I’m educated and a fan of science, so why do I follow superstitions?

Source: Radio New Zealand

As kids, many of us are told that if we go outside with wet hair, we’ll catch a cold. And as adults, we might spend an extra few minutes drying our hair before stepping out.

Many tall buildings in Anglo countries don’t label the 13th floor, while buildings in East Asia often skip floor four.

If a player I barrack for is having a winning streak, and a commentator mentions it, I might feel like the player is “jinxed” and their winning streak will end.

We can be quite creative in how we assemble information, in ways that are totally incompatible with science.

Unsplash

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

Person dies in crash, car submerged in river

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A person has died on State Highway 1 in Taihape, to the north of Spooners Hill.

Police were advised at 7.25am on Sunday that a car had gone off the road and into Hautapu River.

The car was found submerged in the river with significant damage from the crash.

It was removed from the river on Sunday afternoon.

The driver was the sole occupant.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

‘Ens…ification’ blamed for as Kiwis feel down about internet

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sixty percent of Kiwis use AI weekly, but 68 percent are ‘very or extremely concerned’ about it being used to produce harmful content. File photo. 123rf

Fewer and fewer New Zealanders are feeling positive about the internet, despite many spending hours online per day.

A study by Internet NZ has found that only 72 percent of Kiwis think the positives of the internet outweigh the negatives, despite nearly half spending four or more hours online a day.

InternetNZ chief executive Vivien Maidaborn said that figure had been slowly declining from 90 percent in 2019.

“The concern is potentially increasing because of what’s now being called the ‘enshittification’ of the internet by the big players who are really prioritising profit over user experience.”

Maidaborn said the research showed the increasingly complex relationship people have with the internet.

“Love it or hate it, we’re all using the internet a great deal… it’s become so integral to our day to day. But that doesn’t mean it’s something we enjoy engaging with.”

Attitude towards AI

The research also found kiwis were feeling increasingly confident in using artificial intelligence, but concerned about its potential to produce harmful content.

It found 60 percent of Kiwis used AI weekly, but 68 percent were ‘very or extremely concerned’ about it being used to produce harmful content.

AI could amplify some of the worst parts of the internet, Maidaborn said.

“Scamming phishing, targeting of particular groups with harm. All of those things can happen way faster than human speed with AI.”

The findings reflected the pace at which AI has grown in the past few years, Maidaborn said.

“In a very short time, we’ve gone from most people having a very limited understanding of what AI is and what it can do, to it being in use every day in almost every household.”

AI also brought opportunity, but more policy guidance was needed from the government so that people were not using unregulated tools, Maidaborn said.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

One killed in Ruapehu crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emergency services were called to the scene in the Ruapehu District just after 11pm on Sunday (file image). RNZ / Richard Tindiller

One person has died after a three-vehicle crash on State Highway 4 in the settlement of Erua on Sunday night.

Emergency services were called to the scene in the Ruapehu District just after 11pm.

One person died at the scene. Another person sustained critical injuries, and four others minor.

The Serious Crash Unit examined the scene and enquiries were ongoing.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Rugby: All Blacks halfback Cortez Ratima re-commits to NZ Rugby to after next World Cup.

Source: Radio New Zealand

Will Jordan celebrates with Cortez Ratima after scoring. Wallabies v New Zealand All Blacks, 2024 Rugby Championship and Bledisloe Cup test match, Accor Stadium, NSW, Australia, Saturday 21st September 2024, Copyright David Neilson / www.photosport.nz David Neilson/Photosport

All Blacks halfback Cortez Ratima has re-signed with New Zealand Rugby and the Chiefs to the end of 2028.

The 24-year-old said it was an easy decision, especially after the recent birth of his second son.

“I have a new baby at home and being in one place and having a stable home life is good for our family,” Ratima said.

“I love this club and how they have supported me and my family. I’m loving what [Chiefs coach] Jono [Gibbes] and the other coaches are doing and there’s no place I’d rather be.”

