under investigation in relation to “misuse and inappropriate content”. Three of the staff are facing criminal investigations.

It follows an audit of staff internet usage sparked by the resignation of former Deputy Police Commissioner Jevon McSkimming, who recently pleaded guilty to possessing objectionable publications, including child sexual exploitation and bestiality over a four-year period.

Asked about the number of staff under investigation, Chambers said it was “disappointing, and it falls well short of expectations”.

“We have a code of conduct for a reason. If any of that behaviour is found to be criminal, we’ll take action. But those audits came about because I decided that we needed to put in place systems and processes and audits to ensure that we identified any inappropriate behaviour.”

Former Deputy Commissioner Jevon McSkimming. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Chambers referenced one of the recommendations in the IPCA report, which was to “sustain the good progress” on implementing recommendations from the rapid review into police information security controls and implement a practice of auditing the systems’ use by those officers being considered for promotion to the ranks of, at least, superintendent and above as well as staff with security clearances.

Chambers said he was going “one step further”.

“As an executive leadership team recently, we decided that actually we’re going to step beyond the people that are applying for promotional opportunities, and we’re going to have a look anyway.

“So, one of the things that we have decided to do, and I’ve communicated this out, is that for Deputy Commissioner, Assistant Commissioner, District Commanders and Directors, we are going to have a look at internet access over the last 12 months, because that’s the right thing to do. We have to be confident that at the senior levels of the organisation, Superintendent and above that, there’s nothing to see here, nothing untoward.”

Chambers said police were prioritising the checks.

“So, I’ve said you can start with me, and then those that are in the process to apply for other leadership roles, which we’ve had recently, Assistant Commissioner and also District Commander roles advertise so applicants for those senior roles.

“We are running checks now and then I’m hopeful, probably after Christmas, we will get the capacity to run the rest through whether they are sworn superintendent or civilian equivalents, and above. We will run them all through as quickly as we can.”

The IPCA concluded that once a decision was made in October 2024 to launch a proper investigation into allegations of sexual offending by McSkimming ,senior officers, including former Commissioner Andrew Coster, “attempted to shape its approach so as to bring it to a rapid and premature conclusion”.

They did not find any “collusion”, rather a “consistent pattern of behaviour driven by a common mindset and perspective”.

This, the IPCA said, were concerns that it could end with “unjustified victimisation of the Deputy Commissioner”.

Asked whether there needed to be further investigations into the conduct of the senior staff members, Chambers said he had asked a Detective Superintendent to take a “close look” at the IPCA report and provide advice on whether or not there there was any matter “that needs to be looked at from a criminal liability perspective”.

“Anything that’s remotely appears to be criminal offending is serious, but it may or may not be the case, but I need to let some of my most senior investigators who are very, very good at what they do, let them do their job and provide advice to me, which I will then take on board,” he said.

“It’s how close is some of that activity that we know through the investigations and the IPCA report, how close is some of that activity potential judicial processes that’s what we’ll look at and I’ll let my investigators do their job and then provide guidance to me.”

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Has the freedom of ‘hybrid work’ made us happier?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Has flexible, remote work made mahi more fun and has the freedom made us happier?

The nine to five has changed a lot of recent years, with Covid forcing some business to adapt to working from a home.

But it’s not without its challenges. How do you read the room when no one is physically in it? Did that colleague’s chat message have a tone?

Barbara Plester

Supplied

How and when to call in sick to work

An Auckland University social scientist has been exploring these questions, embedding herself in two businesses, one a tech company and the other a food manufacturer.

Associate professor Barbara Plester told Checkpoint hybrid working came with challenges, but believed people were happier when doing so.

“I believe it makes us happier, every single person that was able to do hybrid work absolutely wanted to keep it.

“They were happier doing it because of the flexibility, because of the autonomy and they felt trusted by their boss.

“That was really important to them, that combination of freedom and trust.”

She said people did sometimes feel some anxiety because of possible isolation and lack of connection.

