Live: Six remain missing at Mt Maunganui landslide, campsite search ongoing

Source: Radio New Zealand

A search continues by local emergency services for missing people following a landslide at Mount Maunganui in Tauranga. AFP / Ben Strang

Search teams are still trying to find six people who are believed to be buried under a landslide in Mt Maunganui following this week’s devastating storms.

Emergency services are also trying to track down three other people who may have been at the campsite at the time the landslide hit.

An independent review into “all aspects leading up to” the landslide had been ordered on Friday, Tauranga mayor Mahé Drysdale said.

“It is important that we have a clear and accurate understanding of the facts and events leading up to the landslide, so that we can ensure that the future safety of the community is appropriately safeguarded.”

Work was underway to determine the review’s scope, what expertise was needed and the timeframe for delivery.

Follow the RNZ liveblog at the top of the page for the latest updates.

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‘Thank God’: Parents of conjoined twins grateful they defied medical advice

Source: Radio New Zealand

Conjoined twin Sawong from PNG wears a party hat as his family and staff at Sydney Children’s Hospital celebrate him reaching 100 days old. Supplied/Jurgen Ruh/Manolos Aviation

The parents of rare conjoined twins say doctors in Papua New Guinea told them to take the boys home as they were beyond hope.

“Thank God we [defied them] and we are where we are,” the boys’ dad Kevin Mitiam, who is also a twin, said in Tok Pisin.

Tom and Sawong – who were fused at the lower abdomen – had unplanned emergency surgery to divide them at Sydney Children’s Hospital on 7 December.

The surgery was brought forward as Tom, the weaker twin, was deteriorating rapidly. A large multi-disciplinary team took seven hours to separate the boys but Tom died soon after he was detached from his brother.

The team spent a further five hours working on Sawong, who is doing well and could return home by the end of February.

“The Port Moresby General Hospital paediatrician team told us [twice] to go back home, that there was no hope for them,” their mum Fetima said in Tok Pisin.

“We were even told not to trust Jurgen Ruh [the family’s spokesperson] because they said he was giving us false hope.

“I am happy and I laugh when I see my baby Sawong and think about that advice,” she said.

“I am full of hope, I cuddle him and talk to him every day, as he grows.”

RNZ Pacific has reached out to Port Moresby General Hospital for a response.

The two-month-olds were medivacced from Port Moresby to Sydney on 4 December, following medical advice that they undergo urgent surgery.

The move followed weeks of tense wrangling over the viability of separating them, which country would accept the case and perform the operation, and how it would be financed.

The boys shared a liver, bladder and parts of their gastrointestinal tract, but had their owns limbs and genitals.

They also had partial spina bifida – a neural tube defect that affects the development of a newborn’s spine and spinal cord. Tom also had a congenital heart defect, one kidney and malformed lungs.

Doctors at Port Moresby General Hospital initially explored the possibility of transferring the twins to Sydney, but the plans fell through when funding from a charity was pulled.

The hospital later made a u-turn and advised the couple to stay in PNG or face the death of either one or both of the boys.

The medical director Dr Kone Sobi said previously that multiple discussions led to their final decision, and added: “The underlying thing is that both twins present with significant congenital anomalies and we feel that even with care and treatment in a highly specialised unit, the chances of survival are very very slim.

“In fact the prognosis is extremely bad and the twin’s future is unpredictable.”

Manolos Aviation pilot Jurgen Ruh with Sawong at Sydney Children’s Hospital. Ruh flew Sawong and his conjoined twin Tom to Port Moresby General Hospital from their home in remote Morobe Province after they were born. Supplied/ Jurgen Ruh/ Manolo Aviation

Ruh told RNZ Pacific on Thursday that although Sawong remains in intensive care, monitored constantly by a specialist nurse, he is “strong and doing well”.

He was no longer on a ventilator, did not need supplementary oxygen and was gaining about 50 grams a day in weight, he said.

“The hose fitting on his nose is simply to monitor his breathing and to assist a little with extra pressure in his lungs.

“Doctors have now closed up a hole in his stomach with stretched skin and he is improving every day, but it will be another month or so before he is released, possibly by the end of February.

“Occasionally Sawong gives the biggest smile on earth; he is just happy with what he has.”

The hospital recently celebrated Sawong’s reaching 100 days old with a simple but touching celebration.