Cortez Ratima of New Zealand All Blacks during series against England, 2024. PHOTOSPORT

Ratima has played 38 games for Waikato and 60 for the Chiefs since his Super Rugby debut against the Crusaders in 2022.

He has played 21 tests since making his All Blacks debut against England in 2024.

Ratima said with the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia getting closer, competing for a place in the All Blacks was a huge motivator.

Gibbes was delighted Ratima was staying with the side.

“It’s great to have a player of Cortez’ ability stick with us. It shows his faith in what we are doing and where we are heading, which is terrific. It’s also a reflection on the culture we have here at the club.

“Cortez is a talented young man and it is exciting to know he and his whānau will be a part of the Chiefs for another three years, at least.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Iranian NZers ‘incredibly hopeful’ attacks will lead to swift regime change

Source: Radio New Zealand

People mourn the death of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed in joint US and Israeli strikes, in Tehran AFP / ATTA KENARE

As strikes and retaliations continue in the Middle East, there has been a mixed response from Iranian-New Zealanders – but some see the US attempt to instigate regime change as an opportunity for Iran to reinvent itself.

The Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed yesterday amid US and Israeli strikes, but in response the regime has vowed “heaviest offensive” in its history.

Iranian-born former Green Party member Golriz Ghahraman told RNZ many in the Iranian community were celebrating US action towards regime change, but some are already concerned about what comes next.

“What’s happening in Iran… is terrifying by any standards. It’s pretty mixed, but distressing emotions for any Iranians,” she said.

“It’s our homeland being bombed, but of course we’ve seen some incredible, unprecedented violence by the Islamic regime against protesters earlier this year.”

Iranian-New Zealanders were “waiting with bated breath” to see what the outcome would be, she said.

“There are some who are incredibly hopeful that this will lead to swift regime change, some are deeply worried that what will happen is what we’ve seen happen to other nations in the region – which is that they’ll be devastated and then the previous regime will be reinstated.”

She was alluding in particular to Afghanistan, which has been under Taliban rule since shortly after the US withdrew https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/world/446161/us-exit-leads-afghans-to-rue-decades-of-war troops from the region in 2021].

New Zealand-Iranians with family still in the country were naturally “deeply worried”, she said.

Ghahraman, who was also a former UN human rights lawyer, said that although a lot of Iranian expats shared the US desire for regime change, the strikes were still illegal according to international law.

“There’s no such thing as a lawful pre-emptive attack on a sovereign nation. The United States knows this.

“This is just absolute fiction in terms of being able to bomb a country because you perceive them as a threat.”

Although the Khamenei government had been incredibly violent and oppressive, it was still hard for some Iranians to see the US as a liberating force, she said.

“We do have a very difficult situation in terms of enormous human rights abuses being committed by both sides, and the Iranian people being caught in the middle.”

She was calling on New Zealanders to support the Iranian community during this time.

“What we would like is to know that we live among communities that see our humanity, and know that the lives of our people, freedom, human rights for our people also matter.

“It’s nice to know that in our little communities in Aotearoa, that we are seen”, she said.

‘We don’t call it a war’

Iranian man living in New Zealand Reza Farhour said he did not see the attack on Iran as a war, but as other countries helping the Iranian people.

Reza Farhour told RNZ that he was happy about Iran’s supreme leader being killed.

“We don’t call it war. It’s not against our people. It’s to help our people to get what they want.

The death of Khamenei was an opportunity for Iranians to govern Iran they way they would like, he added.

The conflict would not be over until the regime was gone, and Iran established a secular democracy, he said.

He estimated between 80 and 90 percent of Iranians were calling for the exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi to become the leader – the eldest son of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who was the last shah of Iran.

Last month, millions of Iranians had rallied across Europe, North America, and Oceania in response to a call by Pahlavi.

United States president Donald Trump said 32,000 were killed in Iran as a result.

“He’s [Pahlavi] a very democratic person. He has been saying from the beginning: I don’t want to be a king, only the leader of this transition until we have a free election to choose what kind of democracy people want.”

The wall has ‘finally cracked’

Dr Forough Amin – an Iranian woman in New Zealand – told RNZ she was celebrating after the death of Iran’s supreme leader, and that she would not be the only person feeling relief on Sunday.

