SH3 blocked after Waikato crash leaves two with serious injuries

Source: Radio New Zealand

A serious crash has closed State Highway 3/Ōhaupō Road where it intersects with Ryburn Road. Pretoria Gordon / RNZ

Emergency services have responded to the scene of a serious crash that has closed State Highway 3/Ōhaupō Road where it intersects with Ryburn Road in Waikato.

Police said a two-vehicle crash was reported about 9.15am on Sunday.

“Initial indications are that two people have serious injuries.”

Diversions are in place and delays are expected as emergency services work at the scene.

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Venezuela attack: New Zealand ‘concerned’, expects everyone to follow international law – Winston Peters

Source: Radio New Zealand

Winston Peters. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Foreign Minister Winston Peters has made the government’s first statement following the US military action against Venezuela, saying New Zealand is “concerned”.

On Saturday, the US attacked the Venezuelan capital Caracas and captured the South American nation’s president and his wife, citing alleged drug offences.

US President Donald Trump said in the meantime, the US would “run” the country, which has some of the world’s largest oil reserves.

“New Zealand is concerned by and actively monitoring developments in Venezuela and expects all parties to act in accordance with international law,” Peters said in a post on X (formerly Twitter), using the official Minister of Foreign Affairs account.

“New Zealand stands with the Venezuelan people in their pursuit of a fair, democratic and prosperous future.

“We continue to advise that New Zealanders do not travel to Venezuela. New Zealanders requiring urgent consular assistance can contact the 24/7consular emergency line on +64 99 20 20 20.”

The military action comes after months of accusations from the Trump administration that Venezuela has been shipping narcotics into the US, but Trump has made no secret of his desire to access Venezuela’s natural reserves.

“We’re going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure,” he said. “We’ll be selling large amounts of oil.”

The United Nations is set to have an emergency meeting on Monday to discuss the action, which has recieved both praise and condemnation from world leaders.

Invasion unlawful – expert

International law expert Professor Alexander Gillespie of the University of Waikato said while it was “very good that Peters has called upon all countries to ‘act in accordance with international law'”, he was curious to know whether Peters believed the US action was lawful or not, or if Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro had diplomatic immunity.

In theory, Gillespie said it appeared the US military action was unlawful.

Professor Alexander Gillespie of the University of Waikato. Alexander Gillespie

“You can only attack another country in times of self-defence and that situation must be urgent, proportionate in action, and no alternative to the use of force,” he told RNZ via email.

“Trump is not wrong to be concerned about the problem of illegal drugs and transnational criminal/terrorist groups, but the pretext of illegal drugs in this area is fanciful; where the ‘war on drugs’ has turned into something completely different. To say it is self-defence stretches the doctrine way beyond what it has previously been understood as.”

But it was unlikely Trump would face any legal retaliation, as the US has a veto on the UN Security Council and would “just laugh” at the prospect of being taken to the International Court of Justice.

Gillespie said there was a risk the US arrest of another country’s president would give others such as Russia, China and Iran “a green light to intervene in countries they disapprove of unilaterally – without going through the UN”.

“It will be a small step for countries like China to take Taiwan on this precedent; or Russia to push even harder into Ukraine.”

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Football: Brooke Nunn levels late for Phoenix women to maintain unbeaten run

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pia Vlok of the Phoenix in action against Brisbane Roar. photosport

Brooke Nunn scored late in second half stoppage time to secure the Phoenix a 2-2 draw with Brisbane Roar and stretch their unbeaten run.

Coming off massive wins over Sydney FC (7-0) and Western Sydney (3-0), sharing the spoils in Brisbane was a small let-down but coach Bev Priestman said she walked away satisfied.

“If you’d asked me at the beginning of the game I’d say no, but you ask me at the end and yes, I’m very happy to take the point,” Priestman said.

“Overall whenever you take points on the road you have to be happy.

“The first half we weren’t at our best. They changed shape and we took some adjusting to that. But in the second half we did a much better job of preventing any shots.

“What I’m most proud of is that the team never gave up and they went to the very end. Sometimes some of the best teams cannot be at their best and still take points out of a game, especially on the road.

