Rising production and employment sees manufacturing sector expand

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

  • Manufacturing activity expands marginally in November
  • Four of five sub-indexes in expansion – employment first since April
  • Manufacturing expands five months in a row
  • Points to broader economic recovery

The manufacturing sector expanded for a fifth consecutive month in November, led by rising production and employment.

The BNZ-Business New Zealand Performance Of Manufacturing Index (PMI) for October rose by 0.2 points to 51.4 from 51.2 in October, but is still below its long-run average of 52.4. A reading above 50.0 indicates expansion.

The sector has been gradually recovering from the mid-year slump when the economy stalled.

BNZ senior economist Doug Steel said the PMI has settled into growth territory, but he is hoping for bigger improvements in the months ahead.

“We want to see more upbeat out turns from this survey and the Performance of Services Index, to provide us with some comfort that the expected lift in Q3 GDP can be sustained into Q4.”

Steel said manufacturing was struggling to gain momentum, and its current activity was nothing to get excited about.

However, the survey attracted fewer negative comments from manufacturers, with the proportion of negative comments falling to 45.6 percent, down from 54.1 percent in October and 60.2 percent in September.

BusinessNZ’s director of advocacy Catherine Beard said in the current economic climate, any move higher was a welcome step.

“Manufacturers reported a lift in demand driven by seasonal Christmas activity, improving economic conditions and rising customer confidence.”

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

Urgent debates in Parliament go into wee hours of the morning

Source: Radio New Zealand

VNP/Louis Collins

MPs may well be cranky after debates under urgency continued until about 1.40am this morning – resuming again at 9am.

The House continues a packed agenda as the government tries to clear through legislation before the end of the year.

When Parliament is under urgency, sittings usually conclude at midnight.

But when amendments are being voted on in the Committee of the Whole House stage of a bill, the session cannot stop until the amendments have been dealt with.

The opposition putting forward more than 200 amendments on the Electoral Amendment Act – which makes several changes to election rules – was therefore what kept MPs going into the early hours.

Labour’s Greg O’Connor was in the Speaker’s chair and patiently kept things running.

“No doubt to the great disappointment of the house, the time has come for me to leave the chair. The house will resume at 9am tomorrow,” he said.

The remaining pieces of legislation on Friday also includes pushing a climate targets bill through all stages – a process that will take significant time – as well as changes to overseas investment national interest tests, and a re-committal of the committee stage of a bill adding two extra judges.

If not all dealt with, sittings will continue on Saturday – potentially until midnight – or whenever voting on amendments concludes.

Urgent sittings this week have seen the government extend RMA consents, backtrack on controversial changes to the fast-track regime, and pass changes to the rules for pig farming.

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

Disgraced former Gloriavale leader Howard Temple sentenced to 26 months’ jail for sexual offending

Source: Radio New Zealand

Former Gloriavle overseeing shepherd Howard Temple in the Greymouth District Court during his sentencing. Tim Brown / RNZ

The disgraced former leader of Gloriavale stole the innocence and childhood of the girls and young women he abused.

Through tears and strains of emotion his victims have detailed to the Greymouth District Court the lifelong effects of Howard Temple’s sexual abuse.

The 85-year-old has today been jailed for 26 months for indecently assaulting young women and girls over 20 years in the secretive West Coast Christian community.

He has also been added to child sex offender register.

Temple became the community’s so-called overseeing shepherd in 2018 when its founder Hopeful Christian died.

The victims, who have name suppression, told the court of the torment Temple created in their young lives due not only to his offending but the authority he wielded over their lives.

He held a “position like God”, one victim said.

“I don’t think you, Howard, have any idea of what you took from me,” the woman said.

“Your sexual desires came above what was right and you allowed yourself to take what you wanted.

“You abused that trust. You were not a servant of God. You were using the name of God to cover your sins.”

The woman told Temple she felt sick about the way he put his hands on her, but “who was I to say no to you?”.

Temple not only had the ability to control their lives but the victims also believed he controlled their ability to enter heaven.

“Abuse was not a word we knew,” the woman told the court.

“I wish I had a sense of before and after the offending … there is no before – you stole my innocence.”

The woman was further traumatised by having to give evidence at the aborted trial earlier this year.