“This Supreme Leader has been the symbol of a system that has brought enormous suffering to our people for 47 years,” she said.

“Thousands have been imprisoned, have been executed.”

Khamenei was the core of an oppressive regime controlling every aspect of Iran – including politics, economy, and culture, Amin said.

“He, as the central figure of this system, has disappeared.

“We feel like the wall that has stood over this country for decades has finally cracked.”

She was hoping Israel and the United States would completely end the regime, and Iran’s exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi would take over.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

‘Enshittification’ blamed for fewer NZers feeling positive about the internet

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sixty percent of Kiwis use AI weekly, but 68 percent are ‘very or extremely concerned’ about it being used to produce harmful content. File photo. 123rf

Fewer and fewer New Zealanders are feeling positive about the internet, despite many spending hours online per day.

A study by Internet NZ has found that only 72 percent of Kiwis think the positives of the internet outweigh the negatives, despite nearly half spending four or more hours online a day.

InternetNZ chief executive Vivien Maidaborn said that figure had been slowly declining from 90 percent in 2019.

“The concern is potentially increasing because of what’s now being called the ‘enshittification’ of the internet by the big players who are really prioritising profit over user experience.”

Maidaborn said the research showed the increasingly complex relationship people have with the internet.

“Love it or hate it, we’re all using the internet a great deal… it’s become so integral to our day to day. But that doesn’t mean it’s something we enjoy engaging with.”

Attitude towards AI

The research also found kiwis were feeling increasingly confident in using artificial intelligence, but concerned about its potential to produce harmful content.

It found 60 percent of Kiwis used AI weekly, but 68 percent were ‘very or extremely concerned’ about it being used to produce harmful content.

AI could amplify some of the worst parts of the internet, Maidaborn said.

“Scamming phishing, targeting of particular groups with harm. All of those things can happen way faster than human speed with AI.”

The findings reflected the pace at which AI has grown in the past few years, Maidaborn said.

“In a very short time, we’ve gone from most people having a very limited understanding of what AI is and what it can do, to it being in use every day in almost every household.”

AI also brought opportunity, but more policy guidance was needed from the government so that people were not using unregulated tools, Maidaborn said.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Official advice about Ehlers-Danlos syndromes and hypermobility spectrum disorder labelled ‘incredibly damaging’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Some patients with a rare disorder experience complications and have to rely on feeding tubes, intravenous fluids and strong pain killers. 123rf

People living with a rare connective tissue disorder say new Health New Zealand guidance about their condition is misleading, with some fearing it could leave them without treatment that keeps them alive.

Te Whatu Ora published the updated information on Ehlers-Danlos syndromes (EDS) and hypermobility spectrum disorder (HSD) on its website last week, following “a review of current evidence-based EDS information.”

On Friday, it told RNZ the information was written in plain English and only meant to provide a high level overview.

EDS is a group of inherited connective tissue disorders, often defined by stretchy skin, hypermobile joints and tissue fragility.

Patients often live with chronic and debilitating musculoskeletal pain and gastroenterological problems. They also commonly have Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS), dysautonomia issues, and Mast Cell Activation Disorder (MCAD), requiring multi-disciplinary and complex medical care.

There are only a handful of specialists who diagnose and treat EDS in New Zealand and dozens of patients have told RNZ they faced years of misdiagnosis, or being told their symptoms were in their head.

Patients and advocacy groups say parts of the HNZ guidance are incorrect and potentially harmful.

“It’s quite alarming that our own [health] agency can’t even provide the correct information,” said Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes Aotearoa New Zealand (EDSANZ) chief executive Kelly McQuinlan.

“We’re already struggling to get the care that we need and this is incredibly damaging.”

The HNZ information linked to EDSANZ’s website giving the impression it endorsed the guidance – which it did not, said McQuinlan.

“We were not consulted, nor were internationally recognised EDS experts in New Zealand.”

She called for HNZ to remove the information until it had carried out “meaningful consultation.”

