Family puts bach rebuild on hold to accommodate nesting kororā

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Taranaki family has paused a bach rebuild due to nesting kororā. Ngati Mutunga

A Taranaki family has paused work on the rebuild of their coastal bach, after a pair of nesting little blue penguins – or kororā – took up residence beneath its floorboards.

The Vile family, who are redeveloping a classic two-bedroom bach at Urenui Beach, are now patiently waiting for a chick to fledge.

Scott Vile, who’s owned his Urenui bach for about five years, knew he’d have to pause his summer renovation plans, when he discovered a penguin incubating an egg.

“Basically, I lifted a piece of chipboard there and they weren’t under there when I started in October, so me being me, I just went for it.

“Then my curiosity caught me out and I checked again on a Sunday, before I went to leave, and hello, there was a penguin sitting on an egg just nesting away, so I quickly made the phone call and got some help really.”

Coromandel couple Tracey and Peter Kendall told Morning Report on Friday they were at their wits ends, after their resident rowdy penguins migrated underneath their bedroom – keeping them up at nights.

Scott and wife Natalie were more relaxed about his find – they contacted the Department of Conservation and put the project on hold.

Scott Vile and Anne-Maree McKay search for the kororā chick. Robin Martin/RNZ

“Basically, we’re waiting for the penguin to fledge, so it will leave and go to sea, and once it’s fledged, we can continue on with the project and carry on.”

The timeframe was open-ended.

“Oh, it is just what it is. We’re pretty cruisy and, once we’re allowed to start, we’ll get in and begin chipping away at it.”

Scott said the bach had a history of penguins nesting under the floorboards and, at one stage, had a perspex viewing hatch in the floor.

“Late at night, they scoot out to sea, and they come back in when we’re having BBQs and a few drinks at night, and you can see them come back in.

“Kinda like little drunken sailors, they come in and hit their heads on the floorboards, ‘Donk, donk, donk’ you can hear them as they get back to their home.

“It’s just living in harmony really, just both us in the bach and them under the floor.”

Scott said the couple’s children, Bentley and Jordan, were thrilled by the discovery of the nest.

“We’ve been amazed by how fast the chick has grown. It’s been pretty cool to watch them grow.”

Scott Vile and Anne-Maree McKay search for the kororā chick. Robin Martin/RNZ

DOC tipped off Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Mutunga Pou Taiao about the penguin discovery.

“We actually all met here and had a look, and sure enough, there were a couple of little fuzz balls under the deck there. It was just really awesome, and we’re so grateful for Scott and his whānau for just being so accommodating of them, and willing to put their summer time on pause for us and the kororā.”

McKay helped monitor kororā for a joint Ngāti Mutunga – Ngā Motu Marine Reserve Society project.

“There’s been kororā around this coastline for as long as I can remember and, from the stories I’ve heard, they’ve been around for generations now.

“We have two areas that we monitor closely – Wai-iti and here at Urenui – and there are plenty of kororā coming and going.”

McKay expected the Vile family could soon get back to work.

“We actually microchipped this penguin on Monday, so it had shed enough of its fluff, of its down feathers to be chipped. It should only be a couple of weeks now, [before it fledged], I imagine.”

Meanwhile, Scott Vile wasn’t worried about penguins causing him to lose sleep.

“We first encountered them up the coast at Wai-iti, so we’re pretty used to them and I sleep like a rock anyway, so they’ve never bothered me.

“Like I say, we just live together harmoniously. They come and go as they please, and we do the same, so it’s always been a good little relationship.

“We just need them to leave for a couple of months, so I can build a bach and then they can come back.”

DOC Taranaki principal operations advisor Kelby Clements said the Vile family’s decision to pause their project for the penguins’ benefit was “naturing at its best”.

“This is a great example of how small acts of naturing make a difference to protecting our precious native species.

“By pausing their project, Scott and his family have made a real difference to this little family of kororā, and that will contribute to our understanding of the species’ local population.”

There were originally two kororā – which were the world’s smallest penguin species – under the Vile’s bach, but one did not survive.

Clements said little blue penguin populations had been declining where they were not protected from predators and threats to the birds increase where there was human development in coastal areas.

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

The father fighting NZTA over ‘inherently unsafe’ brakes in some 70,000 vehicles

Source: Radio New Zealand

Selwyn Rabbits has spent the years since his son Graeme’s death investigating the safety of cardan shaft brakes, and discovered several other related fatalities. Now, a coroner’s report has backed him up, calling them ‘inherently dangerous’. Nick Monro

After a death on a construction site, a coroner’s report has called a braking system found in some 70,000 vehicles around New Zealand “inherently unsafe”. Waka Kotahi disagrees.

Every time Selwyn Rabbits hears of a vehicle accident in the news, his first fear is that it is the same dodgy brakes as those on the runaway vehicle that killed his son nearly eight years ago.

“You get an instinct,” Rabbits says, a former military engineer and director of crane company Lifting Management.

