Auckland gets professional golf tournament after 20 year hiatus

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Royal Auckland & Grange Golf Club. www.photosport.nz

A world class professional golf tournament will return to Auckland for the first time in more than 20 years with the launch of the Japan-Australasia Championship.

The tournament, which is co-sanctioned by the Challenger PGA Tour of Australia and the Japan Golf Tour Organisation, will be played at Royal Auckland and Grange Golf Club from 5-8 March, 2026.

The $1.4 million event will showcase leading players from Australasia and Japan alongside rising stars from across the region.

The tournament will become the third leg of a three-week New Zealand swing and will follow the New Zealand PGA Championship at Paraparaumu Beach on 19-22 February and the New Zealand Open at Millbrook Resort, which starts on 26 February.

PGA of Australia chief executive Gavin Kirkman hailed the new event as a significant milestone for golf in the region.

“This tournament represents an exciting new chapter for golf in our part of the world,” Kirkman said.

“Partnering with the Japan Golf Tour for the first time is a tremendous opportunity to strengthen ties between our Tours and provide our players with a truly international stage.”

Royal Auckland and Grange Golf Club recently completed a major redevelopment and club captain Ian Blair said being approached to host the event was recognition of their world-class course and facilities.

“This is Auckland’s first major men’s professional tournament in 20 years, and we’re honoured to showcase our course to international audiences while engaging with our wider community and inspiring the next generation of golfers. It’s a historic moment that reflects both our proud heritage and our exciting future.”

The New Zealand Open was last held in Auckland at the Grange in 2004.

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South Taranaki fire spreads to 100 hectares

Source: Radio New Zealand

Firefighters expect they will be battling the fire for days. Pretoria Gordon / RNZ

A fire in South Taranaki has grown overnight to an estimated 100 hectares, with firefighters expected to be battling the blaze for several days.

The fire, located between Waitōtara township and Waiinu Beach settlement, started on Monday afternoon and is yet to be contained.

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) says two firefighting crews, two helicopters, and heavy machinery are working to extinguish the blaze, with additional help on the way.

There have been no evacuations, but residents have been told to prepare to leave.

FENZ says the smoke is currently blowing out to sea but are advising local residents to limit their exposure by remaining inside with windows and doors shut.

Waiinu Beach Road is closed from Silver Fern Farms Waitōtara to the turn-off to the Waiinu Beach settlement.

A separate forestry fire southeast in Parikino has seen reinforcements from the New Zealand Defence Force and the Department of Conservation called in.

The blaze in Lismore Forest near Parikino – near Whanganui – has scorched more than 100 hectares, after being first reported at 5.15pm on Sunday.

FENZ Incident Controller, Assistant Commander Renee Potae says the fire, which is still not contained, is burning through slash piles, cutover pine forest and underneath standing pine trees on the forest floor in several locations, across difficult terrain.

“There will be multiple crews on the ground today with support from heavy machinery and five helicopters.”

She says the weather forecast could hamper firefighting efforts.

“The wind has picked up significantly and some rain is forecast which could make the ground muddy and make access more difficult for ground crews.”

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Consumer spending slightly below expectations for first half of month

Source: Radio New Zealand

Worldline NZ expects Christmas Eve to be the peak day for total core retail transactions. 123RF

Consumer spending patterns have been tracking slightly below expectations for the first half of the month, but are expected to pick-up as Christmas approaches.

Worldline NZ’s latest data indicates spending at core retail merchants fell 0.3 percent to just over $2 billion ($2.049b) in the first 14 days of December on last year, with mixed patterns across sectors and regions.

Spending was highest in West Coast (+3.9 percent), Whanganui (+3.3 percent) and Otago (+2.9 percent), with the biggest declines recorded in Wellington (-4.0 percent) and Bay of Plenty (-2.4 percent).

Worldline NZ chief sales officer Bruce Proffit said Christmas Eve was expected to be the peak day for total core retail transactions.

“But we’ll see if that holds up in the ongoing challenging economic environment,” he said.

