Boxing live updates: Jake Paul vs Anthony Joshua

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the action, as two-time heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua takes on YouTuber-turned-professional boxer Jake Paul at the Kaseya Center in Miami.

The main card is expected to start about 4pm NZT.

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Jake Paul and Anthony Joshua. Leonardo Fernandez

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

Threat from organised crime needs new approach – Associate Police Minister Casey Costello

Source: Radio New Zealand

Casey Costello

New Zealand needs to step up its approach to the increase in organised criminal groups targeting the country, Casey Costello says. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Organised crime networks are escalating their activities in New Zealand, Associate Minister of Police Casey Costello says, announcing a new cross-agency plan to combat them.

“New Zealand and our Pacific neighbours are being increasingly targeted by organised criminal groups, who are using new technologies and new ways of operating,” she said. “We need a different, stronger and more cohesive response.”

  • The Detail: Changing the future for organised crime
  • Many New Zealand agencies have some level of responsibility for dealing with organised crime, but more work was needed to enable them to work together more effectively, Costello said on Saturday.

    The change would mean better use of resources, powers and information that agencies collectively possess, and better accountability of efforts to combat organised crime.

  • ‘Organised crime is organised. We are not’, ministers told
  • Organised crime taking place in New Zealand included drug trafficking, scams, migrant exploitation and money laundering, harming individuals and families, legitimate businesses and the broader New Zealand economy, she said.

    “The illicit drug trade alone is estimated to cost the country around $1.5 billion in social harm.

    “The key thing I think we need to recognise is that organised crime is a business that will do anything it can to make a profit. They are agnostic about commodity – whether it’s people, whether it’s tobacco, whether it’s drugs, whether it’s money laundering, whether it’s scamming – whatever they can do to make money, they will do.

    “We need to be pivoting and responding in a far more flexible and responsive way than we currently are.”

    Police seized almost 14kg of methamphetamine and $360,000 of cash as a result of Operation Settler in 2023.

    Some of the almost 14kg of methamphetamine and $360,000 of cash seized by police from a Mexican man posing as a tourist in Auckland. NZME / Supplied / NZ Police

    A ministerial advisory group on organised crime has published a series of reports on the vulnerabilities in the country’s response to transnational crime, including revealing that government agencies typically avoid the risk of sharing data and work was needed to address the problem.

    “Organised crime is organised, we are not”, and it should be recognised as the greatest threat to national security, the report, released earlier said.

    It recommended urgent action, including one minister tasked with responsibility for the government’s organised crime response, an overhaul of strategy and a charter that would hold agencies accountable. It also warned the government that a “smaller, scaled back option” taken from its full recommendations, would “not achieve the results we need”.

    What the newly announced plan includes:

    • Exploring the idea of one agency responsible for transnational and serious organised crime
    • Developing new methods for sharing information and data between agencies
    • Putting into action a package of actions on methamphetamine harm
    • Strengthening communities and addressing harm through ‘Resilience to Organised Crime’ initiatives.

    “It’s about better accountability,” Costello said. “It’s about focusing our resources where they most need to be.

    “Sometimes we get swallowed up with keeping busy and forget to identify what the outcomes are. We really want to get some strong outcomes, because organised crime effectively needs organised government to respond to it.”

    However Aotearoa had some advantages when it came to tackling organised crime, she said.

    “We are the envy when I go around the world and talk to other agencies. We don’t have state boundaries – we have one jurisdiction.

    “We have one border. We have very straightforward legislation.

    “We have a good judiciary, so we have that cohesion that should make us the very hardest border to penetrate and the easiest to enforce law in this space.”

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

Manta rays now considered nationally vulnerable in NZ

Source: Radio New Zealand

Manta rays, which can reach up to nine metres wingtip-to-wingtip, are found in the Hauraki Gulf (file image). Supplied / Manta Watch NZ

Manta rays visiting New Zealand are under threat from pollution and boat strikes.

The Department of Conservation has assigned manta rays the threatened status after a new report found numbers were dwindling.

Their status is now ‘Threatened – Nationally Vulnerable’ when they were previously ‘Data Deficient’.

“This change represents a greater level of concern for the species than previously held,” DOC said in a statement.

The manta rays are one of 113 species who were assessed by an independent panel for the latest conservation status report about New Zealand’s chimaeras, sharks and rays.

Senior Science advisor Dr Karen Middlemiss said manta rays spend about six months in New Zealand waters each year when it’s warm.