“It threw a little party for Sawong, his parents and all the staff who have been part of his journey. Fetima cut a frozen cheesecake on his behalf,” Ruh said.

A massive funeral for Tom was held a month ago at the Mega Church in Hillsong, Sydney.

The family are expected to scatter his ashes after they return home to their remote village in PNG’s Morobe Province.

While the complex surgery was a success, the results were bittersweet for the parents.

“I thought it was amazing, after the surgery a nurse gave Tom to them and they spent hours just cuddling him,” Ruh previously told RNZ Pacific.

The parents had been through a “rollercoaster” of emotions since the twins were born on 9 October.

“They had accepted that they would lose Tom and there’s been many tears shed along the way,” he said previously.

Ruh said last month that at one stage during negotiations the Sydney Children’s Hospital requested AUD$2 million to do the operation, but funds and guarantees could not be found.

RNZ Pacific understands that the parents had approached the PNG government for funding, but Ruh would not confirm this.

The ABC had reported that the hospital had asked for payment before the twins were transferred from PNG; however Ruh said as far as he knew no money had changed hands.

When asked how it was financed he said: “It’s a mixture of funding which took too long to organise.

“It should never have taken eight weeks to get the twins separated, it should have happened in eight days, but no referral pathway [to a foreign hospital] exists,” Ruh said.

He laid the blame on the PNG health system, and said babies born prematurely or with birth defects were lost in the system.

“It was a very disappointing ride we had, in terms of overall support from Port Moresby General Hospital. Then there were delays in getting them to Australia.

“We were exploring faster options, but we did not have any support.”

The boys were eventually moved from the public hospital to Paradise Private Hospital in Port Moresby, which provided them with free care.

The family felt the twins would be “safer” and have less chance of cross-infection from other babies, particularly of malaria.

A multi-disciplinary team from Sydney Children’s Hospital flew to Port Moresby on 21 November to assess the twins, amid growing public pressure in Australia and PNG.

At that point the boys only had a combined weight of 2.9kg, and Tom was relying on Sawong to keep him alive.

Sawong (left) and Tom while they were being treated in Port Moresby General Hospital’s neonatal unit last year. Supplied / Port Moresby General Hospital

In a letter to doctors in PNG, the Sydney team said surgery was in fact feasible although Tom was not expected to survive it.

“The reason for the early separation is that Sawong is working hard to support Tom,” the letter said.

The team had recommended the twins be urgently transferred in a specialised aircraft with intensive care facilities plus medical and nursing personnel.

The boys underwent multiple investigations at Sydney Children’s Hospital, including an MRI and CT scan to define their anatomy and vascular supply.

“Before the surgery, the medical team [in Sydney] said it was a miracle that Tom had survived for two months,” Ruh said previously.

A huge team including liver surgeons, colorectal surgeons and urologists, specialised cardiac anaesthetists, cardiologists, neonatologists and interventional radiologists were involved in the surgery, supported by a large team of nursing and allied staff.

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

Government announces $10m for Ringatū marae in Bay of Plenty

Source: Radio New Zealand

Politicians welcomed to Rātana on Friday. RNZ / Pokere Paewai

The government has announced $10 million for Ringatū marae in Bay of Plenty.

Making the announcement at Rātana, regional development minister Shane Jones said the funding would boost resilience in the Wainui Marae infrastructure near Ōhope.

It followed similar previous investments at Waitangi, Rātana and Parihaka.

Jones said the build would create 71 jobs, and afterwards the marae complex would include a wharenui, wharekai, wharetāonga, wharepaku, and a modern safe space for worship, cultural events and learning.

“I acknowledge our Finance Minister [Nicola Willis] because we are short of putea, but she supported this,” he said.

“And no, this is not an attempt to get votes. If I was going to get votes, Waikato would have voted for me when I gave them $30 million for the Ruakura infrastructure.”

Earlier, Winston Peters also pushed back on the idea such funding could constitute a political bribe.

“No… you should understand that when we’ve come here, we’ve always left a gift. It’s the Māori way and we’ve done it for decades in successive governments,” he said.

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Watch: Local iwi speak with father of two children missing in Mt Maunganui landslide

Source: Radio New Zealand

Local Iwi spoke with a father who is missing two children at the Mt Maunganui campground landslide, during a karakia service.