“And to get back-to-back points on the road and three games undefeated, we have to also be proud of that.”

Sabitra “Samba” Bhandari. photosport

Manaia Elliott had opened the scoring for the visitors in the 15th minute with a speculative effort from distance, wide on the left, but the Roar equalised almost instantly and took the lead shortly after the half hour mark.

It looked like Wellington’s pursuit of an equaliser would be in vain until the eighth minute of time added on, when Nunn delivered a cross from the right flank which beat Lincoln at her near post and nestled in the back of the net.

Wellington drop one place to six ahead of a home match against Melbourne City on Saturday.

The Phoenix could be without Sabitra “Samba” Bhandari, who limped off with a knee injury late in the second half.

“We’re not sure yet. I think she’ll definitely need to get a scan on her knee,” Priestman said.

“It could be nothing but it also could be something and it’s something we need to look into.”

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Do focus apps actually improve your productivity?

Source: Radio New Zealand

It’s hardly a revelation that we’re living in an era of distraction and smartphone addiction. Our phones interrupt us, hijack our attention, and tempt us into scrolling. Even when we aren’t interacting with them, their mere presence makes it difficult to concentrate.

To address this, app developers have responded with a vast ocean of productivity and focus apps, each promising to tame the chaos with timers, app blocking, habit reminders, and rewards designed to help you stay focused and be productive.

To understand whether these apps are worth our while, we first need to consider why staying focused is so difficult in the first place.

A range of productivity apps now promise to tame the chaos with timers, app blocking, habit reminders, and rewards.

Honey B Games / ENFP Dev Master

Is tracking our health healthy?

Wellbeing

Why is it so hard to stay focused?

By and large, a lack of focus boils down to difficulties with self-regulation, the ability to monitor and manage thoughts, emotions and behaviours for goal pursuit.

In short, when a task feels boring, stressful, or tedious, it creates an unpleasant feeling. We then search for relief, and for most of us that comes by way of our smartphone, which has become our go-to coping device, even if it derails the work we need to do.

There’s been much talk that our capacity to focus has dwindled in recent years, though this is not supported by the scientific literature.

The research does, however, suggest that certain technology habits (especially multitasking and constant digital interruptions) are associated with greater distractibility for some people. In other words, while our ability to focus may not be declining, the modern world places far greater demands on it.

The rise of focus apps

To cope with these demands, a new generation of focus apps has burst onto the productivity scene. These apps use gamification (the application of game design elements in non-game settings) and cute characters to encourage focused work.

Chief among these is Focus Friend, which briefly took over ChatGPT as the most downloaded app during its first month on the App Store in August last year.

The app works by encouraging you to set a focus timer. During that session, a virtual bean character quietly knits in the background. If you pick up your phone and open apps you have pre-selected as off limits, the knitting unravels and the bean looks upset. If you stay on task, you earn digital rewards such as socks, scarves, and room decorations for your bean.

How does it get you to focus?

Beyond the usual gamification tricks, this app also uses several psychological principles.

First, it uses incentives by giving you immediate, tangible rewards – knitted items and room upgrades when you complete a focus session.

Next, it leverages reward substitution by getting you to do one potentially unpleasant thing (deep work) to earn something immediately enjoyable (seeing the bean’s world improve).

The app also stimulates commitment and consistency. Simply starting the timer functions like a small promise to yourself, and once that’s made, we tend to want to behave consistently by maintaining streaks and avoiding behaviour that would break that session.

Over time, decorating the bean’s room activates the IKEA effect. That is, we place more value on things we help build, so the more you customise and invest in the space, the more motivated you become to protect it by continuing to focus.

Do focus apps actually help?

The research examining the effectiveness of focus apps is thin. One study examined a range of apps for reducing mobile phone use and found that gamified focus apps, while scoring high on user sentiment, were rarely used and were less effective than simpler strategies such as switching the phone to grayscale mode.

While no peer-reviewed studies exist specifically on Focus Friend, its high App Store ratings plus the slew of articles from enthusiastic users, suggest people enjoy using it. However, enjoyment alone does not correlate with increased focus or productivity.