Hospitality spending was also expected to rise further this week with the peak expected Saturday 20 December.

“Food and liquor stores saw more transactions and slightly higher average transaction value across almost all regions in New Zealand, apart from Marlborough, but this is expected to increase even further in the coming days as shoppers prepare for Christmas Day festivities,” Proffit said.

Hospitality sector spending was mixed with spending generally more positive outside the major centres.

Spending on non-food goods fell 5.7 percent on the year earlier to just over half a billion dollars ($549m).

“Notably, some merchant sectors surpassed their Black Friday weekend spending peak last Saturday, including gift stores, toy and games retailers, bookshops, marine stores, florists and jewellery stores,” Proffit said.

“However, almost all merchants within this group are anticipated to reach new highs for the year, in the remaining days before Christmas, although spending at clothing stores generally peaks on 26 December amidst the usual Boxing Day sales.”

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Jane Austen would have turned 250. Here’s why she is still relevant

Source: Radio New Zealand

Austen’s six novels – including Emma and Pride and Prejudice – were groundbreaking in the early 1800s.

As a pioneer of free indirect style and the marriage plot, her mastery has inspired many homages and imitations — both on the page and the screen — over the last two centuries.

On the 250th anniversary of her birthday, we look back at Austen’s life and legacy.

A portrait of Jane Austen based on a drawing by her sister Cassandra.

Public domain

French Austen inspired rom-com hits the mark

Who was Jane Austen?

Austen was born on December 16, 1775, in the village of Steventon in rural Hampshire, where her father, the Reverend George Austen, was a clergyman.

Her mother, Cassandra, was “known for her poems and her wit”, Devoney Looser, who is a professor of English at Arizona State University, tells ABC Radio National’s The Book Show.

“She had two very interesting parents, but they were not by any means a family of great wealth.”

Jane Austen fans pose at at Winchester Cathedral with a Bank of England £10 note featuring the author’s portrait.

AFP

The Austens were what’s often described as lower gentry: people of ‘good birth’ who weren’t landowners themselves.

The Austen home was an “intellectual environment” but one in which money was tight.

To supplement the family’s income, George Austen took in a series of male students, to the ultimate benefit of his daughter’s education.

“There were, one scholar has estimated, 19 different boys who spent some years of their lives in this clergyman Reverend George Austen’s home,” Looser says.

“In effect, Jane Austen didn’t just grow up as a clergyman’s daughter; she grew up in a boys’ school.”

Early signs of genius

Austen is believed to have started writing when she was 11. She made copies of some of these early works, written between 1787 and 1798, later published as her juvenilia.

Looser says that while many critics initially dismissed this early writing as lightweight, it is now viewed more favourably.

“You can see her brilliance, her genius in these works from 11, 12, 13 years old. It’s quite incredible.”

Her early work often played on sending up the literary conventions of the day to comic effect.

“The juvenilia is filled with drunkenness, adultery, murder – not the things you necessarily associate with the mature Jane Austen, the Jane Austen of the six major novels,” Looser says.

Devoney Looser is a professor of English at Arizona State University and the author of Wild for Austen: A Rebellious, Subversive and Untamed Jane.

Supplied

The collected works of Jane Austen

Aspiring authors, take heart: Austen’s first attempts to have her work published were unsuccessful.

One of Austen’s novels (no one is sure which) that her father submitted to a publisher in the 1790s was rejected sight unseen.

In 1803, she sold a manuscript for £10 ($NZ30) to a publisher, who, for reasons unknown, refused to either publish the novel or return it to her.

(Her brother eventually acquired the novel back in 1816, and it was published as Northanger Abbey in 1817).

While Austen was a prolific writer, she had to wait until she was 35 to see her first novel in print.

Sense and Sensibility, published in 1811, was a reworking of her first full-length novel, Elinor and Marianne, written years earlier. No copies of the earlier manuscript survive.

Jennifer Ehle as Elizabeth Bennet and Colin Firth as Fitzwilliam Darcy in the 1995 drama series Pride and Prejudice.