“The revised material should include appropriate citations that are aligned with current international standards,” she said.

RNZ is aware of at least two formal complaints already made to the Health and Disability Commissioner about the information.

What the guidance says

The HNZ guidance states there are only 12 subtypes of EDS, omitting the most common type hypermobile EDS (hEDS) which it conflates with hypermobility spectrum disorder (HSD).

It also states that hEDS/HSD is “not due to a collagen alteration”, implying it is not a genetic condition.

The 2017 international classification of Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes distinguishes hEDS as a separate condition from HSD. While a precise genetic mechanism for hEDS has not yet been identified, hEDS is classified within the group of heritable connective tissue disorders involving collagen or collagen-associated conditions.

HSD is not included in the umbrella of EDS subtypes, and it is not always linked to collagen defects.

It is estimated that around 4000 people in New Zealand have some form of EDS diagnosis.

Prevalence in patients ranges from 1 in 2500 to 1 in 5000, though some geneticists think hEDS could be as common as 1 in 500. The HNZ guidance says fewer than 1 in 20,000 people have altered collagen EDS.

“It really highlights how much our government and our health system don’t understand or care about the differences,” said Grace Vernal, who lives with hEDS.

Most doctors already knew little about the condition and wrong information could make it worse, she said.

“It just makes something that’s really complicated and stressful, even more complicated and stressful.”

Some people with hEDS can develop life threatening complications, including abdominal vascular compressions, where blood vessels are squeezed, restricting blood flow causing pain, nausea, vomiting and malnutrition.

Some patients experiencing these complications rely on feeding tubes, intravenous fluids and strong pain killers. Several have sought extensive surgery overseas, because they could not get treatment in New Zealand.

The HNZ guidance cautions against patients paying for private international surgery and it “did not recommend” patients with HSD/hEDS be given intravenous fluids, artificial feeding or opiate pain relief.

“There is increasing evidence in medical literature that people with HSD and associated conditions are at risk of being provided medicines and offered invasive treatments that cause more harm than good,” it stated.

Doctors divided

Doctors are divided about the medical evidence for abdominal vascular compressions in hEDS patients. Specialised scans identifying multiple compressions are often obtained privately using novel radiological techniques, and they are not always accepted by doctors working in the public health system.

The Vascular Society of Aotearoa New Zealand said the scientific evidence linking hEDS and vascular compression syndromes was limited. It was aware of patients being harmed by unnecessary treatments.

“Once a patient has confirmed diagnosis of hEDS, the question remains whether these patients increasingly suffer from vascular compression disorders. There is not sufficient evidence yet in the literature to support this at this point,” it said in a 2024 position paper.

It recommended patients be cared for within a multidisciplinary team, including gastroenterology, radiology and psychological assessment.

Rachel Weatherly had to give up a US college football scholarship because of hEDS complications. She relies on a feeding tube for nutrition. Justine Murray

Rachel Weatherly, who had surgery for multiple compressions in Australia last year, said the HNZ wording around treatments was frightening.

The surgery resolved all her pain and had dramatically improved the quality of her life, she said. She still required tube feeding as her stomach had trouble processing food because it had dropped so low into her pelvis. She is hoping further surgery might be able to fix this.

“The treatments they said are not recommended are literally keeping us alive at the moment -the intravenous fluids, the tube feeds,” she said.

Jemima Thompson and her mother Rachel McKenna. Supplied

Rachel McKenna’s daughter Jemima Thompson was funded by Health NZ to travel to Germany in 2023 for vascular compression surgery after becoming bedridden and unable to swallow.

“Without the surgery, she wouldn’t be here. She’d be dead and I have no doubt about that,” McKenna said.

After surgery, Thompson was able to finish high school and had just started university this year.

McKenna, who co-founded a support group for patients dealing with compression complications, does not believe any other hEDS patients since have been successful in seeking HNZ funding for multiple vascular compression surgery overseas.

Surgery ‘innovative and experimental’

A 2023 review by HNZ’s Northern Regional Clinical Practice Committee concluded surgery for multiple vascular compressions was not well founded in scientific literature and any surgery being offered should be considered “innovative and experimental”.