How to use focus apps wisely

Do you have an automatic and uncontrollable urge to check your phone when working? If so, you could try to use a focus app.

Practical steps include scheduling specific focus sessions in which to use the app and selecting a clearly defined task. Also, when you feel the urge to check your phone mid-session, take note of the feeling and remind yourself that discomfort is part of getting important things done.

Finally, after a week of use, review your experience to see whether the app actually helped you make progress. Ask: “is this serving me, or am I serving it?”

Be sure to watch for pitfalls. Apps such as Focus Friend don’t assess the quality of your work, so you could spend focused time on low-value tasks. It’s also fairly easy to trick the app using your phone settings.

Perhaps most importantly, remember that while a focus app can help you resist checking your phone, it can’t resolve the inner forces that pull you into distraction. The key to better focus might be diagnosis, not download – that is, learning to notice what you feel, choosing how you want to respond, and making the commitment to staying focused on what matters.

*Dwain Allan is a lecturer at the School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing at University of Canterbury.

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Two dead after fatal drownings on Northland beach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rāhui from the Glinks Gully entrance to Mahuta Gap Police

Two people drowned at Ripirō Beach, between Mahuta Gap and Glinks Gully, on Saturday.

Police were called about 6.50pm to reports two men could be seen struggling in the water.

Police and other emergency services responded immediately, and the men were pulled from the water unresponsive.

Surf Life Saving New Zealand (SLSNZ) confirmed surf lifeguards responded to an incident at Glinks Gully.

Police had informed SLSNZ of two people caught in a rip, 300m north of the access way at Glinks Gully, approximately 17km south of the Baylys Beach patrolled area.

The first surf lifeguards to arrive at the scene launched an inflatable rescue boat and located both people, who were in the water and unresponsive.

They returned them to the beach to commence CPR, however resuscitation attempts were unsuccessful.

The deaths have been referred to the coroner and local iwi have placed a rāhui on the area, until 7pm Monday 5 January.

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Neighbourly users’ private information up for sale on dark web after a breach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Neighbourly is back online after it was shut down on New Year’s Day when its operators became aware of a data breach. Screenshot

Names, email addresses and GPS locations – as well as posts and private messages – of users of the Stuff-owned community website Neighbourly have been put up for sale on the dark web.

Neighbourly is back online after being shut down on New Year’s Day when its operators became aware of a data breach.

A website monitoring the dark web says a massive database of information belonging to Neighbourly was put up for sale over Christmas.

Daily Dark Web said a user claiming to possess more than 213 million lines of data from the site offered the information for sale on a cybercrime marketplace.

Neighbourly has told its members it will look to seek a court injunction against the use of any of the material, but said it was satisfied the breach was quickly contained.

The breach came the same week as details of up to 126,000 ManageMyHealth users were accessed without authorisation.

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Weather: State highway reopens, evacuees return as East Coast recovers from heavy rain

Source: Radio New Zealand

Julia Sudnitskaya / 123RF

State Highway 35 at Tolaga Bay has reopened to one lane and is expected to be fully reopened by mid-morning.

Flooding on Saturday closed a stretch of SH35 overnight between Wharf Road, just south of Tolaga Bay, and Okitu.

Dozens were evacuated and spent the night at Tolaga Bay Area School’s gymnasium, many of whom have now been able to return.

A majority of the evacuees were tent campers from Tolaga Bay Top 10 Camp, who moved early Saturday night.

Despite the road reopening, NZ Transport Agency / Waka Kotahi urged caution for travellers. It asked anyone in the area to be alert to possible flooding, slips and debris in other parts of the region.

Crews were also monitoring a build up of woody debris around Gladstone Road bridge on SH35 in Gisborne.

Ūawa deputy civil defence officer Nori Parata told RNZ the rain had been torrential.

“We had to open up the base because there are a number of travellers that had got caught with the road closure, and also didn’t have appropriate vehicles for that kind of situation.