BBC

In 1813, Austen published her next novel, Pride and Prejudice — also based on an early draft, known as First Impressions, that she began in 1797, when she was 21.

She published two more novels in her lifetime: Mansfield Park (1814) and Emma (1816).

Another two novels — Northanger Abbey and Persuasion — were published after her death in July 1817.

Austen published her novels anonymously and was relatively little-known during her lifetime, but news of her true identity soon began to spread thanks to the likes of the Prince Regent (later King George IV), who was “a notorious gossip”.

“Once the Prince Regent knows your identity, you can assume that the cat’s out of the bag,” Looser says.

The woman behind the books

To the great disappointment of Austen fans and biographers alike, most of her letters were destroyed after her death, some by her sister Cassandra and others by her niece Fanny. Only 160 of her missives remain.

The first published biography of the author, written by her brother Henry just months after her death, presented Austen as a saintly and, it must be said, dull figure.

“He says that her life was not a life of event. This is obviously not true,” Looser says.

“We can tell from her letters that she was not someone who was boring and nice and faultless. She had a rapier wit, and she wasn’t afraid to use it, especially in private.”

Camille Rutherford and Pablo Pauly in the 2024 French comedy Jane Austen Wrecked My Life.

supplied

Looser makes a case against Austen’s perceived mildness in her 2025 book Wild for Austen: A Rebellious, Subversive and Untamed Jane.

While Austen wasn’t an out-and-out radical, she broke with social convention in her efforts to become a published author.

“Certainly, she was not the wildest person of her day, but there were things that she was doing that were really outside of what was proper. They were outside of what was conventionally feminine,” Looser says.

“The ideal woman was supposed to be passive and quiet, and not unlike what Henry Austin describes in his biographical notice of her in 1818.

“This is clearly not who Jane Austen was.”

Looking for clues in her novels

Many have turned to her writing to learn more about who the elusive Austen really was.

“Clearly, she has a sense of what it means to be good, and her characters who do good and behave in ways that are good have better ends,” Looser says.

What differentiates Austen from her contemporaries is the way she dispenses justice in her novels.

“She goes a little light on her villains,” Looser says. “She’s responding to a very strong didactic moralising tradition in her era that kills off the villain or sends them away … They die a tragic death because they’re bad. She doesn’t do that.

“She lets her most flawed and villainous characters have a different kind of bad end. Often, they’re punished by being around other people who are really unpleasant … and I think that too is a kind of morality. But it’s not a punishment in the way that we generally think of it from fiction of this period.”

She introduced a new breed of sassy female protagonist in characters like Elizabeth Bennett and Emma Woodhouse.

“Her heroines are not pictures of perfection,” Looser says.

“Their flaws are part of what make them interesting and, arguably, even good.”

ALBERT LLOP

Irish author Colm Tóibín, an avowed Austen fan, has found other common themes running through her work.

“She loves a sailor,” he says, noting that Austen’s youngest brother Charles was a rear-admiral in the navy.

“In Jane Austen, anyone who’s in the navy is good, anyone who’s in the army is bad, and anyone who has inherited money is suspect.”

A real-life marriage plot

Austen never married, but her life wasn’t without romance. When she was 20, she formed a brief amorous attachment to Tom Lefroy, a neighbour who was, unfortunately, as impecunious as she, and the match went nowhere.

Then, in 1802, she accepted the proposal of one Harris Bigg-Wither, the brother of a friend, but changed her mind 24 hours later.

Looser says the one-day engagement shows that Austen was ambivalent about the institution of marriage.

Jane Austen’s bed at Jane Austen’s House Museum in England.

Eurasia Press / Photononstop via AFP

Bigg-Wither appears to have been a somewhat prickly character, but he stood to inherit extensive family estates that would have assured Austen’s economic future — no small thing in Regency England.

“It seems likely from what we know of her fiction that she wasn’t in love with him,” Looser says.

“It would have been a good match. She would have had economic comfort. She would have taken herself off the family balance sheet, so in that sense it would have been a gift to her father and brothers, but she put herself first by taking back her ‘yes’.”