But DOC staff often find them injured.

“In New Zealand waters the sorts of things that we find impacting them are pollution in the waters, habitat degradation, disturbance in key aggregation sites, and vessel activity can also play a role, Middlemiss said.

“We often find animals that have got evidence of boat strikes.”

Middlemiss said current estimmates suggest there are just a few thousand manta rays in New Zealand – but further data is needed to confirm this.

“We know very little about our manta ray population size, age structure, and regional connectivity with other Pacific populations.”

Basking shark from above and underwater (file image). Left Basking shark from above – credit rossbeane, some rights reserved (CC BY-SA) Right Basking shark underwater – Photo credit Greg Skomal – NOAA Fisheries Service [Public domain]

Meanwhile, Basking and Plunket’s sharks are now considered ‘Threatened – Nationally Critical’ – the last status before extinction.

“The disappearance of the basking shark from New Zealand’s shores is very concerning, and we don’t know exactly why this has happened,” Middlemiss said.

“Urgent research is required to better understand population pressures – both human induced and environmental – to inform conservation management decisions for both basking and Plunket’s sharks.”

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

Black Fern Layla Sae faces extended time out with knee injury

Source: Radio New Zealand

Layla Sae makes a break for the Black Ferns against Spain. photosport

Black Ferns loose forward Layla Sae will miss much of the 2026 season after suffering a serious knee injury on duty for her English club Harlequins.

The 25-year-old’s anterior cruciate ligament injury is likely to see Sae spend the first half of next year recuperating, with a possibility of returning for international duty late in the season in home tests against Australia and France.

The Hurricanes Poua confirmed in a statement their hard-running No.8 will miss the Super Rugby Aupiki season.

There is no chance she will play for New Zealand in the preceding Pacific Four series in April, the first matches under the eye of newly-appointed coach Whitney Hansen.

“Layla’s injury is a massive loss to the Hurricanes club. Her energy, relentlessness, humility, and openness have been – and continue to be – a cornerstone of the Poua,” said Poua head coach Hayden Triggs.

Andrew Skinner/www.photosport.nz

“Layla’s contribution and fight for the Poua in the past have been a driver for the changes the club and the team are hoping to build on in Super Rugby Aupiki 2026.

“The club will support her rehab and provide everything she needs to come back the dominant force she aims to be. She will continue to play a big part in our 2026 campaign in a support capacity, which will help the club achieve our goals next year.”

In October, Sae and Black Ferns team-mate Liana Mikaele-Tu’u signed a short-term contract to play for Harlequins in the English Premier Women’s Rugby championships, scheduled to finish in March.

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

The Ashes live: Australia v England – third test, day four

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the cricket action, as the third in the five-test series between archrivals Australia and England continues at Adelaide Oval in Adelaide.

Australia currently has a 2-0 lead in the series, after successful campaigns in both Perth and Brisbane.

First ball is scheduled for 12.30pm NZT.

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Philip Brown

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Christmas dishes that are better to prep ahead

Source: Radio New Zealand

The last thing you want on a summer Christmas Day is to be hot, flustered and glued to the oven or stove when your guests arrive.

Food writer and cookbook author Kathy Paterson, who spent 20 years running an Auckland catering company, starts prepping up to two days out and even plots a time-managed plan if there’s a crowd.

The payoff is fresh food on the table with minimal stress, fewer dirty dishes, and more time to actually enjoy the presence of your guests, she says.

Food writer Kathy Paterson.

Supplied / Anna Kidman

Traditional Christmas Mincemeat

Food writer and food tour host Helen Jackson agrees.

“I just don’t like having all the heat and the oven and the elements all going on the day of, because it feels stressful and busy and we’ve also worked hard all year and it’s nice to be a bit more relaxed, so I do try and be more organised.”

Starters and sides

Salad dressing can often be made days in advance. (file image) Kathy Paterson also washes her greens, dries them and stores them in an airtight container so they’re ready for plating.

Unsplash / Getty Images

Think dips, sauces, dressings and robust salads. Roasted vegetable salads, pickled eggplant, stuffed tomatoes and crostini toppings are all ideal prep-ahead options.

Jackson roasts slow-cooking vegetables like beetroot and onions the day before. On the day, she’ll cook new potatoes or kumara, let everything come to room temperature, then toss it all together. Dress and add herbs or crunchy toppings at the last minute. (Crostini can be toasted ahead and stored in an airtight container.)