His son Graeme Rabbits was crushed in January 2018 when the brakes failed on a telehandler, which rolled down a slope and pinned him against a concrete mixer at a construction site in west Auckland where he was working.

Selwyn started investigating soon after Graeme’s death and discovered several fatalities caused by vehicles with cardan shaft brakes since 2010.

The brakes are in around 70,000 vehicles in New Zealand, they are a common and cheaper form of braking system, with a single mechanism connecting to the gearbox rather than at the wheels.

Last week, in a major development, Coroner Erin Woolley found the parking brake was “inherently unsafe”. The finding was rejected by the Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) – but is in line with Rabbits’ own conclusions after nearly eight years of extensive investigations.

RNZ’s senior Checkpoint producer Louisa Cleave and reporter Jimmy Ellingham have been in close contact with Rabbits for many months but he was only prepared to go public with his story after the coroner released her findings.

Cleave tells The Detail how she became aware of Rabbits’ research into his son’s death through his niece, a friend of hers.

“I was immediately taken in by the detail that he had put together, it was an extensive amount of work in terms of other accidents that he had discovered, linked to the same braking system.

“One was just the previous year to Graeme’s death and I can only imagine when he started looking and started discovering all these other accidents and deaths how he realised that this was something that was a major problem,” Cleave says.

She says Rabbits was very insistent that he would not step outside of the coronial process and speak about the case because that’s where he would get the answers. It was always clear that any reporting would be based on her findings.

The Coroner referred to six fatal incidents involving vehicles with cardan shaft brakes since 2010, including one after Graeme’s death.

Her report said that Graeme’s death happened because the cardan shaft brake in the telehandler he was using to tow out the concrete truck failed to hold when it was parked on a slope.

It had been subject to a comprehensive servicing regime, and the Coroner said it would not have been obvious to Graeme, or any other person on site, that the brake would suddenly let go in the way that it did.

According to the report, what happened to Graeme could happen to any other person and more needs to be done to educate the users of vehicles with cardan shaft brakes about the inherent danger they pose.

The Coroner also strongly encouraged NZTA to acknowledge that relying on a cardan shaft brake as the only brake on a vehicle is inherently dangerous, because even a well maintained brake can fail without warning.

NZTA does not accept that finding.

In an interview with Checkpoint, NZTA’s deputy director of land transport Michael Hargreaves says since 1 December 2022, there have been significant changes to the Certificate of Fitness process, including roller brake testing.

He says that has led to fewer vehicles failing.

“In 2020, about a third of these vehicles used to fail, in 2025, after the roller brake test, it is now around about five percent,” he said.

He did not accept the Coroner’s finding that the brakes could fail whether or not they had passed the test.

“Our view and the assessment that we have made is that if we target the factors around poor maintenance and operational use, which is what we have done, those safety benefits will flow.”

Several reports on the NZTA website are dedicated to the brakes’ limitations and how to operate and maintain them. Over the years it has updated and added to the advice.

In July 2022, it issued a safety alert for them “to raise awareness of the limitations of the brake mechanism, including the potential risks of parking on slopes”. That was in addition to a WorkSafe bulletin on driveshaft parking brake failures.

The Transport Agency also requires vehicles with the braking system to display warning stickers.

New Zealand Transport Agency chair Simon Bridges. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Rabbits says NZTA has not done enough and he is seeking a meeting with the chair of the agency, Simon Bridges.

He knows it’s not viable to ban all of these vehicles outright as it would be hugely costly and inconvenient. But he wants more done to warn drivers and he wants to see new imports stopped.

Cleave says his call to action is backed by many in the industry.

The National Carriers Association has sent an updated alert to its 1500 members off the back of the coroner’s report.

Heavy vehicle compliance expert Steve Bullot says the system has a fatal design flaw.

Cleave says she has spoken to a number of other people in the industry who echoed those concerns.

In a written statement to Checkpoint, the NZTA board chair Simon Bridges says Rabbits’ request is being considered, and a response will be provided directly to Rabbits.

Any legal advice to NZTA or its board members in connection with the coronial findings and recommendations is legally privileged and confidential.

Rabbits is determined and says he has a lot of supporters. His objective has always been to prevent another death or injury.

“I come from a military background, I was an engineer in the air force and I’ve always believed that you’ve got to make the system right so that it performs, it does its functions just like the Navy is doing with the Manawanui.

“This has not been a grieving father. I’ve always approached this logically, constructively. And I’m a strong believer that if you do that, sooner or later someone will take notice.”

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

Ethnic businesses’ contribution to economy continues to rise

Source: Radio New Zealand

Small Business and Manufacturing Minister Chris Penk, Ethnic Communities Minister Mark Mitchell and Finance Minister Nicola Willis participate in a discussion panel with moderator Ziena Jalil on Friday. RNZ / Liu Chen

A new report reveals that ethnic businesses contributed $87 billion to New Zealand’s GDP in 2023, an increase from $64 billion in 2021.