It’s a decision that Looser believes mirrors the fictitious Elizabeth Bennett’s refusals of marriage – and one that paid off for Austen.

By the time of her death, the author had achieved a degree of economic independence, earning £700 ($NZ1,617) from her books, a significant sum for the time.

Life beyond death

In a tragic turn of fate, Austen died of an unknown illness when she was just 41.

In addition to her six novels, she left two unfinished fragments, Sanditon and The Watsons.

In the years since her death, her literary reputation has continued to grow to the point where she is now considered one of the giants of the English canon.

The title page from the first edition of the first volume of Pride and Prejudice, published in 1813.

Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Her work has provided rich fodder for the screen, too. The first television adaptation of an Austen novel was a BBC production of Pride and Prejudice in 1938.

Many more have followed, including the 1995 six-part series starring Colin Firth in a famously damp shirt as Mr Darcy, and the 2005 film version, which starred a dishevelled Keira Knightley rambling through the muddy English countryside.

While many Austen adaptations are faithful to the period, others — like the inimitable Clueless, a reworking of Emma — have reimagined her work in a contemporary setting.

To Tòibìn — who has taught Austen’s novels, including Pride and Prejudice and Mansfield Park, in his creative writing classes at Columbia University — this longevity is no surprise.

“The more you study them and disentangle them, deconstruct them, the more perfect they seem,” he says.

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

Industrial fire burning in Wiri in south Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

A large fire in the South Auckland suburb of Wiri has resulted in road closures.

The fire is understood to be at an industrial building and large plumes of dark grey smoke can be seen from several kilometres away.

Police have closed Roscommon Road and are directing traffic back on to the motorway.

An industrial fire is burning in the south Auckland suburb of Wiri. Supplied / Ben Chissell

An industrial fire is burning in the south Auckland suburb of Wiri. Shaun McLaughlin

More to come…

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Japanese and Korean sunscreens are trendy – but do they work under NZ’s sun?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Once niche imports, Japanese and Korean sunscreens are now lining shelves at retailers, including major places like Farmers, and slipping into the routines of New Zealanders tired of the heavy, chalky formulas they grew up with.

Auckland hairstylist and makeup artist Naeema Bhikoo has watched the shift firsthand. After years of putting up with “sticky and heavy” Western sunscreens that left a white cast, she says she began exploring Asian formulas during trips to Japan and South Korea.

“I used to hate wearing sunscreens. The only time I’d wear a sunscreen would be if I knew I was going to the beach,” she says. “Asian sunscreens in general, they’re very lightweight, just feel like a regular moisturiser, some of them have gel textures … it just feels like it soaks right in, no white cast.”

Auckland hairstylist and makeup artist Naeema Bhikoo.

Supplied / Mala Patel

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Reserve Bank governor sends message markets gone too far

Source: Radio New Zealand

Reserve Bank governor, Anna Breman. RNZ / Supplied

Economists say the Reserve Bank governor is sending a clear message to financial markets they have gone too far in raising fixed mortgage rates over the past week.

Anna Breman, barely two weeks into the role, took the unusual step of issuing a statement about current financial conditions which had gone “beyond” the RBNZ’s recent projection for interest rates.

“Financial market conditions have tightened since the November decision, beyond what is implied by our central projection for the OCR.”

She repeated that the forward path for the official cash rate (OCR) published in the November Monetary Policy Statement (MPS) indicated a possibility of another rate cut in the near term.

“However, if economic conditions evolve as expected the OCR is likely to remain at its [ https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/business/580066/official-cash-rate-cut-to-2-point-25-percent

current level of 2.25 percent] for some time.”

“As always, we are closely monitoring wholesale market interest rates and their effect on households and businesses.”

Breman said the RBNZ would look at incoming data, financial conditions, and global developments, as it worked towards its next interest rate decision in February.

Independent economist Cameron Bagrie said banks were also looking at the numbers and were coming to the view that rates would rise next year.

“There’s a little bit of calm your farm, cool your jets.”