“The first day of the season that you get new potatoes is often Christmas Day, so that’s a given that you’re going to cook them on the stove top on the day.”

Toast crostini and prep their toppings early. (file image)

Unsplash / Maryam Sicard

Paterson peels agria potatoes the night before and keeps them submerged in cold water. Dressings — Caesar, blue cheese, mayonnaise — can be made up to a week ahead. Salad leaves can be washed, dried and stored ready to plate, but herb toppings and sauces are best chopped fresh.

For vegetarian sides, she suggests quinoa-stuffed tomatoes prepared the day before and refrigerated. Cheese boards are another opportunity to get ahead: seed crackers can be made a week in advance, and toppings like roasted tomatoes or charred red peppers mixed with labneh or soft cheese keep well. Pickled vegetables — eggplant, cauliflower, beetroot, baby carrots or mushrooms — add colour and zing and can be made ahead too.

“I know you can buy a lot of these things, but they’re so much nicer if you can make it yourself.”

Main dish

Food writer Helen Jackson.

Supplied

Ham, turkey — and especially gravy — are all prep-friendly.

Jackson removes the skin from her ham, scores it, adds the glaze and bakes it ahead, reheating on the day. If oven space allows, you can save the actual cooking for Christmas Day.

Paterson makes the glaze several days in advance and applies it the night before to really deepen the flavour when it cooks.

Brine the turkey ahead, but leave stuffing for when you cook. (file image)

Unsplash / Claudio Schwarz

For turkey, brine it 12–14 hours ahead but leave stuffing until the day of cooking, she suggests.

As a self-professed gravy enthusiast, Paterson can make it weeks ahead even. Save stock from chicken or vegetables, make the gravy, then freeze it, she says. (Tip: A spoon of Vegemite deepens colour.) For something different, she suggests an old-fashioned Cumberland sauce — made up to a week ahead with citrus zest, redcurrant jelly, port, mustard powder and ginger.

Dessert

Making tiramisu a day ahead helps the sponge fingers soak up the flavours from the liquid. (file image)

Unsplash / Karolina Grabowska

Pavlova, tiramisu, ice cream and trifle all benefit from advance planning.

Jackson bakes her pavlova base ahead and stores it, adding cream and berries just before serving. Tiramisu — classic or tropical — is always made at least a day ahead so the sponge has time to soften.

No-churn ice cream can be made days in advance and frozen. “It does need to come out of the freezer and a good 15 minutes before you scoop it because it is quite a firm ice cream,” Jackson says. (This year she’s doing a pistachio, orange and ricotta flavour inspired by a trip to Italy).

Paterson preps strawberries the morning before by hulling and refrigerating them for pav. Her mum’s routine is to bake it on Christmas Eve and leaving it to cool in the switched-off oven overnight. Meringues, meanwhile, keep for months if stored well.

Trifles are another reliable option: poach fruit like peaches and bake sponge ahead, assemble the day before, and add cream just before it hits the table.

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

What will happen to Gloriavale’s students once the school closes?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gloriavale Christian Community on the West Coast, taken when it was visited by the Employment Court’s chief judge on 25 February 2023. RNZ / Jean Edwards

Parents of students who attended Gloriavale Christian School will still have “a range of options” for their children’s education, the Ministry of Education says.

The ministry advised the West Coast Christian community on Thursday that it had decided to cancel the private school’s registration from 23 January.

Acting Hautū (leader) Te Tai Runga (South) Andrea Williams said it had only just started working through options with the families, community and other schools.

“The ministry recognises that there is a strong desire from the community for options that recognise their distinct nature and educates their children together as much as possible.

“There are a range of options the ministry is considering within the state system, which includes provision at a local school, establishing a satellite of another state school, a Te Kura Hub or a combination of these.”

Families would need to meet the criteria and be approved to enrol with Te Kura, in line with national processes, she said.

Similarly, any application from families to home school their children would be “treated on its merits”.

“There is guidance on the ministry’s website on the requirements that must be fulfilled to be granted an exemption by the Secretary for Education.”

It would not be possible for the community to set up a charter school for next year as the date for sponsors to submit applications to set up new schools in 2026 had closed, Williams said.

Gloriavale Christian School’s board has said it would challenge the ministry’s decision to cancel its registration.

However, Williams said there were no avenues for the school to do so under the Education and Training Act.

“We can’t comment on other possible avenues of appeal the school might be considering.”