Plester also said people understood online chats differently, which often posed as a challenge.

“Emojis can be interpreted in a variety of different ways, so it just depends on your interpretation…

“And sometimes you can send a little GIF to someone and if it’s not the right person, that can go horribly wrong for you.”

Tone was a difficult thing to navigate, she said.

“When you are in face to face communication, you have got all of these cues going on, you can spot someone’s change of expression, change of body language.

“But when it’s written and it’s with GIF’s or emojis and things like that, sometimes you’re reading a tone that’s just not there.”

She said it was a “new art of communication”, and hybrid workers needed to figure out how they communicated.

What is forced fun?

Companies should be aware of forced fun, Plester said, which was when ‘fun’ was planned and something employees had to join.

“Forced fun is not really fun.

“I always suggest to companies to have an opt out clause so that people can say ‘that ones not for me’ or ‘not today’.”

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Virginity testing harming women in New Zealand – researcher

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Helen Clark Foundation is is calling for better laws to protect victims of sexual violence in New Zealand, including eradicating virginity testing. 123rf.com

Researchers say the practice of virginity testing is happening in New Zealand and it’s harming women.

The Helen Clark Foundation is calling for urgent law changes to better protect victims of sexual violence and reduce offending rates.

The think tank’s report, Addressing Sexual Violence in New Zealand, makes a number of recommendations, including adopting a clearer definition of consent in law, banning sexually explicit deepfake abuse, and eradicating virginity testing.

Researcher Sophia Harré said they did not know the extent of the practice in New Zealand but were concerned it is happening in some communities.

“There have been cases where medical professionals have been approached to conduct the proceedure and they’ve declined. We’ve heard talk that it might be happening by family members in community.”

She said virginity testing was when a woman or girl is subjected to a physical inspection of their hymen, while virginity policing involved checking for blood after sexual intercourse.

“These stem from myths around hymens that they will bleed or will be damaged when sexual contact occurs, these are incorrect.”

Harre said the practice was damaging, especially in cases involving sexual assault.

“It can have quite significant impacts on their position in society, it can impact their relationships, it can have consequences on their education and career opportunities later in life.”

Virginity testing is not illegal in New Zealand, and the UN has called on governments to ban the practice altogether and to carry out awareness campaigns.

The report recommends a number of steps in line with UN recommendations, including improved education for medical practitioners and legal professionals, research to inform community-led interventions, and legislation to ban virginity testing.

Labour’s Priyanca Radhakrishnan has lodged a members’ bill which seeks to amend the Crimes Act to criminalise virginity testing.

The proposed the Crimes (Virginity Testing Practices) Amendment Bill “seeks to protect vulnerable women and girls by amending the Crimes Act 1961 to introduce new offences that criminalise virginity testing and the related practice of hymenoplasty”.

Harré said the foundation supported the Bill as long as there was education and consultation for communities that may be practising virginity testing.

“There’s a risk that if we go really hard on legislation and ban it without having proper consultation with these communities that it could be driven further underground.”

Auckland clinical nurse specialist in family violence, Kathy Lowe, was interviewed for the foundation’s report and has been educating both medical professionals and communities about virginity testing for 30 years.

“For me it’s not a women’s issue it’s human rights issue, it affects men and women. Imagine if we told men that they had virgin semen and the first time they lost it they weren’t a virgin any more and they had to go to a doctor to prove that they were still a virgin before they were allowed to be married,” she said.

“It doesn’t make sense and yet we’re still doing that to women.”

Lowe said it was not possible to tell by looking at a hymen whether somebody has had sex.

“The majority of people say the first time you have sex that bit of skin gets broken then you’re not a virgin anymore and that’s how we can tell whether somebody’s a virgin, by that piece of skin being broken,” she said.

“The hymen is not a skin, it’s not a membrane, it’s not a seal. It’s actually a collar of stretchy tissue just at the entrance of the vagina…when you’re born with a hymen, the hymen has a hole the middle of it, you are born with the hole.”