The Economic Contribution of Ethnic Communities 2001-2023 report – commissioned by four organisations, including the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment and the Ministry for Ethnic Communities – was unveiled at the Ethnic Xchange Symposium in Auckland on Friday.

The symposium, organised by the Ministry for Ethnic Communities, followed last year’s inaugural event in an attempt to boost economic growth and expand ethnic enterprises.

Nearly 500 ethnic representatives attended the event alongside Finance Minister Nicola Willis, Ethnic Communities Minister Mark Mitchell and Minister for Small Business and Manufacturing Chris Penk.

Mervin Singham, chief executive at the Ministry for Ethnic Communities RNZ / Liu Chen

Mervin Singham, chief executive at the Ministry for Ethnic Communities, said an additional $10 billion in untapped potential was waiting to be unlocked.

“That is quite a big contribution,” Singham said.

“Our recent research has highlighted that more can be done to unlock entrepreneurial capability of that community. This is why we have symposiums like this to continue to lift that contribution.”

Ethnic businesses make up one in five of all New Zealand enterprises, reflecting nearly the communities’ population share of 25 percent, according to the Ministry for Ethnic Communities.

Asian-owned firms export goods worth almost double the national average, the ministry said.

Dave Ananth, president of the New Zealand Malaysia Business Association, says conducting business in Asia is about building trust. RNZ / Liu Chen

Dave Ananth, president of the New Zealand Malaysia Business Association, highlighted the importance of government engagement and people-to-people ties.

“I think there should be more engagements, not once a year, but more often things like this,” he said, adding that the hundreds of participants can all act as ambassadors for New Zealand.

“I think people need to understand that business in Asia is building trust,” Ananth said. “It’s who you know rather than what you know.”

Ananth said it was easy for him to pick up the phone and ring contacts in another country to conduct business and he would also happily introduce New Zealand business to his friends overseas.

He also encouraged business to think outside the box and look for business opportunities, for example in a country that’s less well-known.

Investment consultant John Hong RNZ / Liu Chen

John Hong, an investment consultant, was encouraged to see that many people from all ethnic backgrounds – especially younger generations – participated in the event.

He said the government should try to retain staff who were knowledgeable and skilled, calling for a stronger continuation of government policies.

“There has also been a high level of staff turnover within government agencies … especially after the pandemic,” Hong said.

“If an entire agency ends up being staffed with new people, then of course they don’t understand the international environment, and they don’t understand the domestic context either,” he said.

“There’s no continuity. If you don’t know the past, how can you possibly plan for the future?

“It takes time for [new people] to know each other and settle in. But with elections every three years, the cycle is so short that many things simply don’t have enough time to get off the ground.”

Ethnic Communities Minister Mark Mitchell stands alongside female entrepreneurs at the symposium in Auckland on Friday. RNZ / Liu Chen

Supporting female entrepreneurs

The symposium also unveiled a report titled Ethnic Women Entrepreneurs on Friday that was also commissioned by the Ministry for Ethnic Communities.

The report said four in 10 of ethnic business owners were women, facing challenges that “reflect the combined effects of gender, ethnicity, migration status and systemic bias”.

Structural barriers, cultural disconnects and persistent under-representation characterised ethnic women’s entrepreneurship, the report said.

While ethnic communities comprised 25 percent of the employed workforce as of May 31, women from ethnic communities earned 16.4 precent less per hour than European men, it said.

Speaking at a panel focusing on stories of ethnic female entrepreneurs, KPMG partner Bineeta Nand said it was hard for ethnic women to secure bank loans or venture capital and, as a result, they needed to rely on personal loans and community funding, which could restrict their project’s scalability.

“Think about those stereotypes and biases that you might have when you’re looking at another ethnic woman in business or a proposal or an application for funding,” she said.

“I think that’s where we can actually start making a difference. Unless we start changing some of those mind sets, we … will be having the same discussion again.”

From left: KPMG partner Bineeta Nand, Clearhead CEO and co-founder Angela Lim, and Kami chief of staff and strategy and co-founder Alliv Samson RNZ / Liu Chen

Singham said women entrepreneurs were most successful because they were highly relational in a multi-dimensional way.

He said the report would provide an insight into how to better support this cohort of entrepreneurs.

“We want to make sure that there’s a bit more of an even keel for ethnic women entrepreneurs to be supported,” Singham said.

“We feel there’s more support that could be put in place to support ethnic women entrepreneurs.”

Singham said there had been more engagement between business councils and ethnic businesses after last year’s symposium.

“The government is taking into account more of what ethnic communities [and] businesses are saying about immigration, regulatory settings in the country and so on, and this is an ongoing conversation that we’ve started,” he said.

However, he hoped the “ethnic community’s voice could be heard a little bit more”.

Mitchell said ethnic businesses were a “huge enabler and competitive advantage” for New Zealand.