Further details of plans for the children’s education would be shared once they had been confirmed, she said.

The cancellation decision comes after the school’s second failed Education Review Office (ERO) audit in as many years.

July’s ERO report found it had not met three of eight registration criteria and was not a physically and emotionally safe space for students.

Secretary for Education Ellen MacGregor-Reid advised the school that she was considering cancelling its registration in October.

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

Live: Black Caps v West Indies – third test, day three

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the action on day three of the Black Caps’ third test against the West Indies at Bay Oval in Mt Maunganui.

First ball is scheduled for 11am.

Black Caps squad: Tom Latham (captain), Tom Blundell (wicketkeeper), Michael Bracewell, Kristian Clarke, Devon Conway, Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes, Daryl Mitchell, Ajaz Patel, Glenn Phillips, Michael Rae, Rachin Ravindra, Kane Williamson, Will Young

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

Part of State Highway 1 in Northland closed after serious crash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Part of State Highway 1 in Northland is closed following a serious crash.

Police said the two-vehicle crash happened between Greenway and Mountain roads in Kaiwaka on Saturday morning.

Officers were called to the scene about 9.20am.

In a statement, police said initial indications suggested serious injuries were involved.

“The road will be closed, with diversions in place.

“Motorists should please avoid the area if possible, or expect delays.”

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‘Devastating in all ways’: Sand dune ecosystems on Tokerau Beach being destroyed by vehicles

Source: Radio New Zealand

Hapū members from Te Whānau Moana me Te Rorohuri work to protect sand dunes from vehicles. Victoria Lelo Kapa-Kingi

Thrill-seekers causing significant damage to dunes on the Far North’s Tokerau Beach have forced the kaitiaki rōpū to install temporary fences and block access points.

As many people head off to the beaches for summer, a group from hapū Te Whānau Moana me Te Rorohuri are trying to educate those who drive on the beach and in the dunes.

Kaitiaki Victoria Lelo Kapa-Kingi told Saturday Morning the behaviour was “really dangerous”.

“I think the best way to describe the behaviour is, I think it comes from a place of thrill-seeking,” Lelo Kapa-Kingi said.

“We’re seeing motorised vehicles destroying our dunes, really. They’re being driven all through our dune ecosystems on our beaches, not just two-wheel motorised vehicles but four-wheels as well, doing donuts up and down our beach.”

Lelo Kapa-Kingi said the small kaitiaki rōpū (guardian group) was looking after 18 kilometres of shoreline and dune ecosystems – and seeing vehicles destroy shell life, kaimoana (sea food), pipi beds and tuatuas.

“In our dune systems, we have our coastal birds who lay, they have their nesting sites throughout our dunes, we have our skinks, our gecko, our katipō (spider) which also live through our dunes, we have a multitude of native plant life that are being destroyed as well.

“They’re all being basically ripped up through the tyres going through our dune systems. It’s devastating in all ways.”

Hapū members have installed temporary fencing to try and protect sand dunes. Victoria Lelo Kapa-Kingi

Not only was there native flora and fauna throughout, but there were a number of wāhi tapu (burial grounds) all throughout the dune systems.

With an influx of manuhiri (visitors) and whānau (family) coming to the area for the summer period, Lelo Kapa-Kingi said they were fencing and blocking all entrances to the beach to protect the dunes and all that was in them.

She said the group had had a positive response to the work they had done so far. Some were unsure, giving them the opportunity to educate them, while some had already cut fences and driven through the barriers.

But Lelo Kapa-Kingi said it wasn’t the first time they have had to reinstall fencing “and we will continue to do so”.

“As someone who lives in Whatuwhiwhi and is on the ground every day, I am very picky and choosy about when I take my tamariki (children) to the beach.

“We do what we can to influence, to educate, but at the end of the day, if there’s reckless behaviour on our beaches, we need to choose safer wahi (place) for our tamariki to enjoy, to live, to be their best tamariki selves and unfortunately, at this time, the behaviour on Tokerau is not supporting that.”

Lelo Kapa-Kingi said they had received funding from Northland Regional Council and were working on creating kaitiaki coastal toolkits in the hopes of passing their learnings for dune protection on to other coastal hapū and iwi.

But at Tokerau Beach, the group would be looking to weed and hold community wānanga (discussion) in the new year to get everyone one board and replant.

The goal was to plant 5000 new plants into the dune ecosystem and replace what had been destroyed.

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