There is no data about the practice of virginity testing and Lowe said it was a taboo subject in many communities.

“I truly don’t know which cultures do this and don’t but I think every culture in New Zealand has a myth around virginity.”

She hears about the prevalence of it from nurses and doctors who are asked – and decline – to conduct such examinations.

Lowe said it was also unclear if the practice of hymenoplasty was still conducted. The last time she heard of a case was 2013.

“They get the edges of the [hymen’s] hole and they stitch it together so that when you do have sex you’re going to bleed for sure and it’s going to hurt like hell because it’s scar tissue. In their mind they think they’re making themselves a virgin again when in fact the hymen was never sealed to start with.”

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

Chronic methamphetamine use will cost us – emergency doctor

Source: Radio New Zealand

The consequences of chronic methamphetamine use are already visible in hospital wards, and it’s about to get worse, an emergency department doctor says.

Dr Paul Quigley told a symposium on reducing drug harm on Monday the country was facing an impending health crisis on par with smoking-related lung disease.

“We are seeing the chronic effects of drug use, that’s often in terms of mental health – so people developing ongoing forms of schizophrenia – [but] we are now seeing the hard effects of long-term methamphetamine use.

“We’re seeing people with cardiomyopathies, heart failure.” Dr Paul Quigley.

RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

Quigley told RNZ methamphetamine was particularly “cardio-toxic”, affecting the heart in two key ways through accelerated ageing and exhaustion.

He said the ageing heart meant heart disease was showing up 10 to 15 years earlier than expected.

“So we’re seeing people in their mid-40s who are regular methamphetamine users having heart attacks as if they’d be in their 60s.”

He said meth also increased people’s heart rate and blood pressure, and sustained use literally “exhausts the heart” resulting in cardiomyopathy (a type of heart failure) and in extreme cases, heart transplants.

Quigley said those most at risk of heart disease weren’t “your weekend warriors”, but almost daily methamphetamine users who’d been using for more than a decade.

He said data showed acute meth use in New Zealand was on the rise and the major concern was the impending burden on the healthcare system and society – a cost already seen in countries where meth use was high.

befunky.com

“You should look at this like smoking. People smoked in the 40s and 50s … then later we had this terrible burden of lung disease from the effects of smoking. And it’s going to be the same.

“If we have increased meth use now, we should be looking at, ‘Well, what’s going to happen in 10 to 15 years time?’

“We’re going to have this much larger population of patients with these heart conditions … and it’s affecting parts of our society that are already struggling,” he said.

“We’ve just got through the smoking crisis – in terms of lung disease is decreasing – but it’s just going to be replaced by this new disease.”

The Reducing Drug Harm in Aotearoa Symposium – hosted by the Public Health and Forensic Science Institute – featured a range of experts from the frontline of festival drug checking and wastewater analysis, to the police’s drug intelligence office and international experts on early warning systems for new and harmful drugs.

National Drug Intelligence Bureau analyst Kylie Collins spoke to current and emerging drug trends in New Zealand, highlighting a spike in meth consumption in July 2024 that almost doubled methamphetamine use nationally – and has continued.

Collins said the vast majority of New Zealand’s supply came from overseas and the increased use had coincided with a drop in price for the drug.

She said alongside increasing seizures of the drug, meth-related hospitalisations had also been on the rise.

“However, many hospitalisations stem from chronic or very heavy use. So with the recent increases in meth consumption we expect to see even bigger increases in hospitalisations in years to come.”

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Man charged after allegedly eating a pendant at an Auckland jewellers

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Fabergé locket was worth more than $33,500. SCREENSHOT

A man has been charged for allegedly swallowing a Fabergé locket worth more than $33,500 during a theft at a store in Auckland.

Police were called at 3.30pm last Friday to the store in the central city.

The 32-year-old man was accused of picking up a Fabergé James Bond Octopussy Egg pendant and swallowing it.

Court documents reveal the pendant was worth $33,585.