“We’ve got diasporas with entrepreneurs, businesspeople, business leaders [and] people with deep connections back to countries that we want to increase our trading relationships, our sporting relationships, our cultural relationships,” he said.

He said the government was very focused on taking big trade delegations that were always heavy in presence with ethnic leaders to leverage the relationships they had.

Mitchell said the government was working on identifying and reducing red tape.

“The government should be pulling the levers … to support and help our entrepreneurs, business leaders [and] businesses grow, and give them an environment so they can grow unimpeded,” he said.

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

Retirement village mulls banning electric cars, bikes – even wheelchairs

Source: Radio New Zealand

The policy may extend as far as banning types of wheelchairs. PANCAKE PICTURES

Some residents at an Auckland retirement village want to put the brakes on a policy that would ban any more electric vehicles (EVs) within its gates.

Fairview Lifestyle Village in Albany said it was concerned about the risk an EV fire would pose to the busy community’s residents and homes.

While rare, EV fires can be more difficult to put out than petrol car fires and the village said it was unclear who was legally responsible for managing that risk.

The policy was still in mediation, and residents who already owned electric vehicles would be allowed to keep them, but they were not letting any new EVs into the gated North Shore community.

As well as cars, the policy extended to e-bikes, e-scooters and wheelchairs.

Retirement Village Residents Association chief executive Nigel Matthews told RNZ’s Checkpoint this was the first case concerning electric vehicles that he had seen.

While the issuing concerned some retirement residents, he said it was great that consultation was underway.

“We have been aware that this has been an ongoing discussion since early February, March of this year and, unfortunately, some of these processes take a while.”

Matthews said concerns about the risks of EVs had seemingly been increased via the media.

“There’s been obviously a tension in the media – as soon as there’s an EV that blows up or catches fire, it’s on the front page. [If] it’s a diesel or a petrol car, you won’t hear about it.”

He said the issue was complicated by policies being formed after people had already moved in with EVs.

“Prior to people moving in, no policy on this. However, there’s obviously – you know – discussion that has occurred, and now they’re wanting to put in a policy, which would ban charging in your own garage and obviously underneath in the car parking area of the apartment.

“I get it, but you know, if the council imposed a sudden policy change on me and said, ‘You can no longer charge your EV in your own personal garage’, we need to actually change that. I would then want to engage in consultation and I’d want there to be some sort of resolution.”

Despite the decision causing frustration for some, he said the retirement village had acted properly.

“The law’s pretty clear – if operators change something that’s going to have a material impact on you, then you must consult. These operators have done exactly that.”

There was currently no end in sight for that consultation.

“At some point, there’s going to have to be a resolution at the end and you’ve got some residents that clearly want to be able to continue to use their EV.

“It’ll be like telling someone who drives a Ford now, ‘You can no longer drive your Ford, but we’ve got some Holdens you might like’.”

Matthews said, if the village wanted to look at also banning things like electric bikes and wheelchairs, they would have taken a broader look at the issue.

“I’ve seen the YouTube clips where things have exploded – either ebikes and EV of some sort that are being charged and then just caught alight… but I’ve also seen it with cell phones.

“At what point do you actually stop and say, ‘We need to have a bigger holistic look at this and come up with some sensible parameters?'”

Fairview Lifestyle Village said its overriding concern and objective was the safety of its 300 residents, as well as staff, visitors and property.

It said, in New Zealand, the legal responsibility framework around the safe management of EVs in residential care settings was completely undefined, so it had to define its own safety parameters.

It said it had taken a measured approach in consulting on and developing a policy to address the current technology and set guidelines for future advancements.

Fairview Lifestyle Village said it anticipated debate, and welcomed ongoing robust conversation to ensure that the policy ultimately implemented was fit for purpose and put residents’ safety first.

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

Makayla and Haami score big at Waiata Māori Music Awards

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hawke’s Bay’s rising star Makayla Purcell-Mainini and Invercargill singer Haami Tuari walked away with two of the night’s biggest honours at the 2025 Waiata Māori Music Awards.

Makayla, fresh off opening for Six60’s Grassroots tour, nabbed Best Māori Female Solo Artist, while Haami — one-third of the beloved Tuari Brothers — claimed Best Māori Male Solo Artist. Last year, those titles went to Mohi and Anna Coddington.

The Tuari Brothers also scooped up Best Māori Group, adding another glittering trophy to the whānau’s shelf.

Auckland reggae ensemble Corrella, last year’s Best Māori Group, won Best Māori Urban Roots Reggae Album and Best Pop Album by a Māori Artist for their LP Skeletons.

Hip-hop artist Tipene, from Hawke’s Bay, was also celebrated for his fourth album Heritage Trail 2 – The Partnership. The project features a powerhouse mix of familiar voices — Troy Kingi, Jordyn with a Why — plus contributions from politicians Hana-Rāwhiti Maipi-Clarke and Rawiri Waititi.