Around a dozen people from Mauao Trust and local iwi representatives gathered at the base of Mt Maunganui at 6pm on Friday, joined by the families of the missing – together they held a karakia ceremony.

Authorities believed there were six people missing in the landslide, while police were seeking the whereabouts of a further three.

Tracy Ngatoko, mana whenua from Ngati Ranginui and Ngai Te Rangi, she did what she called an “apakura.”

The rescue operation at Mt Maunganui on Friday night. Kim Baker Wilson

“An apakura is a lamental cry, of sorrow, and basically I called upon our mountain, Mauao, to help all the servicemen that are there and the women that are trying to find those that are still unaccounted for.”

After that, three men said three different incantations.

“Evoking the gods to help with the search, evoking the gods to clear the pathway so that it enables them to do the work that they still need to do across the next few days and ahead of us.

“But more importantly, to be with the families that at this stage, a lot of uncertainty, sorrow, anguish.”

Ngatoko said the three karakia were different -one was directly to the mountain, another was a historical prayer, connecting to the events of the past and its history as a burial ground.

The final karakia was to the elements, asking for the weather to stay good to help the workers with the search.

An ambulance at the scene. RNZ / Kim Baker Wilson

She said all the machinery stopped during the ceremony, the only noise was the incantations.

“There’s a saying in Māori that goes, he kanohi kitea he hokinga mahara, which basically means a lot of images brings back multitudes of memories. And so it was quite emotional, just walking around the corner down there and seeing the devastation.”

Ngatoko held back tears as she spoke of the emotion she felt watching the families of the missing crying during the silence and prayers.

She spoke to a man who was missing both of his children in the landslide.

“He’s trying to be as positive as possible because his wife isn’t in a good state at the moment, knowing that the children are still stuck there and just can only but send heaps of aroha and empathy to him”

During the ceremony the skies opened up and drenched the area around the mountain. As soon as the ceremony had finished, the sun returned.

Ngatoko said it was a cleansing.

“In one instance, it was a cleansing in terms of what needs to be done and needs to continue to happen. And the other part of it was the spiritual realm which bestowed itself upon the physical realm.

“When those two powers meet, it was a phenomenal feeling.

“It was also a tohu for us, a symbol of the tears of our ancestors. And no doubt, those of the affected families as well.”

There continued to be restricted access to the area and a rāhui in place.

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Oldest member of NZ Winter Olympic team thought dream had passed him by

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lyon Farrell competing in 2019 in Atlanta. Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images/AFP

With an average age of 20 in the NZ Winter Olympic team, Lyon Farrell is probably considered over the hill in snowboarding years for a first Winter Olympics.

At 27, Farrell is three year’s older than the next oldest members of the 17-strong team, which has been confirmed for next month’s Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.

Farrell achieved a long held dream when his selection in the Men’s Snowboard Slopestyle and Big Air disciplines was confirmed on Friday.

Mentally, Farrell said he felt like a 20-year-old.

“Just staying in it, riding with a bunch of 19-year-olds …I’m still learning new tricks and giving these young guys a run for their money,” Farrell said.

Farrell grew up in Maui, Hawaii but first learned to ski at Coronet Peak in Queenstown with his parents and siblings.

His Mom was American, and his Dad a Kiwi. His grandparents live in Arrowtown and Farrell spent a lot of his childhood in the South Island.

He switched to snowboarding, following in his big brothers footsteps and entered his first competition in 2011.

He first started training with the New Zealand team in 2014 when he was just 15, then got the opportunity to ride with the USA team.

Farrell was with the US team from 2015 to 2022 but missed out on the last Olympics after tearing his ACL in the lead-up and thought that dream might be over.

Things were very different in 2014 when no New Zealand male athletes were sent to the Sochi Winter Olympics that year.

“So that conversation was never really there, there wasn’t really a structured team around slopestyle riding…I didn’t really see it as something that could happen.

“And then 2018 was when Zoi [Sadowski-Synnott] and Nico [Porteous] really started crushing it and I was like whoa all the guys that I’d been snowboarding with when I was 15-16 years old are doing amazing, I’d love to see what’s going on.”

New Zealand had its most successful Winter Olympic Games at Beijing 2022, where Kiwi athletes claimed two gold medals and a silver.