Do you know more? Email finn.blackwell@rnz.co.nz

An online listing for the locket said it had been crafted from 18ct yellow gold and set with 60 white diamonds and 15 blue sapphires.

A golden octopus inside the locket was set with two black diamonds for eyes.

Officers from the Auckland City Beat team were on the scene minutes later, and arrested the man, police confirmed.

He had been charged with theft, and was remanded in custody when he appeared in Auckland District Court last week, he was expected to reappear next Monday.

Police told RNZ the pendant had not yet been recovered.

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Tertiary institutions enrolling extra students to meet demand

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Richard Tindiller

The Tertiary Education Commission has taken the unusual step of giving multiple tertiary institutions permission to enrol extra students this year as they try to meet a boom in enrolments.

The commission’s chief executive, Tim Fowler, told Parliament’s Education and Workforce Select Committee institutions could enrol up to five percent more students than the government had agreed to fund them for.

“We have always set that as the outer boundary marker above which institutions cannot go without our permission, and it has been extremely rare for us to allow institutions to go above that in any year,” he said.

But Fowler said this year it allowed many more institutions to exceed the five percent limit and it would likely do the same next year.

He said an increase in the number of school-leavers had driven enrolments up across the entire tertiary sector, including polytechnics and private tertiary institutions.

But the number of people in workplace learning, such as apprenticeships, had dropped because many employers had less work and had chosen not to employ apprentices, Fowler said.

He said the number of people in work-based training dropped about 15 percent a year for three consecutive years.

Fowler said the government had provided sufficient funding for 99 percent of projected enrolments.

He said university enrolments rose four percent this year and only one of the eight institutions had enrolled fewer students than the commission had agreed to fund it for this year.

“What we’re mostly seeing is them over-delivering against their small budgeted deficits or small budgeted surpluses,” he said.

Fowler said university finances were constrained but only one was rated as “high risk” financially.

“We have two universities low-risk, we’ve got one high, one medium-high, and the rest medium,” he said.

Fowler said universities’ ability to deliver on capital spending was restricted and they were increasingly reliant on income from foreign students.

He said the institutions were generally managed and governed well.

Fowler said for years the commission had encouraged institutions to improve their students’ course and qualification completion rates and those figures were starting to improve.

He said the date for dissolving super-institute Te Pūkenga had been pushed out to the end of March 2027 because next year’s election could make it difficult to take the final steps necessary to wind it up at the end of 2026.

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Thunderstorms, hail and possible tornadoes forecast for North Island

Source: Radio New Zealand

Storm clouds over Queen Elizabeth Park in Kāpiti after a thunderstorm. Supplied/ Dan Bailey

The hot start to summer is expected to take a turn, with thunderstorms, hail and even a chance of tornados for the North Island.

MetService said an active low pressure system is expected to move onto central and northern New Zealand during Wednesday and move to the east of the country on Thursday. The system is expected to bring heavy rain with thunderstorms and strong winds.

MetService Meteorologist Devlin Lynden said there is a moderate risk for thunderstorms in the North Island bringing heavy rain, small hail and even a chance of small tornadoes.

Lynden said the conditions were the “right set-up” for small tornados, with tornadoes more likely to form in coastal areas of the North Island.

MetService has issued several weather warning and watches across the North Island.

Bay of Plenty has been issued an orange heavy rain warning for most of Wednesday, with up to 120mm of rain expected.

A heavy rain watch has been issued for Auckland, Waikato, central North Island, Taranaki, Wairarapa and Wellington for Wednesday.

A strong wind watch has been issued for Northland, Auckland, Wellington, Wairarapa, Taranaki, eastern areas of the Tararua District and Hawke’s Bay for Wednesday.

While the North Island may be in for the brunt of it, the South Island gets its share of rainy weather too.

The upper parts of the South Island may also see a period of heavier rain on Wednesday associated with the low to the north.