Ōpōtiki reggae/roots musician Hori Shaw picked up Radio Airplay Song of the Year by a Māori Artist, while the Emerging Artist Over 25 Award was shared by Shane Walker, Ngatainui Ratu, and Rawhitiroa.

Ahead of the ceremony, organisers announced that the late producer Wyn Anania would receive the Iconic Contribution to Music Industry Award.

“Wyn Anania’s exceptional contributions to the music industry exemplify his passion for Māori culture and his dedication to preserving te reo Māori,” a spokesperson for the Waiata Māori Music Awards Trust said.

Active since the late ’90s, Huata’s career took flight through her collaboration with Charles Te Ahukaramu Royal, whose album He Tohu Mauriora was the first Māori language music recorded digitally.

Since then, her work with artists like George Nepia III and Warren Maxwell has continued to leave its mark on Māori music and performance.

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

Cook Islands PM says economy remains strong despite NZ funding pause

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Foreign Minister Winston Peters will not attend the milestone event in Rarotonga, which will celebrate the Cook Islands’ six decades of self-governance in free association with NZ. RNZ Pacific

Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown told local media he had requested a meeting with New Zealand’s Prime Minister and Foreign Minister regarding the funding pause, but was declined.

It comes as a second round of funding to the realm nation has been paused by Aotearoa, bringing the total funds held to nearly $30 million over two years.

Brown has declined an interview with RNZ Pacific.

In a written statement, a spokesperson for Brown said the government continues to engage in good faith with New Zealand and that discussions are ongoing, “so it would not be appropriate to comment further at this time”.

However, speaking to Cook Islands Television (CITV) in Cook Islands Māori, Brown said he had received criticism for not meeting with New Zealand’s prime minister or foreign minister.

“I want to confirm to you all that I did send a letter to the prime minister of New Zealand and [New Zealand foreign minister] Winston to arrange a meeting between leaders, New Zealand’s leader and myself,” Brown, addressing Cook Islanders direclty, told CITV.

“I wanted to elevate these discussions to the prime minister’s level. But they sent their response, they wanted the discussions to be done between our officials.”

He said the Cook Islands was doing what New Zealand requested by leaving the meeting for officials to come up with solutions.

Uncertainty over what the problem is

The disagreement between the two governments stem from partnership agreements that Cook Islands signed with China at the beginning of the year.

The New Zealand government believed it should have been consulted over the agreements, while Brown disagreed.

Brown told CITV the agreements signed with China are “all over and done with”, and New Zealand has had an in-depth look at them.

“There is a part of the document we signed that [New Zealand] say they have a problem with but they have not been able to confirm with us what exactly it is that they have a problem with.”

Kiwis ‘running’ to Oz, Cook Islands economy ‘all good’

Brown said his government is able to cover the amount that New Zealand has put on pause because of a strong economy, driven by the tourism sector.

He said the money New Zealand had paused would normally be disbursed to education and health.

“Looking to New Zealand, they are having issues with the state of their economy, it’s going backwards, the people are running away from New Zealand for Australia to find better opportunities.

“But our status however, it’s all good, hence we were able to afford to cover the amount of money that we did not receive from New Zealand.”

Relationship between to nations ‘not like it was back in the day’

Brown said the relationship with New Zealand had evolved.

“For our relationship today, it is not like it was back in the day where New Zealand was like a parent, and we were the child,” Brown said.

“We have reached 60 years of self-governance; we are our own people, we have our own land, we have our own ocean, our own being, our relationship now is the relationship between friends, not of a parent and child.”

Brown said he wanted the friendship to grow and not go backwards – where New Zealand spoke for the country on the world stage.

“The younger generations and their young ones, they are able to fulfill roles that were once held by westerners or New Zealand… they can fly our flag, be our voice, out there in the world.”

But Brown said he did not want to change the free-association relationship between the two countries, which he has always maintained. It comes after several calls from New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters for Brown to hold an independence referendum.

“When looking at the state of this relationship, what we are pushing firmly for is that this relationship continues, and is strengthened, continuing on into the future,” Brown said.

Peters’ response

A spokesperson for Peters said they had nothing further to add to a statement issued last week.

Part of it said there had been a series of constructive discussions between New Zealand and Cook Islands officials aimed at remediating the breach of trust.

“However, Prime Minister Mark Brown continues in his public statements and actions to promote a vision of the New Zealand-Cook Islands relationship which is inconsistent with the free association model,” the statement said.

“He appears to wish for the Cook Islands to reap all the benefits of the free association relationship while being subject to none of the mutual responsibilities.”

A spokesperson for Brown in a statement told RNZ the Cook Islands remain committed to the relationship of free association with New Zealand.

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

One person in critical condition after 4WD rolls in Far North

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tokerau Beach. Supplied / Alina Jones

A four-wheel drive has rolled on Tokerau Beach in the Far North, leaving at least one person with critical injuries.

Emergency services were called to the beach at about 7.30pm Friday.