“There will thus be a risk that surgical release in a given patient may provide no relief of symptoms other than a placebo effect,” it said.

Surgery treating multiple compressions is being offered in several countries including Australia, Germany, Spain and Germany, though the techniques used vary between countries and surgeons.

RNZ has spoken to two patients who suffered extensive complications after surgery in Germany, which did not resolve their pain or symptoms.

Health New Zealand National Chief Medical Officer Dame Helen Stokes-Lampard supplied

Health NZ’s ‘plain English’ approach

HNZ did not answer RNZ’s questions about who wrote the updated guidance, which research it was based on, or who was consulted.

“Following a collaborative effort of a range of clinical experts, information for the website was written based on an evidence review conducted by Health NZ to incorporate the best quality international evidence,” Health New Zealand National Chief Medical Officer Dame Helen Stokes-Lampard said in a statement on Friday.

She said a plain English approach was used so the information was accessible. It did not attempt to capture clinical nuances such as subtypes or other technical information.

“For those who want more in-depth reading, links to EDSNZ and Rare Disorders websites are provided.”

McKenna sent an urgent complaint to HNZ, Health Minister Simon Brown and HDC on Saturday.

On Sunday morning, she received a response from Dame Helen, seen by RNZ, stating HNZ did not intend the information to be distressing.

“However, if there is significant concern raised we will review/remove content pending further review.”

She copied in the Minister’s office and HDC to her note saying the matter was a HNZ “website matter that will be addressed swiftly by us.”

HNZ said an EDS working group set up over a year ago had since transitioned to the Rare Disorders Reference Group, which oversaw the review of current evidence-based EDS information.

It had now established a national multi-disciplinary committee to assess patients with vascular compressions, but it had yet to receive any direct enquiries.

Rare Disorders New Zealand Chief Executive Chris Higgins said it was “disappointing and concerning” there had been a lack of consultation about the review.

“We share Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes Aotearoa New Zealand’s frustration. Consumer engagement adds huge value to understanding the lived experience of health conditions, and this is particularly valuable for rare disorders where clinical information is often scarce.

“We expect that as the implementation of the Rare Disorders Strategy progresses, we will see improved engagement between health agencies and the wider rare disorder community,” he said.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Basketball: Will next NZ Breakers coach be homegrown talent?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Judd Flavell and Aaron Young have been assistant coaches in the Australian NBL. Photosport

A worldwide search for the next NZ Breakers head coach could end closer to home.

Breakers president of basketball operations Dillon Boucher said the club would advertise globally to replace Petteri Koponen, who left at the end of their recently completed Australian NBL season to continue his coaching career closer to his family in Finland.

In 23 seasons, the Breakers have had nine head coaches and only two of them have been New Zealanders.

Despite limited opportunities in the main job, top New Zealand talent has occupied assistant coach roles in a couple of NBL teams who could step up, should the Breakers come calling.

Current Tall Blacks head coach Judd Flavell is very familiar with the NBL, after 17 seasons in assistant roles.

Flavell spent 13 seasons with the Breakers, followed by three seasons with South East Melbourne Phoenix, before re-joining the Breakers coaching staff at the start of the 2025/26 season.

Aaron Young is another who has worked with national age-group teams and is a current Perth Wildcats assistant coach.

His first role in the NBL in 2014 was as the Breakers’ video co-ordinator, before going on to coaching roles in New Zealand.

Flavell and Young have both worked closely with up-and-coming local talent, as well as some of the NBL’s biggest stars during their time in the league.

Short-lived stints

NZ Breakers coach Jeff Green during the club’s first-ever game in October 2003. Andrew Cornaga/Photosport

The Breakers owners, who took control in March last year, have backed bringing New Zealand talent back to the club, on and off the court, but having a local coach has not ended well in the past.

The club’s inaugural coach in 2003, Jeff Green, lasted just two months, before resigning.

Former Tall Black and Breakers captain Paul Henare coached the team for the 2016/17 and 2017/18 seasons, and left in murky circumstances, when he turned down a contract extension, following an ownership change.