The low gradually moves off to the southeast on Wednesday night, and conditions will ease behind it, before starting to clear through Thursday morning, with many places seeing drier weather and some sunshine return.

However, strong to gale southwesterly winds will persist, particularly for Wellington, Wairarapa, Northland and Auckland; they will keep the temperatures capped towards the end of the week.

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‘A bit tired, a bit ratty’: Heated exchange between Willis and Labour MPs at Parliament

Source: Radio New Zealand

Finance Minister Nicola Willis. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Finance Minister Nicola Willis has labelled the conduct of Labour MPs “unbecoming” after a fiery Scrutiny Week appearance which saw accusations of name-calling and conspiracy-thinking.

Under questioning in the meeting, Willis also confirmed the government had no intention of buying offshore carbon credits to meet the 2030 Paris agreement as part of a “performative awards ceremony” even if that meant it would breach its commitment.

Christmas cheer?

From the meeting’s outset, the exchanges were heated. Labour’s finance spokesperson Barbara Edmonds asked Willis to explain why she claimed infrastructure spending was increasing despite that not being the case in the most recent financial statements.

Labour’s finance spokesperson Barbara Edmonds. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

In response, Willis said the coalition had budgeted a record amount for public infrastructure over the next four years and finished with a dig at Labour.

“The last government was good at doing press releases, but not so good at getting shovels in the ground.”

Both Labour’s Deborah Russell and Megan Woods immediately objected: “Oh, that’s fine? It’s fine to take shots at the opposition? Anything’s on is it?”

The two sides also had a back-and-forth over a table in the Crown accounts which Willis claimed the Labour MPs had misinterpreted.

Again, it prompted a chorus of overlapping questions from the opposition: “Which table? Which table? What’s the table number? Which table, please? Which table?”

Labour MPs also openly laughed as Willis took credit for the more-than-7000 new built social homes since the election. Russell pushed Willis to confirm that those houses were funded under Labour’s previous Budgets.

“This is outrageous,” Woods said. “They cut the funding for housing and she’s claiming credit.”

Willis: “Everyone’s very excited today, Mr Chair. It’s the Christmas cheer, I suppose.”

The government and opposition side sparred over their respective fiscal strategies and records. Green MP Chlöe Swarbrick accused the coalition of “reckless cuts” and “a doom loop”.

Willis, meanwhile, took aim at Labour’s “disgraceful” increase in debt while in power.

“It was wrong for your government to increase spending dramatically right when the Reserve Bank was begging you to put on the brakes.”

Russell fired back: “That increased spending was, of course, backed by the National Party … [which] called for even more spending.”

Russell also asked Willis whether the government had changed the way the Emissions Trading Scheme operated in order to make its books look better.

“When you’re a conspiracy theorist, you see conspiracy everywhere,” Willis responded.

“Oh, for goodness sake. That’s a ridiculous thing to say,” Russell said. “When you can’t answer the question, you resort to insults.”

Speaking to reporters afterwards, Willis said she accepted the committees could be robust, but thought some of allegations levelled at her were “unbecoming”.

“They’re all a bit tired, a bit ratty,” Willis said. “In general, they behave better than that, but everyone has an off day.”

Climate change commitments

Green co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick also pressed Willis over whether the government remained committed to its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the Paris agreement.

Green co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Willis said that remained a priority but the government was not prepared to “spend billions of dollars sending money offshore to meet that NDC”.

Swarbrick requested that Willis take into account the potential fiscal impact of that NDC in its books for the “sake of financial responsibility” and “transparency” to which Willis simply responded: “No.”

Afterwards, Willis described the call as “a lot of fluff and noise” and noted that the previous government never recognised those obligations as liabilities either.

She said the government would make “best efforts” to uphold its 2030 Paris commitments, but would not buy offshore carbon credits even if that was required to achieve it.

“We do not think it’s in New Zealand’s best interest to send cheques for billions of dollars offshore,” she said.

“New Zealanders who are struggling to put food on the table are not going to thank us for having a performative awards ceremony.”

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