Fire and Emergency said its crews were still working to free one person from the wreck.

St John said two ambulances and two helicopters were at the scene, one patient in a critical condition and another in a serious condition.

More to come…

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

Family violence unit unaware man dated, then stalked, harassed Christchurch murder victim

Source: Radio New Zealand

A specialist multi-agency family violence unit was unaware a man had been in a relationship with a woman he harassed and stalked, making nearly 600 calls to her in two weeks, before fatally stabbing her 55 times.

Corrections had asked police to check the suitability of the woman’s address for the man to live at.

On Thursday, Nathan Boulter – who had a long history of stalking and assaulting ex-partners – pleaded guilty to murdering a woman in Parklands, Christchurch, on 23 July.

The woman had been in a brief relationship with Boulter. After she ended it, he harassed, stalked and threatened her, making nearly 600 calls in two weeks, before hiding outside her home, then stabbing her 55 times with a hunting knife, as she arrived home with her children.

  • Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz
  • Court documents revealed Boulter and the victim had been in a brief relationship, which began in May. After Boulter was recalled to prison, the woman terminated the relationship and told him she did not want any further contact from him.

    He was released from prison on 7 July.

    Speaking to RNZ’s Checkpoint on Friday, Canterbury District Commander Superintendent Tony Hill said, after Boulter was released, police were contacted by Corrections to check or verify the suitability of the victim’s address, which Boulter had listed.

    Boulter was on release conditions at the time, which included not moving addresses without the written consent of his probation officer.

    Hill said he understood police reported their view on that, and the woman had told either Corrections or police she was “not welcoming him back into the home”.

    In 2016, the Integrated Safety Response (ISR) model was launched. According to the police website, the ISR is a multi-agency intervention, including police, Oranga Tamariki and Corrections, designed to ensure the immediate safety of victims and children and to work with perpetrators to prevent further violence.

    “Key features of ISR include dedicated staff, funded specialist services for victims and perpetrators, daily risk assessment and triage, family safety plans, an electronic case management system and an intensive case management approach to collectively work with high risk families.”

    Asked whether any risk assessment was done by the ISR team, Hill said the unit had not been notified that Boulter and the woman were in a relationship.

    Hill said police would normally attend a family-harm event, do a report and it got entered into the safety response “virtual table”.

    “Then all agencies report in what information they hold about the perpetrator and what information they hold about the victim, and then a risk assessment is done, the risk is determined and then the appropriate response is decided on.”

    Police at the scene of the murder. RNZ / Adam Burns

    Hill said, if the ISR had been involved, it “might have seen that there was some risk and a risk assessment done”.

    “Of course, they can’t act if they don’t know.”

    Asked if, given Boulter’s violent history and obsessive behaviour, the ISR should have been notified, Hill said it was “too early to tell”.

    Hill said a Family Harm Death Review was underway to establish what information was shared and the information had been passed on to ISR.

    “Naturally, you’d think that would be the right thing to do, but I think it’s really appropriate to let that run its course, before we jump to conclusions that, ‘Hey, this absolutely should have been done’.

    “I’d like all these facts and info in any cases of this nature to be before them, so we can do that decision-making, and I don’t know what the circumstances or what prevented that from happening on this case.”

    Asked if he believed Corrections should have notified the ISR team, Hill said he was unable to comment.

    “I don’t know what information they had in front of them.”

    Hill was unsure if the woman was warned by police about Boulter’s criminal history.

    “I understand that our team were aware that, if you checked him online, you could find other information. It was pretty evident from the conversation that was had with her, not by police, that she was aware of his background to some degree.

    “I’m not sure exactly what.”

    Court documents said Boulter “developed an unhealthy fixation with the victim”.

    “Once released, the defendant began a significant electronic harassment of the victim, by making 581 calls to the victim between 7 July, 2025, and 20 July, 2025, which she tried to ignore.

    “In response, the victim made zero calls.”

    Boulter used different cellphone numbers and social media profiles to harass, stalk and threaten the woman.

    On 14 July, he sent several email messages to the woman, threatening to “chop u down to nothing” and “one two guess who’s coming to you! Your lack of human compassion and empathy will be the death of you one day soon my Lil hoe! Xxx”.

    The woman began locking her front gate with a padlock to keep herself safe. She also told her friends and family of Boulter’s threats.

    ‘Give us the opportunity to come and help you’

    Hill said police were not notified of the harassment.

    “That’s probably in my mind, that’s key to this is that, while she had told family members and friends that she had reported this, she hadn’t reported anything about the online abuse that she had suffered from him.

    “I think it’s really key to this is that, if you know family members are being subjected to this or you are yourself, you really need to complain to us about that, and give us the opportunity to come and help you.”

    Hill said what happened was a “horrible tragedy”.

    “All family-harm homicides are arguably preventable in some way and that’s what we really want to do – make sure that, if there’s a part of this that we’ve got wrong, we need to own that and make sure that we do everything in our power to prevent that from ever happening again.”