Sadowski-Synnott made history, winning New Zealand’s first Winter Olympic gold medal in Snowboard Slopestyle, alongside a silver in Big Air. She also won a Big Air bronze medal at PyeongChang 2018 and is off to her third Olympics next month.

Farrell had worked with Sean Thompson, Sadowski-Synnott’s coach, when he was as young as 13. He finished second in the Snowboard Halfpipe at the 2014 Junior World Championships under Thompson.

Four year’s ago Farrell started thinking about switching his allegiances back to New Zealand.

“That friendship and connection I had with the Kiwi team was still super strong and at the time it made the most sense to go back to where I started …really paying homage to the place that I learnt how to snowboard.”

Farrell said he didn’t want to look back when he eventually retired and wonder if he could have been a better snowboarder.

“Didn’t really have to do with the Olympics, it more had to do with could I reach my full potential as an athlete. When I started to look at it I saw that the people I was riding with back in 2014 had created something incredible and that was what I wanted to be a part of.”

Zoi Sadowski-Synnott has been an inspiration to Lyon Farrell. Miha Matavz / www.mihamatavz.com

He said a big drawcard was to work with coaches Tom Willmott and Thompson again.

“I believe that they are the best in the world and that the New Zealand team was the best place I could possibly be, so I chose to step away from the US team and go where what I thought was better and I feel it continues to show me that it is.”

After watching a new generation of New Zealand snowboarders emerge, Farrell said he felt lucky to just be involved.

“They’ve kind of lifted me to a level now where I feel like I’m not just a good Kiwi but I’m good on the world stage and I can actually do better than I probably ever have before.”

Growing up, professional sport was a part of Farrell’s household.

His mother Angela Cochran was a professional windsurfer for a couple of decades and still competes, so it was no surprise that Farrell ended up competing in an extreme sport.

“I think it was kind of unavoidable being that my Mum was in a freestyle kind of sport where flipping and spinning and pushing yourself was part of the programme.”

Cochran, who still lived in Maui, competed against New Zealand Olympic medallist Barbara Kendall in the 1990s and 2000s.

The Windsurfing Hall of Famers were still great friends.

“Maui was kind of the mecca of windsurfing and she did a lot of racing and wave sailing with Barbara, so Barbara was kind of my main connection whenever I was in the North Island flying through to see my grandparents in the South Island I’d always be with Barbara and her family, it’s pretty cool to have that connection.

“I don’t windsurf but I picked up a couple of other wind sports along the way, little bit of winging, little bit of stand up paddle, downwind foiling, all sorts of random stuff when I have time in the summer.”

The Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games would take place from February 6-22 across iconic Italian alpine venues.

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Person hit by vehicle outside Christchurch Hospital

Source: Radio New Zealand

The emergency department is still able to be accessed. Supplied / Te Whatu Ora

The road outside Christchurch Hospital has closed eastbound following a crash.

A pedestrian was hit by a vehicle on Riccarton Avenue at 6.50pm.

They have been seriously injured.

Motorists are asked to avoid the area.

However, the entrance to the emergency department is still accessible.

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Person found dead, another in critical condition after ‘serious’ incident in Clutha

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Angus Dreaver

One person is dead and another is in a critical condition after what police are calling a “serious incident” in the Clutha suburb of Crichton.

Detective Sergeant Hayden Smale says at 6.10pm police were called to Adams Flat Road.

The circumstances of the incident are not yet clear and Smale says police enquiries are ongoing.

One person is dead and another seriously injured after an incident on Adams Flat Road. Google Maps

A scene examination is taking place and a guard remains at the property.

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Gloriavale Christian School to remain open, for now

Source: Radio New Zealand

The cancellation of the school’s registration was due to take effect today. RNZ / Jean Edwards

Gloriavale Christian School will remain open for now after its board sought a judicial review of the Ministry of Education’s decision to cancel its registration as a private school.

Secretary for Education Ellen McGregor-Reid informed the school of the decision last month.

The cancellation was due to take effect today.

However, McGregor-Reid confirmed the ministry has agreed to allow the school to remain open after the High Court yesterday granted interim orders preventing the cancellation from taking effect.

She said the community and the ministry have agreed that the school will remain open until the matter is heard.