“But equally we also had the holiday camp [at Tolaga Bay] needed to evacuate people that were camping in tents down there. So I think we’ve got about 80 people in our gym between the travellers and the campers.”

Parata said there were plenty of mattresses in the school gym for evacuees and anyone else caught out by the flooding, and the Civil Defence base was well-equipped with kai and other supplies.

“We’re set up to cater in these emergencies. This is not our first rodeo.”

Parata said the Tolaga Bay Holiday Park had just reopened this season after recovering from Cyclone Gabrielle three years ago.

Shanan Gray from Tolaga Bay Civil Defence hoped the worst was over on Sunday. He told RNZ it had been pelting down overnight, but had since eased.

“The wind is quite heavy at the moment, so hopefully it is pushing the rain out to sea,” he said.

MetService meterologist Braydon White said rain of more than 50mm/h had fallen in Tolaga Bay since 8pm on Saturday.

While the orange-level heavy rain warning had expired at 8am, White said there had been some reasonably large accumulations of rainfall on Sunday morning too, especially on the East Cape.

Ūawa Civil Defence has warned on Facebook that the wharf bridge was “underwater and dangerous”.

“Do not go near it or try to cross. Please stay home, stay off the roads, and keep yourself safe.”

Gisborne residents told to be prepared

Meanwhile, Tai Rāwhiti Civil Defence is monitoring the situation in the city of Gisborne. Group controller Ben Green told RNZ there was a lot of surface flooding across the region, but the Waimatā River and the Tarahiru River had remained steady overnight.

It was feared residents would have to be evacuated after the Waimatā River measured at 7m and the Tarahiru River at 4.26m at 11pm.

Green said access to Tolaga Bay had also been restored, after a slip had closed the gorge on Saturday night.

Tai Rāwhiti Civil Defence would be looking into the impact of the flooding on Sunday.

In a video message, Green said the focus was on the Taruheru River, which flowed through Gisborne City.

“What we’re asking people to do is adopt a ‘be prepared’ and cautious approach to really monitoring the river.

“If you haven’t already done so, check in with your neighbours. Make sure that they’re aware of what the current situation is. In the worst case if you do feel unsafe then, certainly, proactively evacuate if you are uncomfortable with that situation.”

Green said Fire and Emergency had been keeping people informed on Fergusson Drive and other low-lying streets.

He said people could sign up for text alerts through the Gisborne District Council website.

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Wellington Phoenix men overcome odds to crush Brisbane 3-0

Source: Radio New Zealand

Ifeanyi Eze celebrates after scoring for the Wellington Phoenix against the Brisbane Roar. photosport

Wellington Phoenix overcame a wretched run of form and an early red card to upset the Brisbane Roar 3-0 on the road in a major A-League upset.

In a result described by coach Giancarlo Italiano as his best win as a head coach, the Phoenix scored twice in the second half despite being without the services of winger Carlo Armiento, who was shown a straight red in the 38th minute.

The result came five days after their 5-1 loss to Melbourne Victory, which left the club languishing in 10th place ahead of a clash with the third-placed Roar.

Italiano was thrilled with their response, which included keeping a first clean sheet of the season.

“That’s probably the best victory I’ve ever had as a coach. We’ve had it very hard,” Italiano said, close to tears at one point in the press conference.

“I’m just immensely proud for the group. We suffered today. We spoke about it yesterday and it was like a self-fulfilling prophecy. We talked about in order for teams to be successful they need to learn to suffer, to grind, to be committed, to have courage and to be brave. They demonstrated everything today.

“It was almost like the football gods wanted Carlo to get sent off for us to go through this lesson. We needed this. It wasn’t so much the result, it was the performance.

“The boys showed a lot of character tonight. I couldn’t have asked for anything more.”

Ifeanyi Eze scored Wellington’s first goal in the sixth minute, but their chances of victory nosedived when Armiento was shown red for an illegal tackle which sparked an all-in melee.

Wellington Phoenix and Brisbane Roar players involved in a melee. photosport

However, the visitors responded with resolute defence and speed on the counter after the break, scoring through

Kazuki Nagasawa and substitute Paulo Retre.