    Release conditions

    Corrections director of communities, partnerships and pathways David Roberts told RNZ Boulter was subject to release conditions at the time of the murder

    “When he was released, we worked with police in a multi-agency group to monitor his risk and his compliance with his conditions.”

    Following the murder, Corrections commissioned a review into Boulter’s management.

    “Part of this includes how Corrections communicated and worked with relevant agencies, including police. This review is nearing completion.

    “Once it is complete, we will be reaching out to the family of the woman to offer them the opportunity to meet with us and discuss the findings of the review. We believe providing this information to them first is the right thing to do.”

    Corrections chief victims advisor Ruth Money. RNZ / Niva Chittock

    Chief victims advisor Ruth Money earlier called the woman’s death “one more example of preventable tragedy”.

    “I’ve said it before and I’ll continue to say it – I just do not believe that we have the system right for our highest-risk and our highest-threat prisoners and offenders.”

    Money said she understood reviews were underway by police, Corrections and other agencies. She would look at each of the reviews individually, but also from a systemic lens.

    “How did it work, or not? How should it have?

    “Do we have the right provisions in the system to do this better and we just simply didn’t? Why not?

    “Do we need to change the system somehow to make sure that this doesn’t happen again?”

    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

    Family violence unit unaware of man who stalked, harassed, then murdered ex-girlfriend

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    A specialist multi-agency family violence unit was unaware a man had been in a relationship with a woman he harassed and stalked, making nearly 600 calls to her in two weeks, before fatally stabbing her 55 times.

    Corrections had asked police to check the suitability of the woman’s address for the man to live at.

    On Thursday, Nathan Boulter – who had a long history of stalking and assaulting ex-partners – pleaded guilty to murdering a woman in Parklands, Christchurch, on 23 July.

    The woman had been in a brief relationship with Boulter. After she ended it, he harassed, stalked and threatened her, making nearly 600 calls in two weeks, before hiding outside her home, then stabbing her 55 times with a hunting knife, as she arrived home with her children.

  • Do you know more? Email sam.sherwood@rnz.co.nz
  • Court documents revealed Boulter and the victim had been in a brief relationship, which began in May. After Boulter was recalled to prison, the woman terminated the relationship and told him she did not want any further contact from him.

    He was released from prison on 7 July.

    Speaking to RNZ’s Checkpoint on Friday, Canterbury District Commander Superintendent Tony Hill said, after Boulter was released, police were contacted by Corrections to check or verify the suitability of the victim’s address, which Boulter had listed.

    Boulter was on release conditions at the time, which included not moving addresses without the written consent of his probation officer.

    Hill said he understood police reported their view on that, and the woman had told either Corrections or police she was “not welcoming him back into the home”.

    In 2016, the Integrated Safety Response (ISR) model was launched. According to the police website, the ISR is a multi-agency intervention, including police, Oranga Tamariki and Corrections, designed to ensure the immediate safety of victims and children and to work with perpetrators to prevent further violence.

    “Key features of ISR include dedicated staff, funded specialist services for victims and perpetrators, daily risk assessment and triage, family safety plans, an electronic case management system and an intensive case management approach to collectively work with high risk families.”

    Asked whether any risk assessment was done by the ISR team, Hill said the unit had not been notified that Boulter and the woman were in a relationship.

    Hill said police would normally attend a family-harm event, do a report and it got entered into the safety response “virtual table”.

    “Then all agencies report in what information they hold about the perpetrator and what information they hold about the victim, and then a risk assessment is done, the risk is determined and then the appropriate response is decided on.”

    Police at the scene of the murder. RNZ / Adam Burns

    Hill said, if the ISR had been involved, it “might have seen that there was some risk and a risk assessment done”.

    “Of course, they can’t act if they don’t know.”

    Asked if, given Boulter’s violent history and obsessive behaviour, the ISR should have been notified, Hill said it was “too early to tell”.

    Hill said a Family Harm Death Review was underway to establish what information was shared and the information had been passed on to ISR.

    “Naturally, you’d think that would be the right thing to do, but I think it’s really appropriate to let that run its course, before we jump to conclusions that, ‘Hey, this absolutely should have been done’.

    “I’d like all these facts and info in any cases of this nature to be before them, so we can do that decision-making, and I don’t know what the circumstances or what prevented that from happening on this case.”

    Asked if he believed Corrections should have notified the ISR team, Hill said he was unable to comment.

    “I don’t know what information they had in front of them.”

    Hill was unsure if the woman was warned by police about Boulter’s criminal history.

    “I understand that our team were aware that, if you checked him online, you could find other information. It was pretty evident from the conversation that was had with her, not by police, that she was aware of his background to some degree.

    “I’m not sure exactly what.”

    Court documents said Boulter “developed an unhealthy fixation with the victim”.