She was accused of enjoying Temple’s attention and unwanted touching.

“I was assaulted over and over with questions and statements designed to look like I was the offender,” she said.

It took her back to her time in Gloriavale and the unrelenting accusations of the community’s elders.

Another victim said she still felt vulnerable and unsafe, even “wearing a skirt felt unsafe because it made me vulnerable to the harassment”.

She had escaped the community but her much of her family remained inside.

“I left with no sense of self,” she said.

“My parents and family inside are undoubtedly being told I’m evil for persecuting the leader.”

Another victim said she had been silenced since she was a young child.

“Howard abused his position and authority to normalise the behaviour,” she said.

“He wore my boundaries down and my instincts to protect myself were clouded as a result.

“I would submit to people in authority for fear of what would happen if I did not.”

Some of the victims were now themselves mothers, which had emphasised the innocence Temple had stolen from them.

Temple initially denied the offending before pleading guilty to amended charges three days into his trial.

He admitted five counts of indecent assault, five of doing an indecent act and two of common assault.

Many of the charges were representative, meaning they related to repeated similar offending.

The offending was against six girls and young women covering a period from 2002 to 2022.

It covered a period when he was the second-most and most powerful figure in the community.

Temple was the West Coast Christian community’s so-called Overseeing Shepherd from 2018 when its founder Hopeful Christian died.

Judge Raoul Neave said, of Temple, “if he wants to regard himself as a shepherd, this is not how you look after your flock”.

Hopeful Christian was himself jailed in the 1990s for sexually assaulting a young woman in the community.

Howard Temple resigned as leader in August about a fortnight after pleading guilty to the offending.

In January, Temple made a public apology to victims of historic sexual abuse at the community following the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care.

The apology was one of the inquiry’s recommendations, however, former members rejected it as insincere.

About 600 people are believed to live at Gloriavale’s compound at Lake Haupuri, about 60 kilometres from Greymouth.

The group, which began in 1969 as the Springbank Christian Community near Rangiora, was founded by Australian evangelist Neville Cooper, who would later be known as Hopeful Christian.

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

‘On track’: Auckland councillor’s renewed confidence in cashless ticketing for public transport

Source: Radio New Zealand

The first stage of the $1.4 billion National Ticketing System’s latest iteration, known as Motu Move, has been launched in Christchurch. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

An Auckland councillor has renewed confidence the National Ticketing System is getting back on track.

The $1.4 billion project which will allow people to pay for public transport with their phone or card anywhere across the country has faced major delays.

Earlier this week, RNZ revealed Wellington has decided to create its own interim system due to the rollout pushbacks.

RNZ had reported in April Auckland Council transport committee chairman Andy Baker was concerned delays for the project could turn into cost overruns.

Baker told Nine to Noon he recently spoke to someone working on the national project which alleviated his worries.

“He came from Auckland Transport, he’s far more confident that things are on track, that some of the issues I was worried about and that others and the mayor were worried about have been taken care of.”

He said given Auckland had a contactless payment system, the NTS was not needed for the city specifically but it was more about it playing its part in the country.

“This is about people coming from other parts of the country who might have Motu Move [the NTS].”

Christchurch has been the first part of country to get the NTS, but it was yet to get all the features of it, such as concession fares.

Environment Canterbury Regional Council chairman Deon Swiggs told Nine to Noon the system had been working well.

“What we have seen is that the cash fares on the buses have dropped by a little bit more than 40 percent which means that people are starting to use cashless payments.”

Swiggs said the change meant more casual users of public transport had a payment option.

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

Minimum wage workers to get pay increase next year

Source: Radio New Zealand

The increase was to keep up with the cost of living, the Workplace Relations and Safety Minister said. (File photo) 123RF

Minimum wage workers will get a pay increase from April 1, but its less than the current rate of inflation.

Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Brooke van Velden said the rate would go up by 2 percent, from $23.50 to $23.95.

She said it would benefit about 122,500 working New Zealanders and struck a balance between keeping up with the cost of living and not adding further pressure to businesses.

“I know those pressures have made it a tough time to do business, which is why we have taken this balanced approach. With responsible economic management, recovery and relief is coming.

“I am pleased to deliver this moderate increase to the minimum wage that reflects this Government’s commitment to growing the economy, boosting incomes and supporting Kiwis in jobs throughout New Zealand.