“Financial markets don’t tend to align themselves with what the Reserve Bank is saying 100 percent of the time, financial markets tend to push a little bit further in either direction.”

“They were a little bit south of the Reserve Bank when interest rates were going down now they’ve decided to go a little bit north of the Reserve Bank in regard that the next move looks like it’s going to be up.”

Bagrie said the same trend of second guessing and moving ahead of central banks was apparent in other economies around the world, including Canada and Australia.

He said it was a little bit of jawboning, but markets were anticipating a rate rise next year to counter any inflation pressures arising from a recovering economy.

BNZ senior strategist Jason Wong said wholesale interest rates had moved lower after Breman’s comments.

“The market took the view that Breman was sending a clear message of some discomfort with the post November MPS market reaction, which had seen rates sharply higher.”

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Man charged with killing fellow prisoner

Source: Radio New Zealand

Jonathan Trubuhovich died in hospital earlier this month after being assaulted. 123RF

An inmate has been charged with killing a fellow prisoner at Mt Eden Prison.

Jonathan Trubuhovich, who was 69, was assaulted at the end of November and died in hospital 10 days later.

Police launched a homicide investigation and have now charged a man with manslaughter.

The 28-year-old man is due before the Auckland District Court today.

A spokesperson for the dead man’s family earlier said they’re in shock, and want Corrections held accountable.

Trubuhovich had been remanded in custody in May and was due to be sentenced yesterday on burglary, shoplifting and disorderly behaviour charges.

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What the election of Tonga’s new noble PM means for democracy

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lord Fakafanua is Tonga’s new prime minister. VNP / Daniela Maoate-Cox

The election of a noble to lead Tonga’s next government is raising concerns over the direction of the country’s democracy.

Lord Fakafanua, 40, beat incumbent prime minister Dr ‘Aisake Eke – the only other nominee – in Monday’s vote for the top job. The country’s 26 elected representatives cast ballots for the two candidates, with Fakafanua winning 16 votes to 10.

It comes about four weeks after the cohort were elected in the country’s general election on 20 November.

Fakafanua, set to be Tonga’s youngest ever prime minister, spoke to RNZ Pacific following the vote and identified unity in the new parliament as a top priority.

“What I wanted to advocate for was for us to look back at our roots and our foundation as a nation, so we can work together,” he said.

“Because this continued divisive politics is not only a waste of energy and taxpayers’ money, but it directs us away from the real priorities, and that’s to lift poverty and build the economy and help lower the cost of living.”

Lord Fakafanua, 40, is set to be Tonga’s youngest ever prime minister, but not everyone is convinced having a nobles’ representative as the country’s leader is the best way forward. RNZ Pacific / Teuila Fuatai. Teuila Fuatai

Fakafanua entered politics at age 24 in 2008 after being elected as a nobles’ representative for Ha’apai. At age 27, he was elected to the role of speaker, becoming the youngest person to ever hold the role.

Since then, he has been praised for his ability to maintain control of the debating chamber and different factions in Tonga’s Legislative Assembly.

As prime minister designate, Fakafanua will now be looking towards picking his cabinet, which must be approved and appointed by the King. He reiterated his desire for stability in a new government following Monday’s vote.

“I would love to build a cabinet built on a general consensus for the 26 members of parliament,” he said.

However, despite Fakafanua’s message of cohesiveness, pro-democracy advocates have warned that having a noble at the helm of the government is a slide backwards for Tonga’s democracy.

In 2010, the country’s constitutional reforms were implemented to shift the balance of power from the King and the nobles to the people. Now, the Legislative Assembly is made up of 17 people’s representatives, which are elected by the general public, and nine nobles’ representatives, elected in a separate voting process by the nobles.

When Fakafanua is formally appointed to the role of prime minister by King Tupou VI, it will be the second time a nobles’ representative has led the government since the reforms.

Former political adviser Lopeti Senituli said while he believed Fakafanua had performed well as speaker, he feared that a noble as prime minister signalled a shift in power back to the monarchy.