    “Once released, the defendant began a significant electronic harassment of the victim, by making 581 calls to the victim between 7 July, 2025, and 20 July, 2025, which she tried to ignore.

    “In response, the victim made zero calls.”

    Boulter used different cellphone numbers and social media profiles to harass, stalk and threaten the woman.

    On 14 July, he sent several email messages to the woman, threatening to “chop u down to nothing” and “one two guess who’s coming to you! Your lack of human compassion and empathy will be the death of you one day soon my Lil hoe! Xxx”.

    The woman began locking her front gate with a padlock to keep herself safe. She also told her friends and family of Boulter’s threats.

    ‘Give us the opportunity to come and help you’

    Hill said police were not notified of the harassment.

    “That’s probably in my mind, that’s key to this is that, while she had told family members and friends that she had reported this, she hadn’t reported anything about the online abuse that she had suffered from him.

    “I think it’s really key to this is that, if you know family members are being subjected to this or you are yourself, you really need to complain to us about that, and give us the opportunity to come and help you.”

    Hill said what happened was a “horrible tragedy”.

    “All family-harm homicides are arguably preventable in some way and that’s what we really want to do – make sure that, if there’s a part of this that we’ve got wrong, we need to own that and make sure that we do everything in our power to prevent that from ever happening again.”

    Release conditions

    Corrections director of communities, partnerships and pathways David Roberts told RNZ Boulter was subject to release conditions at the time of the murder

    “When he was released, we worked with police in a multi-agency group to monitor his risk and his compliance with his conditions.”

    Following the murder, Corrections commissioned a review into Boulter’s management.

    “Part of this includes how Corrections communicated and worked with relevant agencies, including police. This review is nearing completion.

    “Once it is complete, we will be reaching out to the family of the woman to offer them the opportunity to meet with us and discuss the findings of the review. We believe providing this information to them first is the right thing to do.”

    Corrections chief victims advisor Ruth Money. RNZ / Niva Chittock

    Chief victims advisor Ruth Money earlier called the woman’s death “one more example of preventable tragedy”.

    “I’ve said it before and I’ll continue to say it – I just do not believe that we have the system right for our highest-risk and our highest-threat prisoners and offenders.”

    Money said she understood reviews were underway by police, Corrections and other agencies. She would look at each of the reviews individually, but also from a systemic lens.

    “How did it work, or not? How should it have?

    “Do we have the right provisions in the system to do this better and we just simply didn’t? Why not?

    “Do we need to change the system somehow to make sure that this doesn’t happen again?”

    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: NZ Breakers won’t wear ANBL ‘Pride’ insignia

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Breakers guard Parker Jackson-Cartwright under pressure from Isaac Humphries of Adelaide 36ers. Photosport

    NZ Breakers won’t wear the rainbow pride progress flag on their uniform during the Australian NBL’s ‘Pride Round’ early next year.

    The club said it was a collective decision to not wear the logo as part of the round that recognises the LGBTQIA+ community.

    “In line with the league’s voluntary participation policy to wear the patch, the players discussed the matter as a team,” the club said. “Some players raised religious and cultural concerns about wearing the insignia.

    “To protect individual players from being singled out for their beliefs, the team collectively decided they would either all wear the insignia or none would.

    “The club respects the human rights of all individuals, including their right to freedom of expression.”

    The Breakers are the second club in the history of the Pride Round, which began in 2023, to take a full-team approach to not wearing something as part of their uniform. Cairns Taipans did the same during the inaugural round, when the players did not wear a pride jersey.

    That season, the Breakers did wear a pride jersey.

    Individual players have also chosen not to wear the flag over the last few years.

    The Breakers said the team “are looking forward to participating in the NBL’s Pride Round”.

    “The club strongly supports this event, and is open and inclusive, and will celebrate the diversity of LGBTQIA+ players, members, volunteers and supporters.

    “We are committed to ensuring the Breakers are a safe, welcoming and inclusive place for all, both on and off the court.”

    The Pride Round this season will be held across both the NBL and WNBL from 21 January-1 February, celebrating diversity and inclusion in basketball.

    In previous seasons, players, coaches and staff have participated in ‘Pride in Sport’ training sessions to build awareness of the challenges faced by LGBTQIA+ athletes in sport, and understand the power of language to create inclusive cultures.

    During this season’s Pride Round, the Breakers play four times, with three games on the road.

    The Breakers host Adelaide 36ers on 23 January at Spark Arena. The NBL’s only openly gay player, centre Isaac Humphries, plays for the 36ers.

    During Pride Round, basketball courts will also feature a pride progress flag on the floor.

    In other sports, seven Manly Sea Eagles players refused to play in a rainbow-detailed NRL jersey in 2022.

    Former All Blacks coach Steve Hansen praised the Rugby Football Union for raising the Pride flag above Twickenham for the World XV match against the Barbarians in 2023, after he had selected Israel Folau, who was sacked by Rugby Australia for his comments on gay people.

    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