“The increase aims to help minimum wage workers keep up with the cost of living, with inflation projected to remain relatively stable at around 2 per cent from June 2026,” she said.

The increase was in line with the recommendation the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) made to the minister.

It said it would be the best balance between protecting real income of low-paid workers and minimising job losses.

“CPI inflation forecasts suggest annual inflation will ease to be within the 2-2.5 percent range in the first half of 2026 and remain relatively stable at around 2 percent from June 2026 through to 2028,” MBIE said.

“These forecasts indicate that a 2 percent increase would largely maintain the real income of minimum wage workers relative to the level of the minimum wage when it last increased on 1 April 2025.”

MBIE said the groups most likely to be affected included young people, part-time workers, female and Māori workers.

The effects would be concentrated in tourism, horticulture, agriculture, cleaning, hospitality and retail, it said.

It recommended increasing the starting-out and training wage rates from $18.80 to $19.16 per hour, maintaining the current relativity of 80 percent of the adult minimum wage rate. This recommendation was also adopted.

Infometrics chief economist Brad Olsen said the increases were probably closer to the rate of inflation than people might think.

Infometrics chief economist Brad Olsen. (File photo) LDR

“Only because of course these figures start from April 1 next year. At that point, it’s forecast would have inflation up 2.3 percent. So you’re sort of a lot closer than when we’re currently sitting at 3 percent for the September quarter.

“The minister’s been quite clear in her work to try and balance, supporting workers and the increasing cost of living, but where business conditions are at the moment and and you see that in terms of businesses highlighting cost pressures and the fact that job ads have not really improved all that much.”

Job numbers were not particularly “upbeat” at the moment, Olsen said, with unemployment at its highest since 2016.

“So all of that is a bit more of a balance that I think the government has had to go through this year.”

He said increases in previous years had been much bigger than the rate of inflation.

“Although in one year you might not have the minimum wage increase relative to inflation, the minimum wage is still considerably above where it would be if it indexed to inflation from, say, 2018 onwards.”

Sign up for Money with Susan Edmunds, a weekly newsletter covering all the things that affect how we make, spend and invest money.

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

Timaru’s Christmas tree set on fire, won’t be replaced

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Timaru Christmas tree has suffered some significant fire damage overnight. Timaru District Council

Police have charged a man with deliberately setting Timaru’s public Christmas tree alight.

A photo posted to social media by the district council shows the scorched side of the 10-metre-tall tree in the Canterbury city’s centre surrounded by a melted white picket fence in Caroline Bay Piazza.

Police were called to the Caroline Bay Piazza at about 5.30am on Friday.

Officers arrested a 30-year-old man who is due to appear in court on Friday on charges including arson and possessing a knife in a public place.

The council said the tree has suffered significant fire damage and they would have to remove the tree this year.

It said the tree won’t be replaced this year.

“We’ll be getting in touch with our insurers and looking into options going ahead,” the council said.

Timaru district mayor Nigel Bowen said it was a shame the tree had been so badly damaged.

“Our community was disappointed to wake up this morning to hear our town’s Christmas tree has been damaged due to a fire,” he said.

“This tree has brought lots of joy to our community in the few years we’ve had it and it’s really, really sad that someone has decided to deprive the community of it through a stupid and destructive act.”

Timaru district mayor Nigel Bowen said it was a shame the tree had been so badly damaged. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The mayor said he was disappointed locals and visitors won’t be able to continue the tradition of taking family photos in front of the tree.

“Although the tree is a symbol of Christmas we can’t get past the fact that it is a place of joy and connection for our community,” Bowen said.

“The tree will be removed today, the area will be cleaned up and we will start the insurance process. We will also be providing police and Fire and Emergency New Zealand with any assistance they require in their investigations.”

The Christmas tree’s height includes the star, weighs around 7000kg with the base, and features a 275-metre string lights.

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

Kiwis star Dylan Brown misses out on Golden Boot in baffling decision

Source: Radio New Zealand

By Nick Campton, ABC

Dylan Brown scores a try for the Kiwis against Tonga in round 3 of the Pacific Championships rugby league tournament at Eden Park, Auckland, 2 November 2025. Photosport

Analysis: After a year during which he signed the most lucrative contract in the history of rugby league, it would have been fitting if Dylan Brown ended 2025 in gold.