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Imminent RBNZ rate hike odds narrow despite inflation ticking higher

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ

  • RBNZ governor says shes committed and confident get inflation back to target
  • A stronger economy will add further price pressures
  • Experts bet on one, possibly two cash rate increses by year’s end

The odds of the Reserve Bank (RBNZ) raising its benchmark interest rate by the end of the year have narrowed after the latest inflation numbers.

Stats NZ data showed a 0.6 percent rise in consumer prices in the three months ended December, pushing the annual rate to an 18-month high of 3.1 percent, just above the RBNZ’s target band.

The RBNZ has been betting on the slack in the economy caused by recession and weak activity to put downward pressure on inflation, with domestic price pressures of wages, rents, rates, insurance, and electricity expected to ease gradually through the year.

RBNZ governor Anna Breman reaffirmed her commitment and confidence in getting inflation back into the target band.

“We still have favourable conditions in terms of reaching 2 percent because we have spare capacity and wage growth is still subdued, and our job is to do a balancing act going forward to ensure that we reach that,” Breman said in a pre-arranged interview with the Reuters news agency.

Her comments about a current data release were highly unusual, although they were similar to those made before the end of last year. She made no mention of any move in the official cash rate.

Next rate move higher

Economists interpreted the latest data as a sure sign that the next move in the OCR was higher, the only issue being when.

The RBNZ’s own calculation of core inflation edged higher to 2.8 percent, which ASB senior economist Mark Smith said showed the fall in domestic inflation has stalled.

“If anything, underlying pricing pressures look to be picking up.”

“There is the risk that annual inflation over 2026 will not cool to the circa 2 percent RBNZ expectation. Today’s CPI data and the RBNZ estimates for core inflation supports this view,” Smith said.

He said ASB was now picking a 25 basis point OCR rise to 2.5 percent in December, and another couple of hikes in the first half of 2027 to 3 percent.

“Rather than tapping on the monetary policy brakes, the moves should be interpreted as the RBNZ easing off on the accelerator,” Smith said.

ANZ senior economist Miles Workman agreed the next OCR move was higher and most likely in December.

He said the RBNZ had to balance between wanting to get inflation lower and not squashing the signs of economic recovery that have been showing through.

“The RBNZ will be aware that if it comes out too hawkish in February and thereby tightens monetary conditions before current green shoots have a chance to get established, those shoots could easily wither.”

In her interview, Breman confirmed the mixed outlook with some “weak signals” such as the fall in December retail sales and lack of strong recovery in the labour market, but a pick up in growth.

“We will get some data on the labour market coming out now in early February, so that will also be important.”

“We have to take all of this information into account when we go into the next meeting.”

The RBNZ makes its next monetary statement on 18 February.

Financial markets are pricing in the first increase in the OCR by October, and a second by year’s end.

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Driver swept away into Mahurangi River still missing

Source: Radio New Zealand

Emergency crews have been searching the Mahurangi River for any signs of a man who was swept away on Wednesday. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

Emergency crews spent the day scouring the Mahurangi River north of Auckland for any signs of a man swept away earlier this week.

The 47-year-old Kiribati man was last seen on Wednesday when he and his vehicle were washed away near Falls Road in Warkworth.

The man’s nephew was able to escape and sound the alarm.

On Friday, emergency crews made up of about 30 people resumed their search.

Police say additional resources were deployed to the area. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

A number of people wearing hi-viz were wandering the banks of the river Friday morning, searching through dense bush and debris left by the storm.

Drones were also deployed during the day. A large drone flew high above the river while a smaller drone flew close to the bank.

Later, a fire and Emergency rescue raft was seen making its way down the river.

Those on board were searching under large piles of branches and detritus left behind by this week’s earlier severe weather.

Police said additional resources had been deployed to the area.

Searchers have been going through dense bush and debris left by the storm. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

Senior sergeant Carl Fowlie said 17 Land Search and Rescue staff as well as the water rescue crew from Fire and Emergency were assisting in the search.

“Police is continuing to support the man’s family through this difficult time,” Fowlie said.

“We thank all other agencies who have been called upon in recent days for their assistance.”

Fowlie said everyone involved in the search operation was focused on finding the man.

On Friday evening police said they will continue to monitor conditions over the coming days and deploy resource accordingly.

Meanwhile, the wife of the missing man, who RNZ agreed not to name, told a reporter on Thursday she was still holding out hope her husband was alive.

The Mahurangi River north of Auckland where the search has been taking place. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

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