Paul Henare was the second Kiwi to coach the Breakers. Photosport

In the last seven seasons, the club has had three different head coaches, but none had worked in the NBL, before arriving at the Breakers.

Koponen spent two seasons with the Auckland-based club in his first professional head coaching gig. He was signed at short notice, when Israeli-American Mody Maor quit during the 2024/25 pre-season for a big-money contract coaching in Japan.

Maor had stepped up from an assistant role to coach the team in the 2022/23 season, following a three-season stint by Israeli Dan Shamir.

The Breakers’ longest-serving coach, Australian Andrej Lemanis, was in the role for eight seasons from 2005 and won three championships.

Americans, Australians and the Finn

Sydney King’s coach Brian Goorjian. Kerry Marshall/www.photosport.nz

Across the NBL, which enters the post-season this week, seven of the 10 head coaches were not born in Australia.

Other than Koponen, the remaining six were born in America.

However, Sydney Kings coach Brian Goorjian has been involved with Australian basketball since the late 1970s, and Brisbane Bullets interim coach Darryl McDonald has been a player and then coach since the mid 1990s, so could be considered Australian-Americans.

The NBL is both a stepping stone to other coaching roles and a place experienced coaches return to.

Coaches usually arrive with varying experience in Europe or America.

Like Koponen, Illawarra Hawks coach Justin Tatum had no head coaching experience with professional teams, before he took over the Hawks in 2023 and ultimately guided them to last season’s championship.

Tasmania JackJumpers coach Scott Roth. Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz

Former NBA player Scott Roth was the inaugural coach of the Tasmania JackJumpers in the 2021/22 season and was recognised as the NBL Coach of the Year that season, before the team won the championship in 2024.

Roth had years of experience in both America and Europe, before joining the NBL.

Coaches also bounce around the league, with 72-year-old Goorjian first coaching the Kings in the early 2000s, before switching to the now-defunct South Dragons for a season, returning from Asia to coach the Hawks and then moving on to his current role with the Kings.

Australian Adam Forde, currently the Cairns Taipans head coach, has also had involvement with the Kings and Perth Wildcats.

The Breakers want to winning more NBL titles and securing the right coach will be crucial, but in the NBL, there is no one pathway to getting a winning coach on board.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

Nangs in corner dairies: ‘Should we be stocking this product at all?’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Taking nangs off the shelves is “the first starting point to make sure that you’re safe”, says Retail NZ. File photo. AFP / BENJAMIN POLGE

Dairies and convenience stores need to pull nangs from the shelves, the retailers’ association says.

Police have been warning that problems around the huffing of nitrous oxide products – known as ‘nangs’ – have escalated to people “playing chicken” and seeing whether they can drive without blacking out after inhaling the gas.

They are reminding retailers it is illegal to sell nangs for recreational use.

But a Checkpoint investigation has revealed it is easy to purchase nangs in large quantities from dairies, vape stores and convenience stores with virtually no checks.

Retail NZ chief executive Carolyn Young says she would only expect them to be sold by wholesalers, to supply hospitality customers for whipping cream.

“If it’s a convenience store or a small corner store, that’s actually not your marketplace, that’s not where they’re going to be bought for legitimate use,” she said.

“It needs to be for commercial use only, and if you’re selling it to an individual, especially if you’re selling multiple sales to one individual, you need to be stopping and questioning what they’re asking to buy it for, and whether or not you should be selling that… should we be stocking this product in our store at all?”

Young said retail crime was a concern, especially for retailers who refuse to sell nangs to anyone they think is buying it to get high.

She suggested retailers could say they do not have any stock – or make sure their stock is hidden.

“Certainly taking off the shelves is the first starting point to make sure that you’re safe and your store is safe from being attacked by, potentially young people that are really focusing on getting high.”

Retail NZ had sent guidance to members outlining their responsibilities, Young said.

Police said they were taking a “graduated response” to their growing concerns around the supply of nangs, by focusing on “engagement, education and encouragement”.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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