The future New Zealand playmaker was overlooked for the Golden Boot as the year’s best player in Test football but with due respect to Harry Grant it’s baffling that the award won’t be sitting on Brown’s mantelpiece once he makes his move to Newcastle.

Head-scratching selections for individual awards are par for the course in rugby league and this one gets worse the more you examine it. Grant was his usual self in Australia’s 3-0 series win, but his only man-of-the-match award came in the dead-rubber third Test, and he missed out on player-of-the-series honours to Cameron Munster.

Perhaps you can tie yourself in difficult knots trying to justify Grant’s win, but there’s a reason the headline in the aftermath is universal shock that Brown didn’t take the prize home.

The football Brown played speaks for itself, and ahead of the NZ$15 million contract he’s about to take up with the Knights, it was a window into how player and club can make the most of what shapes as the biggest contract in rugby league history.

He was best on the ground in all three of their wins as they claimed the Pacific Championship and looked a class above opponents like Samoa’s Jarome Luai and Tonga’s Isaiya Katoa, setting up seven tries and scoring three himself across the tournament.

After his showing in the final against Samoa, where he set up three tries, saved another with a tackle on Deine Mariner and ran for more metres than every single opposition player, Brown seemed a player both in total command of his own skills and certain of his place within the wider structures of the team.

He was getting the ball wide and in space and seemed lighter on his feet than everybody else. He played to his strengths and reminded people after an uneven year with Parramatta that they are considerable.

Harry Grant of Australia wins player of the match after the third rugby league test against England at Headingley Stadium in Leeds, 8 November, 2025. PHOTOSPORT

Brown did not seem to be choosing the correct attacking options because, through his creation, the correct option felt more like a natural conclusion to what was happening than a choice between right and wrong.

Such clarity was in short supply for Brown during a difficult 2025 campaign. Once Brown signed his deal with the Knights in March, his long goodbye to the Eels wasn’t easy.

He spent time out of Parramatta’s top 17, and when he returned, it was in the centres.

His strong combination with Mitchell Moses, which helped spur the Eels to the 2022 grand final, lived more in memory than the moment, and the history-making nature of the deal with the Knights made him an easy and juicy target for frustrations – whenever Brown stumbled, there were 15 million reasons why even if the riches hadn’t started coming in yet.

It was the taste of things to come and the beginning of a new world for the 25-year-old, one where he’ll play under pressure and scrutiny few players have ever had to bear.

Australian Julia Robinson has won the women’s Golden Boot award. Photosport

All playmakers need a thick skin and a goldfish’s memory when it comes to criticism, but few of them have to carry the weight of the biggest contract in rugby league history and like a pirate looting gold from a sinking ship those riches are heavy enough to drag anyone into the murky depths.

But for New Zealand, Brown looked like a saviour and the exact kind of hero Newcastle have been holding out for – strong and fast and fresh from the fight.

The Knights have been spinning their wheels in the halves for years now – since the start of 2022, they’ve changed their combination 38 times.

Sometimes it was due to injury, or suspension, or ill-form, or tactical switches, but at some point, when the only constant becomes the changes themselves, the reasons stopped mattering.

Even in 2023, when they made the second week of the finals for the first time in a decade, they switched up their halves combo eight times.

Newcastle are betting $15 million and ten full years that Brown, in one form or another, can be the primary part of the answer, and the way he played for New Zealand could be the blueprint to getting their money’s worth

It’s less what Brown did himself than what happened around him, because the latter is what led to the former.

Kiwis Dylan Brown, right, and Kieran Foran during the Pacific Championships rugby league test between New Zealand and Toa Samoa at Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland, 19 October 2025. Photosport

His halves partner was Kieran Foran, who used up the last of his toughness and cunning for the Kiwis in the final games of his remarkable career.

Through those peaks and valleys, Foran has never spent more than a few weeks at halfback, and alongside Brown he was not the organising, on-ball presence we imagine a classic halfback to be.

Neither player was totally dominant – in the final against Samoa, Brown had just one more touch than Foran – but they found a give-and-take that best suited both their skills.

For the most part, Foran stuck closer to the ruck, played straight and in the line and did most of the kicking, which gave Brown the space to play so well his boots should have been gilded.