Lopeti Senituli is concerned by some of the political manouvres being made in Tonga. ABC News

“What I’m worried about is that the reassertion of the nobility and the King’s control of government.

“The political reform that we adopted in 2010 was the relocation of what is called executive authority – that was transferred from absolute authority of the King to shared executive authority between the King and the elected prime minister.”

Senituli warned that a nobles’ representative as prime minister effectively resulted in less checks on the King and nobles’ powers because they were not accountable to the general public in the same way a peoples’ representatives are through the four-yearly general election vote.

He also pointed to the role of speaker and deputy speaker in parliament, which can only be held by nobles’ representatives. Lord Vaea, the brother of Queen Nanasipau’u was elected the new speaker of parliament at yesterday’s vote, while Lord Tu’iha’agana was elected deputy speaker.

“No people’s representatives can be elected to those two positions,” Senituli said. “So, we are at a disadvantage because the nobles have control over parliament and the deputy speaker and the speaker of parliament.”

Teisa Pohiva, daughter of the late pro-democracy leader and former prime minister ‘Akilisi Pohiva, went a step further and said the outcome of the vote was a “sad day” for Tonga’s democratic reforms.

In a post on Facebook, she highlighted the disparity between the election process for nobles’ representatives like Fakafanua and peoples’ representatives. Both voting processes take place on polling day, however only nobles vote towards the nine nobles’ representatives resulting in a far smaller voting pool.

“New prime minister elect Lord Fakafanua – elected by three people into parliament and elected by 16 Parliamentarians to prime minister,” Pohiva wrote.

She also pointed out the close links between Fakafanua and King Tupou VI.

Fakafanua is a member of the Tonga’s royal family through his mother – who was a granddaughter of the beloved Queen Salote III. He has noble lineage through his father, who held the Fakafanua title before him. His sister is also married to Crown Prince Tupouto’a Ulukalala.

However, despite the criticisms, Fakafanua remains focused on the next steps.

He told RNZ Pacific he understands the new parliament is due to have its first sitting on 19 January, when the MPs and cabinet will be sworn in.

He said he feels “very privileged” to be elected to the role of prime minister and is committed to doing everything he can for the people for Tonga.

“I look forward to working with everyone and hope to have the support from everyone in the country, so that the aspiration of uniting the nation and bringing us all to work towards a common goal is realised.”

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

NZ police to guard Jewish community locations following Bondi attack

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police outside Kosher Deli NZ Nick Monro

New Zealand police expect officers to guard key locations for the Jewish community until at least the end of the week.

Police say the officers, who have been armed, will stay while they continue to assess the deadly attack at Bondi that killed 15 people.

“We’re maintaining our presence while we assess what’s happened in Australia, while we ensure that everything is in New Zealand as it should be,” Assistant Commissioner for National and International Security, Mike Pannett said.

“It’s probably just a reminder that our national terrorism level remains at low in New Zealand, so that indicates there’s no immediate threat to New Zealand, but absolutely important that we give reassurance to all our communities, and on this occasion, particularly our Jewish community.”

Local leaders have said they’ve stopped holding religious celebrations in public because it is too much of a security threat.

New Zealand police have been working with the Jewish Council to ensure everyone can celebrate the Hannukah festival safely.

They say they are in contact with security agencies here multiple times a day, and also in regular contact with police in Australia.

“We are mindful that we take nothing for granted and that we are far better to be prepared and having contingencies in place,” Pannett said.

When asked how long police would remain at key sites, he said it was being assessed on a daily basis.

He expected officers to remain posted until the end of the week, if not longer.

“We are also speaking with other parts of the community of New Zealand as well, including the Muslim community,” Pannett said.

“We’re ensuring that we give them that reassurance to let them know that we are there in the event of something happening.”

Pannett said police were looking at significant events, particularly for the Jewish community, happening over the week.

“And we are maintaining a presence at those events that present a risk, but also provide the reassurance opportunity,” he said.

There was no immediate threat or increased risk to New Zealand, Pannett said.

“We are simply proceeding with caution as we assess the situation and the information that comes in from our partner agencies in Australia.”

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