Italiano reserved praise for teenage goalkeeper Eamonn McCarron, who made a number of fine saves in just his second start.

“Eamonn is like an experienced goalkeeper caught in a young guy’s body,” Italiano said.

“He’s fearless and what I really liked about him today was the reaction from conceding five goals against Victory. It didn’t faze him.

“In the air he was fantastic and the last ditch, brave saves were amazing. He started as the number three at the beginning of the season and now he’s playing like a mature number one.”

Ninth-placed Wellington host sixth-placed Adelaide United on Sunday.

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Two dead after water incident on Ripirō Beach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rāhui from the Glinks Gully entrance to Mahuta Gap Police

Two people have died following a water related incident on Ripirō Beach between Mahuta Gap and Glinks Gully on Saturday.

Police were called about 6.50pm on Saturday with a report that two men could be seen struggling in the water.

Police and other emergency services responded immediately, and the men were pulled from the water unresponsive.

Police said first responders provided first aid but sadly both men died at the scene.

“Our thoughts are with their family and friends during this difficult time.”

The deaths have been referred to the Coroner.

Local iwi have placed a rāhui on the area, until 7pm Monday 5 January.

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Weather: Dozens evacuated after heavy rain on the North Island’s East Coast

Source: Radio New Zealand

Julia Sudnitskaya / 123RF

Tolaga Bay Civil Defence is cooking breakfast for the evacuees who have spent the night at the Area School’s gymnasium.

State Highway 35 is still closed on Sunday, after heavy flooding in the Tai Rāwhiti region overnight.

The 30 remaining evacuees at Tolaga Bay Area School are a mix of travellers who were caught out when the road closed, and campers evacuated from the Tolaga Bay Holiday Park.

Ūawa deputy civil defence officer Nori Parata told RNZ the rain had been torrential.

“We had to open up the base because there are a number of travellers that had got caught with the road closure, and also didn’t have appropriate vehicles for that kind of situation.

“But equally we also had the holiday camp [at Tolaga Bay] needed to evacuate people that were camping in tents down there.

“So I think we’ve got about 80 people in our gym between the travellers and the campers.”

Parata said there were plenty of mattresses in the school gym for evacuees and anyone caught out by the flooding, and the civil defence base was well-equipped with kai and other supplies.

“We’re set up to cater in these emergencies. This is not our first rodeo.”

Parata said the Tolaga Bay Holiday Park had just reopened this season after recovering from Cyclone Gabrielle three years ago.

Shanan Gray from Tolaga Bay Civil Defence hoped the worst was over on Sunday.

He told RNZ that it had been pelting down overnight, but had since eased.

“The wind is quite heavy at the moment, so hopefully it is pushing the rain out to sea,” he said.

MetService meterologist Braydon White said rain of more than 50 millimetres an hour had fallen in Tolaga Bay since 8pm on Saturday.

While the orange-level heavy rain warning had expired at 8am, White said there had been some reasonably large accumulations of rainfall on Sunday morning too, especially on the East Cape.

Ūawa Civil Defence has warned on Facebook that the wharf bridge was “underwater and dangerous”.

“Do not go near it or try to cross. Please stay home, stay off the roads, and keep yourself safe.”

Gisborne residents told to be prepared

Meanwhile, Tai Rāwhiti Civil Defence is monitoring the situation in the city of Gisborne.

In a video message, the Tai Rāwhiti emergency management controller Ben Green said the focus was on the Taruheru River, which flowed through Gisborne City.

It was at 4.26m at 11pm, and the level of concern that posed a risk to low-lying properties was 4.5m, so it would be under monitoring overnight.

“What we’re asking people to do is adopt a ‘be prepared’ and cautious approach to really monitoring the river.

“If you haven’t already done so, check in with your neighbours. Make sure that they’re aware of what the current situation is. In the worst case if you do feel unsafe then, certainly, proactively evacuate if you are uncomfortable with that situation.”

Green said Fire and Emergency had been keeping people informed on Fergusson Drive and other low-lying streets.

He said people could sign up for text alerts through the Gisborne District Council website.

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