But each also had the versatility to change it up if needed – Brown’s first try against Tonga came at first receiver, as did three of his assists through the tournament.

Foran’s swansong turned out to be the best football he played all through his retirement year because what he found with Brown was more of a supplementary relationship than a complementary one.

In some halves combinations, the best attributes of one player cover the weaknesses of another but Brown and Foran found a way to enhance each other’s strengths.

That’s the task before Brown in Newcastle, and in his potential halves partners Sandon Smith and Fletcher Sharpe.

None of the three are halfbacks in the traditional sense. Asking any one of them, including Brown, to be the kind of organising playmaker around which the whole world turns is asking for disappointment.

But once the focus shifts from what they’re not to what they are, the possibilities tantalise.

In a strong year for the Roosters, Smith showed an ability to play into the line and a versatility in switching between first and second receiver that could pair him well with Brown.

The give and take he showed with Hugo Savala before Sam Walker’s return from injury was impressive and heading into the summer he seems the better fit alongside Brown, regardless of who wears six or seven.

Sharpe is the wildcard, given still learning to play in the halves at the top level, but he has a speed so blinding it shapes as the foundation on which much can be built.

Playing towards Brown’s strengths is the only way to make all this worthwhile but it’s a mistake to think what New Zealand did is easily replicable in Newcastle.

The Kiwis have the best forward pack of any team in the world, not just on size and strength but on the skill of Erin Clark, who’s passing was just as vital as Foran and Brown’s.

Even against Samoa and Tonga, who both had packs mean enough to skin crocodiles, they were a class above.

That kind of platform is not easily found anywhere in the NRL, let alone at a Newcastle side who only had one middle forward average over 100 metres a game last season.

The Knights have things to like about them outside of the new money, especially when you entertain the prospect of Kalyn Ponga, Dylan Lucas and Bradman Best linking down the left side with Brown.

Ponga’s prospects especially fascinate given, for the first time in his Knights career, he has a teammate who can truly take the pressure off him.

Outside of Brown, the recruitment of Smith is a nice piece of business and landing rising prop Trey Mooney from Canberra is one of the more underrated moves of the summer.

But this is a team in transition, trying to rise up from the depths of a horror season that was desolate and despondent well before the wooden spoon was confirmed on the final day of the season when Brown himself helped carve them up.

From that low and the performances that were to come, the Knights caught a vision of their own salvation.

They’re receiving the best version of Brown, off three of the best games of his career, and his move is the beginning, the rock on which they are looking to rebuild their church.

For that to happen, they need the $15m gamble to work so well it never looked like a gamble at all.

Brown’s work for New Zealand showed it can be possible and while he might have been denied the Golden Boot he deserved the football he played could be an avenue to even greater treasures.

Kiwis forward Joseph Tapine finished third in the Golden Boot count. The judges comprised former Kiwis star Ruben Wiki, Australian greats Darren Lockyer, Cameron Smith and Petero Civoniceva, who also played for Fiji, and Englishman James Graham.

Julia Robinson wins women’s Golden Boot

Australia’s Julia Robinson was a unanimous choice for the women’s Golden Boot, beating out four other finalists, including New Zealand’s Apii Nicholls.

Robinson had a big impact in all four of the Jillaroos’ matches in 2025, with the winger scoring an amazingly athletic try against Samoa.

“Julia was another who confirmed her status as one of the truly great outside backs of the women’s game with standout performances against England in Las Vegas, Samoa at Suncorp Stadium and New Zealand at Eden Park and in the Pacific Cup final at CommBank Stadium,” said International Rugby League chair Troy Grant.

“Her try against Samoa elevated women’s rugby league to another level, as fans around the world marvelled at Julia’s ability to time her run perfectly and fly through the air like a superhero to catch Jesse Southwell’s cross-field kick and score.”

Rob Hawkins, who spearheaded back-to-back England comebacks to beat Australia 2-0 in the Wheelchair Ashes, became the first player in any discipline to win the Golden Boot in consecutive years.

2025 IRL Golden Boot finalists:

Men

Dylan Brown (New Zealand)

Harry Grant (Australia) WINNER

Payne Haas (Samoa)

Cameron Munster (Australia)

Joseph Tapine (New Zealand)

Women

Yasmin Clydsdale (Australia)

Chantay Kiria-Ratu (Cook Islands)

Apii Nicholls (New Zealand)

Julia Robinson (Australia) WINNER

Tamika Upton (Australia)

Wheelchair

Jack Brown (England)

Joseph Calcott (Ireland)

Nathan Collins (England)

Rob Hawkins (England) WINNER

Bayley McKenna (Australia)

Zac Schumacher (Australia)

– ABC/ RNZ Sport

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

New government rules coming for micro-abattoirs

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jordan Hamilton-Bicknell offers a homekill service. Supplied

The government is looking to cut red tape for small meat processors and is also exploring how homekill meat could be made suitable for sale.

From next year, small-scale meat processors will be subject to reduced meat sampling and testing requirements – compared to their larger, export-focused counterparts.

Around six to 12 of New Zealand’s small operators who process between 200-2000 farmed animals each year will be affected by the new rules announced this week.

They currently have to test 60 carcasses for things like salmonella or E. coli. That will be reduced to 30 in the first season and 12 in subsequent seasons, from April next year.

Andrew Hoggard RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Food Safety Minister Andrew Hoggard said micro-abattoirs told officials the testing rules were unnecessarily restrictive and costly.

“Not reducing the safety at all, but certainly reducing the costs quite massively for [operators], which has been a barrier for a number of them either getting started or trying new operations,” he said.

“By reducing it down to a much more proportionate number reduces a lot of costs, enables them to do a bit more and hopefully we can see a few more micro-abattoirs emerging around the country and a few more better deals for consumers.”

Hoggard said the government was also looking into how they could enable commercial homekill in the future, which was made difficult by poison-free declarations.

It is illegal to sell homekill meat in New Zealand, despite the trade growing in popularity amid cost of living pressures.

“We’ve got challenges with poison declarations, etcetera, for being able to turn more hunting meat, hunted deer, especially venison, into sellable products. And we are working on that one as well,” he said.

There were some challenges regarding the science around withholding dates and poison residues.

“So hopefully we’ll be having solutions on the administrative side of that within the next few months, which should enable less time in front of the computer for those people engaged in that business.

“It’ll be a bit of a slower burn on how we deal with those restrictions around withhold times and withhold areas because we do need to do a bit of science around that one to prove safety before we allow that.”

The new meat testing rules for micro-abattoirs will come into force in April.

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

Kidnapping charges after Facebook Marketplace buyer allegedly robbed and assaulted

Source: Radio New Zealand

A man trying to buy a car was allegedly assaulted by two people. (File photo) 123RF

Two people have been charged with kidnapping and robbing a man trying to buy a car on Facebook Marketplace.

Police said the victim arranged to meet a seller outside a house on Holdsworth Ave in the Auckland suburb of Wesley late at night.

When he arrived, police said two people assaulted him and demanded he hand over money.

They allegedly forced the man into their car and made him withdraw more money from an ATM on Stoddard Rd.

“The victim was then taken to another ATM before the offenders left in a vehicle,” detective senior sergeant Rebecca Kirk said.

The man had called police, Kirk said and officers found the car abandoned on Emily Place a short time later.

Police tracked the couple believed to be involved to a nearby hotel.

When the pair left the room police used a taser, Kirk said and they were taken into custody.

A 32-year-old man and a 35-year-old woman would appear in the Auckland District Court on Friday charged with assault with intent to injure, kidnapping and theft.

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

Live: Black Caps v West Indies second test – day three

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the cricket action on day three of the Black Caps second test against the West Indies, at Cello Basin Reserve in Wellington.

The Black Caps and West Indies are locked in a tight tussle in the second cricket test in Wellington.

Having bowled the West Indies out for 205, the Black Caps lost 10 wickets on day two and managed a lead of just 73.

First ball is at 11am.

Squad: Tom Latham (c), Michael Bracewell, Kristian Clarke*, Devon Conway, Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes, Mitchell Hay*, Daryl Mitchell, Glenn Phillips, Rachin Ravindra, Michael Rae*, Blair Tickner, Kane Williamson, Will Young

*uncapped Test player

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

Black Cap Daryl Mitchell in action on day two. Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz / Photosport Ltd 2025

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